So where ya been?

O.K. so I’m still sick and that isn’t my excuse this time!  So where have I been?  Editing, that’s where!

This past month I’ve poured and prayed over the decision to turn these blog postings into an eBook.  I want to make sure I have the right intentions and that the end result will be something useful to others as well.  In the process of reviewing this past year of New Hope Beyond Lyme on WordPress, it became clear that my followers enjoy messages that are particularly encouraging to persons recovering from a serious illness.  Matters of faith generate the most comments and I’m pleased for that.  To Him be the glory!

I did some research on various publishing formats and have decided to proceed with a no-cost eBook format where I can do virtually all of the formatting of the manuscript and cover art myself.  I have a lot to learn about all of this, for sure!  Lyme Disease will be prominent in the text since the treatment of Lyme was my primary focus for most of this past year.  But the take home message won’t be about a disease . . .

The truths borne out of the trials, struggles, illness, and strife these past two years have once again served to strengthen my faith in the Lord Jesus Christ.  About a year into this season of illness, I began blogging to keep myself sane!  Now looking back over this past year of blog posts, I am grateful to write, has actually brought more hope than tears.  I was so scared of everything in the beginning, particularly when the tic episodes began escalating into full-blown seizure attacks.  I didn’t even write in complete sentences most of the time back then.  The crazy thing is that I generally have more hope and peace now when the attacks exceed 3 times per day, than when they were less!  I have the Lord’s work in my heart to thank for that!  He works in amazing ways for sure.

While I am grateful for the gift of writing, keeping my eyes fixed on the Lord through reading His Word continues to be the most important survival strategy for me in this season of life.  The cool part is that I get to look up all kinds of scripture verses as I pour out my heart onto the computer screen.  I do hope, however, that the New Hope Beyond Lyme eBook will never be a replacement for a fellow sojourner opening His or Her Bible.  Reading a verse here or there in a blog or eBook, on a Facebook Newsfeed, in the signature line of a friend’s email, Tweeted, or in a Pastor’s message is not as valuable as soaking up God’s Word in our time alone with Him.  We can’t dwell in His presence, linger before the throne of grace in the same amount of time it takes to hit, “delete!”  His grace requires a bit of time to reach our weary souls . . .

I do hope, Gentle Reader, that your own faith in God and in the person of Jesus Christ has grown as you have joined me on this journey.  I was reading today in the first chapter of 1st Corinthians where the apostle Paul teaches how we come to understand God through faith and not through an intellectual discourse.  We choose to believe that Christ died on a cross for our sins so that we may become forgiven for our sins, right-with-Him, and begin an amazing spiritual journey rich with meaning as sons and daughters of the King.  To receive the blessings and the promises of a relationship with God through the person of Jesus Christ requires faith.  If we have faith in Christ crucified, it will make a difference in our lives for all of eternity.  That will help us cope with virtually anything, today and tomorrow.

With the testimony of God’s Word as my witness, I submit to you that only with a personal relationship with the Lord, Jesus Christ will any of the stuff we endure in this life make any sense at all.    If we do have this sweet fellowship with Him, the lover of our souls, all of this stuff will be worth it.  And for me, all of this suffering will be worth it as well.  I would not be writing anything if I had not gotten sick two years ago.   Nothing I write will make any difference either if it doesn’t point someone, somewhere to something more than recovery from an illness.

How humbling that Lyme Disease may be used for good.  Such is the, “new hope beyond Lyme,” after all . . .

 

Potato Chips Made Me Better

Did you know that Detroiters eat an average of 7 lbs. of chips per year, as opposed to 4 lbs. in the rest of the country?  If it’s true, it must be due to the Better Made

Better Made Potato Chips
Better Made Potato Chips

snack company that has dominated the potato chip market in Michigan since it began in 1930.  As for me, I can say that these chips made me happy as a kid growing up in the Detroit area.  When I would walk into my grandparents’ home in the country on Lake Columbia, my eyes would quickly scan the top of the refrigerator.  I knew it was going to be a good visit if there was a family sized bag of Better Made potato chips up there!  The same was true at home, especially if there were any left after my dad had already snarfed his evening share of chips with a bowl of chocolate ice cream.  Yes, it’s genetic.   My family loved potato chips!  (I recommend the folded, slightly browned ones with the extra trapped salt and crunch!)

Flash forward a few decades and even today, a chip has the power to make me happy!  Of course I can’t justify the simple carbs and canola oil combination of Better Made potato chips on my special diet so I had to find a replacement.  Let’s see, if there was a crunchy treat that had relatively low salt, 4 grams of protein, 5 grams of fiber, no sugar, 14 grams of carbohydrate, and all non-GMO ingredients, would you go for it?  Well I checked them out and found my new favorite:  Beanitos are better and made for me!  The pinto bean and black bean varieties have clean ingredients and no guilt . . . unless you eat more than, say 12 chips!  Better buy a couple of bags or there might not be any left on top of your refrigerator tomorrow!  Or maybe they need to manufacture a Family Size Beanitos too?

Well that’s all fine and dandy but what does it have to do with finding hope while recovering from Lyme Disease?  In my life, having a treat, an escape, is an essential part of coping with the trials and suffering of this crazy illness.  The ingredients in Beanitos barely count as cheating on my protein-oil-vegetable diet!  I thank the Lord for the little things:  round crispy, slightly salty, and satisfying too!

Long before I would crash and burn this evening, paralyzed by seizure attacks with difficulty speaking, moving, and even feeding myself a sip of water, I imbibed in munching on a few chips.  I am grateful for such a simple pleasure as this to take my mind off of the nightly terrors that have been anything but pleasant these past few weeks.  When the health food section of our local grocery store remained sold out of my fav bean chips, I planned to head straight for the health food store as soon as I was well enough to drive.  My delight came today.  Yippeee!  Both flavors were in stock and “jumped” into my shopping basket as I walked by!  Those happy feelings were to fill my tummy once again.

God’s Word teaches us:

14 Therefore, since we have a great high priest who has ascended into heaven,[f] Jesus the Son of God, let us hold firmly to the faith we profess. 15 For we do not have a high priest who is unable to empathize with our weaknesses, but we have one who has been tempted in every way, just as we are—yet he did not sin. 16 Let us then approach God’s throne of grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need.  Hebrews 4

Yes.  Once again my Prince of Peace met me today in my time of need.  This day and always He satisfies my soul that cries out for His mercy when I am in times of crisis — and when I need a little treat as well.  Sometimes the little things mean a lot.  As for me and my refrigerator, we will keep a steady supply of crunchy treats within reach a while longer.  As for me and my house, under the spiritual leadership of my husband and best friend, we will serve and wait on the Lord.  In all things I am truly blessed.

Extreme Diet Survival Strategies

Extreme Diet Survival Strategies

By

Julie Horney MS, OTR/L

            As you embark upon your new diet or nutrition plan, you might feel at times like the television shows that create a new home or body through an extreme makeover!  Well, if this is the new diet that will work for you, it’s possible that many things in your life will undergo an extreme change too.

Choose to trust the process of transformation and know that you are not alone!  I am not writing this as a nutrition expert, just someone who has experienced the rigors of what feels like an “extreme dietary makeover.”  I am writing these strategies to encourage you that you can do it!  The challenges and victories associated with an unfamiliar food plan will stretch you and grow you in ways that will likely benefit others in the future.  In the end, you will be:  glad you tried something new, have new skills you never knew existed, and understand the powerful healing chemistry of food.

Each of the tips below will help some folks and not others.  Take what you like and leave the rest.  These Strategies refer to “you” and this is intended to include a loved one if you are using these guidelines as a caregiver of another person.  Thank you for helping him or her!  Further, these ideas are in no particular order and in no way are to replace the advice of your healthcare practitioner.  These guidelines should not be considered medical advice!  I share them as a fellow sojourner on the path to better health and to encourage you on your own, unique journey.  YOU CAN DO IT!

Know that your schedule must change in the beginning:  this will likely be time consuming for awhile.  This new food plan could save your life or the life of your loved one!  If he or she was in the hospital, your schedule would change drastically.  So please consider asking for help if needed to keep essential daily activities going and to cut out the rest for at least 2 weeks.  It may be longer.  These new skills will take time to develop and the adjustment to a totally new nutritional plan could take weeks or months.  Things must change to ward off exhaustion, frustration, and illness of the primary caregiver.  You are giving yourself or your loved one a great gift.  You might be surprised that the adjustment won’t be as long as you think it will and some “normal” activities can return to the schedule sooner than you think.

When you make your decision on which diet to follow, gather together as many of the supplies and ingredients you need as soon as you can and before starting.  This is especially helpful if your plan requires say, less than 30 foods/fats/seasonings in the beginning, so you don’t get too hungry and quit.  Even if you must order ingredients online (www.amazon.com, www.walmart.com, www.vitacost.com), get them on the way to your house.  It may take weeks or months to find local resources and the cheapest places for each item on your list.  You will find them!  It’s all part of the natural learning curve.

In the beginning, consider simply posting the new diet plan on the refrigerator or kitchen cabinets to get you and others in the home familiar with everything more quickly.  The person on the new plan will benefit from having specific information written down and easily accessible.

Consider posting a snack list on the frig or a kitchen cabinet for at least the first week or more of the new diet.  Try filling a special basket or brightly colored container with as many food choices as you can as a quick treat.  This also cues others in the household not to eat up the only foods the recovering person can eat AND adds independence besides convenience.  Surprise the person with a new food choice when able, small toy or a note of encouragement/inspirational verse/quote to find in his or her special place.  This is even important if the person is an adult or if it’s for you and you live alone!  Everyone likes a special treat now and then, eh?

The internet can be your friend for:  1) emotional support, 2) resources of information, and 3) places to purchase special ingredients.  Not good on the computer?  Virtually every public library has an adult reference librarian who can help you if you are not a “Googler.”  Most special diet and health protocols have an information and support network on their website or blogging community.  Use them.  Broaden your network online as soon as you are able.  This will help when you are feeling overwhelmed and it is the middle of the night or a time of day when the people you usually go to simply aren’t available.

Follow your plan until your Healthcare Provider or sound advice leads you otherwise.  There will be contradictory information “out there” on most aspects of your diet and health plan.  Don’t get discouraged.  Unless you or your loved one is in a crisis, you must allow time for the new nutrition plan to work.  How long has the person had the health issue?  Consider doubling this amount of time and know that when that date arrives, you will have made some gains, figured out some things to do/not to do, what sources of information are reliable for you, and had some successes.  Virtually everyone benefits from improving his or her nutrition!

Get supportive family and friends involved to help and to keep you on track.  Inform them of your plan and research.  Answer their questions and ask for help with specific tasks and for his or her support to follow the food plan as you have it posted.  Listen to their suggestions if they are offered and offer to take them to your healthcare provider (HP).  By getting a third party involved, the HP, you can help ward off hurt feelings from family and friends when you simply cannot follow their attempts at “helpful advice” right now.  They obviously care and are just trying to help but might not know as much as you or your HP does.  You probably have done more research than the casual commenter.  Thank them and keep moving forward as appropriate.

Drink the best water you can afford whether filtered or bottled.  Filtering your own water is generally cheaper in the long run.

Look for and celebrate the success with non-food rewards!  The meaning of food as a source of comfort, nurturing, requirement for special holidays must change for at least a season of time.  Remember this diet could change a life forever!  Wow.  This new food plan may not last forever either!  We just don’t know at this point and please, “don’t even go there” for now, k?  Sooooo, when there are victories, find a way to rejoice.  Even bottled Perrier tastes like gourmet food when all you can drink is water.  Bon appetite’ in your finest glassware!

Seek special recipes to help you from books, health food stores, local community colleges, online newsletters/blogs, and support groups, etc.  Ask for help by contacting the author of the respective source of info. when needed, especially when you must make substitutions or deletions from printed recipes.  Please don’t be afraid to ask for help.  A year from now you will find great joy in sharing what you have learned to help others too.

With a few basic preparation techniques, you can make most anything taste good or at least better.  This next section offers a few specific (crazy?) ideas where applicable:

For Meats/Fish:

  • If you can cook with oil or fats, rub the acceptable amount all over the meat/fist on your food plan.  Add approved seasonings and a little extra salt (again, only if allowed).  Pink Himalayan or Celtic sea salts are very flavorful even alone.  From here you can either bake it or slow cook it in a covered pan on the stove, searing meat first before cooking it further.  Pepper tastes better if ground and white pepper is milder than black pepper.  Experiment from here.  Even powdered onion/garlic/salt rubbed on meat/fish is a great place to start.   Read all the ingredients in store-bought seasoning mixes and avoid MSG and “natural flavorings.”  (Using oil and healthy fats like real butter enhance flavor, help the meat/fish stay moist and slows digestion to keep you fuller longer!)
  • Ground meats and cooked fish can easily be formed into serving size meatballs and baked for handy meals and snacks.  These also generally freeze well..

For Vegetables:

  • You can add acceptable veggies to the pan of the meat/fist prepared above, coated with the same seasonings.  Just cut up the veggies smaller (1/2” cubes, for example) to make sure they cook at the same rate as the meat.  Root veggies (carrots/parsnips also celery) and greens will take longer.  Add meat or veggie bouillon or non-dairy milks as needed to keep things moist and add flavor.  (Ever cook with coconut milk?  Yum!) 

For Fruit:

  • To make an unfamiliar/low sugar fruit taste better for a picky eater, cut it up and mix it with acceptable sweeteners or other fruits on the plan, let it sit awhile, and enjoy.  Work towards lowering the sweeteners when needed.
  • Puree your low sugar fruits and pour it over most anything as a sauce or topping.
  • Make a smoothie, mixing everything together that sounds good on the daily food list.  Add ice to make it cold and more palatable.  Use liquids on the plan as a base, for example coconut and almond milk.  Even unsweetened “milks” taste good mixed with fruits.  This rocks:  hide supplements or a small amount of fresh green veggies in the smoothie where possible!  Put drinks in an insulated sports bottle for a convenience food away from home.
  • Omit all fruit (and simple carbs) if you are treating a yeast infection of any kind.  Cheating feeds the yeast!  One source advised to do a challenge test after at least 3 weeks away from sweets, by adding back one serving and re-evaluating how you feel.  We can do anything for 3 weeks if it will reduce our misery, eh?

You can steam just about anything just don’t mix meat and veggies together for food safety. 

To make foods tast better: 

  • Use as much salt allowed on your food plan.  Ground pepper too.
  • If sweeteners are allowed, add a pinch to each food item.  For example, a tiny bit of local honey brings out lemon and other flavors more.  I understand that stevia is the only sweetener without a blood sugar impact if yeast is of concern.
  • Where possible, organic cocoa powder, cooking extracts, flavored stevia, or organic decaf coffee crystals are great flavor agents.  Experiment!
  • Vary the oils used to add a new dimension of flavor.  For example, substitute flax oil in dressings.  Heck, use Mrs. Braggs Liquid Aminos instead of vinegar with your oil for a savory dressing.
  • Roasting veggies at high temperatures brings out the natural sugars and makes them taste better on a pan coated with oil.  Who knew that parsnips could taste sweet?

Make more dishes or serving portions than you will need in any given day when possible.  Freeze portion-sized quantities and date/label the baggie or container.  These portions become your new “convenience meals” and can help decrease stress.

  • Freeze soft foods, slightly cooled, in Ziploc-type sandwich bags.  Place each individual bag in a 1-gallon freezer bag or food storage container and place it in the freezer in a designated section for easy access.
  • Separate grain-based foods, veggies, fruits, and meats from each other by placing only food of each type in each 1-gallon bag or larger container.  Label the larger bag or container and grab what you need on any given day!  Mixing it up wards off boredom on a limited diet.
  • Minimize the dangers of bacteria and mold growth in leftovers by freezing portions as noted right away or by making your own frozen dinners in microwave-safe or oven-safe containers.  Remember to label the container please!

You will not likely regret purchasing the best food processor or blender that you can afford.  Almost any food ingredient can be made tolerable when blended with something that tastes good.  For example, add acceptable fruit juice concentrate (reading package labels to make sure you can have all of the ingredients), sweeteners, cocoa, instant organic coffee, whey/egg white/hemp/pea protein powder, salt, etc.  Try this:  chop carrots, nuts, and sunflower or pumpkin seeds together and add to ground meat dishes for increased nutrition and flavor.

 To help with feeling hungry: 

  • Keep protein powders, oils, fats, fibrous veggies (for example kale chips, celery), fiber supplements, seeds, nuts, etc. on hand to stave off hunger.  Consider adding these to your meals where possible to help the meals become more sustaining.  Ever mix organic cocoa with a spoonful of coconut oil and a drop of stevia?  Who knew it could satisfy a hunger craving?  I’ll take mine with organic decaf coffee and no stevia please! J
  • Make a protein smoothie, pudding or no-bake cookie with items from your food plan.  Crazy adaptation:  make a paste of non-dairy milk/yogurt, protein powder, nut/bean flours, pinch of salt, any acceptable flavorings/sweeteners, nuts, seeds, fiber, and any solid fats (like nut butters or coconut oil).  Taste it and adjust as needed for a thick consistency.  Roll it into a log, wrap in waxed paper and refrigerate it.  Give it your own funky name and slice off a chunk when hungry.
  • Mix powdered or liquid supplements into soft foods to make a superfood sauce/dressing/topping without added sugar.  For example, many powdered probiotics and supplements are slightly sweet.  Mix the powder with coconut/greek/almond/plain yogurt and dollop it on a difficult-to-eat food (like cooked greens!).  A sauce or topping can make most anything look (taste?) like a gourmet food!

Always carry emergency food and water with you when you or your loved ones leave the house.  For example, cooked organic chicken apple sausages probably won’t hurt you if stashed in a purse or book bag for a few hours.  Helps to prevent dietary slips and crabbiness!  (Don’t hold us responsible for this one.  Just ask a backpacker about the (organic turkey) hot dogs they pack and survive to tell about it!)

Buy in bulk where possible after you know what foods you use the most and like.  Food spoilage won’t save you any money in the long run!  Packages placed in a large, sealed plastic storage bin generally works well in a cooler garage or basement for dry or non-refrigerated and sealed ingredients when there is simply not enough room in the kitchen or pantry.  Watch expiration dates please and don’t mix old and new ingredients.

Prepare ahead for all special events and social functions.  Give a trusted hostess a  list of acceptable ingredients ahead of time when applicable.  Never assume that your gracious host or the ladies at church/school will really know all the ingredients the recovering person can tolerate.  For example, all gluten-free cookies are not alike!  This is your area of expertise right now.  Thank your hostess for trying to help.

Travel Tips.  Make ahead and freeze serving size portions of foods that are difficult to find on the road.  A well-packed cooler with freezer packs will generally keep items frozen for most of a day until you get to your destination; items will keep for about 2 days if you don’t mind the items partially thawed when you arrive.  Exception:  protect your cooler from a hot car and out of the sun!  I usually go to the grocery store before I reach my hotel or the home of my gracious host to purchase perishable items that will be needed the next day.  This minimizes any potential stress trying to get out and grocery shop when I’d rather be visiting, even if that visiting will be over some special food prep.  Make it fun!

For the car/plane/train:  pack a lunch and dinner in a suitable lunch box to reduce the temptation of going off your food plan when everyone else is grabbing a burger or sub.  (Check airline policies before you get to the airport.)  Remember your treats and keep snack foods, drinking water accessible.  Tip:  request a small refrigerator for your hotel room if it is not already provided.  And as a courtesy when staying with family or friends, let them know about your life-saving nutrition plan before you get there to avoid hurt feelings when you are unable to enjoy meals in the same way you might have in the past.  Your gracious host needs to know if you will require space in the refrigerator or freezer too.

Keep a dedicated notebook or portable electronic device/app to record everything:  grocery lists, snack lists, major symptom changes, new healthcare practitioner recommendations, etc.  It’s just too easy to forget stuff, even the good progress that’s coming along.  You probably want to minimize mistakes and flare-ups; good record-keeping helps track things.  This likely requires keeping a daily log, even if it’s scribbles in a journal, planner, purse-sized notebook or smart phone.  “There’s an app for that!”  Catch up on note keeping when sitting in waiting rooms, riding in a car, etc. and get the recovering person involved too.  Seeing a symptom improve from a “7” to a “3” on a 1 to 10 scale can provide the boost needed to hang in there when the going gets tough.

Please remember:  you are not alone in this journey.  Celebrate that you are doing something to help your health where many would simply give up!  Food is fuel.  Garbage in, garbage out, etc.  This process won’t be perfect and that is o.k.!  Learn from the mistakes and move on.  Keep moving forward where possible.

 

That’s it for now.  Got some of your own victory strategies?  When things settle down for ya, I would love to read them and pass them along to others!  Contact Julie Horney at:  psalm34810@yahoo.com  I am grateful for Cindy Jakacki-Null and Tonya Floyd for their coaching and expertise included in these Strategies.  I invite you to follow Julie’s story by clicking the “Follow Me” button at:  http://www.jesusisforthewounded.wordpress.com

  

P.S. Riddle:  how do you eat an elephant?  (I know, yuck!)  Answer:  one bite at a time.  Yeah, a sense of humor will get you through as well.  We Extreme Diet Survivors  don’t recommend elephant, however!  

:J

 

Too Pooped to Punt? Try Another Way!

When the ravages of illness keeps me from working out, I hunt for alternatives to get my heart-a-pumping!  I recognize that even when we are sick we must keep our bodies moving for the benefits of exercise we all know and to prevent further complications, such as blood clots from inactivity.  This is a constant battle for me these days.  How about you?

In times like these I am hoping that even walking the dog to the mailbox and back counts as physical exercise!  Well, almost.  Exercise at the moment sure takes on a different form, gets performed at different times, and gets done with different strategies fer shure!  For example, twice this past week I got on our elliptical trainer for 10-15 minutes at 2 in the morning!  It actually helped me to relax before bedtime and took the noxious symptoms down a notch that can be worse if I am stressed in any way.  I am very grateful to have an elliptical trainer in my living room just for this purpose!

When I am able to do exercise with a little more intensity, I turn to my garden chores.  Digging in the dirt burns tons of calories but more importantly, it becomes resistive exercise for my lower torso and “lifting” for my upper body as well.  O.k. so I’m not recruiting all of the muscle fibers within the limited range of motion of scooping-and-throwing.  I’m hoping that the diagonal axis of movement actually counts more than the up and down motion of most curls, presses, lunges, and squats?  It’s more like a hybrid exercise that combines the core muscles, upper and lower extremities at the same time, right?

A gal has gotta do what she has gotta do for a time such as this.  That goes for you guys too.  If I have just enough energy on a Monday to lift some weights or re-dig a border around our pine tree, the pine tree is going to see me first!  I just make sure that I use the best body mechanics I can muster during the job, like lifting with my legs, keeping the load close to my body, and so on.  After all, I still am an occupational therapist deep down inside you know and this is the stuff I’ve been teaching patients for years.  The stuff applies to me too and preventing injury is important now when I am more deconditioned than conditioned!

And when that extra measure of energy-grace appears, I do not need a reminder to get out the foam roll, 3-10 pound weights, theraband, weighted bar, or therapy ball.  I still crave exercise!  Gratefully I am able to place these exercise tools within reach in our living room for a quick few reps at, well, 2 in the morning!  As long as it’s a shorter workout, those few reps still won’t keep me from going to sleep.  By the way, like most folks battling Lyme Disease, it’s common to be nocturnal.  The noxious symptoms are the lowest in the middle of the night so that ‘s the time I use to make jewelry for Trinity Jewelry by Design or get my office stuff done too.

I look forward to the time when I can have both a traditional schedule and a traditional work out routine.  Just before my time of illness began on October 11, 2011, I was completing the Metabolic Effects (ME) workout DVD a few days per week, kayaking with my hubby, and our local recreational group and either going for long walks or riding my awesome, custom fitted hybrid, cross bike every week.  I was at the highest level of strength, of fitness of my life at middle age.  Wow.  As I posted in a previous blog about returning to my prior level of fitness, I am Counting on Muscle Memory!  Lord willing, I’ll get back there.  Lord willing, I may even exceed my former level of fitness.  And this is entirely possible if I have less chronic pain in the future.  Wow.   This hope actually keeps me going during the trials of “bothering” to recover from Lyme Disease and Chronic Inflammatory Response Syndrome.  Someday I very likely could be older, wiser, and better than ever.  Cool beans.

I am grateful to my step daughter-in-law, Kate Horney, for introducing me to a way of working out and of eating that has kept me from gaining weight during this time of illness.  She probably didn’t know that I was tracking her work on  Facebook, long before her successful fitness business.  More on that in a moment.  And when I would need to eliminate all forms of sugar in my diet due to Lyme Disease, because of my familiarity with what the ME folks call the fat-loss diet, the transition went smoothly.  Again cool legumes, not beans!

While I had followed a “protein-fat-vegetable diet” many years ago to eradicate a candida infection, the process in the past was very difficult.  I lost a lot of weight very quickly and was weak/shaky/miserable.  Using the ME approach to exercise more recently actually helped control my cravings for carbohydrates because of the hormone-balancing effect of resistive exercise.  This helped when I was exercising more two years ago and it helps now as well because I did not have to go through a rough transition again when eliminating simple carbs from my diet; they were already gone!  I was also already gluten free as well.  To be sugar and gluten-free are both are very helpful in battling Lyme Disease.  The spirochete bacteria of primary Lyme seems to feed off of simple sugars; gluten-laden foods makes everything worse as it can increase inflammation in sensitive individuals.   Wow again.  It’s like the Lord was preparing me for victory two years ago!

For more information on Kate’s work I invite you to check out her website at:  Beyond FitPhysiques.   While her latest book is titled for new moms, I found that it contains incredible weight and fitness strategies that can help all of us ladies who have bodies in transition, hormones adjusting to illness or post-partum changes, and who need a boost to get back on track.  Check out 101 Tips for Post-Natal Fitness and the Metabolic Effects Diet books by using the links under the NEW HOPE FITNESS RESOUCES in the right hand column of this blog.

Just writing this has energized me to do more than I thought I could do earlier today.  Gee Kate, I hope washing the hardwood floors counts too?!  :J

Step-Saving Cooking and Kitchen Tips

Since I have to cook a lot these days while recovering from a chronic illness, I measure every ounce of energy almost as much as every ingredient that goes into each special recipe.  Then again, most of my recipes are hybrid anyways so the “measuring” is with a pinch or scoop of this or that substituted for that or this!

Tis a good thing that I came into this time of illness as an occupational therapist.  I used to teach my patients about energy conservation and work simplification during activities of daily living.  Those terms translate to saving time and energy doing everyday activities.  So allow me to share a few tips that go beyond the Extreme Dietary Makeover Strategies documented earlier.  Those strategies related more to the recipes; these tips relate to the tasks of working in the kitchen including cooking.

Setting up the Kitchen

Keep seasonings that you use often in a cute container by the stove or main food prep area.  For me this contains white pepper, celtic sea salt, marjoram, onion & garlic powders, etc.  The rest are put away in the spice cabinet!

Keep small appliances, water filter devices, and main serving dishes setting out on the counter or within reach when possible.  For example, my favorite pottery bowl in which I eat most meals is on top of the microwave.  Inside the bowl is a matching small plate that I use to serve my supplements and keep them from rolling off the counter and table!  They were made by a favorite potter too, making things a little more special and pretty.

Everything is placed within the “work triangle” between the frig/stove/sink to save steps gathering items, cooking, and cleaning up the kitchen.  This area includes all of the fragrance-free cleaning products, paper towels, trash can, etc. needed in the kitchen.

I only have one dispenser on the kitchen sink and it contains dish soap.  This works well for cleaning hands and dishes when it’s a milder or fragrance-free soap.  This also saves time and money dealing with multiple kinds of soaps and dispensers.  I just refill the dispenser when needed from a larger, economy-sized bottle.

Use paper towels as napkins!  After I made the change, I saved time and money every week that I would have spent re-filling the napkin holder.  Pull out the paper napkins for entertaining.

Use a low-lint towel for drying fruit/veggies to save paper towels or the time spent cleaning a salad spinner.  Or, use paper towels to dry fruit/veggies and let them dry on the side of the sink.  The damp paper towel is then handy when reused for spills, spot cleaning.

The most often used items in a kitchen, from utensils to drinking glasses, should be in the easiest to reach shelves, cabinets, and drawers.  Does the junk drawer really need to be in your work triangle in place of the silverware drawer, eh?

Place heavier serving and cooking dishes in places that you can access without hurting yourself or your joints!  This might mean keeping your favorite cooking skillet that you might use most days, on the stove, ready for use.

My motto for organization is:  the more I can see, the less I have to dig for stuff.  So there are lots of wire shelves and organizer devices in our pantry and upright freezer.

Make sure that there is adequate task lighting over the area where you are using knives, measuring foods, reading labels, etc.  A simple battery-operated light fixture from your local hardware store that has a press-on switch can reduce fatigue, injuries, errors.  Industrial double-stick tape or Velcro adhesive will allow you to put it where you need it without special tools for installation.

Keep supplements and medications taken at mealtimes within reach and within view of the kitchen table where possible as a reminder and step-saver.  Using an attractive basket or tray for each family member keeps things tidy and organized.

If there’s not already a calendar, grocery list, list of emergency-and-commonly-used phone numbers posted in the work triangle, and home phone (or cell phone charging station) consider adding them.

When bringing frozen foods home from the grocery store, reserve a plastic grocery bag or two to help organize items before placing them in the freezer or refrigerator.  For example, bag up all of the packages of ground beef in one bag and loosely knot it with the plastic handles.  Be sure that you can read the package label through the bag or label it with a permanent marker.  When you are ready to use the ground beef it will all be in one place to find it easily in the freezer and of a quantity to provide plenty of leftovers.

Another tip for grocery day:  group all similar items together before putting them away to save steps and time.   You’ll likely store and organize more items efficiently when put away together than stuffing one item at a time into, say, the freezer.

Put a tray under the pet dish to catch some of the spills and drips if it’s in the kitchen area.  Bow wow.  Meow.

Meal Preparation

Use disposable plastic gloves like those that restaurant workers use for meat preparation and messier food items.  Simply turn them inside out as you take them off and throw them away to keep everything sanitary.  This saves time and avoids the risk of contamination when trying to wash your sticky gooey hands!  Here’s a cheap alternative:  wrap a sandwich baggie around your hand and use that hand to hold the meat while the other hand holds the knife.  The baggie-method also works well for greasing cooking pans.

I learned from the Rachel Ray Show to keep a trash/scrap bowl (or one of the food wrappers) on the counter to collect all of the scraps; throw everything away at the end of your meal preparation, EXCEPT meat wrappings.  Julie tip:  for meat wrappings and containers, cut them open after placing the whole package inside a grocery store plastic bag.  The bag catches the juices and makes for an instant disposal container after the meat is removed.  This also reduces smell after it is in the trash can  so you don’t have to empty it as often.

Keep the kitchen trash can accessible during meal preparation to eliminate time/hassle opening a cabinet or pantry door repeatedly.  Heck, pull out the trash can and put it next to you until you are done generating trash then return it to the cabinet or pantry!  This also saves steps walking across the room and possibly outside of your “work triangle.”

Pile up all of the recyclable containers from meal preparation off to the side of your work triangle.  Take everything to the recycling bin at one time after you are done preparing the meal and pouring refreshments.  A similar strategy goes for composting fresh fruit and vegetable scraps; pile them up on one of the damp paper towels and throw the whole thang into the compost pile at the end of each day.  (I use plain white paper towels by the way.)

Try to minimize the number of spoons, spatulas etc. used on the stove during cooking.  Who says the spoon used to stir the sauce can’t stir the gluten-free noodles boiling in water?  Saves having to wash and handle extra utensils.

Use one sharp knife for meat and another one for everything else during food preparation at a given meal.  Simply toss the meat knife into the dishwasher after use.

Similarly, use one pan for successive cooking tasks where possible.  For example, the meat drippings on the foil lining the roasting pan from the chicken can make great flavoring for oven-roasted vegetables!  Another example:  re-use the pan in which you boiled the gluten-free pasta to steam the vegetables or make the gravy.  You probably don’t even need to wash it after draining the noodles!

Wash the dishes as you go or load them directly into the dishwasher to save clean-up time and stress after the meal.

Leaning against a chair, placing one foot on a stool or the bottom shelf of an open cabinet, or sitting on a step stool can all reduce fatigue and back strain during meal preparation.

Mealtime

Serve prepared foods buffet style, serving them in their cooking pots and pans on the stove and counter.  This keeps everything inside the “work triangle” and prevents having to wash extra serving dishes and transport items to/from the kitchen table.  This also makes it easier to manage different dietary needs and preferences of various family members.  For example, I can open the pouch of shredded cheese for those wanting a cheese topping on a salad and keep mine diary-free because I serve the salad without cheese in one main bowl.  Alternative:  make the salads in individual bowls and save washing a large serving bowl altogether.

Put specific items directly on the plate of the person headed through the “work triangle” buffet instead of in a separate dish.  For example, my husband likes tomatoes on his salad but I cannot have them at this time.  So I put the tomatoes on his plate or in his salad bowl and he serves himself from there.  The dishes are on the counter, by the way, as part of the buffet saving effort from having to “set the table.”

Ask a family member to take drink orders and pre-pour drinks before the meal where possible to reduce clutter and clean-up tasks.

Leftovers

Sometimes I put the whole, covered and slightly cooled saucepan or casserole dish in the frig after dinner, on a heat-proof silicone hot pad.  The next day it’s ready for re-heating.

Sometimes I pull out the lunch-sized storage containers before or after dinner and make my hubby’s lunch right away before storing the leftovers.

Often I’ve made extra servings of each dish to freeze individual portions in plastic containers or baggies after the meal.  The items can be stored as complete meals or separately in sandwich bags; the sandwich bags are then placed into 1-gallon freezer bags marked Meat, Veggies, Breads, or Fruit.  Talk about healthy fast food!

Storing meat portions has become a versatile helper in preparing future meals, especially when diets vary among family members.  I might even store meat-and-cheese burgers separately from meat burgers in respective gallon freezer bags labeled for each family member.  Love freezer bags!  This will save time in the future when you simply do not have the time to make enough food to meet everyone’s needs.  For example, on the night I am writing this, I’m glad I had a half of a cooked baked potato frozen that I could add to my husband’s meal:  I have been unable to grocery shop this past week and he needed more than the veggie and meat entrees that comprise my meal plan.

Summary

From meal preparation, mealtime, clean-up, and storing leftovers, you can see that I am all about saving time, energy, and moolaberries!  I do re-use the freezer bags most of the time by the way as long as they do not get soiled from the items stored in them!  If you would like some tips for managing special diets, head to an earlier blog post and I hope you’ll find something useful for you:  Extreme Diet Survival Strategies

Please feel free to share with me your tips and tricks, especially within the context of helping the homemaker with chronic illness.  Take care,  :J