Tag Archives: healthy living

Healthy Living in a Toxic World – Episode 3: The Power of Adequate Sleep

In this episode of Healthy Living in a Toxic World, we talked to Dr. James Maas, author of the NY Times Best Selling book Power Sleep who has been researching sleep for over twenty years. In this episode Dr. Maas offers up tips for why sleep is essential for our energy, overall health, and optimal performance.

In this episode we discuss:

  • Is it a good idea to take naps?
  • How sleeping plays a role in our success
  • The connection between sleep and weight loss
  • What diseases can be avoided by getting a good nights sleep
  • What is REM sleep?
  • How sleep affects our performance in work and life in general

& More! Tune in and don’t forget to share!

Podcast Episode 2: Plant-Based Diet

Episode 2 of Healthy Living in a Toxic World has been live for a week now, hope you have caught it! It was a real honor to have the opportunity to interview Dr. T. Colin Campbell, author of the China Study, and Founder of the T. Colin Campbell Center for Nutrition Studies at my alma mater Cornell University. You may have also seen Dr. Campbell in awesome plant-based focused documentaries such as Forks Over Knives.  Dr. Campbell and I discussed the wide range of diseases that can benefit or be healed just by switching to a plant-based lifestyle. One of the most interesting nuggets I took from our conversation was the origin of the protein myth. Dr. Campbell mentions that this idea that we need excessive amounts of animal protein actually started after a study on dogs (not humans) was published in the 1800s and showed that the animals were weaker with a lower consumption of protein. Crazy huh?

As you may know, as a nutritionist I believe in bio-individuality and that we all need to find the unique balance of foods that work for our bodies. That said, I do believe that EVERYONE can benefit from eating more plant-based foods, and eliminating processed foods. Take a look at your diet today, and see how you can add in more organic fresh fruits and vegetables whether it be including smoothies, juices, fresh salads, or additional sides.

To listen to the full conversation, subscribe to the podcast on Itunes, Spotify, or Google Play. Links below 🙂  -XO Esosa E, MS AKA Raw Girl

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IG TV Episode 2: 5 Reasons You May Have Acne

Are you vegan, gluten-free, only drink rain water, and can still not figure out why in the heck you still have acne? This one’s for you boo. Welcome to Health Bytes!

There are many reasons why acne can happen, but most people focus on acne as an external issue and don’t think of acne as a warning sign. Acne usually points to a underlying issue with your digestion, elimination, your diet, hormones, and sometimes the balance of microorganisms in your gut. You may have what in your mind is the PERFECT diet, but still can’t beat the blackheads. Here’s a few reasons why:

  1. You eat a lot of processed or packaged foods, or fried foods. Consuming foods with dead oils and high in trans fats that are processed can cause breakouts for some of us, because everyone has different levels of sensitivities to food. Even if your bff can wolf down fries and maintain her blemish free skin, it may not last for long and could lead to a much more serious health condition. If you are sensitive, consider it a blessing and stay away from foods with excess oils, stabilizers, chemicals, high fructose corn syrup, and other fillers.
  2. You have some underlying elimination issues. The colon is literally our bodies’ sewage system. In order to keep our skin clear we need to have regular bowel movements. the colon needs to be clear enough to process waste and toxins out of the body. If you are only having one bowel movement over the course of a few days — it’s a sign that you are constipated and need to drink a lot of additional water. To calculate how much water you need, a good general rule of thumb is to divide your body weight in half and drink that amount in fluid ounces, not to exceed 125 fluid ounces.
  3. You May Have…Parasites! A lot of people don’t know this, but some acne or skin breakouts can be caused by parasites. Parasitic infection is usually a sign of an underlying root cause or health issue sometimes related to leaky gut, for example mercury poisoning, candida overgrowth. DO you have fatigue, or a visible white coating on your tongue? It may be time to figure out what’s really going on and get the buggers or candida out of your system.
  4. Last but not least: Stress and hormonal imbalance can cause acne. Remember when you were a teenager and everyone said not to worry about your acne because your raging hormones caused them? Well when we get older and still have acne, that’s no longer an acceptable answer. SO now what? Well if we are stressed out, and our cortisol levels are consistently high, our body stays in fight or flight mode,  and we can eventually wear out our adrenals, and throw off the balance of progesterone and estrogen in our body. If estrogen levels get high, we also may breakout, or have an imbalance that manifests itself in other ways such as fibroids, endometriosis etc. in women. Moral of the story is that acne can be affected by more than diet alone. If you do the work to figure out what your acne is trying to tell you about your body; you’ll be able to stay blemish-free and keep that natural glow! -XO Esosa E, MS AKA Raw Girl 

 

 

Healthy Living in a Toxic World – Episode 2: The Benefits of a Plant Based Diet

In this episode of Healthy Living in a Toxic World, I spoke with Dr. T. Colin Campbell, author of the groundbreaking and best selling book The China Study who has spent more than 70 years researching the connection between diet and disease.

In this episode we discuss: 

  • The core benefits of a plant-based diet
  • Myths and misinformation about protein and where it all began
  • Diseases that can be prevented or healed with a plant-based diet
  • What nutrients need to be supplemented on a plant-based diet
  • What foods turn on cancer cells?
  • Is B12 deficiency really a big deal on a plant-based diet?

& More!

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All New IG TV Show: Health Bytes!

Hey lovelies! 2019 is here, and I’ve got more new content for you. Hopefully you’ve already subscribed to my new podcast, and yesterday I also launched the first season of my IG TV show Health Bytes! If you do not follow me on instagram, head on over to @therawgirl and hit follow so you can keep up with the weekly episodes. Each week I’ll also be posting the transcript from the show, here on the blog. Please send in comments, questions or topic ideas for season two, I would love your feedback. -XO Esosa E, MS AKA Raw Girl

EPISODE 1: The Dangers of Health Fads

OMG have you tried keto yet? What about the low fat or low carb craze? If you can’t keep up with the latest health fads and are overwhelmed with the massive amounts of contradicting information out there, this one’s for you boo! Welcome to Health Bytes!

I’m not sure if you noticed but every year there’s a new health fad being pushed as the latest way to lose weight, stay healthy, OR to binge on a bunch of foods that aren’t so great for you. Whether it be the keto craze, the myth that fat is bad for you, or the obsession with low carbs, following health fads can miss the mark for several reasons. Let me break it all the way down for you :

TO start, the problem with health fads is that they are usually about getting results quick and not about maintaining your health or longevity. I get it!  We live in a YOLO society, but when you are 80 and have heart disease, you may regret the years you spent on an Atkins diet. At the end of the day, healthy living should not be a race. and the diet we adopt should provide us with immediate health boosting benefits as well as supply adequate nutrients to keep us healthier as we age. Of course, you diet may adapt as you age to accommodate your bodies’ needs, but following a fad can set you up for building a nutritional foundation that is on shaky ground.

Another problem with fad diets: they are not personalized and do not account for specific conditions. I personally believe in bio individuality. We are all uniquely designed and have specific genetic makeups. It’s incredibly important that our diets take those factors into consideration, and also provide the right balance of nutrients to help us heal if we have a specific disease or imbalance. Our diets should be individualized, and should also include some of the healthiest versions of ancestral foods based on where our families originate. When we keep some of the good foods our fathers father ate before us, we are maintaining nutrients in our diets that honor our genetic makeup.

Last but not least, one problem with adopting health fads is that when the craze is happening, there is rarely adequate evidence based research to demonstrate the full repercussions the diet may have on your health long-term. When we get so focused on the immediate short term goals of weight loss we can sacrifice more important aspects such as cardiovascular health. We all know several health fads that were all the rage; only to find out years later research has debunked them as myths. I’m sure you know of the low fat craze which swept America, only to find out later that healthy fats are incredibly important for maintaining good cholesterol and heart health. For instance, research studies have recently shown that low carb diets that are high in animal protein actually decrease longevity.

The moral of the story? Before you jump on the latest health fad, think twice and do your research. It’s a much better use of your time to consult with a nutrition specialist one on one and build a lifestyle that is tailored to you and includes a balanced intake of protein, complex carbs, and healthy fats.

I’m Esosa E. Clinical Nutritionist & Founder of rawgirltoxicworld.com, until next time, your wealth is in your health!

 

New Podcast Alert!

Happy New Year 🙂 I’m really excited to hail back to my radio days and launch my podcast Healthy Living in a Toxic World, now available on iTunes, Google Play, and Spotify! In this podcast, I’ll be bringing  you weekly conversations with health experts, longevity Sheroes and Heroes and insights on your mental, physical, and emotional health. Season one was recorded awhile back but has some serious GEMS! Guests include incredible experts like Dr. T. Colin Campbell author of The China Study, Dr. James Maas New York Times Bestselling author of Power Sleep,  Victoria Moran @mainstreetvegan Author, podcaster and founder of Mainstreet Vegan Academy, Mimi Kirk former PETA’s Sexiest Vegetarian Over 70, Bernardo La Pallo who at the time of interview was 109 years old  & more!

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The Art of Creating Healthy Rituals

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If you spend any time studying the world’s most successful and productive people or high performance athletes, you will discover that they all have many things in common. One specific common denominator is the ability to create and maintain healthy rituals that allow them to maximize their time, energy, and focus throughout the day. What is a ritual? Rituals are essentially habits that we can create and repeat over and over. What can make a ritual special is that they can become sacred. Just as religious ceremonies perform certain rituals, the daily actions you take over and over consciously or unconsciously are also affecting your daily life. When you take control and create rituals that feed your soul, you take better control of your destiny. Below are some steps to help you begin on your path to establishing rituals that feed your mind, body and spirit.

Baby Steps. You may have a very clear vision in our mind of who you want to be. The healthier version of you exercises every day, loves juicing, and is a meditation junkie. The reality is though you may be starting with getting in 1-2 workouts a week, 5 minutes of meditation, and simply remembering to eat our vegetables. Rather than get overwhelmed by how far you are from your grand vision, it’s important to begin where you are and take small actions. Start by writing down that grand vision –who you want to be at your best in all areas, and then make very small actionable goals that you can do daily for each. If you want to make time for meditation maybe you begin with 5 minutes, and then slowly increase in increments until you reach your goal.

Push through resistance with preparation. This is also known as stop saying YES to your excuses. When we are trying to make major changes, it can be easy to listen to that voice in our head that seems to come up with every and any excuse to not follow through. The hardest part of changes is pushing through resistance and showing up, until we get results. That may mean going to sleep in you workout clothes so you can roll out of bed in the morning and hit the gym, setting meal prep days on the weekends so your nutrition is on point during the week, creating a healthy snack drawer at work so you don’t give in to office sweets. Very often when we live a life that is ritual-free we are used to being at the mercy of our circumstances. Creating rituals empowers us, and preparation helps us honor the goals we set one day at a time.

Create accountability. We all need different levels of accountability to have success and you may think you can go it alone, but by doing so you may being doing yourself a disservice. Why? The power of minds in agreement is real, and it’s important to work with someone who knows more than you in a specific area so that your actions can be more effective. Every seen someone desperate to reach a goal and trying everything and anything, expending all their energy only to burn out when there is no progress? Take that same person and give them a mentor or coach who has achieved or knows how to achieve the goal and they almost get a “shortcut” blueprint to reach their goal faster, calmer, and with more laser focused energy. Accountability can also be created by including others in your ritual. Maybe you go with friends to yoga regularly, or set gym dates with your bff. Bringing others along makes you more likely not to forget and also makes the experience a social one.

Set Reminders & Notifications. In order for a ritual to become one, you need to repeat it often. That means scheduling in time daily or weekly, and making sure you show up nine times out of ten. When you start to prioritize your rituals and write them down in your planner and set notifications on your phone, you are more likely to remember to do them in the first place, and start hardwiring your brain to make it a habit.

Tracking & Journaling to Assess Impact. Tracking can feel tedious for some, but for others it serves as a gentle reminder of our success or failure with implementing new habits. It doesn’t have to be boring, as now there are apps on the iPhone to track almost anything from water intake to mediation. You can also make tracking fun by using gold stars or stickers in your planner. Make it festive so that you are celebrating the small daily wins. Beyond tracking, even more important is really taking note of how our ritual is slowly shifting our lives. One amazing way to do this is to journal daily and note any changes in the flow of your day, emotions, and overall energy. This allows you to look back and review how your new ritual is improving your life and gives you positive data to support continuing it, or adjusting to better suit you.

Choose Rituals that Bring Your Joy. Part of the way you can create lasting rituals is to actually incorporate things in our lives that you love to do. Your ritual should give you more energy, peace, or add to your emotional, physical, or spiritual wellness. As you practice them, it’s really important to stay completely present and focused on the joy they bring you, and in the space of gratitude that you have taken time out for yourself.

7 Simple Weight Loss Tips

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It’s almost Christmas!!! Hope you and yours have a merry one, and also managed to avoid starting the New Year with an extra ten pounds to lose added to your resolutions. Weight loss and weight maintenance can at times seem very daunting because there is a plethora of information out there on the topic. Between fad diets, weight loss success stories, and the wide range of experts claiming to have solutions weight loss can start to seem overwhelming or confusing. In my clinical practice I see clients daily struggling with weight loss and maintenance, and these are some simple tips that can help you stay on track.

  1. Eat Breakfast Daily. A common mistake many people make when they are trying to lose weight is to skip meals. Although it seems logical that if you eat way less or next to nothing at all you will lose weight, that is not the case. When you are undernourished is your body thinks you are starving and conserves fat. By starting the day off with a balanced breakfast (which can be light) we give our body essential nutrients it needs and help to prevent overeating later in the day.
  2. Weigh yourself at least once a week. Don’t go overboard with this, but monitoring your weight at least once weekly can help you stay on track and make sure you are not unconsciously gaining weight after all of those holiday parties! When weighing yourself try to do it first thing in the morning before meals and at the same consistent time. If you weigh yourself more than once a day you may notice that in the evening or after meals you weigh more which is natural. It’s ideal to only weight yourself once and not get too caught up in the natural daily fluctuations that happen with additional water and food.  
  3. Watch less than 10 hours of TV per week. Reducing the amount of sedentary in your day overall can go a long way to improving weight maintenance and helping with weight loss. Long hours of TV watching is not helpful for many reasons. In addition to the fact that it is a sedentary activity, you may find that while you are watching you also eat. When we eat in front of the television, we tend to overeat ad be less conscious of the portions of food we are consuming. During TV programs there are also multiple advertisements for fast food which can lead us to crave less than healthy foods. If you are going to watch TV for long periods, try exercising while you watch so that you are moving towards your weight loss goals and burning calories.  
  4. Exercise every day, or at minimum two to three times per week. Wellness guru Jack Lalanne once said “Exercise is King. Nutrition is Queen. Put them together and you have a kingdom.” Regular exercise is essential for weight loss, maintaining healthy weight, and remaining youthful. Research has shown that those who exercise regularly are sometimes 10-20 years younger than their non-exercising counterparts.
  5. Use a food activity / diary or log.   Tracking your food and activity keeps you accountable for your health goals. Sometimes we can over or under exaggerate our health habits, but when it is clearly written down we are faced with the truth of our habits and can more easily make adjustments to help us reach our goals. The great news is there are many apps that can assist with tracking including Lose It! And My Fitness Pal. If you are not an app person, you want to use good old fashioned pen and paper to log your meals and that works too!
  6. Choose a low calorie eating plan. If you are trying to lose weight you may have heard that calories matter. Although the quality of the food you consume can also help encourage weight loss, it is important to be aware of quantity. But where do you start? A simple way to find out what calorie level to work for you is to calculate your basal metabolic rate. There are many basal metabolic weight calculators online and all you need to input is your age and height. You’ll want your calories to remain somewhere between 500-1000 above your BMR depending on your activity level. The best way to receive professional guidance on this is to see a nutritionist or dietician who can create a plan for you.
  7. Limit fast and processed foods.  Consumption of processed food derails your progress and speeds weight gain. When we eat whole nutrient dense foods we avoid refined sugar, refined flours, and excess sodium which increases inflammation and lead to weight gain over time. It’s been proven that the less you eat out the less likely you are to gain weight and you can eat larger quantities at home and lose weight than you can at fast food or restaurants. When we eat fast food the other issue is that our body does not actually receive the nutrients it needs to function optimally, so we don’t get the internal cues to stop eating. On top of that, most processed foods are scientifically designed to make us crave more of them! The added sugars and salt become addictive, but the food does not satisfy our daily nutritional requirements.

 

Healthy Living in a Toxic World – Episode 1: The Ageless Woman

In this episode of Healthy Living in a Toxic World, I speak to Annette Larkins a living longevity expert, also known as “The Ageless Woman” about what incorporates in her diet and lifestyle to stay ageless.

We discuss:

  • How a genetic background for disease can be trumped by lifestyle
  • The importance of a positive mindset for staying ageless
  • The raw food diet and what kinds of supplements help contribute to staying youthful
  • Her personal health journey that led her to a raw food diet
  • Annette’s top tips for living a long healthy life
  • Important lifestyle habits to help you stay ageless

& More…

5 Ways Toxic Work Environments Can Damage Your Health

 

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Finding work that you love and are passionate about seems easy, until you discover that even if you do find it, in the professional world, you may still have to navigate work environments that can be extremely toxic. Unfortunately, there are many people in positions of power in professional environments who use their position to abuse, shame, belittle, and micromanage their employees. The worst kinds of bosses, can terrorize their team, leaving them in a state of fear twenty-four seven. It is really important to take stock of your work environment and really assess if it is doing more harm than good to your peace of mind. If you are in a toxic environment remember that you can either choose to stay, or choose to plan your transition. But it is a choice, and you do have the power to find an environment that nurtures your professional growth and allows for peace of mind. Below are some ways that toxic environments can damage your health. If you are wrapping up this year and any of these points sounds familiar, you may need to start planning your glorious exit to a healthier work environment for 2019! -XO Raw Girl 

Depletion of adrenal hormones or lead to stress related diseases. Unfortunately, many people when faced with environments, co-workers, or bosses that make their daily work extremely difficult choose to stay in those situations for years, only to later find that they have gained weight, have hypertension, or other serious chronic health conditions. After staying in a situation where there is repeated stress, your body is eventually going to try to get your attention by producing dis-ease. This is why it is extremely important to note how toxic environments can slowly erode your health, and take immediate precautions if you believe your situation warrants it.

Create Addictions to Negative Emotional States. Over time, if you stay in a toxic work environment you may get addicted to having a bad day. Do you notice that you are always complaining, grumpy, on edge, and nothing seems to be able to snap you out of it? This may mean that over time after repeated experiences that were unpleasant, your mood has now become a personality trait. How do we change this? Well of course you can start looking for other work and planning your exit, but you can also do inner work that slowly changes how you relate to your work environment. This means spending quality time each day with some of mindfulness practice or meditation. Remember you cannot control what happens to you, but you can control whether you respond or react. Mindfulness starts to help us respond and create new ways of looking at the world around us with increased empathy.

Can contribute to a feeling of apathy or paralysis. There’s almost nothing worse than apathy, or that feeling that negative experiences in an environment have literally sucked away any desire you have to contribute. The worst kinds of toxic work environments are the kind that reward subpar behavior and push back against innovators, or employees who want to make positive changes and shake up the status quo. In any high growth and dynamic company culture, usually the opposite is the same, innovators are given the opportunity to flourish, and there are clear and integrated rewards for employees who go above and beyond the call of duty.

Toxic environments can normalize shame and erode self esteem. Some supervisors consciously or unconsciously make statements that undermine your worth as an employee or a human being. Perhaps your boss tries to make you feel bad for requesting pay that is commensurate with your experience, or they consistently make passive aggressive comments about your performance that leaves you edge and never sure about where you stand with the company. If you are in a situation like this, do yourself a huge favor and run for the hills. After coming up with a suitable game plan of course. This kind of management can do real insidious damage because if you stay long enough your confidence may wane, and you may begin agreeing with the statements made, or even if you survive with some measure of self-esteem you may become bitter and this can affect how you interact with others in the company.

Toxic environments tend to bleed into interpersonal relationships, take away from quality of life, and self-care time. Some toxic environments are toxic simply because they do not allow for adequate work life balance. Is your boss always dumping a pile of papers on your desk right before closing? Do you only have time on the weekends to catch up on sleep and grab groceries? Do you never see your friends, take vacations, or engage in social activities after work? You may be in a toxic work environment, or you may someone who needs to reexamine your relationship with work. There are some of us who believe that our work is our worth and the busier we are the more important we are. Not the case. Living in the land of burnout should not be badge of honor, so it’s important to make sure you are not neglecting your health, self-care, or relationships which are a part of the overall measure of a balanced healthy life. If you are in a toxic environment, setting healthy boundaries is going to be key and having difficult discussions with your superiors. Is it important to work hard yes! But to have all of your evenings taken away and no social support, eventually will cause imbalance in your personal life and health status.