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Welcome to show number 3/6 in my: 6 Step System To Becoming Vegan and Living A Healthy Vegan Lifestyle Long Term series.
It’s a “veganising” of the system I designed many years ago to effectively lose fat (and GAIN a fit, strong, healthy body) by getting your mind working for you and making your best eating and exercising actions simple and sustainable.
To recap, those 6 steps are: Define. Align. Eliminate. Educate. Strategise. Prioritise. We covered “Define” in show E601 and “Align” in show E603.
Today I’m going to focus on:
How To Eliminate Limiting Beliefs and Live A Healthy Vegan Lifestyle Long Term.
For years I believed the path to leanness was paved with hours of cardio. And a zero fat diet.
I also accepted that genetically I was “meant to be’” fairly chunky on the bottom and scrawny up top. Hips and thighs were just where my fat gravitated to right? And if I got super extreme with running and cutting everything out of my diet my lower body would get acceptably lean – at the expense of a now emaciated looking face and upper body.
As you can imagine these beliefs were not working particularly well for me.
Today’s show is dedicated to freeing you of the beliefs that are making achieving a healthy vegan lifestyle impossible.
What we’re going to do is eliminate the beliefs that are not propelling you towards the attainment of your goal.
Why is it important to have zero tolerance for such beliefs?
If the way you think is not in support of your goal than it is absolutely in conflict.
There is no status quo as far as your beliefs.
Limiting beliefs sap the life out of your best intentions. They attract more of the same. More energy sapping, confidence eroding, insidious thoughts and beliefs that make it impossible to realize your goal.
How to eliminate your limiting beliefs and ensure your thoughts are HELPING you gain your ideal body and ideal health while following a vegan lifestyle.
Step 1: Brainstorm your current beliefs about exercise, #plantstrong food and I would even say, vegans and a vegan lifestyle in general.
Beliefs at this level are called Global Beliefs. Everything you feel to be true about the world around you. They determine how you interact with the world. You will filter in evidence to support your current beliefs… and filter out evidence that does not support your beliefs.
For example: What is exercise to you?
Boring, hard, tedious? A necessary evil? Vanity? Something to be endured – when you have nothing better to do?
This is not my belief, however if I chose to entertain this belief I could absolutely find evidence to support it: treadmill trudging, spin classes, trying to increase my weights every session, sticking to the same old program… and so on.
In contrast could exercise be: A tool to create a strong, fit, healthy body that allows me to wear whatever I like and have the energy to do whatever I like? Precious, fun and indulgent me time?
What is #plantstrong food to you?
Restrictive? Boring? Socially isolating?
Perhaps, What is clean eating to you?
Bland and time consuming? Expensive and inconvenient? Something to be endured rather than enjoyed?
In contrast could #plantstrong food – even clean eating be: How you ensure your body looks, feels and functions optimally? A chance to get creative and make yummy meals that you love and that support your best health? The biggest positive impact you can have as an individual on the health of our planet and a way to align your daily eating actions with your beliefs that cruelty to animals is unnecessary and unjustifiable?
Step 2: Question the validity of any current beliefs that do not make it easier to do the things you know you need to do to achieve your goal.
Often our beliefs have just come to be without any real volition of our own. We accept them unquestioningly. AND too often we accept the (unacceptable!) results they deliver to us. It’s one thing to unconsciously allow this to be the case.
Especially so far as becoming vegan your beliefs might have been consciously (I’d say maliciously and deviously) perpetuated by the marketing and financial interests behind animal agriculture.
With awareness comes responsibility.
It’s time to take back control of the beliefs that are not working for you.
A couple of useful questions to ask yourself:
=> “When did I decide to believe that?”
=> “What evidence do I have to support that?” or “How do I know that to be true?”
For a number of years I held tight to the belief that all cardio was either punishingly boring and time consuming or impossibly hard and exhausting. When I questioned that belief it really did seem to be a little extreme. Perhaps even an excuse to conveniently give myself an “avoid hard cardio at all costs” card.
I also subscribed to the belief that I needed animal products to get enough protein and maintain both muscle and leanness.
Step 3: Search for proof to support a more sustainable / effective belief.
When the student is ready the teacher will appear right? I guarantee once you become open to the possibility of something, opportunities and examples will start to show themselves. In fact they’ve always been there – it’s just that now you have your blinkers off so you can see them. You’ll begin to filter in the proof that will help you, rather than filter it out.
I began to see body weight workouts that had the same cardio effect and yet were just as fun (to me!) as lovely weights. Or the super-crazy-short Tabata style training that could see me on and off the hateful treadmill in 6 minutes flat.
If you’re stuck as to where to start, take a look at the people who have the results you’re seeking. Imagine what their beliefs might be? Or simply just ask them how they think of exercise, #plantstrong food, or veganism in general. People who are doing well – in any aspect of their life – are generally fairly willing to discuss it.
What next?
Let’s put this into action. It’s the time of the actionable!
First: Grab a piece of paper or open a new doc and brainstorm your current beliefs about exercise and #plantstrong food. Anything goes, so don’t judge or edit your responses just get them all down.
Second: Grab your rational non-emotional mindset (!) and question the validity of these current beliefs, ask, “How do I know that to be true?”
It’s ok for a belief to change.
The only important factor surrounding your beliefs (as long as they are not hurting anyone else) is, Does it get you the result you’re seeking?
Finally: Hunt down the proof to support a more effective, sustainable, supportive belief. That proof is there, it’s all down to your willingness to accept it and to accept the results it will make available to you.
I almost forgot: I mentioned one of my old limiting beliefs was FAT MAKES ME FAT! WOW, I couldn’t have been more wrong, in fact Good fats are your fat burning friends.
Here are my 7 fav vegan ‘Eat Fat To Melt Fat’ food swaps:
- Swap your morning pastry, muffin or banana bread: for oats spiked with delicious nut butter(I LOVE almond, cashew and brazil nut butter), and seeds (like hemp + pumpkin seeds).
- Swap butter or worse margarine: for avocado.
- Swap store bought mayo or dressing: for a less processed option.
Here’s a yumbo avocado sauce / dressing: Mash 1/2 a large super ripe avocado. Stir through 1 heaped tablespoon of Veganaise (I know it’s proceeded however a little bit goes a long way). Season with salt and pepper. This is my new fav dressing which I stir through a heap of kale-slaw type veg and then top with 2 black bean and beetroot burgers for a super fast super delicious lunch.
- Swap a chocolate bar or biscuit: for 50 gm of unsalted nuts.
- Swap chips: for kale crisps. I’m seriously addicted to these things!
1/2 a big bunch of kale (washed, ripped into chip sized pieces and dried with a tea towel then patted super dry with paper towel).
1 teaspoon of great quality extra virgin olive oil. A generous pinch of Celtic sea salt or really whatever you like: chilli, paprika, herbs…
Place kale into a plastic bag with oil and seasoning and shake till well coated. Sprinkle onto a baking sheet in a thin layer (use multiple pans if making lots and cover baking sheets with cooking paper for easy clean-up).
Bake at around 180 degrees Celsius and watch carefully till it starts to brown and crisp up. The time varies depending on your oven and the amount of kale – but it’ll be around 20 minutes.
- Swap processed and fake energy / protein bars: homemade protein balls.
- Swap a fast food shake or choc milk: for a homemade shake with a tablespoon of nut butter. Here’s one I love:
1 cup unsweetened vanilla almond milk or coconut water or just plain H2O. 1 serve vegan protein powder (aim for at least 20gm Protein and only 2-3gm of Carbohydrate and Fat per serve). 1 tbsp ground flaxseed (optional). 75gm frozen unsweetened raspberries or strawberries. 1 tbsp natural almond butter. 3 ice cubes. (or if you’re game 3 frozen spinach cubes – it looks ugly and tastes good!)
Simply dump all ingredients in a blender and blend!
What are your fav good fat swaps?
In show 607 I’ll be back with Part 4 of my 6 Step System To Becoming Vegan and Living A Healthy Vegan Lifestyle Long Term. We’ll cover: How To Educate and Accelerate Your Way To A Healthy Vegan Lifestyle.
That’s it for today in Healthification. Huge thanks to YOU for sharing this week with me. You rock and I appreciate your support!
The Healthification podcast is proudly bought to you by my FREE ‘Easy Vegan’ plan. It took me 25 years to transition from a meat eater to a happy, healthy Vegan! You can do it in just 3 days with my simplified ‘easy vegan’ plan! Get the fit, strong, and healthy plant based body you deserve… while avoiding ALL the mistakes I made along the way!
Till next time, remember Creating a body and life you love is Freedom. (If this ex-carb queen, non genetically gifted, naturally uncoordinated vegan chick can do it – so can YOU!!!)
If you liked “How To Eliminate Limiting Beliefs and Live A Healthy Vegan Lifestyle Long Term” you’ll also like: Eliminate Limiting Beliefs. (Encore Episode) and Identity Beliefs Revisited.
If you’re yet to share the Healthification love – just click here to zip over to iTunes and leave an honest rating and review. It’d help me out big time. With gratitude, Kate.