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The Juggling Act

A woman's guide to finding the elusive balance with fitness, food, family, and SELF!

Categories: Family, Wellness

The Importance of Setting Firm Boundaries in all Relationships

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It is important to set boundaries in any kind of relationship. Not setting boundaries can lead to avoidance, which is the biggest mistake people make. Sometimes we look at someone and think, “I’ll just distance myself from that person,” but this usually backfires in the end.

Sometimes it is not healthy to spend time with someone, and that is okay. It does not mean that you do not care about that person anymore, it just means that spending time with that person is not healthy in that moment, and that is okay.

Your responsibility is to look out for yourself. Pointing out what makes you uncomfortable while it is happening, you’re not doing them any favors by hiding your feelings, and you’re certainly not doing yourself any favors either.

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Chances are that they have no idea that they’re making you uncomfortable. The chances are also really high that they don’t know what you’re thinking at all; people are not mind readers. So why should I have to say something and potentially make things worse? Because it is important to your well-being to verbalize your discomfort in that moment.

It goes back to setting boundaries in the first place. Not only are you setting boundaries for the people you care about, you’re making them aware that what they’re doing is effectively causing that boundary to be implemented, so it doesn’t come as a shock later on down the line when you do finally address things. The only way to keep uncomfortable territory from going haywire down the road is by dealing with it as it arrives, not by pretending everything is fine until it’s not.

Reasons Why Boundaries are Essential in Personal Relationships

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The first step in setting boundaries is getting clear inside yourself. Once you are clear, it’s like turning on a big porch light that uninvited energy can see. They may not respect them, but they can’t help but see them. More is better and less is more manageable, but no boundaries at all guarantees problems. The importance in creating these is that your redefinitions and/or ownership of your space becomes an active demonstration of your personal values and needs.

Making it explicit allows you to be seen and understood in the way you intend. Respect for you and your space comes from making what you need clear to others as this is self-respecting behavior. Once people are clear about what you are comfortable with, they then have a choice of whether to respect it or not.

For example, it is none of your business whether someone likes what you need as it’s none of their business whether or not you respect it.

Promoting Self-Care

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People are unique in their vulnerabilities and needs. For most people, personal time allows them to slow down and regroup, to refuel and revitalize their sense of self. It can be time to indulge in personal passions and hobbies without feeling guilty that others haven’t been considered.

It can provide peace of mind to think about nothing. Hikes in the woods, reading for pleasure, or listening to music can bring healthful outcomes. It’s when our human bodies have time to repair themselves. It’s when we can think, analyze, remember, assimilate, plan, and enjoy. And when we haven’t paid attention to our bodies and minds, we may actually wind up ill, tired, or confused.

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In reality, users’ loads can suck people dry. Caring people can deflect attention from their needs and care for others without taking time to care for themselves. It’s especially important in this age of parental job overload that time is made for self-care.

When physical and mental resources get low, taking personal time can help regain the strength to regenerate the capacity of givers. Not only is that important, but personal time also provides the needed energy and stamina to meet work demands, deadlines, and extra effort involved in going the extra mile.

With the added advantages of better health and self-knowledge, it’s crucial to allocate time for yourself. One modern workplace model shows companies and their workers how to find work-life balance. Setting aside time for quiet and introspective thought is another function of personal time.

Preventing Abuse and Toxic Relationships

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Setting up physical, mental, and emotional boundaries is very important in all relationships – professional, personal, or casual encounters. It is important to safeguard an individual’s self-worth and integrity. It’s imperative to communicate these to everyone, especially in those close personal relationships.

For example, it’s okay to tell a friend that they can’t just stop by your house without calling first. Many people don’t want their family or friends seeing them on a normal basis without personal pride intact. Additionally, stopping by might not be convenient or even when it’s inconvenient. As long as a polite request is made, it allows the other person to think before they speak and keep from hurting someone else’s feelings. This helps to keep negative and hurtful comments from the combination and causing additional problems.

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In any relationship, tolerating an abusive situation is not acceptable. Abuse consists of pushing, striking, or insulting. If a relationship becomes abusive or violent, it’s crucial to go away immediately and find help. If you’re being abused, remember that the person’s behavior is totally intolerable.

It’s also essential to recognize that the individual causing the abuse has a significant problem to solve. Stopping the abusive behavior has to start with them, not you. If a person does not recognize their abusive behavior as a severe problem, a long-term relationship without treatment may jeopardize their life.

Fostering Healthy Communication and Respect

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When someone sets boundaries, it tells others that they also need to respect those limits. It says: “No, I am not superhuman; no, I am not an overachieving ninja. I am human, and in order for us to have a deeply committed and loving relationship, you need to honor the lines that I’ve drawn.”

Setting limits is often helpful to the other person – think of the good effects that tough love can have. Who can most enable the ‘unhealthy’ behavior that our friend is engaged in? The friend, of course. Yes, the temptation is great. But helping our friend by encouraging him or her to set limits is not only a loving act, but important for our own well-being.

Respecting the boundaries set by others can be tough. We are often disappointed when our fantasy of the other is tarnished by their limitations. Boundaries are not set to keep the other person out, but to build the foundations of safety and trust so both can grow emotionally and deepen the friendship and affection.

Respect also involves sending the mixed messages that cloud boundaries when respect is absent. Boundaries are about honesty and permission. When they are truly embraced, they free us to honestly express our deepest selves, and we give others permission to do the same.

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Boundaries are a crucial element of any relationship, but they can be especially important when being in a romantic relationship with someone who suffers from a mental health disorder. Allowing another person into your personal space is an invitation for fear of the unknown, and if your significant other begins to feel overwhelmed by the weight of responsibility for dragging you out of the black cloud, it is possible for them to disconnect from the relationship altogether.

Urging your partner to put aside their support role if they need a break and consider you as an individual, rather than actively encouraging emotional separation, will give them the break they want and need, in addition to helping improve their own physical and mental health.

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Fundamentally, allowing suffering to stranglehold your significant other’s life is selfish, disrespectful, and if you cannot help it, not fair. Splitting up can provide comfort throughout the most difficult, demanding, disinterested, and stressful times, but it is also critically important to maintaining a romantic relationship that makes those times worth living.

Thank you for taking the time to check out this article! If you loved it I hope you will subscribe to my blog as I love to share gardening content, recipes and other helpful articles!

If you’d like to read my personal story, you can find it here!

If you like this article and would like to follow along when I post new ones, please join my reader community below where you’ll only be notified when new articles or books are published!

By clicking submit, you agree to share your email address with the site owner and Mailchimp to receive marketing, updates, and other emails from the site owner. Use the unsubscribe link in those emails to opt out at any time.


Xoxo,
Elizabeth Richey
About the Author: Elizabeth Richey, living and thriving in rural Arkansas, Aquarian and iced coffee enthusiast. When she’s not writing, gardening, playing with her chocolate lab Maple or sharing videos on YouTube (Elizabeth’s Many Adventures) you can find her enjoying time with her family or traveling somewhere new! Most of the time she’s dreaming of being kicked back in her hammock in her cottage garden listening to the birds sing. 

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Categories: Fitness, Wellness

3 Shockingly Easy Tips for Maintaining Joint Health in Your 40s

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When the celebratory toast to a friend’s birthday or a forkful of anniversary cake is met with muffled groans and rolling eyes, it’s not just about a few candles. The forties are a time when many of us start to experience a gradual increase in both the number and severity of the aches and pains in our joints.

Survey a roomful of forty-something women about their bodies, and you’ll hear about the usual suspects: varicose veins, early signs of osteoporosis, diminished exercise tolerance, and the pesky fingers-grasped-frozen-round-the-handrail – a short flight of stairs a common complaint. But while baby-boomer and millennials alike are informed and motivated about mammograms and bone density testing, few of us think very much about our overall muscle and joint health.

We’re just too busy taking care of other people. The good news is that wisely investing a little time and self-care in your joints can make a huge difference: easing symptoms, buying extra years of joint mobility and function, and potentially staving off big-deal orthopedic surgery in the not-so-distant future.

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Understanding Joint Health in Your 40s

When it comes to staying active and healthy, our joints play a key role. However, when many of us hear about joint health, we might instantly imagine elderly people with arthritis. The truth is, joint issues are more common than we see in popular media. In fact, women, especially, often have less dense bones than men due to hormonal changes, making them more likely to suffer from conditions like osteoporosis, bone fractures, and physical joint problems.

There is no real cure or remedy for weakened joints or poor bone health—it essentially comes down to preventative health to avoid suffering a host of problems later on. This guide is meant to introduce women to preventative care for their joints before they reach the age of 50.

For women, the “silent” form of arthritis is especially common due to hormonal imbalances women can experience. Symptoms might not be visible until age 50, causing women to suddenly feel discomfort in their joints. Non-medical contributors, such as excessive sitting and inactivity during days spent indoors fuel the issue.

Pregnant women are also unlikely to see collagen finished rejuvenating compared to when they were younger due to the lack of energy spent to release the protein. It’s key for young pregnant women to be aware of mild joint health practices, pointing to a more active lifestyle leading up to and following childbirth. Maintaining joint health before “silent” arthritis sets in is especially important.

By increasing daily exercise and maintaining enough vitamins and proteins, pain and joint stiffness associated with age can be offset. Cholesterol balance is another factor. High amounts of cholesterol throughout aging can prevent cartilage from increasing in growth. Regularly checking cholesterol levels can help prevent the onset of mild arthritis.

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Tip 1: Incorporating Joint-Friendly Exercises

Exercise not only maintains a healthy weight and heart health, it can reduce joint discomfort and stiffness. Resistance training that targets muscle groups around specific joints can provide stability and support to the joint, reducing pain and preventing some types of injury. Water-based weight-bearing exercises are one of the best forms of exercise since being in the water takes the pressure off the joints.

Water-based exercises can provide support to a person’s body while they practice different movements. What are even better are the benefits of swimming or being in the water with the resistance of the water to help build back your muscles and surprise your body in different ways.

Focus on exercises that prevent stiffness and improve your range of motion with strength-based workouts. Tai chi and Pilates are both great examples of workout routines for joint health. The exercises can increase flexibility, build strength, enhance balance, and ease the stiffness or aches involved in your joints.

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When starting a new exercise program, take it slow with low-impact activities like morning stretching, tai chi, or yoga. Incorporate rest days to allow your body to heal and prevent injury. You should also contact your primary care physician to guide any exercise routine. They may refer to a physical therapist who can provide you with tools to build your joints and prevent pain.

Be responsible with your routine and make sure to listen to your body! Try to prevent high-impact activities that include sprinting, jumping, or sudden, jarring movements by cozying up your exercise machines and workout plan.

A rest day will provide your body with a chance to recover from any actual stress. Consider combining your workout routines with acupuncture, deep tissue massage, or a first aid bath to maintain the body’s relaxed, rejuvenated, and enhanced range of motion.

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Tip 2: Eating Right for Joint Health

When joint pain starts looking like a frequent visitor, what’s a girl to do? We often think of joint pain as a natural part of aging or a problem experienced mostly by athletes. But aren’t all those fitness and exercise activities that are supposed to keep us healthy also hard on our bodies?

The great news is that good health and preventive practices can come from a combination of non-invasive treatments and smart choices about how we treat our bodies and our joints in particular. And having good relationships with our bodies and how we feel deep down inside is crucial. When what’s happening on the outside doesn’t match up with the vibrancy we feel on the inside, it’s time to get to the bottom of it.

You know what else is key for feeling young and vibrant? Minding the messages our bodies are sending us as we age. So, if you are in your 40s or approaching your mid-40s, it’s also time to take your joints seriously. Significant changes tied to estrogen’s role managing joint health begins to take place in our late 30s and early 40s and lead to years of declining joint health.

Another notable harbinger of joint health concerns in women occurs 15 years or so after our last menstrual period. However, it’s important to understand how to keep our joints in the best possible condition long before both of these periods. After all, these aches and pains made their measured approach silently, without any warning. Our bodies are too sophisticated for ambiguous clues! Let’s take a look at joint health in women.

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Tip 3: Prioritizing Rest and Recovery

By the time we hit our 40s, we begin to recognize the critical importance of rest. All women are unique and have varying levels of activity, but it’s likely that we’re juggling a family and career, too – which makes it even more vital to pay close attention to our time for recovery.

While men and women are both vulnerable to joint issues as they enter middle age, women specifically are at a significantly higher chance of developing RA, which affects different aspects of our lives. If you suspect you have RA, it’s essential to consult with a medical professional.

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This is critical in order to determine your new levels of mobility and the necessary stretching and strengthening exercises for your recovery process. Ensure ample time for rest between workouts, take time to recover and hydrate.

It may also be worth experimenting with natural methods of helping to relieve inflammation in joints, such as balneotherapy – the use of a therapeutic bath. It’s an approach worth exploring if you’re living with RA. I hope this article provides you with the necessary information to promote healthy joints!

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There’s no doubting that the 40s come with an increased likelihood of developing arthritis, irrespective of gender. By the time you reach midlife, the significant role that estrogen has played in maintaining your joint health becomes apparent as the joint pain/discomfort you endure begins to worsen more and more.

Women in particular tend to experience more musculoskeletal problems than men because of their higher body fat composition compared to lean mass. The greater fat mass encourages higher levels of inflammation – a characteristic that worsens as estrogen naturally decreases. The body mass index begins to climb during the early-to-mid 40s, while the muscle mass ratio falls as estrogen and other hormone levels adjust.

Additionally, once a woman reaches 50, there’s a marked hormone decline observed, and symptoms such as weight gain and uncomfortable joints can be attributed to this new balance.

The 40s are also a decade marked by the reduced production of human growth hormone, progesterone, estradiol, and insulin – all of which are critical for a woman to stay healthy, as well as for maintaining her lean body mass and strong bones. Insulin has a direct influence on inflammation and chronic disease development.

Blood sugar levels begin to creep up in the 40s, increasing a woman’s likelihood for developing heart disease, cancer, and type 2 diabetes. Because these different hormone levels contribute to our lifestyle and the way we age, it’s imperative that women take it upon themselves to work with a healthcare provider who understands how all these interacting factors impact the body.

Women can see their lives become more vibrant, energetic, and healthy as they cross over into the next important life stage of aging. Ensuring that your joints aren’t a daily source of worry is an essential first step.

Thank you for taking the time to check out this article! If you loved it I hope you will subscribe to my blog as I love to share gardening content, recipes and other helpful articles!

If you’d like to read my personal story, you can find it here!

If you like this article and would like to follow along when I post new ones, please join my reader community below where you’ll only be notified when new articles or books are published!

By clicking submit, you agree to share your email address with the site owner and Mailchimp to receive marketing, updates, and other emails from the site owner. Use the unsubscribe link in those emails to opt out at any time.

Xoxo,
Elizabeth Richey
About the Author: Elizabeth Richey, living and thriving in rural Arkansas, Aquarian and iced coffee enthusiast. When she’s not writing, gardening, playing with her chocolate lab Maple or sharing videos on YouTube (Elizabeth’s Many Adventures) you can find her enjoying time with her family or traveling somewhere new! Most of the time she’s dreaming of being kicked back in her hammock in her cottage garden listening to the birds sing. 

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Categories: Wellness

3 Benefits to Daily Meditation

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Meditation allows the mind to go beyond the conditioned, “thinking mind” into a state of deep stillness and silence. In that state of deep stillness, the mind relaxes and is extremely alert and focused – a unique state of restful alertness. Practicing meditation creates a deep sense of peace and well-being, and it offers the opportunity for people to know their spiritual essence. Additionally, meditation allows a connection between the human spirit and the infinite spirit.

This leads us to what I consider the chief benefits of meditation. The state of deep meditation and relaxation allows us to go within ourselves where we can clearly and directly experience our divine presence. Guarding our thoughts allows us to reflect our higher selves, our spiritual truth that leads to feeling closer to God. Furthermore, meditation is a powerful tool in the journey toward true self-awareness, self-realization, enlightenment, or whatever else one decides to call the highest state of our individual existence.

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So what is meditation? The word ‘meditation’ does not mean just sitting quietly or thinking about something. It is an experience that is much deeper and profound than that. It is the practice of concentration where one focuses on a particular object, thought, or feeling. Meditation is actually a state of awareness. It means focusing the mind in one direction rather than allowing it to wander at its will. In concentrated meditation, it is purposefully regulated and held within for a specified period of time.

Many people believe that meditation is doing nothing, but it is quite the opposite. It is important because it is a mental exercise that may improve physical and mental health and self-knowledge. It is a valuable tool that can nurture a higher state of awareness and fulfillment.

Reduced Stress and Anxiety

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By taking around thirty minutes to meditate, you can help reduce your stress levels. Chronic stress is not healthy for us. When we are stressed, we produce more of the hormone cortisol. By learning to lower your cortisol production, you can do wonders for your overall physical well-being as well as your mental health. In addition to reducing stress, the reduction of it and anxiety through meditation can also help you feel more at ease.

People with lower levels of stress tend to feel better about themselves. It is simpler to appreciate your life and what is in it if you aren’t stressing out about the many things in it.

Meditating every day can help you reduce stress and anxiety in your life. These are two things that many of us need to have less of. No one truly desires to be stressed or anxious, yet for many of us, this is all too true. If you would like to take control of these two things in your life, then try taking control of them.

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Improved Focus and Concentration

But the irony is that what we tell ourselves we want — happiness, peace, fulfillment, focus, motivation — we can find in the quiet that we’re so afraid of. Through meditation, you can learn what it feels like when your brain is clear. You can then use this feeling to better understand the wants and desires, fears and angers that cross your mind, and evaluate them.

You can learn to focus on what will help you achieve success in your job, health in your life, and peace in your heart. Eventually, with enough practice, this type of control will become second nature.

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Here’s another Ram Dass quote that illustrates this: “I know how to think, but I don’t know how to stop.” This is the curse of modern living. We are constantly thinking. We’re thinking about work, what we have to pick up from the store, what we want to cook for dinner, whether we’ll make our next deadline, how to fix our clogged sink. If we walk down the street, we have music blasting through our headphones because we can’t bear the quiet.

At home, we have the television constantly blaring because we can’t bear to sit in silence. We’re terrified of being alone with our thoughts, because then we might have to confront our real fears, our real wants, and our real desires. So we seek to distract ourselves in any way possible.

Enhanced Emotional Well-being

Emotional well-being can be cultivated quite easily through a dedicated meditation practice. Emotional problems like depression are no match for the complete happiness that meditation offers. Individuals with chronic pain are frequently isolated from family and friends due to their condition.

Improving your emotional health is incredible since a loving relationship can support your meditation practice, reducing pain and improving quality of life.

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A study shows that loving relationships and pain management greatly benefit your health. This is direct evidence that emotional well-being and meditation are related. We all need people to lean on in life, especially when we are trying to maintain good health.

Chilling out is unique to meditation. Sure, lying sprawled on the summer grass is wonderful, but the ultimate relaxation is to exhale and find your true self while meditating. That is nirvana. People who experience nirvana know a nice secret. Regular meditation is associated with a reduced risk of clinical depression.

A study found that enlightenment provided a sense of increased well-being in depressed military veterans. Subjects who meditated also decreased their social anxiety and experienced less stress. So if you’ve been on the fence, I say just give it a try! You can find free videos on Youtube and many different options starting as brief as 5 minutes! What do you have to lose?

If you’d like to read my personal story, you can find it here!

If you like this article and would like to follow along when I post new ones, please join my reader community below where you’ll only be notified when new articles or books are published!

By clicking submit, you agree to share your email address with the site owner and Mailchimp to receive marketing, updates, and other emails from the site owner. Use the unsubscribe link in those emails to opt out at any time.

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Xoxo,
Elizabeth Richey

About the Author: Elizabeth Richey, living and thriving in rural Arkansas, Aquarian and iced coffee enthusiast. When she’s not writing, gardening, playing with her chocolate lab Maple or sharing videos on YouTube (Elizabeth’s Many Adventures) you can find her enjoying time with her family or traveling somewhere new! Most of the time she’s dreaming of being kicked back in her hammock in her cottage garden listening to the birds sing. 

Categories: Fitness, Wellness

3 Exercises for a Nice Butt if you have a Desk Job

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Thanks to computers, video games, TV, and the internet (of course), more and more jobs are being done at a desk. This makes it hard to burn calories and keep fit while you’re working. You sit in the office all day and when you come home it’s to your computer or a TV. No wonder the US obesity rate is skyrocketing. But hold on a second. For those of us who work at a desk, are there things we can do at the office to help us get fit or stay fit without going to a gym and breaking a sweat? The answer is, of course, yes.

Here are three exercises for legs and those great buns of steel that you want but don’t think you’ll ever get with a desk job. Do these exercises on alternating days, and you will be giving your legs an exceptional workout.

Now let’s set some ground rules first.

Stand up.

There should be no slouching in the chair, leaning to one side or another in this office space.

You will also take the stairs whenever there is the option to, and no sitting on the escalators.

And of course, try and stand when you can. Standing burns calories because you need to use your muscles in order to stand. Sitting destroys them.

Now back to the exercises.

Glute Bridges

To perform this exercise, lay on the ground on your back. Place your feet flat on the ground around a foot away from your butt. Begin to raise your hips to create a straight line from your knees to the shoulders. The most effective way to do this exercise is to really concentrate on squeezing the glutes as tight as you can and imagining they are pushing your hips up; hold this top position for 2-5 seconds. This exercise can also be performed a number of ways to increase intensity, such as one leg at a time or on to a bench with weight placed on the hip flexors.

Raise and lower the hips in a bridging exercise. This is a great exercise to help people who just can’t feel the glutes working in other exercises. The bridge, which targets the hamstrings as well as the glutes, has been found to provide one of the highest readings of muscle activation in a study by the American Council on Exercise.

Squats

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To perform a bodyweight squat with proper form, start by standing with your feet shoulder width apart. Put your arms out in front of you and then begin to lower your body by bending your knees and pushing your hips back as if you were going to sit in a chair. Try to lower yourself so that your thighs are parallel to the ground and your knees are directly over your feet. The lower back should remain slightly arched and your head should face forward. Now your bodyweight is loaded on your heels, so the key is to push from your heels when standing back up. A great way to perfect this is to practice in front of a mirror and concentrate on pushing from the heels and using the glutes to stand back up. This will make sure you are loading the glutes properly.

Squeeze your glutes and stand back up.

To make proper squats, doing them correctly is very important. Tabitha of BFT recommends her clients to work with a kitchen chair pushed against the wall for balance. Another way to work with good form is to practice doing a squat by pretending to sit, then getting back up without sitting on a chair.

Lunges

When you lunge, keep your knee in line with your ankle. Go low to recruit the glutes and avoid adding too much quad muscle. Static lunges are a great exercise because you can really go deep and get good glute activation if you have correct technique. Walking lunges are also excellent for the butt and great if you have tight hip flexors. The glute of the back leg is put under great stretch and has to contract hard to bring you back up, helping to increase range of motion in the hips.

The added benefit here is increased hip flexibility and for some, this alone increases the booty pop and makes the butt look perkier. Stance and also cause poor posture and low back pain from underdeveloped glute muscles in these individuals. In addition, the sitting phase of the pulse will give the quads a brief rest when they are fatiguing from the wall sit position, changing the focus to the quads which is something we want to avoid to keep this an effective butt exercise.

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Exercise is crucial for physical and emotional wellness. Working from a desk job can be an obstacle to remaining in good condition since there are various temptations to avoid. Desk jobs are infamous for adding to a widening waistline and an increasing cellulite belly, however many of us people with sedentary jobs are mostly concerned with the effects on our lower body, particularly how to avoid saggy buttocks. This focus does not exclude the importance of overall body fitness and the great ideas presented on other parts of this site – maintaining tone and fitness in the entire body is crucial for an overall attractive and healthy appearance, and spot reducing fat or increasing definition in one part of the body is not possible, as much as we wish it was.

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Unfortunately we just cannot choose where the fat is going to be taken from, or where the muscle will be the first to tone. But spot treating a problem area is feasible and potentially fixable. Rest assured that if you are someone with a desk job and have noticed a change for the worse in the shape or size of your buttocks, you are not imagining things. Muscle bulk decreases quickly without use, and low blood flow to the muscle and high fat in the surrounding areas can cause degradation in muscle quality and skin tone. This is not a life sentence however, since muscle strength and tone can be improved with targeted exercise, and many aspects of the desk job can be counteracted with a few habitual changes.

It’s my belief that fitness should not be a source of stress to oneself, and a habit should be both manageable and enjoyable. Therefore only exercises that can be done with minimal or no equipment, and are contractible under the constraints of bad weather or busy schedule, have been posted on this site. Once exercise becomes a chore the chance of quitting becomes high. The above 3 exercises alone can be a good start to maintaining lower body tone, and should in no way be felt as a complete routine. They are no nonsense, and will require little thought to remember, freeing mental resources for anyone super busy. Each has its own specific trait, so if one is particularly enjoyed or found beneficial, it may be later incorporated into an entire routine targeting all muscle groups.

If you like this article and would like to follow along when I post new ones, please join my reader community below where you’ll only be notified when new articles or books are published!

By clicking submit, you agree to share your email address with the site owner and Mailchimp to receive marketing, updates, and other emails from the site owner. Use the unsubscribe link in those emails to opt out at any time.

Xoxo,
Elizabeth Richey


About the Author: Elizabeth Richey, living and thriving in rural Arkansas, Aquarian and iced coffee enthusiast. When she’s not writing, gardening, playing with her chocolate lab Maple or sharing videos on YouTube (Elizabeth’s Many Adventures) you can find her enjoying time with her family or traveling somewhere new! Most of the time she’s dreaming of being kicked back in her hammock in her cottage garden listening to the birds sing. 


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Categories: Fitness, Wellness

Frustrated Feelings Post-Op from Plastic Surgery

-A woman’s thoughts after undergoing a tummy tuck, muscle repair, thigh lift and liposuction at 39 years old after losing 130 lbs.

woman in gray tank top while sitting on bed
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When you read stories about or see posts on socials about people having plastic surgeries they’ve dreamed about for years, you really do see the highlight reel. Some people on YouTube with long form content with go into the nitty gritty details of how difficult different parts of the journey are. But what I’ve found with my own recovery from plastics is that it’s way more of a head game than I ever realized.

To clarify, I knew that dealing with pain and the difficulties of everyday life post op with swelling, pain and limited mobility WOULD be difficult and therefore would be a head game. But what nobody warns you about is how much time you have to sit around with your feet propped up for 7-14+ days…just THINKING. During this time, whether your thoughts are negative or positive greatly have to do with each person’s individual personality.

fashion love people woman
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I consider myself a very positive person but even yet, I had moments of deep self reflection that slanted towards a more negative vibe. I had and still have (20 days post op as I write this) major frustrations with my lack of independence. I would have to say that is probably the biggest mental hurdle for me. In the early days post op I knew I’d need to lean on my husband and even my teenage sons to help me with…almost everything. But now 20 days out, the fact that I still can’t dress myself or reach my feet is SEVERELY frustrating. Because I’m someone who did yoga daily prior to my surgery and have really great flexibility and even as a “plus size” or midsize woman, I could do the splits. So to have had 7 lbs of skin removed from my stomach and yet here I am still unable to even reach out my own fat feet to put shoes or chonies on…I hate it.

Photo of author: my “yogi” body before, with my skin tucked into super tight leggings.

My husband is incredibly helpful and truly a caretaker and giver at heart so he has been nothing but wonderful. But because of the things I still need assistance with, I can’t shower alone for fear I’ll fall in the shower (my fear AND his fear) and I can’t reach everything to dry off and again, I can’t reach my feet to put chonies or pants on! So this has become a nightly routine for us that takes up to an hour that we squeeze in before or after dinner, before our evening chill time and it’s like an exercise session, just trying to get all the things done at the end of the day when I’m the MOST swollen and mentally and physically exhausted from trying to be normal all day!

I wanted to share these thoughts today not only to vent but to warn you, that if you’re considering plastics and you’re a fairly or very independent person, it WILL test you! There will be so many things you just can’t do and you have to throw your hands in the air, say okay, choose acceptance, remind yourself 100x that you chose this for yourself and just TRY to find an inner peace with your lack of abilities. For me personally I am a very productive minded person, I mentally reward myself daily with how many things I can get done in a day and I LOVE being busy, busy and productive working on my 100 goals everyday.

Photos of author 1 day post op with 2 drains.

Recovery has forced me to STOP, to just stop everything. I had paired down my google calendar of my own responsibilities for the first 7 days post op. When week 2 rolled around and my normal full calendar was in front of my face but my body and mind were like “Wait a minute, I still feel like a wounded critter with zero energy and stamina, I can’t do all that!”…I had to re-evaluate. And again, being someone who loves productivity, it kinda broke my heart to realize I had to take another week off from doing the things I enjoy doing.

And in that moment, about day 8, it sunk in and I had all these thoughts:

What if I need more than 2 weeks?

Is that okay, can all these projects wait, can I still meet my March and Q1 goals if I take even more time off? (I am after all a brand new indie author who released her first book 3 weeks ago and I’m solely responsible for promoting it, link here on “How to Start a Successful Freelance Career” if you’re interested! On sale now for just $2.99!!!)

When can I handle returning to my normal life?

How long will this recovery REALLY take?

Why is it taking SO LONG?

And then I have to stop and remind myself why I’m here. I’m here because I had weight loss surgery in 2010 and had a device put in my body (the lap band) to prevent me from over eating to try to take back control of my miserable life in my mid 20s. My weight loss journey was slow and I’d progress for a year then plateau for a year but over the course of 13 years I lost 130 lbs, gained back 30 and maintained the 100 lbs weight loss and was left with a very saggy apron stomach and ripply inner thighs that were a constant reminder of how much fuller my body used to be.

Me in 2010 at 315 lbs at 25 years old and next pic is me pre-op plastics/skin removal surgery, 230 lbs at 39 years old.

So after losing my first 50 lbs I knew I’d want a tummy tuck someday because I personally carried a lot of weight in my stomach, while my butt and thighs were large but also a lot of muscle. It took me many years to realize and accept (and a good scale) that I carry a large muscle mass and not only will I never be 115 lbs, but I’ll also not even ever be 160 lbs because my body isn’t built that way. All my essential stuff in my body (everything excluding fat) comes in around 170 lbs. So my goal weight to maintain has almost always been 190-200 and for some people that is their max weight or before weight. At 230 lbs I wore a size 14 in jeans.

As time went on I knew I’d love to have a thigh lift as well. Finally in 2023, I set out to do everything I possibly could to make this dream a reality and I’d do BOTH at the same time. I had my first plastic surgery consult actually in October 2022 and found out they thought I was a good candidate even though I was a “mid-sized” and wore a size 14, I didn’t have a desire to be a ton smaller. I knew if I lost another 20ish pounds that I’d be happy with that forever. And I wasn’t sure how much my extra skin weighed so I was ready to take those steps.

My plastics journey involved initial excitement in the fall of 2022 and getting really motivated and then the loan I was hoping to get for it didn’t pan out. I worked on my credit and in mid 2023 reapplied and it was approved but they said they couldn’t actually “issue” the loan until 30 days before the surgery and I hadn’t booked it yet so when I went to do that the soonest they had available was November 2023 (that didn’t interfere with my gardening season, something I do as a hobby but also a Youtuber and you can find my gardening Youtube channel here if you’re curious, I also share my plastics journey there!)

woman in a dress and a film camera hanging on her neck
Photo by Hatice Baran on Pexels.com

So I went ahead and booked that appointment but when it was 30 days until my surgery we checked back with the loan company and suddenly they could no longer do the loan. To say I was devastated was an understatement. I mean this is something I’d wanted done for 10+ years and it felt like the wheels were finally in motion but then I kept hitting road block after road block. Finally, by the grace of God and many tiny miracles, we had the funds without a loan to pay for my $12,000 surgery in March 2024. When we couldn’t make that Nov surgery date we rescheduled back then and rescheduled for 3/6/24 so the fact that the funds needed hit our bank account on 3/4/24…yeah, miracles!

person jumping on seashore during golden hour
Photo by Oleksandr P on Pexels.com

The doctor pushed my surgery to 3/8/24 due to his own schedule which was fine by me but nonetheless, here we are and that was my bumpy journey to get here. So when I have those moments of sitting around feeling frustrated and damn near pissed off that I can’t put on my own shoes…I remind myself (and my husband reminds me) of everything I went through to get here, how bad I wanted this, how much I love my results already, etc.

Day 17 post-op, after having the final drain removed this was day 2 of being able to wear a compression garment around my waist which helped greatly to reduce the swelling in my stomach. As I began to see the results, this eases a lot of the negative thoughts.

I didn’t just have a tummy tuck, I had a tummy tuck/skin removal (they removed 7 lbs of skin & fat AND mine was more invasive because my incisions wrap around my hips and go TO my back before it stops), it isn’t just hip to hip or like a c-section scar. I also had major muscle repair because my abdominal wall had split, I had my thigh lift where he removed 2 lbs of skin and fat and then he removed 6 liters of fat from my legs and hips to smooth out my legs to get the best results possible for my thigh lift. So, when you do the math, 6 liters of liquid fat equates to 12 pounds!!!! This guy….removed 12 lbs of fat from my body…via liposuction, that I didn’t even PAY FOR. You hear me? I paid for a tummy tuck and thigh lift and got a discount for doing both together and he said he’d do “some” liposuction for good results and dude takes out 12 pounds! Color me shocked.

But my point is, from having TWO major surgeries AND liposuction, swell hell for me is just going to be a part of my life for 4-6+ weeks. Had I merely had a regular tummy tuck, I’d likely be feeling pretty normal now at day 20. But that isn’t me and I have to remember to not compare myself to others on socials who had plastics, because just because they had skin removal too, if they didn’t have all 3 procedures like me, we are not the same.

Me in my truck on day 19 driving for only the 2nd time feeling super impressed by my much slimmer waist, or “snatched” as the kiddos are calling it these days! I don’t think at any point in my life I remember seeing the seat belt so clearly or visibly…so this is a major none scale victory for this former chubby girl. You can see I’ve still got thick but also swollen thighs and that is to be expected but as much as I love my results, I know I’ll always be a mid-size, thick woman and I have come to finally LOVE my body type and feel like removing the excess skin is getting me to where I wanted to be post weight loss.

I want to point the importance of not comparing yourself to others online because there is a weight loss patient influencer I follow on IG who had the sleeve done 2 years ago and lost 270 pounds (yeah, holy wildness, right!) and on the exact same day as me she went in for surgery also but she had a tummy tuck REVISION, thigh lift REVISION and arm lift. So this was her 2nd or 3rd surgery and the main goal was her arms but she had small revisions done to the other areas. And I’d follow her stories everyday relating to her pain, moods, progress, etc until about day 10 when she got much more mobility and her swelling was down and she was on the road to feeling normal again. I beat myself up mentally for a good few days before venting to my husband. And he was quick to remind me not to compare my journey to anyone else’s and so I just want to share the same advice here.

If you’re in my shoes and you’re having major surgery, even if you’re only having one procedure done…it’s encouraging to find like minded community on socials but remember to NOT compare your recovery to others. Listen to your doctor, listen to body, be gentle with yourself and show yourself grace always. Our bodies are wonderful machines, meant to heal, meant to thrive and if we just follow the post op instructions of staying hydrated and getting ENOUGH movement, our bodies will do the rest!

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xoxo,

Elizabeth Richey

About the Author: Elizabeth Richey, living and thriving in rural Arkansas, Aquarian and iced coffee enthusiast. When she’s not writing, gardening, playing with her chocolate lab Maple or sharing videos on YouTube (Elizabeth’s Many Adventures) you can find her enjoying time with her family or traveling somewhere new! Most of the time she’s dreaming of being kicked back in her hammock in her cottage garden listening to the birds sing. 

The author pre-surgery when she felt normal and what she can’t wait to get back to! <3

Categories: Fitness, Wellness

5 Easy Ways to Get More Movement in Your Life

Here are 5 easy ways to get more movement in your life. They say that “at least 150 minutes per week of moderate-intensity aerobic activity” is recommended to life a healthy lifestyle and maintain a healthy heart. I’ve got 5 easy ways to get more movement in your life, that are easy to fit into any fast paced life! That is the curse of our modern advances isn’t it, we have progressed so much that we do and move less physically. So let’s be more mindful about the value and FUN of having more movement in your life!

photo of woman wearing pair of black nike running shoes
Photo by Dominika Roseclay on Pexels.com

A Daily Walk

I’m sure you’re thinking “Oh yeah, just walk” but I really feel like people under-value a good walk. We hear all the time about how running is good for us and people running a 5k or half marathon are “so healthy” but that isn’t what I’m talking about here. I’m talking about just walking laps around the exterior of your house, walk up and down your neighborhood street or walk to town.

man in gray hooded jacket walking on gray bricks pavement
Photo by Lukas Hartmann on Pexels.com

The space around you whether you live in town or in the country, in a home or an apartment building, is going to change what options you have. You could always hop on a treadmill but if you don’t already have one, then it isn’t free and therefore it won’t be easy to start. But you can put on some comfy shoes and just get up and go outside, weather permitting.

For me, even just a 15 minute walk outdoors in natural sunlight can dramatically boost my mood! You will feel your back and thighs begin to loosen if you’re used to sitting behind a desk all day. Whether you are counting miles or steps or not, if you just made an effort to walk around outside for 15+ minutes, it would definitely be a good benefit to your quality of life!

Mini Exercise Bike

Another easy way to get more movement in your life; this one might sound silly to you but I feel like this little mini exercise bike would be more activity than you’d get with out it. Maybe?

Images from Amazon.com

Some of us have desk jobs and if you also work from home you could find yourself stuck in a desk chair 6, 8 or even 12 hours a day. If you make it a priority to go take a walk, that’s wonderful. But if the weather is cold or rainy or maybe you just have 5 minutes before a conference call and you’re feeling pint up, try this!

It’s so small and can slide right under your desk, it’s very affordable on Amazon, for less than $50! You can get one on Amazon in this link here! For such a small investment up front, I say get it to have as a good option. You can stay in your desk chair, maybe spin while on a boring zoom where they don’t need to see you or you’re just there listening but not speaking. It would be considered minor cardio but would definitely get your blood pumpin’ and be good for you!

Park Further Away

I think this is a tip that dieters have been sharing for years and after 14 years of living this practice myself, I have to share it. Park further away, quit circling the lot looking for the closest parking spot to save you 20 ft of walking and this is an easy way to get more movement in your life.

top view photo of cars on parking lot
Photo by Kelly on Pexels.com

Why? Why are we so concnerned about saving ourselves 20 feet coming and going? Are you in THAT much of a rush? I mean…if you don’t WANT to walk 20 feet…I’m going to bet you’d probably really benefit from it, as we all would. I like to park in the back half of the parking lot although not all the way down there because my kids complain about it. But then you’re just adding more and more steps to your day, doing the same thing you were already there doing but yet getting MORE movement in your life!

Pick up your Groceries Yourself

I know that curb side pick up has become a life saver and time saver for a lot of us post-2020!

family doing grocery shopping
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But if you have been doing pick up orders for 1+ years now, do you ever think about how many physical steps you’re missing out on in your life by not doing it anymore?

Imagine this, you used to go grocery shopping once a week and you’d walk around the store on average about 45 minutes gathering up everything on your list. For the average person that is 5000 steps and around 2 miles of walking!!!! Okay think about it…

If you did that weekly for a year you’d be getting:

2340 minutes of activity a year

or 39 hours of activity a year

by walking 104 miles to get your groceries around the market

Think about how much that adds up! Ever since you QUIT getting your groceries yourself, you’ve given up 104 miles of walking per year that you were probably getting before! And granted if you were more conservative and got groceries bi-weekly you’re still looking at 20 hours of activity and 50+ miles of movement in your life! Go back to it! Do like I do and use the Walmart app all week to track what I need and make my list because it also saves my favorites and all items bought. Then I just GO and get groceries myself unless I have a particularly time crunched day.

I know you’re probably busy, we all are and it’s such a curse of our current culture and “progression” but if you can make the time on a Saturday with your kids or maybe go alone as me-time…add that activity back to your life!

Have a Dance Party Every Day

Likely another under-rated option…a solo or partner dance party!!

man in white dress shirt and blue denim jeans standing beside woman in white long sleeve
Photo by cottonbro studio on Pexels.com

I recently added this to my life in the last few month and every weekday morning it gets my day started out on the right foot! I opt to do a solo and private dance party when I’m getting dressed and doing my make-up for the day. I use ear buds and have a playlist on my phone of hype music that have positive lyrics, amped vibes and always makes me feel HAPPY and energetic!

I dance around my room to 3-4 specific songs each morning as I get ready and even after I’m dressed, I’m just vibing out with myself in the morning. When I end I’ve almost started to get a sweat on and I’m ALWAYS in a good mood! Give this one a go and comment below and let me know what your favorite hype song is, I’d love to hear from you!

I hope you’ve enjoyed this article and if so why not give me a follow or subscribe, as I’m always sharing more about great places to eat, Airbnb recommendations, traveling, health tips, recipes and more! Thanks for the read!

If you’d like to read my personal story, you can find it here!

xoxo,

Elizabeth Richey

About the Author: Elizabeth Richey, living and thriving in rural Arkansas, Aquarian and iced coffee enthusiast. When she’s not writing, gardening, playing with her chocolate lab Maple or sharing videos on YouTube (Elizabeth’s Many Adventures) you can find her enjoying time with her family or traveling somewhere new! Most of the time she’s dreaming of being kicked back in her hammock in her cottage garden listening to the birds sing. 

Categories: Wellness

Top 3 Self Care Tips for Mental Health

Elizabeth R

A lot of us have experienced situations lately that have made us curious about what the top 3 self care tips for mental health would be! I have discovered over the last 30-something years that we just really have to take care of ourselves. If we don’t fill our own glass, we have nothing to pour from.

Long, hot, relaxing baths!

a romantic setting in the bathroom
Photo by Taryn Elliott on Pexels.com
drink and candles in bath
Photo by Ioana Motoc on Pexels.com

My #1 tip in the top 3 self care tips for mental health has got to be long, relaxing baths. If you haven’t had a really relaxing bath, maybe you’ve been doing it wrong. I like the get the water really hot but some people don’t love that. Don’t underestimate the value of “funness” of bubbles. I always use my bubble baths because it just feels more luxurious and like you’re not there just to bathe. Epsom salts are also wonderful because they benefit your skin and mood!

If you keep even a single candle in your bathroom, it really makes a difference for the mood or vibe of a relaxing bath. I love to read in the bath as well but you could also listen to an audio book on your phone! Imagine that, propping it up and just relaxing into the bubbles while enjoying the story!

person reading book on bathtub
Photo by cottonbro studio on Pexels.com

I think the reason a bath can be so beneficial is because usually we unplug from technology. Also the dim lighting from having a candle lit and the main light off sends some kind of signal to your brain. Maybe it is reminding us of the calmer days before electricity or it reminds us of the darkness just after a sunset.

Also, warm water relaxes your blood vessels so this can actually allow blood pressure to drop. This creates a calming affect by either restoring you to a normal blood pressure or by reducing you to a lower blood pressure like you’d find when you meditate and everything slows down in your body.

Meditation

woman meditating beside her dog
Photo by cottonbro studio on Pexels.com

I could write an entire article on why meditation is wonderful for you so here I just want to sing it’s praises as a wonderful way for self care. In today’s modern fast paced world we all spend so much of our day plugged in, tuned in, talked to and at and we’re overloaded and over-stimulated. Meditation starts out solely beneficial as a moment to unplug and just sit and be with yourself and see what is happening in your brain.

Then it is even more beneficial when you learn how to calm your brain and make sense of the circling thoughts you find within. You can sit as pictured above or even just kicked back on your bed but the importance is what you hear. You either want to hear nothing, silence or use a specific meditation track.

Meditation tracks can have specific sound waves and frequencies to bring on specific moods or feelings of calmness, love, healing, etc.

woman meditating in the outdoors
Photo by Oluremi Adebayo on Pexels.com

By using this time to calm down and tap into ourselves, we can do a mental check in. As soon as you silence the outside world, your inside world will begin to yell at you. Before you know it you’re going over grocery order lists, what did you forget to do, who do you need to call, etc. Once you calm those thoughts you’re left with your own inner musings and questions to life.

This is where we can reach a calm space and begin to either dissect or just enjoy what we see, hear or feel inside ourselves. With more practice you learn to get calmer, deeper, faster. With more practice you learn whether you need to have a moment of peace within or if you want to seek the answer to a burning question…and how to do both.

The reason meditation is one of the 3 top self care tips for mental health is because it teaches us the control we have over our minds, our thoughts, how we talk to ourselves and even our unconscious thoughts and decisions. You learn how to take the power back from your most important organ.

And by learning how to tune out the outside world and tune into you, you learn to listen to what you need to relax and to feel recharged. It is completely mind mending relaxing when done properly and can be as efficient as a 15 minute complete mood reset, once you know what you’re doing.

Learning how to set healthy boundaries in relationships and enforce them.

man people woman sitting
Photo by Ron Lach on Pexels.com

This is a hard lesson for a lot of people and a good majority of people think that others having boundaries could be them being rude. Not only does it have to do with HOW you choose to enforce your boundaries but it also depends just how to interact with people.

If you have a lot of people in your life constantly asking for favors and you always say yes but you know you are being taken advantage of, you may start trying to say no. Which, if this is you, then saying no probably isn’t that easy for you. But so say you finally do it and those same users are going to think you’re being rude or mean all the sudden because your behavior pattern changed. It isn’t rude at all to stand up for yourself and refuse to do something you don’t want to do. But to someone who has never heard you say no, it can be taken as rude.

It is important we have healthy boundaries in our most intimate, close relationships because these are the ones who should love us enough to want to have healthy boundaries and not do things to hurt or use us in the first place.

photo of man lying on bed while reading book
Photo by Lisa Fotios on Pexels.com

For you setting a new healthy boundary in order to take better care of yourself may just be that from now on you’ll practice saying no when a friend invites you out when you’d rather stay home.

It could be that you have a co-worker always saying super rude things to you and you decide to finally bring it up with your boss and document it.

Or it could be that you have a really toxic relative who always manages to make you feel like crap for whatever reason and you choose to unfollow them on socials and just take a break from seeing or talking to them. I think social media breaks are super helpful because it gets us out of that same thought pattern about someone or something for a bit and helps us to refocus on things that matter more.

I hope these tips were helpful and you give them a try!

If you’d like to read my personal story, you can find it here!

Please do follow my blog or subscribe to my newsletter to be notified when I share new recipes or health & fitness tips! <3

Xoxo, Elizabeth

I’d love if you’d subscribe to my newsletter to get updates on new articles!

About the Author: Elizabeth Richey, living and thriving in rural Arkansas, Aquarian and iced coffee enthusiast. When she’s not writing, gardening, playing with her chocolate lab Maple or sharing videos on YouTube (Elizabeth’s Many Adventures) you can find her enjoying time with her family or traveling somewhere new! Most of the time she’s dreaming of being kicked back in her hammock in her cottage garden listening to the birds sing. 

Categories: Fitness, Wellness

5 Things to love about Samsung Galaxy Watch

I used to think a smart watch was just another tech thing for “techie” people to “stand in line” for and so I pretty much ignored them the first few years they were on the market. But today I’m sharing 5 things to love about Samsung Galaxy Watch! Eventually I was upping my own health and fitness game and came across some recommendations for a smart watch! And I never looked back!

I’ve been wearing my Samsung Galaxy Watch now for about 5 months and in that time I’ve learned so much about myself, my routines and habits! I’ve also been able to use that information to IMPROVE all of those things!

I highly recommend the Samsung Galaxy watch and you can find it here on Amazon!

Exercise Tracking

One of the top 5 things to love about Samsung Galaxy watch is how great it is for exercise! If you already have a fitness routine then you’ll love how much the Galaxy watch can compliment it! OR if you’re like me and were hoping to ADD fitness to your life then the watch will be a huge motivator! As seen above, it can track all sorts of workouts. During the work out it monitors your heart rate. After you add your health profile, it’ll let you know what ranges are good for you!

There are so many types of workouts you can do and track. For me personally I’ve used the walking, running, yoga, dancing and weight lifting and it’s super easy! Another thing I love about this is the app on your phone gives you a daily and weekly overview of how much you’ve worked out that week! You can set daily step goals as well as daily activity minutes goals.

Above is a look at my week last week of light exercises! It gives you a nice overview and then a total for the week. I like this as it helps keep me mindful of how active I’ve been throughout the week.

I highly recommend the Samsung Galaxy watch and you can find it here on Amazon!

Convenient with alarms, texts, codes, etc.

Although I don’t respond to texts via my watch, when I get on eit’s easy to say “Ok” from my watch. I have also taken calls from my watch time to time when I was away from my phone. Or if my hands weren’t free and a call came in and I could easily accept on my watch screen. Watch calls just sound like it’s in speaker mode!

I also am the type to have a lot of alarms set throughout my day to remind me of numerous work things. So those popping up on my phone are very handy! I also have the “I AM” app setup on my phone to share positive affirmations throughout the day!

I highly recommend the Samsung Galaxy watch and you can find it here on Amazon!

Sleep Tracker

The 2nd best top 5 things to love about Samsung Galaxy Watch is sleep tracking! Not to sound too dramatic but I think this sleep tracker has changed my life! We all know that we need to be getting 7+ hours of sleep per night and most of us don’t. I am not too bad about that but I am really bad about keeping a consistent routine. Some nights I go to bed at 10pm and other nights 2am so you can see how this affects my routine and amount of sleep.

The watch tracks how many hours you sleep, all your sleep cycles, time in bed vs. time asleep, REM sleep, deep sleep and an overall sleep score. If you sleep too little or too much, your sleep score is lower. It has been really eye opening for me. It helps remind me that even if my score isn’t great, that I need to put more effort into being consistent!

I highly recommend the Samsung Galaxy watch and you can find it here on Amazon!

Stress level

This watch has the capability to measure your STRESS LEVELS! The watch photo above shows that you can see a snapshot of the day on the watch. But since the screen is small it can be hard to see. The other image is a screenshot from my own app for this last week. This has been so eye opening for me. Prior to me quitting vaping in September 2023 I would have never guessed I was such a stressy person.

When I quit vaping, I had so many moments of high stress and near panic attacks. I had just started using the watch a few weeks prior and so I began keeping an eye on it. You can see from my screenshot that I am still experiencing stress and it affects me daily. I have been able to resist returning to vaping, which was my go to tasks before if I was stressed. I have been working the last few months to catch when I feel this way and find new positive ways to deal with stress.

With meditation each morning and you can see the nice bright green section in the morning. But I’m trying to figure out what is triggering these red spikes! Nonetheless, I think this is a very handy tool! You may be like me and have underlying stress that you’re used to. You might not even know that you’re doing it. It’s good to find out if we are experiencing stress so we can reduce it because stress causes illness, diseases and premature death.

I highly recommend the Samsung Galaxy watch and you can find it here on Amazon!

Other stuff; body composition, cycle tracking and water tracking

Some other cool functions include menstrual cycle tracking, body composition scan and water tracking.

The cycle tracking is very interesting, you can add the date of your last cycle and then it’ll give you warnings or alerts for your ovulation week and a few days count down up to your cycle. You can log symptoms too if you want.

The body composition scanner supposedly scans yours wrists, obviously I’m curious as to the validity of this feature, and then it tells you your body fat %, pounds of muscle, % of water, etc. I’d like to think it is accurate-ish but the body fat % is off by like 9% compared to my scale in my bedroom. Still, even if you don’t trust it as super accurate, I can attest that as you low weight the figures do change and update!

I highly recommend the Samsung Galaxy watch and you can find it here on Amazon!

If you’d like to read my personal story, you can find it here!

Please do follow my blog or subscribe to my newsletter to be notified when I share new recipes or health & fitness tips! <3

Xoxo, Elizabeth

I’d love if you’d subscribe to my newsletter to get updates on new articles!

About the Author: Elizabeth Richey, living and thriving in rural Arkansas, Aquarian and iced coffee enthusiast. When she’s not writing, gardening, playing with her chocolate lab Maple or sharing videos on YouTube (Elizabeth’s Many Adventures) you can find her enjoying time with her family or traveling somewhere new! Most of the time she’s dreaming of being kicked back in her hammock in her cottage garden listening to the birds sing. 

Categories: Family, Fitness, Food, Wellness

Welcome to my world

Welcome to my cozy corner of the web! I want to start out this new home online by sharing with you a little bit about myself and why I was motivated to launch this blog in the first place! I’m 38 years old, I’m a mom to 2 biological children and 5 step children, 3 of which are grown and 4 we’re still actively raising, ranging from ages 7 to 23.

My family and I are located in Arkansas on a quaint 6 acre small family farm just a few miles down the road from where my family on my dad’s side settled here 9 generations ago! Our family roots in this community are deep and strong but I did spend 22 years of my life in Arizona living south of Phoenix and loved it! So that time in the desert definitely shaped who I am today!

I love home life and mom life, cleaning and cooking and DIY’ing anything in my spare time but I don’t have much spare time as I’m the classic over-achiever! I’ve been an entrepreneur for 13 years now, working in real estate and finance. I own my own consulting firm that I launched in 2019 and it has happily kept my plate full ever since! But in my spare time I love writing, gardening, redecorating our house for the 100th time, reading, hiking, going on nature walks, playing with our 1 year old chocolate lab Maple or canoodling our adorable barn cats Ernesto and Sterling!

A lot of us get to an age where we decide we need to take better care of ourselves so that we can be healthy grandparents or just feel good in our older years. For me, that concern started when I was in my early 20s, a single mom to two little boys and morbidly obese, as seen below.

So in 2010 after much research and inner turmoil, I had a bariatric (weight loss) surgery to help me lose weight. At the time my children were 4 and 6 years old and I was only 25 years old so I wasn’t sure if I’d ever have more children so I opted for the lapband surgery as the band itself is adjustable. Which means, they could remove saline from the band to allow me to eat more if I were to get pregnant, so I could have a healthy pregnancy. Plus all other weight loss surgery options then were newer and very invasive and very…permanent. So I went with the band.

It looks something like this!

My journey with my health, weight loss, healing, personal discovery and self love is such a long one I actually wrote a book about it, but have yet to finish it! Keep an eye out for that in 2024! But I’ll sum up my journey and say, I took me 13 years to lose 130 pounds. My weight loss was very slow, I’d sit at a weight for 1-2 years before I’d progress another 10-15 pounds. In the process I was tackling a lot of inner demons, working on myself and breaking bad habits one at a time. I knew this had to be a slow, permanent lifestyle change for me. I learned how to actually cook, learned about nutrition and exercise, learned how our body actually functions on the inside (still learning more on that all the time actually), I quit sodas in 2010, quit cigarettes for vaping in 2016, quit a monster energy drink addiction in 2017, quit sweet tea in 2019 and finally quit all nicotine (vaping) in 2023 ending a 20 year addiction!

I learned a lot about myself during this time but the biggest thing I learned was that I LOVED being active! I became an athlete for the first time in my life, completing my first 5k in 2011 and my first half marathon in 2012! I also picked up Tennis and wasn’t too bad at it, fell in love with hiking and exploring and just haven’t quit! Then in 2016 I started yoga and that lead to daily yoga for 18 months which was the most transformational time in my life! I happily call myself a yogi and a hiker, because these things make my soul happy!

In 2019 when I cut out sweet tea, I lost an additional 30 lbs from where I had been sitting for a good 2 or 3 years and that put me down at my lowest I’ve ever been! The pictures below are me at my lowest and I was there 12-14 months. I honestly don’t expect to ever be this size again as my band was really tight during that time and I don’t believe I was consuming enough calories to actually BE HEALTHY.

For reference, here is where I am today in late 2023, 50 pounds heavier! Hint, I had all the fluid removed from my lap band in December 2019 and I immediately began gaining because really I hadn’t become more mindful, the band just hardly ever let me eat and that’s how I got down to my lowest weight. Above I was not exercising, I was not eating well, I was not taking care of myself. Within 3 months I had gained 50 lbs!!!! I know, shocked me too! And then I’ve been working to lose the same 10 pounds for the last 3 years, literally! But by working I mean not really working but just mad about it all the time and unhappy in my clothes although NOT hating myself because I have a lot of grace for this body after all we’ve been through!

The difference is that where I am today is an “almost 40 year old” woman, the number on the scale no longer matters to me and my ultimate goal is physical fitness and internal health as well as mental health! And so I’m starting this blog 45 days after starting a new lifestyle change with myself where I’m actually tracking my food, protein, water, sleep, steps, exercises, etc. I started a powder vitamin I add to water daily to make sure I’m getting all my nutrients since my lap band restricts how much I can eat, I set a goal to eat 100+ grams of protein per day to build muscle and burn fat, I’m doing yoga, strength training and walking daily! My steps have gone from 1500 a day having a work from home desk job to now meeting 8000 per day since I walk 2 miles a day!

So my goal for this blog is to share not my journey but rather the tips I learn along the way that could help you too! I want to meet you where you are and if you’re here because you came across a research article comparing Samsung wearable or because I shared an amazing low-carb, family friendly recipe…then welcome! I’m glad you’re here! I feel like in order for each of us to be well rounded and really taking care of all parts of ourselves, we need to remember the mind, our inner peace and that inner happiness! So I’ll be sharing tips on ways I discover that make it easier to be mindful, how to be present, the benefits of meditation, apps to use, etc. And I hope you find it all so interesting and useful that you subscribe to my blog and the email list and enjoy every article I post! Please do comment on an article if you have a question, insight, encouragement or love to give!

Thanks for being here!

You matter!

xoxo,

Elizabeth

Hi there! I'm a 38 year old mom who is constantly striving to find the balance between physical fitness, health, enjoying good food, quality time with my family and remembering to also take care of my self and inner happiness! I'm here to share tips from the good days when I'm able to strike that elusive balance!

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