Monday, June 29, 2026

Monday Workout: Christmas in June






Last year I forgot our mid-year Christmas observation.  Not this time!  The 12 days of Christmas in June is important!

How it works, for those of us who don’t know or remember:  we do one push press.  Day 1 is over!  Yay!  On Day 2, we do two goblet squats and one push press.  And so on, until we have completed all 12 days.  Yes, I know this means we will have done 42 burpees.  You’re welcome.

 

1 push press

2 goblet squats

3 Overhead press

4 1 leg squats each leg

5 deadlifts

6 burpees

7 pushups

8 renegade rows

9 mountain climbers

10 jump lunges

11 kb swings

12 plyojacks

 

Thursday, June 25, 2026

Wellness Check: 6






A rainbow to eat!

 

1.     Red bell pepper. 

2.     Oranges. 

3.     Yellow squash.

4.     Green beans (or broccoli, or spinach, or asparagus, or any of the other million green veggies)

5.     Blueberries.

6.     Eggplant.

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Wellness Check: Nutrition 2






Anybody who knows me will not be surprised that my favorite technique for good nutrition is planning ahead, since it’s my favorite technique for almost everything.  There are some particularly good reasons to use planning for nutrition, however.

One is that hungry people make less good decisions.  If I plan my meals and have healthy choices on hand, I’m a lot less likely to choose ice cream for dinner.  (It’s a sad reality that once we become grown-ups and can have whatever we want for dinner, we also know that ice cream is not the best choice.  Even when we are stressed out.)

 

Another is that we can incorporate more variety.  When we buy a bunch of different vegetables with an actual plan for using them, it’s a lot easier to “eat the rainbow.”  We can experiment, maybe one night a week, with a new recipe or even a new cuisine.  (You know that experimenting is one of my other favorite techniques!)

 

Meal planning is not rocket science.  It’s definitely a skill, and skills can be acquired.  I’ve been doing it for a long time, so it’s easy and obvious to me, but when I started out, I sometimes planned too much food and sometimes too little.  Nobody died, I learned, and my family eats better than if I just opened the fridge every day and had to figure out what to feed them in the moment.

 

Try it and see how it works for you!

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Wellness Check: Nutrition 1






There is a lot of nutritional advice out there, much of it conflicting.  Worse, the easiest foods to get in our culture are the ones that are not particularly good for us.  This combination, plus the overall busy-ness of our lives, can lead to poor eating habits.  It’s entirely understandable that we don’t eat the best foods for us.  Fast food companies have huge advertising budgets, fad diets make their creators rich, and trusted sources of information are scarce on the ground.

So what should we eat?

 

There are some basics to consider.  We need enough calories in our food to power our activities.  Those calories, ideally, should come from lean sources of protein, whole grains, vegetables, good-for-us fats, fruits, nuts, and seeds.  Those of us who are older, who work out a lot, or are still growing may need more protein than we think.

 

If we are eating a varied diet, our vitamin and mineral needs may take care of themselves.  A multivitamin can be insurance against any lacks, but I’m not going to recommend a whole suite of supplements (they have a big industry behind them, too.).

 

The general principle is that food is most nutritious for us when it is closest to how it started.  An apple, with its peel, is better for us than a glass of apple juice, no matter how organic and free range.  (Yes, I know that apples do not fall far from the tree and thus do not range at all, but it makes me laugh to think of them doing so willy-nilly.)

 

It is also important that our food gives us joy.  There are certainly times when it is absolutely good for us to eat a food that is not the most nutritional choice—celebratory pizza with the kids after a great report card springs to mind, or eating Grandma’s special pie on a visit with her.  The key is to make those choices consciously and occasionally.

 

More tomorrow!

Monday, June 22, 2026

Monday Workout: Newer?





For the round lunges this week, you can choose to do front/side/back or the newer, fancier version:  cross front, front, diagonal front, side, diagonal back, back, curtsy.  Three rounds.

 

kb swings

30

kb twists

20

kb 8x

10

 

 

step ups

30

gorilla row

20

round lunges

10

 

 

opposite knees

30

pushups

20

plank/side plank

10

 

Thursday, June 18, 2026

Wellness Check: 6






Things that will help us sleep well:

 

1.     Turn off the blue light.  That means the tv and all the devices.  At least a half hour before bed time.

2.     Keep it dark.  Either keep the room dark or get a sleep mask.  (I love mine!)

3.     Keep it cool.  Lower temperatures help us get and stay asleep.

4.     Relax.  Some gentle breathing or meditation can help.

5.     Get exercise.  Some people get amped up after exercise, so if this is you, schedule your workout earlier in the day.

6.     Watch the caffeine and alcohol.  Moderation or abstention can help. 

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Wellness Check: Sleep 2






For adults, the ideal amount of sleep falls somewhere in the seven to nine hours per night range.  (It is possible that you are the one special snowflake who really does function well on four or five hours, but I doubt it.  Try getting a little more and see how you feel.  I’ll wait.)

Getting those hours in requires some planning.  I love a good routine, and routines work great for sleep.

 

The first thing we need to do is to set a bedtime.  I know this might make you feel like you are eight and you’re being deprived of watching all the good shows that come on late, but, people, nowadays we watch things on streaming whenever we want, so let’s get over it.  Then we need to work backwards from the time we want to crawl into bed and figure out what time we need to start getting there.

 

Personally, I am a morning person.  I am lucky if my bedtime routine includes brushing my teeth.  When I had younger kids, though, my routine had to include their routines, plus making sure that there was clean laundry to wear.  Some people like to lay out clothes the night before.  Others are lunch preppers.  Make a list of all those things and figure out how long they take.

 

Then you need to be a grown-up and enforce bedtime on yourself.

 

I know.  No fun.  But definitely useful.

 

Tomorrow:  more techniques for better sleep.