Ready to experience better health?

Back to work lunch hacks (+ bonus recipe)

For many, lunch is one of the more challenging meals of the day when it comes to nourishment.

Without forward planning or preparation, you may find yourself falling back on something ‘quick and easy’ on the go. But preparing lunches ahead of time doesn’t have to be an ordeal. And you don’t have to repeat the same boring salad day after day.

Here are our top three lunch hacks to help you maintain a nourishing way of eating through your work day while keeping your taste buds happy.

1. Leftovers

Get creative with your leftovers and transform them into brand new meals. For example, if you’ve cooked too much rice, add some egg, vegetables and toss in a wok or saucepan to turn it into a high vegetable fried rice. In her latest book Simplicious Flow, Sarah Wilson suggests using a sandwich press to heat or cook a number of different meals—even a piece of rump steak. Think beyond two slices of bread and get creative with your office sandwich press! Many warm meals can be enjoyed cold if you don’t have the ability to heat food at your workplace.

2. Use seaweed wraps instead of bread

Sushi can be a nourishing option, especially if you make your own. Store bought sushi may contain sugar and/or preservatives, as well as relying heavily on rice as the predominant filling. When you make your own sushi, you have complete control over all the ingredients and their quantities. Use brown or black rice instead of white rice, a hearty amount of avocado as a source of whole food fat and loads of vegetables. Making sushi is not as hard as you think. In fact, you can even just take the ingredients all separate and roll them as you eat. Better yet, try the sushi bowl recipe we’ve included and avoid wrapping altogether. This is one of Dr Libby’s favourite lunches.

3. Amp up the nourishment of the old staple, avo on crackers

A staple go to lunch for many is avocado on toast or crackers. It’s quick, easy and who doesn’t like avocado? Although this lunch already provides quite a bit of nourishment thanks to the 19 different nutrients in avocado, you can take it a step further. Try finely chopping kale and mixing it through mashed avocado seasoned with lemon and salt. It’s delicious! You can also add other leafy greens, spring onion and/or capsicum if kale isn’t your thing. Keep some boiled eggs in the fridge too, so you can add some good quality protein to this combo or plan ahead to make sure there is some left over home-cooked cold meat from dinner the night before.



This recipe is taken from my book The Energy Guide which you can find here!

Cortisol and body fat

In my years of working with women, many have shared that even if they eat like a bird and exercise like crazy—they still gain body fat.

And according to the calories consumed versus calories burned theory, this doesn’t make sense to them.

After all, why aren’t they ‘rewarded’ for all their effort?

It’s because, in many cases, they’re pulling the wrong levers. Despite good intentions, they’re giving their body the wrong instructions when it comes to asking it to burn body fat effectively.

They are unknowingly suffering from a major effect of too much cortisol.

Cortisol is a stress hormone, and our body produces this when it believes we’ve been experiencing persistent stress. It might be our response to our overflowing inbox or to-do list, how we feel about our finances and relationships or just the result of never slowing down to give our body a chance to rest. We might not even realise our body is stressed—sometimes our brain can be more capable of coping with our lives than our body.  

When we churn out cortisol, our body believes we’re in danger and that food could be scarce, so it stores fat, rather than burning it. It doesn’t know why you’re churning out cortisol, it only interprets the hormones that are being produced and acts accordingly—in its best effort to save your life.

And, for many women, over time, this leads to an increase in body fat.

In my Weight Loss for Women course, I discuss this in much more detail. I also offer you lots of insights, tips and strategies on how to reverse this process, get your body into balance and burn body fat effectively.

Join me for the next intake and learn:

  • Why body fat around our middle region can increase and how to mobilise this
  • What foods might be driving an increase in body fat
  • The importance of the liver in burning body fat as fuel
  • The role the thyroid plays in body fat mobilisation, how to know if yours is out of balance, and ways to support it naturally
  • Tips and strategies to manage emotional eating
  • How to improve your digestion

If you feel that you could benefit from some support in these areas, you might like to take a look at my online Weight Loss Redefined course. We only run a few intakes per year. You’ll be supported and guided for nine weeks as I teach you the things you need to know about your body and the levers to pull that can help it achieve long-term, sustainable weight loss.

Your body is yours for life. Knowing how to work with it and how to interpret its messages can completely change your whole experience of life. 

Are you experiencing thyroid troubles?

The thyroid is a butterfly-shaped gland that sits in your throat area. It makes hormones that play an enormous role in your metabolic rate as well as temperature regulation.

Too often, I see people who exhibit symptoms of an underactive thyroid, yet their blood test results come back within the ‘normal’ range.

Symptoms of an underactive thyroid include: 

  • Gradual weight increase over months, for no apparent reason
  • A tendency to constipation
  • Depressed mood, forgetfulness
  • Hair loss or hair drier than normal 
  • Dry skin and brittle nails
  • Exhaustion
  • Headaches

And when you’re experiencing these symptoms, yet your bloodwork returns as ‘normal’, it can be incredibly frustrating.

To correct any imbalance in the body, first you must find the road in. How or why did it become imbalanced in the first place? This will give you the answers for how to return it to optimal functioning.

Some of the factors that can drive a thyroid imbalance include mineral deficiencies, infection, poor liver detoxification, too much estrogen (as this suppresses thyroid function) and/or elevated cortisol levels. 

If you suspect you might be having thyroid troubles, whether you’ve had a blood test or not, I encourage you to start to look into some of these factors that might be relevant for you. For a tiny gland, the thyroid packs a mighty punch, and getting it functioning optimally is so important to our overall health.

If you are interested in supporting your thyroid health, you might like to take a look at my online weight loss course, Weight Loss Redefined. We only run a few intakes per year. You’ll be supported and guided for nine weeks as I teach you the things you need to know about your body and the levers to pull that can help it achieve long-term, sustainable weight loss.

Are you whispering your boundaries?

Are you whispering your boundaries?

How often do you catch yourself saying ‘yes’ when you really want to say ‘no’?

In a recent blog, I wrote about how self-care won’t always feel comfortable.
How sometimes, in order to prioritise this, you may need to have uncomfortable conversations.

To take that conversation further, let’s now talk about boundaries because these go hand in hand with self-care. Too often I witness people trying to ‘whisper’ their boundaries to others—they are like hopscotch chalk lines, too easily washed away by the rain. They really need to be asserted, clearly, not erasable—more like the paint of a tennis court baseline. 

Having great boundaries is about accepting that you’re not superhuman and respecting what you’re truly capable of saying ‘yes’ to. It also involves knowing what your priorities are and having a desire to live your highest priorities most days. After all, we make time for what we priortise. Many people know what they can and can’t take on, they just don’t know how to communicate this to others.

So, what stops us from making our boundaries clearer to people? Fear. And mostly it’s the fear of what other people will think of us.

We don’t want to let people down, to disappointment them or have them think we are aren’t kind (all of which are another’s perception based on their joys and pains up until this point in time). And that’s a natural human concern—but is it worth letting yourself down in the process? No, it’s not. Besides, it can be all in the way you communicate—it is possible to say no or ask for what you need with kindness.

When we prioritise our own boundaries we have more energy, we’re better able to enjoy life and show up for the things that matter. In fact, when we take better care of ourselves by prioritising our own boundaries we have even more to offer the other people in our lives because of the benefits self-care gives us.

A great way to start cultivating your boundaries is to begin to notice, with great kindness, when you try to implement them. Simply observe how it makes you feel when you do so. If speaking up is new for you, it might feel a little uncomfortable. It may also feel like you’re almost whispering your boundaries or sugar coating them, speaking indirectly rather than with clarity, which can make them difficult for others to hear. But just like a muscle, your voice will become stronger the more you use it and soon you’ll be comfortably expressing your needs. Plus, the way others respond to what you express may actually surprise you in the most wonderful way – you give them the opportunity to display compassion for you, which you’ve likely been offering them for years.

Having great boundaries involves holding true to you, to your soul, to your own inner compass, and sometimes finding strength in places where you currently feel small. It’s also about remembering that how another person reacts is not under your control, but how you take care of yourself is.

If stress is an ongoing issue for you, read this

Stress is something that most people experience to varying degrees. It’s part of being human and it’s also part of what keeps us safe.

However, the relentless output of stress hormones is strongly linked to a host of health challenges, so rather than trying to avoid stress altogether, as this will be almost impossible, you want to instead work on deciphering what stress really is for you, as well as take steps to decrease the intensity of your stress response. This will help your stress responses to be less relentless and give your body more calm breathing space.

Here are some suggestions.

Caffeine.

I know you might not want to hear it, but caffeine has an almost immediate effect on your stress response. Once in the body, caffeine blocks the receptors in the brain that help to slow down our nervous system, so they can’t work effectively, and it also activates the stress axis, sending a signal to the adrenals to make adrenaline.

Antioxidants.

When you’re in a state of stress, your body produces more free radicals because you tend to breathe more rapidly when adrenaline is elevated. Antioxidants nullify the harmful effects of these free radicals. Increase your intake of antioxidants from whole, real plant foods with a wide variety of colours.

Perceptions.

The thoughts you think are directly correlated to the amount of stress you feel. Explore your perceptions around pressure and what you believe is urgent. For example, if a car pulls out in front of you, it is urgent for you to slam on your brakes. If you receive 100 new emails overnight, you may feel that all of them are urgent, when in reality maybe 10 need your attention quite quickly. Both of these examples can induce the same stress response in your body when you perceive them as urgent, even though the latter example really sits lower on a scale of urgency.

Reframe.

When you look at your to-do list, remember how privileged your life is because all your basic needs are met and still for too many people in the world, this is not the case. It can help to remember that you ‘get’ to do all of this, rather than you ‘have’ to. We are, after all, busy with what we say yes to.

Fear.

If you feel that stress (I’m not referring to trauma in this instance) is really an ongoing issue for you, then I urge you to consider this. Whatever you are stressed about—anything at all—is usually what you are frightened of. Peel back the layers on what you perceive are your stresses—running late, for example—and see what’s really there. See what you are actually afraid of. Of being seen as a failure or lazy, of people not liking you, of letting others down… For most people, when they peel it all back, their fear is that they are not loved, or that there will be a loss of love. Everything—and I mean everything—comes back to avoiding rejection and obtaining or maintaining love. I don’t know how else to say it. People think the opposite of stressed is relaxed or calm. I say it is trust.

Self-care won’t always feel good

As the holiday season begins to appear on the horizon, the pace of life can pick up and many people get caught in a conundrum between being able to see the ‘finish line’ and also wondering how on earth they’re going to fit it all in. If you feel this, I invite you to pause and consider the possibility that things could be different as you close out this year.

When we talk about self-care, many people think about taking long baths, getting a massage, or spending time in nature, and those things are lovely and delicious, and can cultivate great feelings inside us, but self-care doesn’t always have to look like this.

Sometimes self-care is uncomfortable, sometimes it’s:

… Speaking up when you are worried about what others might think of you.

… Accepting that people may feel you’ve let them down by turning down an important social invitation because you need to rest.

… Having a tricky conversation with someone you care about.

… Making the effort to prepare nutritious food for yourself, even though you’d rather sit on the couch.

… Prioritising some of your income towards quality products and organic food, that serves your health, even when they cost more than cheaper alternatives.

… Getting up from your desk, even when you don’t have the time.

… Acknowledging that sometimes people just need to wait a little while for a response from you—be that a text, a call or an email.

These actions of self-care can all be just as nourishing as a long bath, if not more so.

As the holiday horizon approaches, you might like to reflect on how you can bring in more actions of self-care into your day. Here are some reflective questions to consider and you may like to journal your answers:

Do you really need to ‘fit it all in’ and what would really happen if you didn’t?

What are two small things you could do each day, that take less than five minutes, as a way of looking after you?

How could you approach the holiday season differently this year, from a place of self-care?

Remember that self-care doesn’t have to be something you save up for a special occasion or undertake only once you’re feeling totally depleted. As we move towards the end of the year, I hope that you’re able to acknowledge your small acts of self-care and finish the year with immense kindness towards yourself.

When your eyebrows fall out

Do you feel like no matter how hard you try to do the “right” thing, your body seems to have a mind of its own? Presenting you with all sorts of confusing symptoms like skin challenges and thinning hair or eyebrows?

When these things happen, it can feel like our body is unfairly punishing us.

It’s tempting to mask these symptoms, to put on more make up to cover skin challenges, to get hair extensions to thicken our hair or to have our eyebrows tattooed on if they begin to thin. And it’s fine to do this of course—yet it is important that you don’t miss the message behind what’s happening with your body.

For example, skin challenges can be your body’s way of telling you your liver needs support. Thinning hair can indicate you have a sex hormone imbalance and when the outer third of your eyebrow begins to thin, this can be a message from your body that your thyroid needs attention.

In my new book The Beauty Guide, I address 40 common beauty challenges including how to interpret these messages from your body and a step-by-step guide for how to heal them from the inside out.

In addition, this book looks at how to slow the ageing process, offers solutions for how to cope in this culture of comparison and how to inspire a new generation of girls with an innate belief in their inner beauty and abilities. Using a blend of nutrition, biochemical science and emotional insight, I hope the The Beauty Guide offers education, wisdom and practical solutions to help transform the way you see and feel about yourself—at any age.

I hope you love it!

With warmth,

Dr Libby x

Ageing and weight gain: is it inevitable?

Too many people are led to believe that ageing and weight gain go hand in hand.

The thing is, if this was the case, everyone would put on weight as they aged – and this does not happen. While it’s true that our body does change as we grow older, gaining weight with age is anything but inevitable.

Many women feel like they’ve tried everything to shift body fat, but their body just doesn’t seem to listen to them in the way that it used to. So let’s explore a few reasons why body fat might creep on over the years, and what you can do to address it.

We stop moving as much

Between work and raising families, we tend to make less time for our own wellbeing and this can result in reduced movement habits. If we have a desk job, statistics tell us the average adult will sit between 10-12 hours in a 16 hour waking day. That’s an incredible amount of time on our behinds! We can counteract this by looking for opportunities to increase incidental movement in our everyday life.

Ideally in an office job, you would convert your desk into a sitting/standing station but if that’s not possible for you, aim to get up every hour and move around the office – for example, walk to the kitchen to get a glass of water, or go and see a colleague rather than emailing. Other ways we can increase our incidental exercise include walking or riding a bike instead of driving short distances, gardening, taking the stairs instead of an escalator/elevator, parking at the back of a carpark and walking the extra distance and carrying our shopping in a basket rather than pushing it in a trolley.

We lose our muscle mass

From the age of 30 onwards, we begin to lose muscle unless we do something to maintain (or build) it. Beyond functional movement, muscle mass also affects our metabolic rate and energy production. Muscle mass typically accounts for around a third of total body weight and a quarter of your body’s metabolic activity. In contrast, body fat usually accounts for at least 20% of your body weight (and more for many people these days) but only 5% of metabolic activity! Your ratio of muscle to fat mass therefore greatly impacts your metabolic rate and when you consider that with age muscle mass naturally begins to decline, you can see why it’s important that we actively look for opportunities to build it.

Crash dieting and prolonged stress can actually lead to reduced muscle mass, as your body can convert the protein from your muscles into glucose to meet its energy needs. After a restrictive diet (and there is almost always an ‘after’ because feeling deprived is no way to live), the majority of people go on to regain the weight they lost (for myriad reasons) plus more – a reduction in muscle tissue, leading to a reduction in metabolic rate, in part explains why it can become much easier to gain additional weight.

So, embrace some kind of resistance training. This doesn’t necessarily mean you have to go to the gym, although do this if it appeals! Pilates is a great form of resistance training and yoga uses your own body weight as resistance. The aforementioned suggestions for incidental movement can also help to maintain and build muscle.

Our perception of pressure might increase

The more people we have relying on us, the more pressure we’re likely to feel. When we’re young we tend to have fewer adult responsibilities and so our daily opportunity to perceive stress might be lower. When you add in caring for a family, managing a mortgage, maintaining a relationship with your spouse, family and friends, juggling work commitments, housework, cooking—and everything else we need to consider—it’s easy for these things to pile up as things we have to ‘manage’.

When we feel overwhelmed by responsibility and our everyday tasks, we will likely spend more and more time in what I call the ‘red zone’ which is where your stress response is activated. Without unpacking it fully, suffice it to say that more time in the red zone translates to your body getting the message that it’s not safe to burn body fat efficiently as a fuel. Until you communicate safety to your body, you’re unlikely to let go of extra body fat that your body has stored to ‘protect’ you.

The way we address this is to reconsider our perceptionof pressure and urgency. This is something I teach in Weight Loss Redefined because I recognise how challenging it can be to change the way you’ve been thinking for the last 20+ years. But once addressed, it can create so much freedom and joy in our lives. We can also counteract our stress response by breathing diaphragmatically as this communicates calm to our nervous system.

We haven’t been listening to our body for years

We’re not really taught how to listen to our body so it’s perfectly understandable that we don’t always know how to intuit our body’s messages. But here’s what I want you to know, those parts of your body that frustrate or sadden you—they’re messengers asking you to eat, drink, think, move, breathe or perceive in a different way. Our body doesn’t have a voice, so it uses symptoms to communicate with us. It’s actually pretty amazing if you think about it! So rather than judging yourself or feeling betrayed by your body, bring curiosity and ask yourself what it might be trying to tell you.

Here’s the thing, our body usually starts out by whispering to us. Perhaps we get a little bit of discomfort in our belly once a week, for example, but we don’t think too much of it because 90% of the time it’s fine. But then that whispering gets a little louder and the frequency of those symptoms increases. If we don’t listen, we might end up with daily bloating and wonder what on earth is going on. If we can learn to decipher our body’s messages while they’re still whispers, we can save ourselves a lot of heartache. That said, even if our body is shouting at us with really challenging symptoms, we can still very often experience radical relief if we find the road that our body took to create the problem. This will always be the path we need to take to resolve it.

Body fat that won’t shift can be attributed to nine different factors – gut bacteria, liver function, sex hormones, emotions, the nervous system, thyroid function, calories, stress hormones and insulin – and I cover each one of these in detail in my Weight Loss Redefined online course. As we age, lifestyle factors may compromise the efficiency of one or more of these factors and it’s this rather than ageing itself that can lead to weight gain.

This is why I am so passionate about helping women to better understand their bodies and what they need in order to achieve excellent health. It is my experience that weight loss (if this would benefit a body) is a natural side-effect of great health and if we address the nine factors, finding the one/s that sit at the heart of our challenges, we can maintain a healthy and comfortable body weight for many years to come.

Inspiring a new generation of young girls

Attend any school event where there are children aged six, and you see many little girls who could rule the world.

Their posture is upright, their eyes are bright and they have confidence in who they are—whether that is bold and boisterous or quiet and reflective.

The little boys are often a bit random, shirts untucked and less mature. Hilarious and delightful, of course, and I’m generalising, but you get the gist.

Return to this same school six years later, and the difference is palpable. Strength and confidence has grown in many of the boys, while for too many girls, I cannot help but wonder where all of those little leaders have gone.

So why is it, in this day and age, where we know so much and care so much, that this is still happening? Why do little girls feel judged by their appearance and start comparing themselves to others at such a young age? How is it possible that eight-year-olds want to go on a diet? And what can we do to minimise the self-doubt, sadness, harm and suffering for young girls?

I don’t have a clear answer for this but I do know that it’s a challenge we need to face wholeheartedly. In our modern digital world, between magazines, advertising and social media, we are exposed to an enormous amount of images on a daily basis. Even if we don’t pay a huge amount of attention to the images and advertising we scroll past, we’re absorbing a reflection of what popular culture considers ‘beautiful’, whether we realise it or not. The standards of ‘beauty’ these girls are exposed to have changed significantly over the last ten years.

This is true for all of us but, we simply don’t know the extent to which being exposed to flawless images with no real knowledge of whether they have been filtered, air brushed or digitally altered impacts on young girls in particular—who are still developing their identity and sense of self-worth.

Perhaps this is what is driving more young women to seek cosmetic treatments and surgery. Eighteen year olds are getting Botox as a ‘preventative’ measure and, while it’s wonderful that we have these options on hand, I worry about what drives a young woman to feel that she needs to prevent natural and normal changes in her body from such a tender age. I want all women, particularly younger women, to make decisions from a place of loving themselves, rather than a false belief that there is something wrong with them.

When it comes to the long-term effects of these choices, we truly are in the dark. Substances are tested for safety but they’re not tested over a long period of time or to assess how our body might respond if we continue to top up on a regular basis. How are we to know that what is deemed ‘safe’ today won’t be banned in years to come because of the detrimental toxic load or immune system challenges that can arise from having chemicals injected or foreign objects put inside us?

I believe we need to have more conversations about these things with the upcoming generation of women to foster greater awareness. We need to help them nurture a belief in themselves so that they are less vulnerable to the judgements and passing comments of others and the pervading ideals of beauty put forward by popular culture.

I’m full of hope that we can have a positive impact and truly believe we can help our young girls develop a strong sense of self-belief by choosing how we compliment and validate them. Let’s tell them that we trust in them to make excellent decisions, that we believe in them to become whatever they set their hearts to. Let’s tell them they are beautiful but also focus on all the other qualities that we see in them—their kindness, their leadership, their strength.

Are you ensnared in the culture of comparison?

In our modern digital world, between advertising and social media, we are exposed to an enormous amount of images on a daily basis. On social media alone our friends post happy snaps of their family on holiday via Facebook, while Instagram shows us “flawless” people promoting all kinds of products.

Even if we don’t pay a huge amount of attention to the images and advertising we scroll past, we’re absorbing a reflection of what popular culture considers ‘beautiful’, whether we realise it or not.

What we don’t always think about is, it’s the nature of our brain to process all of this sensory information and use it to build our perception. And what tends to happen is we end up with a catalogue of various images that, when assembled, we use to create a sense of ‘normal’. We then compare ourselves against this ‘normal’ and decide whether we fit it. For far too many, this comparison results in them feeling a sense they are lacking in some way, shape or form.

Most people of a certain age bracket are on a social media platform at least daily, if not multiple times a day. Scrolling through our newsfeeds has become a habitual practice, something we do to fill in the space. In recent years, research has linked time spent on certain social media platforms with depressive symptoms.

The reason for this?

Social comparison.

What we need to remember is, when we are comparing our lives to friends’, colleagues’, acquaintances’ – or total strangers’ – social media profiles, we are most often measuring our reality against someone else’s highlight reel.

It’s human nature to put our best foot forward and share only the best snippets of our lives. But unless you’re consciously thinking about this, you can fall into the trap of comparison. We have to remind ourselves that what we’re seeing on social media is only a snippet of someone’s life, not the complete picture or even an accurate depiction.

Additionally, when you see photos of people in print or on a screen, how are you supposed to know which images have been filtered, airbrushed or digitally altered? With photo editing and enhancements, we don’t immediately know what is real and what isn’t in the images we look at.

What happens to our own minds when we constantly see faces and features that are considered ‘beautiful’ or ‘ideal’ without any real knowledge of whether it accurately reflects how they look in real life or whether it is the way they were born?

We compare ourselves to what we see and if we don’t look the same, our mind might tell us that there is something wrong with us and that there are (many) things we need to change. When we fall into the trap of comparison it scratches an itch of not enoughness. If we believe that we don’t measure up, it can be incredibly damaging to our self-worth.

When we hold a belief that we aren’t enough it can drive behaviours that can impact on our health. For some, it ignites a sense of “well, what’s the point? I’m never going to look like that,” and may lead to unresourceful eating. For others it might drive a constant desire to improve themselves—always jumping from diet to diet, covering up their perceived flaws with makeup or turning to cosmetic surgery.

While it’s wonderful that we have all of these choices at hand, I don’t want them to be made from a belief in your own deficiency. You want your decisions to stem from love, not fear. This is important, not just for your precious self, but for future generations to come.

When we are comparing ourselves to others, we aren’t looking within and appreciating ourselves or nourishing our body, mind and soul. So, if you have become caught up in a culture of comparison, spending your time looking at images that make you feel inadequate, bad about yourself, or anything less than the beautiful person that you are, I want you to choose love – to make a conscious decision about what you give your attention to.

Because life is too short and you are too precious not to.

Currency

Please select the currency you would like to shop in.

Currency

Please select the currency you would like to shop in.