In Diet, Health, Nutrition, Weight Loss, Wellness

From jjvirgin.com

 

You endured a two-hour dinner, your kids are loudly playing X-Box, your husband is snoring on the La-Z-Boy, and you’ve completed your culinary duties with a perfect 20-pound organic turkey.

So what to do now?

If you’re like most people during Thanksgiving, you slip back into the kitchen to “clean” and nosh on seconds… and thirds… This initiates the holiday-season binge that carries through New Year’s Eve.

Thanksgiving is like Christmas minus the gifts, excitement, and festive décor. After feasting on a decadent three-course dinner with red wine and dessert, boredom can quickly kick in.

Don’t succumb with food. Put the leftover triple-layer pumpkin pie back in the fridge (trust me, someone will eat it) and replace eating with these suggestions:

  1. Take a nap. You get sleepy from eating too much, so stop blaming the turkey. Relieve post-meal drowsiness with a short snooze. One study showed that a 30-minute nap promotes wakefulness, enhances performance, and improves learning. It also guarantees, for a little bit at least, that you don’t go face-down in leftover maple cheesecake with roasted pears for a mid-afternoon snack.
  2. Get your brain going. Flip off the blaring TV and go old school with classic board games for entertainment. Scrabble or charades challenge your mind so you’re not thinking about that leftover apple crumb cake your mom made. If you’d rather stimulate your brain solo, crossword puzzles or sudoku make smart ways to distract you from the kitchen’s siren call.
  3. Take a long walk. You sit a lot on Thanksgiving: while eating, browsing online for after-holiday bargains, watching football… A brisk walk breaks that sedentary behavior and gives you an excuse to get some fresh air and (at least for a while) escape the overwhelming extended family. One caveat: you’re not going to burn enough calories walking to earn that second piece of pie, so don’t use that as an excuse to subsequently pig out.
  4. Play, don’t watch, football. Unless it’s pouring, snowing, or otherwise inclement weather, you have no excuse not to enjoy the great outdoors on Thanksgiving. (And no, I ate too much apple crostata is not a valid excuse.) A fun game of touch football provides a fun way to let off familial tension (you know about that, right?) and burn some fat while you are at it.
  5. Email or call friends and family who impact your life and thank them. A study in the journal Psychiatry showed people who kept a gratitude journal experienced high well being compared to the other two groups who wrote about neutral or negative experiences.  In the frenzy of food and festivities, we forget Thanksgiving was meant to, well, give thanks. Make your own gratitude list. Remind your family and friends who’ve gathered how much you appreciate them. And surprise someone who’s shown you kindness with a thank-you phone call or email. You’ll feel great, with no lingering regrets like you’d have with that second piece of caramel pecan pie.

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