Life is Scary…


So happy Halloween…….and welcome November.

New month new beginnings for me.

I took a long hard look at my life today.  My health, my relationship and my dreams for the future.  It was intense. I got stressed so I aggressively kneaded pizza dough and then
ate a whole pizza for lunch….phew. I dragged myself to the chiropractor and found out that I have been ignoring some serious issues for 10 yrs. Gave my self a smack on the hand for neglecting myself and vowed to get it sorted. I also sent off the final part of my application to return to study next year so that I can teach visual art.
My 20′s were for reckless abuse of my body, mind and heart and now my 30′s are going to be the decade of recovery, re focus…rehab basically!
It’s so easy to get lost in your efforts to please everybody else and to live up to their expectations. You forget yourself. When I turned thirty in september I stopped and thought, hang on a min, what do I want?

So I applied for a uni course, took up zumba classes, made some new friends, re-connected with some old ones, saw a chiropractor about the problem I have been ignoring, and some other positive things. It feels good.

Some issues are so deeply woven and engraved that they can not simply be described on a tick list and therefore can not be solved by making a simple change. But all we can do is acknowledge them, face up to them and try to either build bridges or cut our losses and move on.

Life is scary.  Making decisions is scary. Facing the truth is scary.

You have to take charge.

I love something that a friend of mine said recently when consoling someone about their anxiety issues. She said “you have to take charge of it before it takes charge of you”. So true

ahhhhhhhh anyway that’s all a bit heavy.

I hope that you all enjoyed your witches brew and worms spaghetti and you got treated, not tricked.

The poor pizza dough that got a beating!

Ok ill say it out loud……I don’t like meat!


30 and finally at my goal weight x

I had to make the switch back to being a fish-eating vegetarian, a pescitarian to be precise. I have had enough of the stomach turning chewy bits, the gross and gory visuals and the guilt that I am contributing to an industry of cruelty and greed. I was a pecsitarian for most of my life before I met my husband but I have been eating meat for the 10 yrs that we have been together. This is personal, I am not having a dig at carnivores, it’s that saying I AM A PESCITARIAN! out loud to the world confirms my decision.  Sustainable seafood is so available now and It doesn’t cost too much. My children are still eating organic and free range meat at home which is not cheap but it is worth the extra pennies. And yes I know I would struggle to gut a fish, let alone even put the worm on a hook but I am not ready to give it up yet. This is the type of neurotic paranoia that so many of us in the first world are faced when it comes to diet. We live with an abundance of choice and information which means you either care or you don’t.

I care.  I can not ignore the environmental issues and I can not look at a cow in a field with its young and not feel a stabbing of guilt. It would be easier to be ignorant to it all but that wont help. It is a consumer led industry so we need to make good choices at the supermarket.

So anyway in the last couple of months I have really enjoyed the challenge of cooking and eating new things. I have enjoyed learning about alternative proteins, food combining and the benefits of eating raw.

I don’t miss meat and I feel like I have a really positive relationship with food.

Here are some tips to help you gain a more positive relationship with food

LEARN WHICH FOODS BOOST MOOD, RECOVERY, IMMUNITY, SEX DRIVE, ENERGY… 
http://www.netdoctor.co.uk/interactive/gallery/main.php?g2_itemId=2108

EAT FOR A BETTER FUTURE FOR YOU, YOUR CHILDREN AND THE PLANET


http://www.worldvision.com.au/act/ShopEthically.aspx

BUYING GOOD FOOD ON A BUDGET


http://www.livestrong.com/article/555855-the-best-healthy-foods-on-a-budget/

GOODBYE CONVENIENCE FOODS


http://www.hellofresh.com.au/aboutus_delivery_areas/

STEALING TIME-PLANNING AHEAD


http://www.livestrong.com/article/369005-tips-on-planning-healthy-meals-ahead-of-time/

SEASONAL INGREDIENTS

It is very easy to find out what is in season. Ask at your local supermarket, green grocers, Farmers markets or even a good chef. You can also find information online  

WHAT IS LOW GI


http://www.diabetesaustralia.com.au/Living-with-Diabetes/Eating-Well/Glycaemic-Index-GI/

BUY NATURAL ALTERNATIVES TO SUGAR
http://www.theecologist.org/green_green_living/food_and_drink/1336766/top_10alternatives_to_sugar.html

EATING GOOD FATS 
http://www.health.gov.au/internet/healthyactive/publishing.nsf/Content/good-bad-fat

WHAT TO AVOID – SATURATED FATS, PALM OIL, SOY, HYDROGINATED VEGE OIL, SIMPLE CARBS

Life with diastasis recti – the belly that gave me my beautiful children


Should I feel terrible for envying the woman I saw in the once in the pool who looked like she had spent 9 months doing ab crunches  and not growing a human being in her belly?  I guess not. Envy is not something that I often feel but I looked at her cradling her baby in a bikini looking awesome and I felt like crying, I didn’t want to get out of the water and parade my poking out saggy abdomin.When I think of the first time I saw by body post baby a sense of anxiety starts heating up in my chest and creeping up my throat, giving me that lump you get when your about to cry. I must have been more vain than I thought before having kids because excepting a new body image has been really hard for me.  

Anyway I am feeling more positive than ever now that I can except this new me. And really it is a small sacrifice for two beautiful boys.  You can not see the stretch marks in the picture below but you can see the bloated look and the lack of definition. Also the saggy skin that hangs lower on one side! This is the first picture I have taken of it and that is only because It is looking a lot better these days.

I have been getting the feeling that my readers have been wanting me to elaborate a bit on the topic of Diastasis Recti. I apologise if this is not the case and I am about to bore you with the science.

Pronunciation:

dye-uh-STAY-siss REK-tye

Also Known As:

diastasis, abdominal separation

Definition:

Diastasis recti is a condition where the right and left sides of the rectus abdominus (the muscle that makes up the front wall of the abdominals, also known as the “six-pack” muscle) spread apart at the body’s midline. Diastasis negatively affects the strength of the abdominal wall and can aggravate lower back pain.

Bellefit helps with diastasis

What causes Diastasis?

Abdominal separation occurs most often in response to the force of the uterus pushing against the abdominal wall during pregnancy, but can also happen when there is an extreme over-abundance of sub-muscular (visceral) abdominal fat. In pregnancy, hormones are also partially to blame, as they can soften connective tissue, allowing the separation to occur more easily.

Diastasis Recti Test

This simple self-test will help you determine if you have abdominal separation/diastasis recti and how severe it is.

1. Lie on your back with your knees bent, and the soles of your feet on the floor.
2. Place one hand behind your head and the other hand on your abdomen, with your fingertips across your midline –parallel with your waistline – at the level of your belly button.
3. With your abdominal wall relaxed, gently press your fingertips into your abdomen.
4. Roll your upper body off the floor into a “crunch”, making sure that your ribcage moves closer to your pelvis.
5. Move your fingertips back and forth across your midline, feeling for the right and left sides of your Rectus Abdominis muscle.


http://www.bellefit.com/diastasis.php

From my research I have found that this is a condition that also affects men due to either being obese or to exercising incorrectly over a long period of time. It can also be present in newborns.

me 11 months post second pregnancy, still 1.5cm separated (was 15cm)

There are health risks of having this condition and it does have an emotional impact on your life. I suggest that if you have done the test and you feel that you might have a separation then contact a physiotherapist that specialises in woman’s health.

I am sorry for the grusome image but this is what a GP told me I would have to have done and that there was no other alternative.

DSC09011

Pousti plastic surgery. Tummy tuck.

Pousti plastic surgery image. After a tummy tuck procedure

I might not look and tight and slim as this post op lady but my goodness, This is a drastic and expensive measure!

So I will have to embrase the scars and the sag and just look at the beautiful little humans I created.

Ferocious sales ladies v demanding little customers! facing the mummy guilt of going to work


Hello, its been a little while and I’ll tell you why.

I have been very busy in the midst of finding myself employment. Mum and I have decided to go back to the drawing board with our little business and go out and earn some real dollars. I have had the luxury (as some might say) of being a stay at home mother for almost 3 years. It has not been a breeze as we all know (or are otherwise reminded) that being a mother is the hardest job of all.  It has been quite a journey going through this transition and I have had to let go of the guilt that come with saying goodbye to your babies in the morning and picking them up at almost bed time. My youngest is only 11 months and I am very protective of him.  Every family has to do what they have to do to survive. One income is not enough for us to live out our dreams and desires for the future,  so here I go,  off to work.  I have always stuck by the philosophy ‘happy mummy happy baby’  This has helped me through the times where that twinge of guilt for doing something that is not purely selfless arrises.

I have been reading support forums for working mums,  the only real benefit of this is that it reminds me that there are millions of us, all going through the same feelings and dilemmas.  My situation is not unique and many children are in daycare from a far younger age than mine.

I made a pledge to not surpass any opportunity that came my way and to not let anxiety stop me in my tracks. So I have excepted a job. It is a succession role, training to eventually be the manager of a contemporary silver jewelry store in the city.  This is a HUGE change for us and I have to say it is really overwhelming.  I also have to say that my new guilty pleasures are dressing in glamorous clothes, having uninterrupted trips to the bathroom and not repetitively saying….. put that down, stop that , stay still and hurry up! oh yes and being able to drink a whole cup of tea whilst it is still hot.  But my boys, as demanding as they are, are my heart, my joy, my everything so naturally I would prefer to be with them covered in snotty finger prints and patches of baby sick.

There are pros and cons to both working and to staying at home. I can’t decide who is more difficult to work with, My demanding little customers or the ferociously competitive natured  ’sales ladies’.  Either way all I can do is focus on the positives and embrace this new challenge knowing that my boys glowing little faces will be there to greet me at the end of each day.

diaryofanewwoman.org

Any working mums out there with advise or stories? I would love to hear from you.

1 kilo to go


I have one stubborn kilo to go to get to where I was before I had my first son.  16 down -1 to go.

Retrospectively it has been one hell of a journey. It starts right at the beginning, the everything that brought me to be in the place I was when I was just about to embark on the most significant journey of my life. Motherhood.

I was the kid who had to drink supplement drinks because I was so excited about christmas (6 weeks prior to the actual event) that I couldn’t eat.  I hid my easter eggs under my bed for months and I shopped in the kids department for my school uniform right into yr 10 of high school. I was skinny

I was serious about sport for most of my child hood, training up to 4 hours a day before big events. I had no reason at all not to eat whatever I felt like eating.  My parents are great cooks, Mum is the baker who is religious about recipes and dad is the ’chuck it all in’, ‘bit of this’, ‘that will do’ kind of man who always surprises everyone with his beautiful creations.

When I think of the happy times in my life, food always has its presence.

I will never forget the luscious bowl of simple green salad I had as a child in france, with the tangy dressing ( yes I was the weird child eating lettuce amongst the others and their fries).  Dads sausage and beer hot-pot on the yacht we used to spend summers on, Mums incredible chocolate brownies, amazing birthday cakes and home-made elderflower wine.

Then came the teenage years of melancholy, self-pity and despair at my pale skin, red hair, ridiculously skinny legs. These were the emo years and like many girls my relationship with food became a negative one. Though stress, anxiety and the pressure to look a certain way, I developed anorexia and a dependency on alcohol to have fun. Out the window went the sport and in the window came a black cloud that stuck around for a couple of years.

I was 18 when I finally started my journey back to being carefree and enthusiastic about cooking and eating.  At 19 I met my husband, a chef who converted me from being a vegetarian to a carnivore. I have been learning from him ever since. He is a wealth of knowledge and a real artist with food.  We married when I was 23 and still very slim.

I fell pregnant with my first son when I was 26, we had been living and studying in the UK for 4 years together. I had been fluctuating the whole time we were there. One minute I was eating my body weight in carbs and drinking every night and the next I was stressed and not eating at all.

When I got over the initial morning sickness, food suddenly became my friend! hello food and all your sexy flavours, hello Fat Sugar and Carbs, we used to be acquaintances now we are besties forever and ever. Amen.

My Nanna who was my best friend had a serious stroke right before I was due to fly back to australia to live. I knew she was never going to meet my baby and that I was never going to see her again.

Food you really are my best friend now I gained 20 kilo-, got pre-eclempsia and experienced a horrific natural birth followed a pain relief drug reaction that took 3 months to get over.  A Naturopath was my saviour in this situation. I felt like I had seen a million doctors and that I was getting no where. Pauline Twite is her name and she is an angel. She taught me so much about healing through suppliments and diet.

So 16 months later after loosing most of  the weight by walking it off! and finding  joy again after having post natal depression. I fell pregnant. This time I had gestational diabetes and had no choice but to keep my weight under control.

I learned a whole new way of eating through physically being able to see how everything effected my blood sugar levels. I learned that high GI foods are a waste of time unless you want to be tired and fat.

After a tough time having to juggle this new approach to pregnancy eating and the fact that my unborn child had a serious condition where fluid had collected in his chest cavity, causing his lungs to be underdeveloped and his heart to be in the wrong place, I had a c section and met my now perfectly healthy 10 pound boy. 

 Mother nature sorted him out, modern medicine sorted me out.

six months down the track I find out about my 15 cm abdominal separation and the new phase of my life begins.

Now here I am 1 kilo away from my goal weight and telling the world my story. …phew its been interesting and the hardest part now will be maintaining.

But I think that what I have learned has changed my attitude to food. Its is not something to avoid in times of stress and not something to rely on either. You have to love food that loves you. Food that nourishes,excites, strengthens and sustains you. Food is art, food is to be shared. Food is to be respected.

My challenge since having my second son is to create Low GI food that is actually tasty. Lets face it…and I quote my fellow mother group friend Catherine  ” fat =TASTE”

So lets keep the real fat for the sometimes foods, up the nutritional/sustenance value of everything.  And make rainbows on all the plates we prepare.

First pregnancy swollen, heavy and hyper tension, yuck! lots of weight to loose after this one.

All bump after having to diet whilst pregnant with baby no two.

Slim and happy again just before second pregnancy

Lets be best friends with balance, life, love, joy, forgiveness, will power and aquintences with the ‘sometimes’ foods!

I will add a photo of my belly when I have lost that last kilo!

Key factors in changing my relationship with food.

1. learning about how having a terrible diet can seriously affect your ability to cope with pregnancy and child-birth.

2. learning from a  naturopath how diet REALLY effects your emotions and how a lack of nutrients can make you seriously ill.

3. Seeing with my own eyes how sugar effects your body by having to prick my finger 4 times a day. Thus learning what foods sustain you for longer.

4. Reaping the rewards of sticking to a goal and not giving in to the ‘I can’t be bothered’s’

5. learning to neither ignore food or binge on it during emotional times.  It is not your enemy or your best friend.

 

Overcoming Fear, Pride, and Denial.


Loving life for the first time in ages 2010

The hardest part of every journey towards self-improvement is the admitting that something needs work in the first place.

I will never forget the day I fell into heap of despair and self-pity after struggling through post natal depression for 6 months. The look on my husbands face was heart braking, disappointment, confusion and frustration. It was enough to snap me out of denial and into self motivated machine, ready to take on whatever it was that was ruining our lives and beat it. I ran out side with my phone and called a friend. And there they were, finally the three words… I need help.  And they were the seeds, the catalyst for change. Getting off of my stubborn behind and admitting my problems has been the hardest and most beneficial thing I have ever done. Even though the change you have to make can seem like a mountain it can always be tackled bit by bit, day by day with the support of loved ones. In this case, my family and my beautiful mothers group who didn’t need to know all the details they were just there.  So the next stage is forgiveness. Forgiving yourself for being in denial and putting yourself through hell out of fear and pride. That is the best bit.

There are every day challenges now that are not so dramatic but they still fall by the wayside in terms of being tackled,

So here I go…

I am addicted to caffeine even though I know its bad for me

I love carbs … Let me re-phrase that  J’ADORE CARBS!

I am crap with money

I am easily distracted from doing exercise it’s not top of my priority list

I let fear, anxiety and depression get in the way of achieving my potential and if I don’t stop this I will get old and regret what I didn’t do.

Phew! ok so this is what I am going to do, Forgive myself. Stay dedicated to my healthy diet of high protein, low gi whole foods.  Keep exercising regularly. Give up the lattes, Get a paid job and save money, Take every opportunity that swings by and embrace it!

One by one.

And don’t forget to notice the beautiful small things, and savour them. 

I would love to hear from you if you have a similar story, or even if you want to share a small thing that made you smile. Maybe you experienced something that snapped you into making a change?

Hello world!


property of Robyn George-Chilvers

This photograph is my own work

My name is Robyn George-Chilvers

I was inspired to write this blog when discovering nothing but negative information on a condition that I suffered after having my baby boy in July last year. The condition is called “DRAMS” and to put it in simple terms it means a separation in the abdominal muscles. Mine was 15 cm wide and my guts were hanging out in front, unsupported and ugly. I spent nights reading forums finding desperate people in the same situation. These people seemed hopeless and their lives had been effected so negatively that they were depressed and desperate for an answer. I looked at medical sights and learned of all the horrible effects this was going to have on my physical wellbeing. I was feeling emotionally week and scared that this would be the trigger for the post natal depression that I had suffered with the birth of my first son, to come back.

I couldn’t afford the op, and I couldn’t be out of action for three months of recovery. I have two children under 3 years old.I was also told not to lift or excercise in any way … Hello! I am a mummy!

I was devastated to be informed by a GP that an extortionatly expensive tummy tuck was the only answer for me and was referred to a plastic surgeon. Now…this palstic surgeon turned my life around.

I was refered to a Physio that specialises in woman’s health. She had me doing pilates twice a day for 8 weeks and eating healthily.

I have now lost 13  16 kilos, reduced my separation down to about 1.5 cm, and exercising normally at the gym, with normal people. I am coping with life, I am strong and healthy for my children and I have even launched my own business.

I just want people with this condition to find something positive on the internet at night, when like my former self, they are desperately looking for answers.

I am not going to preach or provide any medical advise. I truly believe that healthy food, excersise and creativity are the answers for me. I hope that this Blog will be a glimmer of hope for people who are faced with anxiety and negativity and I aim to  inspire.

I will be writing about food, excercise, love, motherhood, creativity and working from home with two small children.

Live, Love and Create