Family Fitness: Belly Bootcamp Beth Beauchemin calories diet dieting fat loss fit family fitness personal trainer toronto pre postnatal fitness pregnancy recipe toronto personal trainer
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Granola Bars for Your Inner Cookie Monster
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- Beth Beauchemin (Read About Beth)
It is no secret that I am the Cookie Monster incarnate – I can scarf down my favourite oatmeal chocolate cookie (yep, the typical fat and sugar laden one that I find at my favourite coffee shop!) faster than you can blink an eye! However, those delicious treats don’t really provide much more than a quick sugar high, followed by a more devastating crash. Add to the mix my crazy 7 1/2-month pregnant state PLUS just life in general with a toddler, and you have me wanting NEEDING a yummy, but good for me, substitute for those delectable cookies.
At first, I turned to everyone’s favourite, and hopefully somewhat healthy, pocket snack – granola bars. I think I kept Nature Valley in business for the first 6 months of my toddler’s life! However, upon closer inspection, it turns out that my
awesome snack food was not so good! I won’t go into specifics, but suffice it to say that those sweet and salty bars have sugar listed 7 different times. (The plain old crunchy bars only have it listed 1-2x, but as the second ingredient.) While I’m not one to cut dessert out of my life, I do try to be selective about where and how much sugar I’m ingesting. The occasional gelato run in the summer is all good (in my books, anyway) but my “healthy” snack food is not the place for sugar. (FYI – sugar has been linked to bloating, excessive flatulence, loose stools, insulin resistance, increased LDL (bad) cholesterol, decreased immune function, and obesity. Can you blame me for wanting to minimize its appearance in my food?)
So, snackless and desperately needing a quick, easy, and portable pick-me-up, I turned to a fabulous friend and nutrition expert for some advice! Counselling me away from processed sugars and empty calories, Lianne from Sprout Right has given me my newest fast and delicious treat. These bars are officially for our little ones, but I think that they are just about perfect for almost any busy person who’s on the go. The other great thing about these bars… start to finish (including loading the dishwasher) takes less than 20min. Perfect!
Sprout Right “Go Faster” Granola Bars

Sprout Right founder, Lianne Phillipson-Webb
Yields 16 bars.
- 1 cup Nature’s Path Millet Rice Flakes
- 1 cup whole rolled oats
- ¾ cup dried fruit (raisins, dates, apricots, etc.), chopped
- ¼ cup sunflower, pumpkin, or sesame seeds
- ¼ cup chopped almonds or cashews
- ½ cup brown rice syrup
- 2 tbsp coconut butter or unsalted butter
- ¼ cup almond or peanut butter
1. Mix together all the dry ingredients in a bowl. 2. Gently heat brown rice syrup, coconut butter, and nut butter in a large saucepan until melted and smooth. 3. Add dry ingredients to saucepan and quickly stir well to coat completely. 4. Press into a 8” square pan. 5. Refrigerate for at least 1hr and cut into squares. Store in the fridge or freezer.
Nutrition Information: (per serving; varies slightly) 128 calories; 5.5 g fat; 3.1 g protein; 18.3 g carbohydrate; 1.7 g fiber
- slow releasing carbs and healthy fats for longer lasting energy
- good source of vitamin E, calcium, zinc, vitamin B1, manganese, magnesium, protein, copper, selenium, phosphorus, vitamin B5, folate
My other go-to portable snack bar is from Weelicious.com. Blogger Catherine McCord isn’t a nutritionist but a busy mom who loves good food. Weelicious is a fabulous resource not only for when you need to feed the little people, but also for when you need to keep yourself going! Her protein bars (a Lara Bar knock off, but WAY more affordable when you have the time to make them) are awesome!
Bon appétit!
Family Fitness Personal Trainer Diary What's In the News: Belly Bootcamp breastfeeding Dara Duff-Bergeron diet exercise fat loss fit family personal trainer toronto postnatal fitness postpartum postpartum weight loss pre postnatal fitness pregnancy toronto personal trainer weight loss
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the truth about breastfeeding & fat loss
You’ve heard it before, probably even from your OB-GYN or your midwife when she was listing the benefits of breastfeeding to you. Your mom, sister, aunt, girlfriend or coworker might have told you. Maybe you googled “baby weight” or “benefits of breastfeeding” and read it there.
Breastfeeding an infant burns about 500 calories per day. Wow! 500 calories a day! That’s like jogging an entire hour. Or doing two back-to-back bootcamp classes!
Only… it doesn’t quite work that way. It’s true that maintaining a supply of breastmilk requires a woman to eat approximately 500 calories more than she normally would to maintain her own healthy bodyweight. BUT… that’s the key – it requires you to EAT those calories. If you don’t eat enough calories, you might not make the same quantity or quality of breastmilk. So dieting is not really an option when you’re breastfeeding. The LaLeche League recommends you consume a minimum of 1500-1800 calories per day in order to safely lose a healthy amount of baby weight while still providing quality milk for your little one.
The female body is an enigma. No matter how much we learn about dieting, fitness and fat loss, we are still at the mercy of Mother Nature.
I breastfed my first child for 23 months. That’s right. When I found out I was pregnant with #2 I was concerned about being active, nursing my toddler and providing enough calories for my growing baby, so I decided to wean my toddler. After weaning, I actually LOST about 5 pounds that had, despite all my efforts and all my knowledge about fitness and weight loss, been clinging to me for 2 years since giving birth. Now I’m nursing my second and, almost 5 months in, I am reigning in my expectations, settling in for a long chubby period and expecting to lose those last few pounds with some hard work once I’ve finished breastfeeding for once and for all. And it’s not just me. Friends, clients, acquaintances have all told me they’ve experienced the same sudden weight loss during and after weaning.
So what gives? If nursing burns calories, why do you LOSE weight when you wean? Shouldn’t the weight melt off while you’re nursing instead?
The truth is that a breastfeeding body is in many ways like a pregnant body. Hormones produced during the breastfeeding stages help a woman (without asking her opinion, mind you…) maintain fat stores to help feed her and baby in the event of a famine. Once baby is weaned, many women see a weight loss as hormone levels return to normal.
The best formula for losing that baby weight is to eat according to your hunger (read: not your cravings, your hunger), drink according to your thirst and exercise at least 3-4 days per week with a combination of strength training to boost your metabolism and cardiovascular exercise to burn off extra calories.
And patience. The other part of that formula is patience.
How have your postpartum weight loss efforts worked? Did you find you lost weight at certain stages more easily than others? Share with us!
Family Fitness Journey to the Green Side Personal Trainer Diary: Belly Bootcamp Beth Beauchemin budget christmas fit family fitness holiday personal trainer toronto personal training postnatal fitness pre postnatal fitness pregnancy toronto personal trainer
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Holiday musings… and ever tightening jeans!
personal trainer diary
- Beth Beauchemin (Read About Beth)
As many of you already know, I have NO hope of keeping my waistline tight and taut over the holiday season. Having a baby isn’t exactly the best way to stay looking skinny and trim (although it is VERY possible to stay fit through your pregnancy…. Hello Belly Bootcamp prenatal classes!!!), so I’m pushing off my skinny jeans goal until December 2010. (Yummy… that means all I can eat homemade butter tarts! Well, maybe not all I can eat, but I will certainly indulge in a few. It’s for the baby!) 
Since I have no hope of controlling my waistline this season, I am hoping (somewhat) to keep a tighter rein on my holiday budget. What is it about the holiday season that triggers an urge to spend as much as I possibly can to show the people around me that I care about them? I really and truly don’t look at what I receive as a measure of anything, so why would I put that pressure on myself? Is it true that “in order to be a good daughter/sister/sister-in-law/friend/etc you need to spend xxx amount of dollars”. Absolutely not! It is truly a crazy time of year, but here are some ways you can trim the fat from your holiday budget.
- Go paperless. Not only is this great for the environment (YEAH!), but it will save you time and money! You can go paperless in a variety of ways. My favourite 2 are e-cards for holiday notes (This is so fast AND no waiting in line at the post office to mail them all!!!) and being “useful” when wrapping gifts. As little paper as possible in this house – we recycle gift bags like they are going out of style, of course, but we also try and use fabric. Bath or kitchen towels make great wrapping paper, as do reusable lunch bags. Where there is a will there’s a way!
- Hit the dollar store. While paperless is still goal 1, I still have to send cards to my granny and wrap my mom’s presents. Some things will never change! For items like that…. Hello Dollarama! I can spend $20 on a card and wrapping paper at the drugstore, or $3 at the dollar store. No brainer!
- Partner up. This comes from my own personal preference….. I would much rather one nice gift than a bunch of less-than-spectacular little ones. In our family, I often partner up with a few people to get my dad the tool he’s coveting, or the new golf clubs my mom has been eyeing. We spend less than we would have individually, and are able to get a much nicer gift.
- Buy occasions, not items. This is another great “eco” gift. Items such as a restaurant/movie/spa gift certificates; your babysitting services for a night; tickets to a play… these are all great ideas and will create a memory that the recipient will treasure for a long time to come.
- Channel your inner Martha. While I admit that not everyone has culinary or sewing skills, there are a variety of easy and gorgeous things that you can make yourself as gifts. When I was a kid, my grandfather LOVED banana splits. His present from me one year… “a banana split kit”. Homemade chocolate sauce, pineapple jam, and strawberry jam, with a small whipped cream container. Cheesy? Yes. Heart-warming? Very. Useful? Definitely! I think we had banana splits at their house every Friday for the next 2 months! Spend some time researching online, and you will find a plethora of ideas that truly do come from the heart.
So while I will admit that I did go ridiculously overboard for my granny (can anyone say cashmere set?!), I have managed to find a few places where I’ve been able to be more reasonable. Now I just have to sit back and let the dust settle on my credit card: we will see what January brings!
Happy Holidays everyone!
Personal Trainer Diary: bathing suit bikini postpartum pregnancy stretch marks vacation weight gain weight loss
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the cure for stretch marks
personal trainer diary
If you have them, you know. Whether 100 pounds or 300 pounds, 18 years old or postmenopausal, we are united by our stretch marks.
Some women, like myself, are doomed from the beginning. My stretch marks began in my teens. I grew so fast over my fourteenth year that I even have stretch marks on my knees! I am used to my stretch marks. They have faded to slim, silvery reminders of my adolescence and I barely notice them unless they happen to catch the light on a bright summer day… I thought I would be prepared to deal with the mother of all stretches – the postpartum stretch. “How bad can they get?” I thought…
Not bad at all if your dream is to resemble a purple zebra. For those of us who aim for a more human look, they’re pretty bad. But maybe “bad” is the wrong word. They’re pretty “extreme.” But they’re a more-than-fair price to pay for the wonderful little person who gave them to me.
My stretch marks are now collapsed in on themselves, as only my fellow mothers will understand, into an ultimately even less appealing lump of crepey skin not unlike the back of my great grandmother’s nearly century-old hands.
How’s that for imagery?
As my husband, J, and I begin planning our first child-free getaway in more than two years, I feel myself becoming unusually preoccupied with my stretch marks. This will be the first time I appear in public, stretched, as it were, and half-nude. It’s a rite of passage of sorts. My first inclination was to run out and snap up every decent one-piece swimsuit in a fifty-mile radius but, as I vowed aloud never again to wear a two-piece, my husband’s horrified look started to change my mind. If he was so horrified at the prospect of my moratorium on bikinis, maybe I didn’t look quite so awful as I thought. Sure, I don’t look the way I did five years ago, but I’ve worked hard in the last year to lose 40 pounds of baby weight and I am more motivated than ever to stay active and healthy.
I’m in the business of making people look good and – more importantly – feel good about the way they look. Sometimes, in my own life, it helps to imagine my own problems are the problems of a client and imagine how I would respond as their coach and confidante.
I would definitely not let my client self resign herself to a bikini-free life.
Next week I will book a date with my most trusted advisor (my sister) and begin the search for a new bikini. Wish me luck!






