Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Only 7 Days left!!

There's only 7 days left to take advantage of this sale! This is a great deal! Its only the price of a bag of shakeology plus for $10 more you get the entire 21 day fix program. That's 7 workouts, shakeology cup and all the containers to help you learn portion sizes!


We have one challenge group currently already rocking it with this program and will have another one starting in July!




Friday, June 19, 2015

Beachbody Challenge





Are  you ready to take the Beachbody Challenge?? Take before and after pics along your journey with your Beachbody program and submit them to Beachbody. You could win lots of money for it!! What other company does that??


Who wants to start their new journey to being fit?? (and maybe win some money too) 


Check out this video for all the details! 



Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Been Thinking of Trying Shakeology?

Have you been thinking about trying shakeology? Now is a great time! You can get one flavor or a combo of flavors. 




THE HEALTHIEST MEAL OF THE DAY®.
Replace one meal a day with Vanilla, Chocolate, Strawberry, Greenberry, Tropical Strawberry Vegan or Chocolate Vegan to help increase your energy, reduce cravings, lose weight, improve digestion and regularity, and transform your health.
Check out the full video

Here are some great testimonials! 


My Background: I've been pre-diabetic for the last ten years and my cholesterol was dangerously high. No matter what I did diet and exercise wise...the number on the scale only went up. A year ago, I was taking more medication than my 97 year-old grandmother! After just a month of Shakeology, my cholesterol has dropped significantly and my glucose number looks good too. I'm still pre-diabetic but I'm getting close to moving out of that range too! When I told the doctor I haven't been on any medication for a year...she was STUNNED! I wasn't... I could tell my blood sugar had started to regulate..now the numbers prove it! I feel so much better in the morning and in just 30 days! Not to mention, I'm finally starting to lose weight! Make the investment in yourself and order shakeology.
Fitness Programs: Chalene Extreme, Turbo Fire, Rockin' body, Hip Hop Abs
Pros: High qualityGreat tasteVery effective
I have to say, I NEVER write reviews, but, I feel compelled to share the amazing feeling I get from this product. Shakeology has completely turned me around in 1 day from feeling tired, sluggish and run down to having complete energy, feeling very focused and not tired at all.
I just started Turbo Fire and have 2 small children. My days are jam packed from beginning to end, but Shakeology has gotten me through it without passing out from exhaustion. I'm regular, energized and my mind just feels so extremely focused, I just can't say enough good things about this product.
THANK YOU SHAKEOLOGY!!!
Fitness Programs: Turbo Fire
Pros: High qualityGreat tasteVery effective


I was very hesitant on trying this product. I've never taken protein shakes or meal replacements so I did not know what effect it would have on me. I had to tweak what I would add a couple times so it would taste better. I settled on Tropical Strawberry and I add strawberries and bananas with orange juice and water and lots and lots of ice =D It is just delicious! I've always been very irregular on my bowels(not trying to gross anyone out) but this product has totally eliminated that problem. I love Shakeology and recommend it to anyone that wants to have lots of energy and wants to feed the body something good. I know the price is a little high but trust me, it is worth it.
Fitness Programs: Turbofire
Pros: High qualityGreat tasteVery effective

I was thrilled to receive this product. I have tried many protein shakes, meal replacements, and greens drinks before. Shakeology combines them all into one delicious and easy to use shake. It is worth every penny!
Pros: High qualityGreat tasteVery effectivequality ingredientsnothing artificial


I love this product!! I wake up every morning looking forward to having my "breakfast" :) it keeps me full, and tastes amazing!! I enjoy the chocolate with half a cup of unsweetened almond milk/half water, half a banana and a little bit of almond butter. YUM. I also recently tried the greenberry, and i LOVE IT!!! i added half a banana, 1/4 avocado, big bunch of spinach, some blueberries and did half almond milk, half water. it is seriously delicious!!
Pros: High qualityGreat tasteVery effective


I am a carboholic. I have tried for so long to find something to help me with craving sugar and carbs. Shakeology is a lifesavior!!!
It tastes great! It really helps to fill you up and most of all I have no cravings for sugary snacks!!!
Fitness Programs: P90X, Brazil butt lift
Pros: High qualityGreat tasteVery effective

Monday, June 15, 2015

How Often Should You Eat?

How Often Should You Eat
The simple rule for millennia was eat to survive, but our modern lifestyle seems to have it flipped.
Now, with obesity rates on the rise and affecting more than one-third of Americans, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, it seems humans survive so they can eat.
What we should eat has long been debated as diet recommendations have changed over the decades from fat free to high protein to low carb. As has the simplest of factorshow much we should eatwith calories occupying the central role. But what about when? If your goal is weight loss, should you eat throughout the day or is there value in reserving meal times for certain segments of the day? It turns out that answer is personal.
“The recommendations for eating patterns (including the number of times you eat throughout the day as well as when you eat) needs to be approached on an individual basis taking individual goals into consideration,” says Jessica Bachman, Ph.D. and professor in the Department of Exercise Science at the University of Scranton.
One long-running, popular approach to promote general health and weight maintenance has been to spread calories throughout the day in the form of several small meals. In doing so, the concept is that you’ll feel less hungry at any particular time and, therefore, less likely to consume an excess of calories during meals.
There is some data to support this. Bachman led a study that appeared in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, in which people who were of normal weight or those who were maintaining their weight reported eating more often than individuals who were obese.
Another study, this one from the University of Murcia in Spain, found timing may be a factor as well. Over a 20-week test period, those who consumed the majority of their calories later in the day lost weight at a slower rate weight than those who were early eaters. Diet, energy expenditure, and sleep were consistent between both groups, but the early eaters tended to eat breakfast more often than late eaters.
“The hypothesis is that if you eat small meals and snacks throughout the day, you never allow yourself to get overly hungry,” says Bachman. “We know that people tend to eat more when they are very hungry, so by avoiding this greater level of hunger, maybe people can limit overeating and therefore control their calorie intake and, ultimately, weight.”
Bachman followed up her original study with a six-month weight-loss intervention with two groups of 25 overweight and obese adults. One group was told to eat all of their calories in three meals a day and the other group was told to eat meals and snacks at 2-3 hour intervals throughout the day. Both groups lost weight. But the group that ate three times a day ate fewer calories and lost more. “What we found was contrary to observational research. It appeared that eating less often, and therefore being exposed to fewer opportunities to overeat, may help people with losing weight.”
However, this doesn’t necessarily hold true for weight loss programs that offer a set amount of calories and predetermined meal sizes.
study at the Salk Institute in La Jolla chose to look at time-restricted eating instead of focusing on specific types of diets or the number of meals. Their hypothesis was that how efficiently the body  handles calories is more closely related to the circadian rhythms of active and rest periods than the food consumed. The researchers at Salk, led by Associate Professor Satchidananda Panda, tested 400 mice. The mice were given a range of diets, from high fat to just sucrose or fructose, and found those that were restricted to an 8-12 hour feeding window lost weight and were healthier than those allowed food all day.
Even the mice that had 24-hour access to a high-fat diet, and became obese, lost weight once their diet was confined to the feeding time frame. This held true for diets high in fat or sugar, even if they consumed the same number of calories as the all-day eaters. Those fed in the 9-12 hour window were leaner. “It highlights the temporal aspect of feeding more than the calorie content and shows it is important to eat during your active phase which is when your body is tuned to energy expenditure and not energy storage,” says Circadian Biology Ph.D. Amandine Chaix, who participated in the study and felt these results could have further positive effects, when tested on humans.
“One set of the population is already obese,” Chaix said. “So already being obese and switching to a time-restricted feeding, you can lose weight? That was really powerful.”
Bachman said research is moving in the direction of meal timing and may have further benefits for the aging population in addition to those overweight, especially as it relates to the consumption of protein.
“This has potential important applications for older adults who are commonly plagued with muscle loss as they age but, also, for anyone trying to lose weight,” Bachman said. “With weight loss, you are losing not only fat but also lean muscle mass and this way of eating may help prevent some of the loss in muscle mass.”
But all of this may come down to a numbers gamecalories. Baschman says, “If someone is trying to lose weight, the individual needs to create a calorie deficit, ideally by eating fewer calories and exercising more.”
And that science is simple.
http://www.teambeachbody.com/teambeachbodyblog/nutrition/how-often-should-you-eat?ICID=CT_BLOG_EAT_OFTEN

Monday, June 8, 2015

Just a little about me!

I ran my first half marathon this spring! I ran in Dallas, TX in the Rock n Roll Race! It was such a great experience! I was also able to finish under my goal time (which was 2 hr. 30 mins) I finished in 2 hr 13 mins! :) 


I was never a runner until after I had my first son either! It was something I could do while I had him with me. So I just started running one day while pushing him in a stroller. I never thought I would ever be able to run more than 2 miles, let alone 13.1! If I can do it, so you can you!!







Success Stories

Age: 29
Gender: Female
State: Puerto Rico
Primary Program: INSANITY®
Supplement: Shakeology®,P90X® Peak Results and Recovery Formula

Age: 23
Gender: Female
State: Colorado
Primary Program: P90X®
Supplement: Shakeology®, Whey Protein Powder, Slimming Formula
Age: 28
Gender: Female
State: Missouri
Primary Program: Turbo Jam®
Supplement: Shakeology®, Whey Protein Powder 
you
Age: 27
Gender: Female
State: Florida
Primary Program: FOCUS T25
Supplement: Shakeology®
Age: 26
Gender: Female
State: Ohio
Primary Program: 21 Day Fix
Supplement: Shakeology®
I just wanted to share some of the amazing success stories from many of the different programs Beachbody has to offer! I'll work on putting mine up this week as well! :) Challenge group starts June 15 if you want to join us! I'd love to help you get your own before and after success story and pictures! 


These are from the Beachbody website. There are tons more if you'd like to see even more success stoires. Find them here

Confessions of a Junk Food Junkie: 6 Tricks to Kick the Habit

This is an article I found on the Beachbody Blog. I wanted to share it with you! It's such a great read! 

True story: I was a fat kid, peaking at about 225 pounds by age 18. In my more socially awkward moments—and there were many—junk food was my best friend. Or so I thought. When my algebra class crush would gave me the “just friends” speech or a so-called buddy would jokingly call me “Fatso,” nothing said acceptance like a pint of Rocky Road and half a package of Nutter Butters.
Today, I weigh about 160 and I’d love to tell you those urges are behind me. Sadly, they’re not. On bad days, it takes a concerted effort not to pig out. My name is Denis Faye and I am a junk food junkie.
Given our nation’s exploding obesity and diabetes rates, you very well could be too. The good news is that with a few tricks and a little hard work, together we can keep those sugar monkeys on our backs under control.

Why we’re hooked on garbage

It’s safe to say that junk food addiction is a very real thing. The first place to look for proof is the ever-mounting pile of scientific evidence, including a study out of Sweden showing that the hormone ghrelin, which activates the brain’s reward system and increases appetite, reacts similarly to sugar and alcohol.
Then there are the increasingly decadent foods we have 24-hour access to. In his bookThe End of Overeating, Dr. David Kessler theorizes that manufacturers have, over the years, engineered the balance of fat, sugar, and salt in junk food to the point of making it irresistible. He refers to our gluttonous response to this crackified food as “conditioned hypereating.”
Most of this current thinking revolves around physiological factors, such as the fact our brains are hardwired to seek out highly caloric foods as a “feast or famine” instinct left over from caveman days. Unfortunately, human beings are slightly more complex than our primitive ancestors. By adulthood, most of us are a hodgepodge of neuroses and psychoses for whom a Twinkie has become a security blanket, so this urge to splurge will never completely vanish. Sure, you can retrain your body to crave healthy food, but your psyche may never stop seeking validation, Hostess style.

How to keep that addiction under control

Luckily, a well-trained body goes a long way towards helping a slightly off-kilter mind. For example, if I were to force down that aforementioned slice of Sara Lee heaven, I’d get physically sick. After years of clean eating, my digestive system has lost its ability to handle the toxic effects of a sugar hit like that, not to mention the preservatives and additives. Thanks in part to these newfound “limitations,” today I can walk away from the cake or limit myself to one or two bites—but that’s taken years of training.
But it wasn’t easy. If you’re going to break a sugar habit, it’s going to take time, patience, and willpower. But take it from a guy who used to work his way through an entire box of Cap’n Crunch for breakfast: If I can do it, so can you. Here’s where to start.
1. Clean all the junk food out of your home. 
Think of the stereotypical image of the woman getting dumped by her boyfriend and climbing into bed with a tub of Ben & Jerry’s. If that tub wasn’t in the freezer to begin with, odds are that our protagonist would have instead settled for a soak in the tub.
There’s also “unconscious eating” to worry about—when you just grab a bag of fried carbs while you’re sitting in front of the tube and stuff your face for no reason. If you don’t have access to the junk, the only bag you’ll be able to grab for will be filled with baby carrots. If someone brings some junk over for a dinner party, enjoy it with them and dump the rest when they leave.
2. Eat 80% clean.
Relax with that other 20%. Just because your kitchen cupboard no longer looks like a movie theater concession stand doesn’t mean you can’t live it up sometimes. If most of your diet is super tight, you’re doing great, so cut yourself some slack. When I made my first big push to clean up my diet, Friday was Cookie Day. I ate like a saint 6 days a week, but every Friday I had a giant chocolate chip cookie and a latte. Knowing I had Cookie Day to look forward to made all the celery on the other days much more palatable.
3. Make a comforting ritual out of eating healthy.
The fact that Cookie Day was a ritual was also quite helpful. Unhealthy eating is often ritualistic—something comfortable and constant that you can depend on. Not only can you have your own Cookie Day—a conscious, controlled, weekly moment of indulgence—but you can replace unhealthy rituals with healthy ones.
For example, I used to drink at least two servings of alcohol a night. I’d have wine or beer with dinner and then another one when I was sitting around reading or watching TV. When I realized that second drink wasn’t doing me any favors, I replaced it with a cup of herbal tea. The 21-days-to-form-a-habit thing has no scientific backing, but eventually a behavior pattern will set in. In my case, after three weeks I stopped missing that second beer. Then, after a few more weeks I really started craving the calming, peaceful feeling my cup o’ chamomile gave me. Now it’s a nightly ritual.
4. Carry healthy foods with you at all times.
If you carry a purse or a backpack, throw an apple or some raw nuts in there. In this Fast Food Nation, it’s pretty easy to find yourself in situations where you’re hungry and, shucks, you just have no choice but to buy a donut because that’s the only thing you have access to. You don’t have that excuse if there’s a snack in your pack. Here are a few to consider:
  • Fresh fruit (Apples, plums, pears, and stone fruit travel well!)
  • Dried fruit (It all travels well!)
  • Raw nuts
  • Whole-grain crackers
  • Shakeology packet
5. Discover new, yummy fruits and veggies.
There’s a lot of weird, healthy food out there. Sometimes, we avoid fresh produce because either we’re either bored of the same old oranges or there’s a stigma associated with particular produce. Dad just forced you to eat asparagus one too many times. If this is a problem for you, buy fruits and veggies you don’t recognize. If you don’t know how to prepare it, do an internet search for “(produce name) + recipe.” You might stumble on a new flavor that completely blows your mind.
For me, that magic fruit was the cherimoya, or “custard apple.” They’re green and scaly on the outside, thick, white, and creamy on the inside, with a rich taste as sweet and satisfying as the richest sorbet. My mouth is watering just writing about them.
6. Binge on healthy foods.
I’m probably the only person who will ever give you this advice since it’s a wee bit questionable. Every once in the while, something emotional triggers me and I need to eat junk. Someday I might completely conquer this urge, but not yet. When I feel this happening, I hit the fridge and “pre-binge” on healthy foods, mainly raw veggies. Sooner or later, the ice cream or chips come out, but by that point, I’m so full of broccoli or spinach that I’m not physically capable of doing too much damage. Dysfunctional? Maybe, but a vast improvement over the alternative.
You might be one of those lucky souls who just decided to walk away from the candy counter and never looked back. Good for you. I’m not one of those people. Eating right is much easier than it was 20 years ago, but it’s still a process. That said, the rewards are innumerable, so why don’t you set down the pudding pop, grab a peach, and join me?

Link to the article  http://www.teambeachbody.com/teambeachbodyblog/nutrition/confessions-junk-food-junkie-6-tricks-kick-habit?ICID=CT_BLOG_JUNK_FOOD