Monthly Archives: February 2012

Who Needs a Health Coach?

Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you’re probably familiar with personal trainers and what they can do for your fitness routine. You may have also heard of life coaches or executive coaches and how they can help you set goals and achieve them. But, even if you’re regularly reading the Nourish blog, do you really know what a health coach is?

And  more importantly, how would you know if you need one? For starters, have you ever dreamed of having:

  • Increased energy?
  • Decreased cravings?
  • A more consistent workout routine?
  • More confidence in the kitchen?
  • Help implementing lifestyle changes your doctor has recommended?
  • Better cooking skills?
  • A more efficient and effective way to grocery shop?
  • Lower food-related stress?
  • Less guilt about what you feed yourself or your family?

If you said yes to any of these, then health coaching could be just what you need!

A health coach is someone who can guide you through implementing lifestyle choices that will help you create and maintain a healthy, vibrant life.  Health coaches are gaining popularity as a way to help reduce the incidence of chronic illnesses that can be controlled through lifestyle modifications. For example, Type 2 Diabetes can be largely controlled through diet and exercise, but while most doctors tell patients that fact, they don’t often have the time or the means to help them implement the necessary lifestyle changes. It’s like being told you have a flat tire but not having a clue how to change one and not having anyone to teach you!

This is where health coaches come in. They’re like personal trainers for your overall health plan. They can help you improve the way you eat, teach you how to cook, demystify exercise, explain the importance of rest, help you assess the influence your career and relationships have on your health, and help you organize your life to accommodate your new healthy habits. A good coach will walk beside you for a period of time – 6 months or longer usually – until those habits are hard wired into your life and you feel confident that you can sustain them on your own.

Your coach should be certified (by an authority like the Institute for Integrative Nutrition or the American Association of Drugless Practitioners). Moreover, you should feel a connection with the person you choose to hire – your results will be better if you look forward to meeting with your coach than they will if you dread it! Generally your first meeting should be a free getting-to-know-you session so that you can decide if you’d like to work together on an ongoing basis.

Health coaches are getting some good national press. Oprah has featured them in O magazineDr. Oz has declared them a critical element in the future of health care. And, Dr. Andrew Weil’s Self Healing Magazine says, “When athletes want a competitive edge, they hire a private coach to monitor their progress. When it comes to your health, using this mindset could also be beneficial. Health coaches are increasingly being hired by corporations to help employees stay healthy and by individuals seeking to improve well-being. For some, these coaches offer assistance in managing dietary constraints (due to conditions such as celiac disease or diabetes), and for others, they might focus on teaching stress-reduction methods. In some ways, the health coach picks up where your physician left off, helping you implement wellness strategies suggested after a check-up or diagnosis.”

If you think a health coach may be just what you need to reach your health goals this year, our team at Nourish is ready to meet with you in person or by phone to talk about the programs we have available. Contact us today to get started!

Healthy Chocolate Pudding

Just four more days till you can shower the people you love with love…hugs and kisses and all sorts of cuter-than-cute pink and red creations will be flying around on the 14th. I, for one, can’t wait. I’m not so big on the drippy overwrought romantic side of Valentine’s Day but how can you resist a homemade valentine card from a 4 year old? In our house, there will be heart-shaped pancakes with strawberries for breakfast, love notes in the lunchboxes, and an after-school treat like this one.  Sounds like the recipe for a picture-perfect Valentine’s Day to me!

Making this all natural homemade pudding is barely more difficult than making pudding from a box but the results are so much better. Besides, when is the last time you tasted warm chocolate pudding? Wow. Top this with a dollop of whipped cream and you’ll be the sweetest part of Valentine’s Day!

 

Healthy Chocolate Pudding

adapted from Oprah.com

 

serves 4

 

Ingredients:

1/4 cup cornstarch

2 tablespoons sugar

3 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa

1 ounce dark chocolate, cut into small pieces

2 1/2 cups fat-free milk

Fresh raspberries for garnish

 

Directions:

1. In a medium saucepan combine cornstarch, sugar, cocoa, and dark chocolate. Heat over medium heat.

2. Gradually add the milk, stirring constantly until mixture comes to a boil.

3. Let boil for one minute, stirring constantly.

4. Remove from heat and transfer to small dessert cups. Refrigerate until firm (if you can stand the wait), top with raspberries, and serve.

 

Don’t panic….just cook!

Several years ago, a gardening workshop I attended with some girlfriends nearly sent me to the floor of my closet with a blanket pulled over my head. The very sweet presenter spent an hour chatting merrily about planting bulbs and potting soil and the merits of various fertilizers. She showed us stunning arrangements of vibrant annuals and extolled the benefits of planting various perennials for a lush and colorful backyard. I sat there smiling and nodding and taking copious notes. I bought tools. And gardening clogs. And bulbs. And potting soil. And  I never planted a thing.

I left that workshop so completely overwhelmed by information and so intimidated by the prospect of failure that I just gave up altogether. That adorable lady who ran the workshop would be so disappointed if she knew this. She’d be sad. She’d wonder where she went wrong!

When you’re already good at something, it seems so easy. You excitedly share your passion – be it gardening or fashion or quilting or scrapbooking – with anyone who will listen. You could go on for hours sharing all sorts of inside information that any self-respecting friend of yours would be lucky to learn.

When you’re the one trying to learn, however, it’s anything but easy. You yearn for someone to tell you just what you need to know and nothing more. You wish everyone would stop throwing around complicated terms that you don’t understand and acting like it was a piece of cake. It’s not a piece of cake to you. Far from it.

This is what used to happen when I started to talk to someone about cooking. People nodded politely. If they were a client, they took notes. They enthusiastically oohed and ahhed over suggestions I made. They said things like “That sounds delicious!” and “I can’t wait to try it!” But more often than I’d like, when they got in their car and drove home, they never turned on the stove.

Once I caught on to this, and got over my sadness and merciless self-criticism, I was bound and determined to change the outcome. I don’t want people to listen to me talk about cooking – I want them to actually cook! The research is so clear that cooking for yourself at home is one of the very best things you can do to improve your health and well-being. It’s why Nourish places such an emphasis on healthy eating out of all the healthy lifestyle habits out there for you to adopt!  Being able to turn a few simple ingredients into a nourishing meal makes it far easier to control your weight and your overall health.

So now, when I get into a conversation about cooking, especially with a novice, I try to remember that gardening class. I don’t throw around fancy cooking terms like braise  and simmer and blanch. I don’t spout off ten adaptations she could make to the simple recipe I’m sharing – I just share the recipe. I write it down. I tell her to call me if she gets confused in the middle of making it. I send her pictures or videos if I have them. Or, better yet,  I offer to cook with her.

If you’re one of the sweet followers who has read the Nourish blog for a while but who hasn’t actually gotten up the nerve to cook anything, will you reach out to me? Post a question in comments below this post or any recipe post in our archives. Drop me an email.  Send me a message via Facebook. I am here for you, and so are the hundreds of people reading this blog or in our Facebook community, many of whom are accomplished home cooks who would be delighted to demystify healthy cooking for you. We’re all here to help. So please, don’t panic….just cook!