Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Ten Days of Real Food!


I've been reading through the 100 Days of Real Food Blog for some months now. 




I find it encouraging that this woman decided to learn more about the food she ate and was feeding her family and then led her family on a journey to see what would happen if they cut out all processed foods for a definite period of time. She's done two documented 100 days of real food pledges: "The Original"  and  "100 Days on a Budget." I'm currently reading through her blog posts on the latter pledge. 


She encourages readers who might find giving up processed foods for 100 days intimidating to try a 10 day pledge. Seemed doable.


As I shared in my last post, one of my goals for 2014 is to gradually make my way to eating a mostly (85%) whole foods, unprocessed diet. I woke up one Monday morning in late January and thought "What am I waiting on?! I'm taking the 10 days of real food pledge today!"


I didn't follow the rules perfectly. But I kept trying. Because I'm usually the type to quit when I have a slip-up or for some reason end up not following a plan exactly, the fact that I kept trying even though I couldn't do the pledge perfectly is significant for me.

Day 1:
"Breakfast"- Green juice and a banana
Lunch- homemade stove stop mac and cheese, steamed cauliflower and broccoli, avocado with evoo and sea salt
Snack- raw organic pistachios, clementine orange, apple sauce
Dinner- shrimp fried rice, raw kale salad
Dessert- homemade gluten free chocolate chip banana bread
Liquids- water, green tea with raw honey, red wine



"Real food" included meat( preferably local and organic), dairy (preferably organic), fruits and veggies, whole grains, nuts, and seeds, and all the wonderful things you can make with these unprocessed ingredients. It excluded refined sugars, refined grains, deep fried foods, and all food products made from those ingredients. Store bought/ packaged items where allowed as long as they had no more than 5 ingredients and all the ingredients where whole (i.e 100% whole grain bread, pasta etc). Raw Honey and Maple Syrup were the only sweeteners allowed [in moderation]. The pledge permitted alcohol.


For my heart you see...
The rules and the entire Real Food deal are best explained on the website. I highly recommend checking it out and reading the blog posts. The site also has ton of recipes and resources for the real-food curious!


The blue corn tortilla chips were a no-no

 


I'll keep trying the pledge until I can do the 10 days perfectly (maybe one day I'll make it to a 100). But for now I'm pleased with how much healthy food I consumed (and am still consuming) consistently.




Friday, November 15, 2013

Self Care and Exciting Mysteries

A couple of weeks ago, I decided that I would consciously and unashamedly dedicate November to my well-being.  I planned to actively take care of myself with more nourishing, home-cooked food, more abundant and higher quality sleep, more reading and writing, more lying in the dark listening to beautiful music (what, you don't do that?), more moving my body, more aloooone time but-and-also more time with friends not named Hannah (although I do love her and my time with her very much).


I've been marginally successful. I've done more cooking than in previous months and although I currently can't stand the sight of a green smoothie, I've increased my salad intake tenfold (or five threefold, whatever). I've had more alone time and spent more time with non-significant-other friends. On the other hand, I haven't read or written as much as I've been wanting to, my daily exercise still only comes in one form: my 10 minute walk to and from work, and the listening to music in the dark thing has been a no-go.The very, very great news is that I have an entire half of a month left to continue to make progress, and I will use those two weeks well!

In other news:

My life is in crazy flux! So many things are changing in so little time. In less than two weeks I will end my term at my current job (I have so many things to wrap up) and be on my way to Nashville, TN for Thanksgiving! Immediately after returning to Chicago, I will start a new full time job (praise), settle into a new apartment, play kitten mommy for a month, and possibly begin preparations to start another Master's program (part time). I'll share more details as these things happen but just know that my head is spinning! A couple of weeks ago when this was all still very uncertain and I was in danger of an anxiety meltdown in my office, my dearest Han, via Google chat, encouraged me with these words:

" I love you dear. Pray to Jesus for patience. I will try to find you some inspirational recorded thoughts from someone smarter than me, but until then just try to love this time as more of an exciting mystery than a scary secret."

I loved that last bit especially and decided from that moment on that "scary secrets" were out and "exciting mysteries" were in. Women's group last night reinforced this for me. During prayer, one of the women asked that God would help us all to celebrate and rejoice at what S/He is doing in our lives instead of allowing anxiety and fear to have center stage. Another woman prayed that we would all find peace with uncertainty and weakness, knowing that it's in those things that God's certainty and strength are exemplified.

I'm still scared. A lot can still go wrong how am I moving all of my shit?! . But in this moment, I'm choosing to make the joy, hope, and excitement of everything larger than my fears.

Oh, and in case you didn't catch it in the first picture, this happened:

3 weeks into my new do, it's already grown out from the starting 1/4 of an inch
Nearly 4 weeks ago, I asked Han to shave my head for me, and she did (she's done it several times before). I did it for completely different reasons than the first time and I love it more than I did the first time.


I think it's a good look for 25. 

Monday, September 9, 2013

Oh Discipline

One day I'll be able to call myself a disciplined human being. I'll introduce myself that way: "Morgan Service, disciplined human being here!"  Ok, maybe not. But it would be nice to know that if I did, I wouldn't be lying!



I did not meet my sleep goals for August. I have not, so far, met my unprocessed food goals for September. And I have troubles. Multiplied breakouts- depressive/ anxiety episodes-breaking out in hives every day again-constipated troubles. Sorry [not sorry] if that's TMI.

I've been having technical troubles too. My computer was out of commission for a while because my charger went kaput. Then my phone died and I received a less than stellar replacement. I can no longer compulsively check Facebook or Instagram (verb) every bit of my life. This forced semi-disconnection from social media is good though (I think). I know my father is relieved that I will no longer exceed our monthly data limit. You win Daddy-o, you win.

These past 7 and some weeks have not been all bad, however. I started exercising semi-regularly again. I've also journaled a few times after a many-months-long dry spell.

And I have other new things happening:

1. I'm loc'ing my hair! This is my second attempt ( I started the process in the late spring of 2011 but quit by the end of the summer) and I am sticking to it. So far I am a month in. I wore my baby locs out for a week but am now wearing yarn wraps (no, that's not me in that video) over them. Because honestly, the baby locs stage is just a little too rough for me right now. Not rough as in hard or burdensome. Rough as in "yikes, I don't feel as pretty as I want to!" And I'm fine with that being the reason I'm currently wearing braids.



2. I started a  blog on Tumblr! www.aqueerfaith.tumblr.com. I'm using it to discuss my experience of Christianity and non-heteronormative sexuality. I found it very hard to keep the blog focused because there are so many amazing, beautiful, funny, clever, poignant things on tumblr. To address that problem, I also made a secondary tumblr blog www.mfoodfaithfemme.tumblr.com for my other interests.  

My very first post where I detail the persons to whom A Queer Faith is dedicated.

3. I renewed my library card--it expired in mid-May--and I'm thrilled to be able to borrow books again! Right now twenty three of them are lounging on top of my bookshelf. There's that discipline problem again. But as my good friend, Bianca, put it, "what am I supposed to do?! They're free!"  I'm currently reading 10 books at once Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn. So far, I like.



4. I have a camera again (I lost my last one on Valentine's day earlier this year)! A camera separate from my phone! And praise the Lord, because my "new" phone does not take very good pictures and getting pictures off of it onto my computer is more than a trial! Hannah gave me this camera for my birthday. Technically I've had it for a couple of months, but when I brought it back from Nashville, I left it at Han's place and it remained there until this past weekend. I purchased a memory card for it on Saturday and have been a very happy girl ever since.
I look like a professional, don't? 
I used it to take this picture of the pita bread and hummus that I MADE FROM SCRATCH tonight. Can you tell that I'm SLIGHTLY proud of myself?


I won't give up the fight to turn myself into a consistently healthy eater. My latest weapons:


 More to come on this when I can share something that will make you proud of my growing discipline.

Adieu.


Monday, February 11, 2013

Mid-February Wellness

I sat down a few days ago to write a detailed food update. I couldn't do it. I literally tried for hours and could only produce 2 incoherent paragraphs. I haven't discussed food here since the beginning of November so a large part of me wants to tell you every little detail about what I've been eating. But for some reason, my brain can't make it happen! So I'll  just say that from November to now I've exercised about 4 times and I've been eating the unhealthiest that I have in about a year and a half--mainly junk food, lots of sugar, lots of refined carbs, lots of alcohol. Ironically, I've lost about 5 pounds on this "diet" and am the smallest I've been since high school. Not ironically, I've had the stomach flu and 3 colds during this time-- the final cold lasted a whopping 5 weeks.

Yech.

I am amused that I managed to lose weight while eating 90% junk and not exercising. I've learned that, for me, the quantity of food consumed has a more significant impact on my weight than the quality of food consumed. Although I scarfed down junk for the past couple of months, I ate sporadically. On most days, due to poor decision making and the lack of an appetite, energy, interest and/ or time, I only ate one or two meals. And so my tummy shrank, and my pants got baggy...and my immune system went on vacation. I had a physical about a week and a half ago and learned that I had borderline low blood pressure. This was also funny to me considering the high sodium content of everything I'd been eating for the past few months. Less funny, however, was that my iron levels were low and that I basically had no Vitamin D in my body! Ok--I exaggerate. My levels were just abysmally low at 19 (according to my doctor, 30 is the adequate level) !

But good news:

Last week's sole green smoothie


I've come to a place where I again have both the desire to eat well, and some of the [mental and physical] energy I need to make that happen. I planned to make February my month to focus on wellness, or something, but we're almost half way through the month, and I've still been eating junk, averaging 3 hours of sleep a night, not exercising, and drinking too much [liquor]. I'm not stressing about it though. Over the past couple months I've really realized that I'm not mentally at the place where trying to be a stickler about food will be beneficial to me. . It's been hard for me to admit, but I have "deeper" things to work on before I'll be able to successfully follow a "strict" food regimen.

So I have some simple daily goals (SDG's--you know you like that) for now:

1. get 7 hours of sleep
2. do 20 minutes of exercise  (not including my walks to and from work)
3. drink a green smoothie and eat a serving of steamed veggies
4.  have 30 minutes of communion with God in whatever form seems best that day
5. journal
6. drink 8 cups of water

A list of 6 things might seem too long, but I have at least 10 other things I want to add. So I am pleased with myself for committing to only 6.

And these are foundational. I need rest, veggies, and water. I need to move. I need God and I need to have sorted thoughts and feelings. I don't think I'll be able to make any other long-term positive changes in my life until those 6 things are standard.

I'll start tonight with a green smoothie and 7 hours of sleep. This is going to go amazingly well.


Sunday, October 14, 2012

My Month of Meat (and seafood, eggs, nuts/seeds and healthy fats)

Hello!

I am switching gears a bit. I have decided to try the "Paleo," short for "Paleolithic," diet for 30 days ( I am currently on Day 2). Thank my friend Janelle who lent me the book, "It Starts With Food" and also thank my inability to resist testing [seemingly sound] nutritional claims for myself! I am not going to give you an in depth explanation about the Paleo diet. I will tell you what you eat on it, but I won't go into any great detail because that would take too much time AND you have Google (or Bing if you prefer) to do that for you.




What I will be eating:
- vegetables
-sea  vegetables (kelp, arame, dulse wakame)
-meat (grass-fed, organic, pastured--not to be confused with "pasteurized," this means the animal was not raised in a factory or barn but on actual grass pastures)
- eggs (from pastured chickens),
-seafood (wild caught),
- fresh fruit
-raw nuts and seeds
-other healthy fats: coconut (meat, butter, unrefined oil); olive oil; ghee (clarified butter i.e. butter with the milk proteins removed)
- green tea, herbal teas

Ghee: clarified butter i.e butter without the inflammatory milk proteins


What I will NOT be eating:

-added sugar or artificial sweeteners in any form including maple syrup, agave, stevia or...raw honey. I am actually undecided about the raw honey because I just love honey in my green tea and I only add about 1/4 of a tsp anyway...
-grains (not even whole grains: no bread, pasta, baked goods, wheat, corn, brown rice, quinoa, millet, amaranth etc).
-legumes ( no lentils, beans, peanuts, soybeans or products made from soy).
-dairy (except ghee).
- processed crap i.e cheetos and pumpkin doughnuts.

In general I have heard the Paleo diet explained as healthy  because it's the way "early humans" ate.  Some proponents of the diet say that our digestive system hasn't evolved along with our agricultural practices and therefore can't handle all of the things we include in our diet in the present day. Well...I don't care all that much about how cavewomen or cavemen ate. I'm doing this because the research I've done (research that does not actually mention cavepeople) has adequately convinced me that some of the foods that I assume are good for me might actually be harming me.  Specifically, I'll be following the Whole30 program (created by the authors of It Starts With Food). Click on that link for a really great overview/ explanation of the program! (I am pretty sure any questions you might have will be answered by that link so click before you ask).

Poached eggs w/ sauteed kale, chard, garlic, and red onion



I'm still skeptical:

1. Meat all day every day?


Pastured lamb chop from the Farmer's Market!
The authors of It Starts With Food, and the research they cite, have done a good job of convincing me that my LDL cholesterol and triglyceride levels will not skyrocket, my arteries won't clog, my kidneys won't give out from animal protein overload, and  I won't have a heart attack...but they have not sufficiently convinced me that I won't be constipated. After suffering from consistent constipation from ages 7 to  20 (I'm 24 now), a return to that dark time is a big concern of mine. For some reason I am not convinced that I will get enough fiber from vegetables, fruits, nuts, and seeds. I feel like I need grains and beans to have optimal fiber intake. I did poop like a champ this morning  (after Day 1 of this plan) however, so I'm hopeful things will be OK. I hope that was not TMI. We are all grown ups and can talk about poop right?  If  you're not a grown up, I hope you're not reading my blog . ha. No really, get outta here :/.

2.  Not even whole grains?!

 I have been very waryof gluten (a protein found in wheat, spelt, barely, rye, and sometimes oats) for a while now  (and have made several unsuccesful attempts to give it up long term) but I'm having a hard time believing  that even non-gluten whole grains (like brown rice, quinoa, amaranth, etc) are negatively affecting me. "The research," suggests, however, that all grains can be pro-inflammatory. We will see.

3. No beans? Now you're just making stuff up!

But actually they're not making stuff up. Still I did find that their argument against beans was the weakest of all their arguments against restricted food groups. I am especially skeptical because Dr. Joel Fuhrman ,who I absolutely respect and trust after reading his incredible book Eat to Live, puts beans on a very high nutritious, cancer-fighting pedestal. Again, we will see.

After the 30 days, I will reintroduce some foods to my diet (wheat products, whole grains, and beans) one at a time to see how my body reacts to them. If a particular food group causes a bothersome reaction then I'll know that the foods in that group are a general no-no for me. I am already pretty sure that dairy has a bad effect on me so I don't plan on "reintroducing" it as a regular part of my diet.

What I'm hoping for:

1. No more chronic hives!
2. High energy levels that my body sustains for the entire day. (In a normal day I crash between 12 and 4 and by the time I get home in the evenings I feel completely drained).
3. Higher quality sleep.
4. Clearer skin.
5. No more eczema!
6. The death of my sugar addiction and food cravings.
7. Bye bye nasal allergies, nasal congestion and, persistent nasal drip (yum).
8. Mood stability.
9. No more general body stiffness or random but persistent aches and pains (mainly my knee joints and back pain).
10. Relief from my chronic upper right abdominal pain.

I am not doubtful about the healing power of the right foods. A truly healthy diet reduces systemic inflammation--which is frequently caused by poor diet, stress etc.  Systemic inflammation is a significant root cause of  a ton of common ailments like allergies, eczema, acne and joint pain, as well as of  major diseases like cancer, diabetes, heart disease etc. I don't know if this is the particular eating plan that will be best for me but I am excited about testing it.

What about being an "aspiring vegan?":

Fruits and Veggies from this morning's trip to the Farmer's Market: 1 huge bunch of Red Kale, 1 head of  purple cabbage, 1 head of green leaf lettuce, 3 parsnips, and 6 pears.

I am OK with taking a break from that goal for a while. My number one reason for attempting to go vegan was for my health. Concern for the environment was a supporting reason. Along the way, I learned just how despicable and cruel factory farming is and my conscience would not let me go back to fully supporting that. The good folks at Whole30 say that I will be healthier with high quality animal protein in my diet and they've given me enough evidence to make me want to test their claim. I also appreciate that they emphasize the importance of eating grass-fed, organic, pastured meat and meat products.
 I don't and won't preach to people about everything wrong with factory farming on a regular basis. I don't want people to be angry at me or down on themselves, and I don't want people to think that I have a superiority complex about meat eating. I don't. This is not an elitist thing. It's a personal cruelty-free, health conscious thing and this is my blog and today I will preach a bit. Factory-farmed meat is just not good for you. The grain and animal by-product diet that factory farmed animals are fed, as well as the antibiotics and hormones they're given makes their meat, especially the fatty parts (toxins are concentrated in fat cells), not.good.for.you. I respect that the authors of It Starts With Food emphasize that their health claims don't hold as strongly, if at all, in the case of eating factory farmed meat. Grass fed beef,  pastured chickens and their eggs, and wild caught seafood ARE expensive, no doubt. I can just barely afford it but the strain is worth it.
The people who make their millions from factory farming DON'T CARE ABOUT YOU OR YOUR HEALTH. They ONLY CARE ABOUT THEIR MONEY! Fact, fact, fact. They are unnecessarily and heartbreakingly cruel to animals (and to their factory workers btw), don't give a shit about the environment and I'll do everything I can to NOT support their ugly souls! This is a conclusion you have to come to on your own however. Nothing but doing my own research on this (or any food) issue would have convinced me to go this route.
In short,  doing the Whole30 program doesn't violate any of my beliefs/ morals about eating animals and I plan on being an "aspiring vegan," once again someday

Acorn Squash baked w/ ghee and a bit of sea salt.

Still, in support of Veganism:

A little side note. I am now more than ever convinced that people who say being vegan is more expensive than being omnivorous don't actually know what they are talking about. Beans, brown rice, fruits, and vegetables are cheaper than  meat, fish, eggs and dairy products--even the factory-farmed, non- organic kinds of these products. I challenge anyone to test me on this.

Ok, that is all for now. Stay tuned for my Paleo adventures!

Saturday, September 29, 2012

Salad Bowl Blog: Lows, Highs, Chicago VeganMania, and the Man of My Dreams

It's time for another blog post where I talk about a bunch of random things!

  •  I am in a rut. I don't feel well physically or mentally and I am wondering what it is going to take for me to do the things I know I need to do to change that. It's a nasty cycle really. Getting out of a rut requires energy. I don't have the energy because the things I do (or don't do) when I'm in a rut suck my energy. I am so sugar addicted I can't even joke about it, I am grumpy, moody, and super anxious. I am breaking out in hives everyday, my nasal allergies have gone cah-raaazy, and hellooo eczema!  The thought of intense exercise scares me. Seriously, if I think about doing anything more than yoga or going for a walk I want to cry. Sometimes the thought of yoga alone is enough to freak me out. Friday morning was my low point--I woke up, did not want to get out of bed and after about ten minutes of lying there, I spontaneously burst into tears! I want to ask the universe how I got to this physical and mental place?! But I think I know how--unwise choices, busyness, indiscipline, and just plain life circumstances. 
BUT...
  • I am planning to have an amazing week. I am going to be kind to myself by making good sleep, exercise, and food choices and spending quality time with my heavenly Padre. I've promised myself that if I make these good choices everyday this week then I will reward myself at the end of the week by getting my eyebrows threaded! Let's see if this external motivation works. I'll keep finding new rewards every week until spiritual, physical and mental wellness become the rewards (I'm thinking this will take a good, long, while).  



  • This past week did have a some highs though. I wore my rainbow earrings to the place where I volunteer and was hit on by one of our clients.  This was a high solely because the situation amused me intensely and gave me a good story to share. Apart from being amused, I was slightly grossed out--the woman was old enough to be my mother (::GAG::)--and slightly embarrassed because really, how inappropriate!  


  • High #2: I signed up for Chicago's Hot Chocolate 5K and will be running it with a very good friend (in a previous post I mentioned that I planned to do a half marathon at the end of October, definitely not happening anymore).
  • High #3: I'm picking up the CSA box for one of my friends who will be out of town this weekend and I get to keep all of the produce! Fresh produce excites me. FREE fresh produce!!?!!! Well...that's pretty orgasmic.
  • High #4: About half an hour after my mini breakdown on Friday morning, I got a fantastic phone call from the Executive Director of the place where I volunteer telling me that I'd gotten the job I'd recently interviewed for there. Ahhh!! I will dedicate a post to this sometime in the near future but for now just know that I am extremely happy about it! I'm just going to have to hide from Ms. lady who reminds me of my mom (::GAG:: again).
  • High#5-I got offered another Netflix free trial. I think this might be my 10th one but c'mon, who says "No, thanks"to a Netflix free trial? This is a great thing because there are several food and nutrition documentaries that I've been wanting to watch and most of them are available on Netflix. Also, the third season of The Vampire Diaries was just put on Netflix. TVD is one of my absolute favorite shows. I missed the entire last season so getting to catch up on it has made me so happy-- Mmmm Stefan Salvatore.


  • Today was Chicago VeganMania! My friend and I were one of the first 100 people in line so we got goodie bags full of vegan...goodies. It was mainly snack food, a few treats (including a peanut butter cup  and superfood fruit chew mmmm), coupons, informational flyers, and tiny beauty product samples.

The bag itself was pretty sweet too. I had a good time. I ate lots of samples, and got to hear the author of one of my favorite blogs , as well as the author of  eat vegan  on $4 a day, speak. I left motivated to make a lovely vegan meal plan for this upcoming week. I'm writing this post instead, but that meal plan is next.

Vegan goodies

You can never have enough reusable bags!

  • Upon leaving the vegan fair today I saw someone who I am sure must be one of the most delightful men in Chicago, if not on the planet. He was [one version of] the man of my dreams. Now, what I am about to describe might sound a little scary at first but try to keep an open mind. He was white with waist long blond dreads. He had tattoos all over his arms and a few on his face too. He had HUGE ear gauges, and a septum piercing. He was well built (SO well built haha) and had a wonderful smile (his teeth were so straight and white) and a very handsome face even with the tattoos. He was walking his dog :). His appearance was just so off the wall and badass but the way he smiled and interacted with people outside of the fair contradicted that "image." I loved it.  If I ever see him again it's going down. I don't know what "it" is yet, but it's happening. I think I was so intrigued because he's the male version of the way I sometimes want to look (minus the face tattoos)! I want to grow long dreads,  pierce my septum,  get a tattoo going down the length of one of my arms, and get ear gauges--small ones. I love the way these things look...one day folks, one day.
Ok, that is all the randomness I have for now.

Until next time :).

Yummy vegan peanut butter chocolate pretzel cup from Chicago VeganMania!


Wednesday, September 5, 2012

An update (lots of pictures)

Hi all,

I'm distressed that it's been weeks since my last post. I'm even more distressed by the fact that I STILL haven't gotten back "on track" from the "fried chicken and cupcakes" weekend I wrote about in my last post.  I won't tell you all the unhealthy things I've eaten since then but know that Entenmann's "donuts," a cheeseburger from Five Guys, copious amounts of peanut M&M's, and a McChicken (oh the shame) are all on that list. My body hasn't taken this abuse quietly: my hives came back some days ago (and have been visiting every day since), my face has broken out pretty badly, and my "digestion," has been less than stellar. Overall though, my food choices have not been completely terrible, especially over this past week. Have you seen this picture before?
I appreciate it so much because it accurately describes the food journey I've been on since June 2011. I am in the jumbled phase: I've had many set backs, "fallen off the wagon" often, looped around a lot, haha, but I am always learning more and, overall, moving forward :).

An extremely wise man once said that "life is more than food" (Luke 12:23). I know this is true but I don't always live like I know it is. I am working on having more balance in my life I and hope to have a few non-food related posts up soon! Until then, here are some pictures of the good food choices I've made recently.

I recently read this book.
I borrowed it from my roommate and really enjoyed it. It doesn't [necessarily] advocate a vegan or vegetarian diet (so if you're looking for a detox program that will still "allow" you to eat meat I highly recommend this book) and it even persuaded me to go out and buy [wild, frozen] salmon (I bought 2 six ounce fillets that I intend to make into four servings) and a small carton of eggs (organic and certified humane). I guess the book made me curious to see how I would feel consuming  tiny amouts of  meat/ animal products as part of a very clean, unprocessed diet. When I've used up these two fillets and six eggs, however, I don't plan on buying anymore. Ok, now for those pictures:
 
Broccoli-Garlic Pasta :). It's brown rice pasta with garlic, olive oil, broccoli, and no-salt added spaghetti sauce sprinkled with a bit of Parma! ( vegan "parmesan" made from nutritional yeast, raw walnuts, himalayan crystal salt).
 
Spinach-carrot- celery- cucumber- beet juice with a bit of ginger and lemon
Cornmeal porridge (a Jamaican specialty) veganized with homemade gluten-free crackers subbing for the usual Excelsior water crackers I grew up eating this with.
Healthy "ice cream"- what you get when you put frozen bananas, a splash of soymilk, a tsp of cacao powder, 1 tsp of vanilla extract, a pinch of sea salt, 1 tbs raw almond butter, and a bit of agave in a food processor (and let it run for a bit).
Green juice from lactino kale, romaine lettuce, cucumber, celery, broccoli stems, 1 pear and 1 piece ginger.
My most recent "haul" from Whole Foods: organic, unsweetened applesauce, organic frozen veggies: mediterranean blend, organic celery, organic red chard, organic lactino, kale, organic red kale, organic romaine lettuce, organic cauliflower, organic broccoli, 1 lemon, 2 limes, raisins, organic brown/wild rice blend, 1 bunch bananas, 1 container organic "orignial" hummus, 2 organic pears, 2 organic fuji apples, 1 pack organic baby carrots, 1 box baking soda, 1 carton organic, plain, unsweetened soy milk (I usually by the WestSoy brand because it's the cheapest "clean" brand I can find. The ingredient list looks like this "Water and Organic Soybeans." Fantastic).
Dinner one night this week. Note the plate organization: 1/2 veggies, 1/4 grains, 1/4 protein. Steamed broccoli and red chard lightly seasoned with sea salt and garlic powder, brow/wild rice blend, and sesame-ginger-maple baked tofu (I've found a new favorite way to prepare tofu!)
Green smoothie from romaine lettuce, 1/2 large cucumber, 1 pear, 1 frozen banana, water, 1/2 cup soymilk, and ground flaxseed.
Red chard omlette on top of toasted homemade sourdough bread

For the past couple of days I've been snackingon raw cauliflower and baby carrots. At first I tried them with hummus but decided I liked them better plain.

organic red grapes. I turned to these today when I had a sugar craving. (I still ended up eating some M&M's le sigh.)

brown/wild rice blend with 1 tsp gomashio(japanese condiment made from sesame seeds and sea salt)

Green juice from lactino kale, romaine lettuce, cucumber, celery, carrots, 1 fuji apple, 2/3 lemon, and 1 piece ginger. I really enjoyed this juice, it tasted like lemonade. It was especially smooth because I strained it with my super tiny sieve (my juicer is an inexpensive brand/model so the juice it produces usually has a little pulp left in).
"Superfood Smoothie" 2 tsp raw cacao powder, 1 handful goji berries, 2 bananas (1 frozen, 1 very ripe), 1 tbs raw almond butter (Trader Joes makes the best and cheapest raw almond butter I've tried so far!), 1 cup raw homemade almond milk, 1 handful raw walnuts (soaked for 8 hrs). (I didn't use the agave pictured). I honestly wasn't that big of a fan of this smoothie. I think I needed more cacao powder and almond butter and less banana. oh well.
 
Ok that is all for now! Stay tuned as I continue to pull myself out of the depths of nutritonal disaster haha.