Lunch & Learn Topics 2013

Stress Management

Wellness and you

All about Nutrition

Healthy Aging

Successful Weight Management

Sleep Disorders

The 5 smartest things you could ever do

Getting Active

What you don’t know will kill you

Self-Care and using Personal Health Records

How to Read Food Labels

Fitness Assessments

Stand-up straight or else (posture assessments)

Office Ergonomics

Counting Calories-the key to weight loss

Mini-health day: BMI, waist circumference, blood pressure

Holiday eating-how not to stress out and over eat

How to build a home gym

Busting Through a Weight Loss Plateau

10 Most Effective Exercises

Exercises for Sexy Arms

How to Start a Fitness Plan

Family Health-simple changes go along way

7 Deadly Workout Sins

Top Workout Tips for Beginners

Getting Back on the Workout Wagon

Selecting and Effectively Using Home Weights

 

Other topics are available for HR, training and safety

Do you take “before” pictures?

Do you take “before” pictures? If you answered yes, I am curious to know if they motivate you in a positive way or make you feel worse and defeated.

I know many people love the “before” picture technique, but I personally felt humiliated by this approach. Below is one of the many torturous before pictures I took.

I clearly remember taking this picture. I hated every moment of it. I forced my husband to take it and complained the whole time that he was doing it wrong. “Make sure to get my whole body in it”, I nagged.

The whole experience was so painful. I felt like I was being stabbed in the heart.
As you can see by my facial expression, this was a low moment for me. I hated my body and I hated that I hated my body.

Looking at it now, I see that my body is not the problem, it was my mind that was holding me back and keeping stuck.

I thought I could motivate myself through punishment. I believed if I was grossed out enough by my belly, thighs and butt, then I would be able to finally stop the yo-yo dieting madness.

It was the same tactic I used with the scale. I thought if I was disgusted enough by the number on the scale, I would finally muster up the willpower to drop the pounds.

My actions were in perfect alignment with Einstein’s definition of “insanity.” I was “doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.”

Many of us do this on our quest for permanent weight loss. Some of us try the same diet over and over again. The one that we lost weight on at one point, only to gain it back a few months later. Others of us join Weight Watchers multiple times. Many of us try different weight loss diets looking for the perfect one to finally solve our problems.

I have done all of these things and more.

Breaking the “insanity” pattern required me to give up my old ways of thinking. I needed to move away from trying to motivate myself through body shame and disgust, and learn to listen to my body’s true wisdom.

Once I finally got it, I have never looked back.
I realize I don’t have a “perfect body”. Like most women, I have cellulite and stretch marks. What I do have is peace of mind and trust in my body. My weight is stable without ever having to diet.

I have found the easy, natural space between being overly restrictive and eating out of control. I no longer struggle and I want the same for you.

Are depressed and frustrated by your dieting failures? Please know it is not your fault. The weight loss industry is a big trap that many of us get sucked into when we are teenagers or even younger.
If the path you are taking leaves you feeling miserable, it is time to find a new road.

Reach out. I am here for you. With love- Michelle

P.S. Are sick and tired of wasting your time, money and energy on the same dieting “solutions” that have failed you over and over? Don’t waste another minute of your precious life. I want to offer you a path to total transformation without struggle.
michelle@michellebailen.com

HCR Final Rule on Workplace Wellness Programs

The Affordable Care Act (ACA) includes provisions to encourage appropriately designed, consumer-protective wellness programs in group health coverage.

Effective for plan years beginning on or after Jan. 1, 2014, ACA essentially codifies the existing HIPAA nondiscrimination requirements for health-contingent wellness programs, while also increasing the maximum reward that can be offered under these programs.

Changes for health-contingent wellness programs include an increase in the permissible reward for meeting a healthrelated standard to 30 percent of the total cost of employee-only coverage (or 50 percent, if the program is designed to prevent or reduce tobacco use). Download the newsletter

Water Conservation Tips

Water is one of the most basic and vital resources for sustaining life. Despite this, or perhaps because of it, water is often overlooked both in terms of availability and as a driver of household expenses. According to the EPA, each American uses an average of 100 gallons of water a day, and the average household spends as much as $500 per year on their water and sewer bill.

Those costs are likely to increase further in the future. A 2012 report by USA Today found that water rates have doubled in more than a quarter of 100 surveyed municipalities over the last 12 years, and industry experts predict additional increases in the years ahead.

The higher rates are being driven primarily by scarcity and improvements to water infrastructure, which the American Water Works Association estimates will cost over $1 trillion by 2035. Download newsletter

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