At least 90% of my clients say, “Eating healthy takes too much time.” With four children under the age of eight, I get it. What I’ve learned, and teach my clients, is that eating healthy can be simple, and comes with a variety of benefits, including:
maintaining your weighthaving boundless energysleeping like a babyhaving clear mental focuslooking and feeling good!
Here are six simple strategies to start eating healthier today:
1. Eat the same breakfast every day.
Find a breakfast you like and stick with it. That way, you always have the healthy ingredients on hand. Plus you don’t waste brain power thinking about breakfast every day.
For example, I always have ½ cup of gluten-free oats with ½ cup blueberries, 2 tablespoons unsweetened-shredded coconut, 1 tablespoon of maca and 1 tablespoon of chia seeds with a drizzle of pure maple syrup.
2. Set one day of the week aside for meal prep.
Every Sunday I prepare:
two salad dressingsquinoa, black beans and garbanzo beanshomemade hummusraw vegetables (cut them up)chili or stew
Meal prepping saves so much time for future snacks, lunches and dinners, because much of the work is done. With the dressing already made and the vegetables washed and pre-cut, it takes just as much time to make a healthy, hearty salad as it does to get McDonald’s on the way home from work.
3. Keep your snacks easy and veggie.
Snacks don’t have to take a lot of time. Some examples:
grapes and walnutscelery and almond butterbaby carrots and homemade hummus (already prepared from prep day)rice cakes and avocado
4. Drink a daily green smoothie.
Green smoothies are chock-full of nutrients and antioxidants making them a healthy addition to any diet. What’s also incredible about these super-shakes is that they only take minutes to prepare.
Also, green smoothies last all day if you blend them in the morning and store them in a mason jar. Take them to work with you. Add a few sprouted almonds and you have a healthy lunch.
5. Prepare batch meals for the week.
Always think ahead for your upcoming dinners.
For example, if you’re making grilled chicken, brown rice and broccoli for dinner, make extra. That way you can use the extra chicken and brown rice in a healthy chicken enchilada casserole for tomorrow’s dinner.
If you make stuffed quinoa red peppers one night, make extra quinoa to serve under the chili or stew you made on prep day.
6. Double your dinner for easy next day lunches.
Always prepare more food for dinner than you need. That way you can pack it up for lunches the next day in no time. This keeps you from succumbing to fast-food with your co-workers over lunch.
All you need is a little focus, planning and organization.
Photo Credit: Stocksy
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Mariah Dolan is a physical therapist specializing in sports medicine and rehab, a certified personal trainer, a group fitness instructor, a female fat-loss expert and weight loss coach. She’s also the author of the book the Busy Mom’s Guide to Lasting Health & Weight Loss: A Step-by-Step Guide to Losing Weight While Feeding Your Family Whole Foods They’ll Actually Eat.
Her own struggles with an eating disorder, weight loss, and motherhood sparked her life’s purpose: to help busy moms incorporate healthy habits into their everyday lifestyle. Mariah has been training clients for the past 14 years and is dedicated to helping women everywhere see how radiant and energetic their lives can be. She believes in taking small actionable steps towards healthy goals in order to create lasting results. Click here to get your free copy of Healthy Fat-Blasting Secrets.