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Not Your Average Gal

Not Your Average Gal

Copywriter. Content Creator. Constant Sassypants.

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Health

I Don’t Look Like a Runner

September 23, 2015 By Caroline Peterson

My butt jiggles. (Although I’m not entirely sure exactly how much because it’s quite tough to verify while I’m running.) I have strong thighs that touch. My boobs need to be locked and loaded into my favorite sports bra. I get really red in the face to the point that I’ve received concerned looks from bystanders.

I just don’t look like a runner.

But I am.

A friend of mine wrote a Facebook status about seeing a marathon and half-marathon race one time purely by coincidence. She was shocked at all the different body types running such long distances. It wasn’t said in a condescending tone; it gave her the idea that, heck, maybe she could even run a long-distance race too.

That’s what is so wonderful about this news story. I dare you to watch it without smiling a bit. She’s an absolute inspiration and reminder that runners, regardless of body size, are still…running.

Fat Girl Running:

(http://nbcnews.to/1Mhrc7G)

“There’s a cognitive dissonance, I think, involved in just imagining somebody who is able to run the amount of miles that I do, and that other people do, that look like me and also carry extra weight. But I think that is due to this notion that we’ve had for years that ‘fit’ means a very particular body type, a very particular weight, and size, and height and that’s just not true. I’m not saying that I don’t have more weight to lose; I know that it’s dangerous to have weight around your belly and I’m working on it.”

Nailed it. It’s that very stereotype that often prevents people from continuing to practice what they love. Running, yoga, dancing. You may not “look” like an athlete, but the second you lace up those shoes, you are.

I have to consciously tell myself to move past this association as other smaller runners cross paths with me. My body may not look like hers, but hell, I’m fit. Remember my excellent numbers? Just like Mirna Valerio says, sure I could stand to lose more weight, yes I could aim for more defined abs, I’m aware of that. But loving and accepting who you are is important too, more so than what the time reads after you cross the finish line.

A1A Fort Lauderdale Half Marathon

“I love my body. And I’ve learned that the more I love my body, the more I love myself; the happier I am, the more healthy I am. Whether that’s in physical health or emotional health or mental health…I’m a better person.”

Think about that.

Filed Under: Body Love, Health, Running

Breakfast for Lazy People

September 9, 2015 By Caroline Peterson

Ideally, I’ll give myself enough time for a hearty, healthy breakfast in the morning. Reality? The fact that I walk out the door with pants on is a win in my book. The solution? Egg Muffin Thingies

I’ve found these to be such a good solution for breakfasts that I thought I’d share it. This probably takes me 10 minutes, tops, to prepare for the week.

What you’ll need:
One dozen eggs

‘das it.

Egg Muffin Thingies:

Crack those eggs, slap ’em into a muffin pan. If you’re OCD like me, you’ll move the yolks into the center with a spoon. Top with salt and pepper, if you so desire. My husband bought this muffin pan for me after my old pan rusted so much that he worried he’d get tetanus. Med students. So overdramatic. Anyway, it’s awesome. I highly recommend it. He got it on Amazon.

Egg Muffin Thingies | Caroline Made This

Pop them in the oven at 350 degrees for 10-15 depending on how much you want the yolk cooked. I like mine a liiiiittle runny.

Egg Muffin Thingies | Caroline Made This

Spoon them out, toss ’em individually in tin foil and throw ’em in the fridge.

Egg Muffin Thingies | Caroline Made This

Boom. Nailed it.

I often add some turkey bacon and put them in a half wrap, I prefer Spinach. It’s dee-lish.

Egg Muffin Thingies | Caroline Made ThisEgg Muffin Thingies | Caroline Made This

Even cold.

Because I’m too lazy to walk to the microwave.

Enjoy!

Filed Under: Funny, Health, Recipes

I Don’t Have a Goal Weight. Should I?

August 28, 2015 By Caroline Peterson

I used to have a number in my head of what I’d like to weigh because I figured that number meant I’d put on that illusive glass slipper and finally be pretty enough to twirl in my ballgown.

But that shit’s for Cinderella and my fairy godmother is probably drunk.

You can read countless weight-loss tales of women and men who thought they’d feel different once they hit a certain weight. But they didn’t. The same insecurities raged. The same person in the mirror stared back, even if physically, they looked vastly different.

You know the first time you felt fat? Don’t you wish you could actually go back to that person and slap her?

I recently lost 4 pounds. Don’t get ahead of yourself by cheering me on — it’s part of the same 10 pounds I’ve lost and regained over the last year. Normally, I’d be beating myself up and playing mind games with where I should be by next week or next month in regards to the number on the scale. I just don’t necessarily have a final weigh-in number in mind for my goal weight. (Aside from a 2015 goal of losing 15 pounds, which seems like an arbitrary number.) I’m on what seems like an endless eat this, not that journey. I considered going back to Weight Watchers (can they just give you a “Buy 4 times, get the 5th time FREE” pass?) but there’s this nagging feeling that I’m grasping at straws at this point. Something has changed.

I’m waving the preverbal weigh-in white flag.

I didn’t share this with readers last year, but I went to the doctor for a full write-up physical while training for my 2nd half marathon. I expressed my unhappiness with the number on the scale. The doctor mentioned he struggles with weight too and he’s tried My Fitness Pal and Weight Watchers.

Been there, done that.

He told me to continue training for my half-marathon and wait until we get my blood-work back to see if anything was off.

It wasn’t. Nothing was off. Nada. I’m perfectly fucking healthy.

Actually, I believe his words were, “You’ve got really excellent numbers.”

Oh. Why, thank you. *slow-mo wink*

Do you know what’s it’s like being told you’re perfectly healthy? IT’S AWFUL. I needed a reason why the number on the scale doesn’t fall into the “normal” BMI range. I have everything telling me I was healthy, except that damn number. I worry that number could be detrimental down the road, the older (and hotter) I get.

So, here I am, living with really excellent numbers…*slow-mo wink*…but letting one damn number from a scale tell me how I should feel. It’s certainly held me back from doing things.

At 5′ 7″, I stood taller than most boys in elementary school and began wearing a bra in 5th grade. I was well on my way to being a wo-man (You must emphasize the WOAH) needing an underwire bra, with thighs that touched before I could even rectify what that meant in my head. At 11 years old.

CMT3

It lead to a lifetime of squashing that inner mean girl talk. I have found, though, I’m much more forgiving of myself as an adult. Perhaps it’s because most women now have underwire bras and cellulite? Hey – we’re in this together! So I don’t feel as different as I did when I was 11 years old.

That said, I want to work on the self-love a bit more. If you had asked me if I liked my thighs 10 years ago, I would probably laughed and grabbed them to show the jiggle. Because I’m a giver AND a visual learner. Now? Now I know these beasts can move huge pieces of furniture, run 13.1 miles, cradle a ginger kitty and laugh in the face of thigh gap.

So, obviously, progress can be made. My thoughts are, instead of focusing on the number, focus on how I’m feeling.

I like how I feel after I do yoga.
I like how I feel after I go for a run.
I like how I feel after I eat a healthier lunch and forgo the Jimmy John’s #9 (Hold the tomatoes and mayo).
I like how I feel when I meal plan.
I like how I feel when I’m not doing a jig to get into my jeans.

This body of mine can and has done amazing things and I need to remind myself of that more often than what the number on the scale tells me. I want to take more of a #wycwyc attitude and move past reminding myself I didn’t get up early enough for a run and instead go for a quick walk when I get home from work.

A1A Fort Lauderdale Half Marathon

I realize I talk a lot about empowering yourself and empowering other women, so it may come across that I have all the confidence in the world. But that constant power struggle between confidence and self-doubt still tugs in my mind as well. It’s not easy.

<insert “If it were easy, everyone would be doing it” quote here. Along with one giant groan and eye roll.>

It needs to start with accepting this body right now, how it is. Loving every nook and cranny. Heck, people learn to love their scars. The huge one on my leg looks like a tiger mauled me, and that’s exactly what I tell people when they ask. They don’t need to know in college I skid on some ice and fell off my bike into a bush. Yes, I was sober. Yes, the bush ripped my sweatpants and then skin. Yes, the story now is a tiger mauled me. I sort of love that scar now.

How do you get to that point? How do you train your mind to respond with kindness and not criticism? How do you avoid beating yourself up at each bump in the road? What if I actually focus on how I feel first instead of what the scale was telling me?

I don’t have the answer, friends. But I’m surely going to give it a mother-effing whirl.

Filed Under: Body Love, Health, Mental Health

I Felt Like Crap. So, I Curled my Hair.

August 17, 2015 By Caroline Peterson

Last night, in an attempt to put my adult pants on, I made a valiant effort at going to bed before 1 am on a school night. I’ve been taking an eye-opening copywriting class and one nugget of brilliant information that stuck with me was how to prioritize myself and my creative work. Not work in the 9-6 sense, but the work that helps motivate your creativity. The work that inspires you. The work that lights a fire under your ass and invokes sashaying to Beyoncé down the hall to the bathroom for your morning piss.

That kind of work.

I just don’t have the energy for that sort of sashaying when I get home from work.

Let me offer some perspective — I’m typically gone 11-13 hours a day depending on my workload. Often, the last thing I want to do when I get home is work on anything else other than a bag of potato chips on the couch. Don’t forget those annoying life things to take care of too, like bills, cleaning and changing my underwear. It’s recently meant that taking care of things that fulfill me outside of work get shoved to the side because I’m just. trying. to. relax. when I get home.

So, with this newfound information that (duh) I need to prioritize myself and my creative work, I took a page from this copywriting seminar’s book (Get it? Writing jokes are hysterical!) and decided to get up earlier than usual to take care of my needs first thing in the morning.

Like-5-fucking-am-first-thing.

That gives me a good 3-ish hours to get my creative writing juices flowing before I need to hit the road and flip the bird at Florida drivers. This morning I had a gecko pop its little head out from under my hood while I was going 65 mph. Little guy held on until I got to work.

Sorry, little guy. Welcome to your new concrete home of my parking structure in downtown Fort Lauderdale. I know I took you away from your family and lush paradise. But, hey, you lived?

Moving on.

The alarm went off this morning at 5:03 a.m. (because somehow that made me less likely to throat punch someone than 5:00 a.m.). I hit sleep. 5:11. Sleep. 5:20. Sleep.

By the time I got up, I felt like crap because I hadn’t fulfilled a new goal. So I beat myself up about for it a few minutes while I laid in bed, because that’s normal and healthy. I was productive for a bit, answering emails and looking up recipes on Pinterest.

HEY! Judgment-free zone.

So after I pinned another recipe to my board that easily has enough food to feed several Duggar families, I thought I’d try to make myself feel better by dressing the part.

You look good, you feel good, right?! <cue giant eye roll>

So I threw on a dress and curled my damn hair.

Bathroom selfies require looking off into the distance with a glow filter added because I couldn't put on foundation properly this morning. Pardon the cleavage, it happens with bathroom selfies.
Bathroom selfies require looking off into the distance with a glow filter added because I couldn’t put on foundation properly this morning.

 

(It fell out before lunchtime.)

(I still feel like crap.)

But someone at work told me I must be going out on an interview or something because I don’t normally look this nice…

So I’ve got that going for me.

Filed Under: Funny, Health, Mental Health

Literally and Figuratively Cleaning Out my Closet

August 10, 2015 By Caroline Peterson

In general, I’m very good about not collecting and keeping too much shit. The hubster pokes fun at me because I have 3 rubbermaid bins in our storage closet of childhood memories that I’ve been moving around to each place I’ve lived since I was 22. My mother wanted nothing of mine at her home after I left, save for a few items I forgot, and my parents have been divorced since I was 10, so very few things of mine were at my dad’s house.

3 bins of memories.

That’s it.

He has his childhood memories still sitting at his parents house that I’m sure could fill more than 3 bins. “It’s mostly trophies and medals from baseball and golf. I wouldn’t want to make you feel bad.” Modest, that one.

I think 3 bins are pretty good. Truth is, I could probably go through those and toss most things.

But the thing nagging me the most recently was my actual clothes closet. Things weren’t organized, I was wearing the same shit to work each day because I couldn’t really be bothered finding that “cute” shirt and I’m just in a rut. I haven’t really, truly gone clothes shopping for a “new look” in years because honestly, I didn’t need to.

Like I’ve mentioned, if traveling has taught me anything, it’s that I don’t need a closet full of clothes to be happy.

Have I bought new things? Sure. But it’s things here and there. I could have kept some items I bought for our trip to Southeast Asia, but if we weren’t going anymore, why keep them? Return, return, return.

So this past weekend, I spent 2 hours organizing and cleaning out my closet.

I was disgusted.

gross

Even if I tend to go through and make donations every few months to the point our drawers and shelved are getting dull, I really must have been avoiding my closet the last year and apparently, as you’ll see, there was a reason. There was a pile of clothes I just tossed more clothes onto without thinking because I hadn’t worn them in years. One after the other after the other.

clothes

 

I like to think I live a bit more simplistically. And, in general, I do. I don’t have nearly as many clothes as most of my friends and yet, still, I put together 2 bags of clothes and shoes to donate.

That’s obnoxious.

Side note: Can you donate bras? The ones I buy to keep these puppies up are expensive and it seems a pity to just throw them out.

Some things were winter-ish items I was holding onto that just seem silly to keep while in Florida. If we ever move above the Mason-Dixon line again (GOD NO. PLEASE NO.) I doubt they’ll even be fashionable still.

And you know me, super model fashionista. Werk it, girrrl.

The sad truth is, some things just didn’t fit anymore. I have no idea how my breasts can keep growing, but they do. The hubster high-fived me when I announced from the corners of my closet that my boobs have a mind of their own.

I was about 5 different cardigans deep when I began to notice a trend. I noticed that most items I was keeping were looser fitting, shells, tanks tops and blouses.  I bought some cardigans when we moved offices and it was suddenly freezing because of a new A/C system. My thought was that I wanted to remain fashionable without putting on my winter coat and scarf at my desk.

But I grew into those looser fitting cardigans and blouses. These clothes are covering me up. Both literally and figuratively. I’m not ashamed of my body, but these clothes were sort of telling me otherwise. It really made me quite sad.

I realize that wearing tight fitting clothes doesn’t necessarily mean you’re confident, but most everything I have is just…baggy.

So I did something that took strength bottled in the reserves of my mind.

I donated my favorite pair of giant, oversized, comfortable sweatpants. 

You know the ones I wear with my giant, oversized Spice Girls tshirt? (Which, duh, I’m not donating.) The ones that the hubster says he knows exactly how I’m feeling about myself when I wear? Translation: Not good. 

When did I stop wearing things that made me feel pretty or good about myself? What the hell is going on here?

I was tossing out bras and underwear when I came across a pair of thongs that made me blush. I used to wear these? It was a quick kick in the ass of how I’ve been feeling about myself. (Don’t worry, hubster, I kept the risqué thongs.)

I donated things that fit funny and things I felt “too” comfortable in. I’m not going to toss my cardigans because it’s still 7 degrees below my nipples being able to cut glass in my office, but at least I’m now aware of what my closet it saying.

Get it together, Caroline, and stop hiding. Be proud of yo’self. (Does your inner voice have sass? Mine does.)

I kept a pair of jeans that are a biiiiit too snug for me to squeeze into and will help serve as a reminder to get my ass in gear at the gym and dinner table. The rest? Tossed. It felt so good to be organized and get rid of the old and toss the things I maybe was holding onto for the wrong reasons.

I’ve certainly been working on getting into a healthier schedule with all of the recent setbacks. Donating those items I’d hope to wear again someday or allowed me to remain hidden was a good step in the right direction.

Do you discover similar things when you raid and clean your closet? Are you reminded of certain feelings or memories when you toss things in the donation bin?

Filed Under: Body Love, Confessions, Soapbox

You were Never in Control Anyway, Honey

August 6, 2015 By Caroline Peterson

I don’t do helpless.

I don’t do can’t figure it out.

I don’t do out of my control.

So what are you to do when you’ve exhausted every avenue and the answer or decision is in someone else’s hands?

Drink.

You let it go. Rather, I let it go. I have to let go.

buddha

Worrying is like a rocking chair — it gives you something to do but it doesn’t get you anywhere.

I’m so frustrated that things are out of my control and that my needs or wishes are on hold until we know more. I hate not having even the slightest knowledge of what the next year will look like. I realize how vague I’m being; there’s a method to my madness as you’ll see below.

We’re all going through shit. All of us. Whether or not your perfect Pinterest party ass wants to admit it, we are all going through shit.

So insert your problem (however big or small) into the sentiments from above:

I’m so ________ that things are out of my control and that my ______ or ______ are on hold until _______. I hate not having even the slightest _______ of what _______ will look like.

Feel any better? You can insert problem x, y and z into most scenarios of life that we share even if the problems are vastly different.

You’re not alone. Gosh, it feels better knowing that. At least for me it does. Do you feel the same way? Perhaps it’s feeling less helpless. Perhaps it’s comforting to know there are battles we all trudge through.

One of my girlfriends sent me a very interesting article yesterday:  After a setback, time in the neutral zone can be therapeutic.

It really resonated with me. I just need to…be. I need to sit in this current whirlpool of setbacks and soak in the uncomfortable feelings associated with it. No, not wallow in it. But simply accept that this could possibly be long-term and float in the new feelings associated with letting go of trying to control the current.

I’m not going anywhere, both literally and figuratively. Current needs demand focusing on the present situation. (Current needs = taking care of myself.) What I had envisioned set up expectations for how things should could turn out.

Expectations are evil. I must accept the present and let go. 

What are some of your techniques after setbacks? 

 

 

Filed Under: Mental Health, Soapbox

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