Overindulged this summer? Gabriela Peacock - the woman credited with getting Prince Harry in shape for his wedding has a solution.
I have always found September is a much better time to kickstart a new health plan than January. The change of routine as everyone goes back to school and work means a change of appetite feels genuinely appealing too. It has been a summer of indulgence for many and, after a challenging year, who could blame us for overdoing it on holiday?
Fish and chips on the beach, ice creams, sweets on long car journeys and too much to drink. I’ve been reminding my clients that there is nothing wrong with treating ourselves over the summer, or indeed celebrating the bank holiday weekend, but with September fast approaching now is the time to reign in the nightly rosé, sort out our sleep patterns and reintroduce some balance into our diets.
There are, of course, many ways to approach a health kick. I favour a gentle approach rather than giving clients (or myself) an immediate uphill battle by ditching whole food groups. Here are my tips for a simple September health reset to help you look and feel better for the season ahead.
Make fasting work for you
Intermittent fasting is both eminently achievable and really works. The 16:8 approach involves eating within a window of eight hours each day – and fasting for the other 16 hours – and is an extremely effective way to lose weight healthily. Fasting lowers inflammation and helps improve the rate of cellular repair, so it’s helpful for rebalancing all sorts of things in our bodies, from auto-immune disorders to chronic pain, injuries and fatigue. It also boosts immunity by giving the body a bit of a shock, which is helpful in the lead up to winter. Unlike crash diets that are hard to maintain, it’s also very sustainable. All you need to do is pick your eating window.
Work out what is most likely to suit your routine and your energy levels. For instance, do you struggle to get by without breakfast, but don’t find you need much dinner? Perhaps 9.30am to 5.30pm would work for you. Or if you think you can last until late morning and want to be able to eat dinner at a normal time, 11am-7pm might work better. There is no additional calorie counting, you just pick your window and avoid eating outside those hours.
You can choose to eat three small meals in the eating window, or two larger ones. Just try to keep the window the same every day as routine is helpful for balancing out the body’s processes.
Try to keep it up for two weeks and see how much better you feel.
Cut alcohol down to a once a week treat
Just practising intermittent fasting will help you lose weight and start to feel better quickly, but if you really want to make a difference, you’ll need to make changes to your diet too. That doesn’t mean restricting yourself hugely; small tweaks can go a long way.
Prioritise Protein
When fasting, balancing your blood sugars is really important so you don’t have energy peaks and crashes. The best way to do this is to include a portion of protein with every meal. Don’t just have a piece of toast for breakfast, have it with an egg or some smoked salmon. Fish, poultry, eggs, avocados, nuts, cottage cheese ‒ adding some good protein to every meal will ensure your blood sugar doesn’t spike, leaving you buzzing for an hour and crashing soon after. Have a balanced breakfast, and you won’t be craving carbohydrates two hours later.
It’ll also help you sleep better if you have some protein at dinner time, par-ticularly if you opt for the kinds of protein rich in the amino acid tryptophan, like cottage cheese, poultry and chickpeas. These are particularly good as they boost our serotonin, which then creates melatonin which helps us sleep better.
Increase the amount of variety in your fruit and vegetable intake too. Aim to eat the rainbow ‒ blueberries with their fibrous skins, filled with antioxidants, red peppers, broccoli, kale. A range of colours will increase the number of phytonutrients (the chemical compounds present in fruit and veg) in your diet, which is great for immunity. It’ll also inevitably increase the amount of fibre you’re consuming too, which will help to support good gut health while also keeping you full for longer.
If you can, cut out booze for a couple of weeks as it plays havoc with sleep and it is full of sugar and empty calories – if you really want one drink, have it as a treat once a week.
Our liver cleanses our body but it does need nutrients to do so efficiently, so if you have been drinking lots over the summer months, up the antioxidants in your diet to give your liver a boost.