Archive for the ‘Raw’ Category

Raw Food Kids RAWK!

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

One of the hardest things to do is get kids turned on to healthy foods.  After all, you’re competing with cookies and other sugary sweets, not to mention the in crowd which can easily turn a child off their favorite healthy foods.

Imagine my delight when I discovered a new raw food cookbook aimed at kids.  I just picked up a copy and it’s absolutely beautiful.  The book truly is aimed at kids.  Not only with fun recipes that are easy to make and sure to delight the pickiest eater but also inspire them to get creative and have fun with their food.

Introducing…

Monkey Mike’s Raw Food Kitchen! The First Ever Un-Cookbook for Kids!

I know from years of experience, that the best way to get kids to eat healthy food is to inspire them and make eating fun. I smile when I think of all the fun I’ve had in the kitchen with my nephews and step-daughter. They love helping me in the kitchen and I love the time we get to enjoy together, creating memories that will last a lifetime!

So be sure to grab your copy of Monkey Mike’s Un-Cookbook For Kids today!

Raw Moms: Empowering Moms

Friday, June 26th, 2009

There’s something I think you should see…

I’ve been participating in the Raw Mom Summit this week.  And I’ve got to say, the collection of interviews has been truly inspirational.  The interviews have given me gems of information to improve, not only my own life, but the lives of the children in my life: precocious nephews and an amazing step-daughter.

As a step-mom, I go against the grain of society’s standard parenting protocols.  I’m not the biological parent and sometimes that can prove challenging.  But it can also be very rewarding and I’m blessed to have an amazing child in my life whom I’ve watched grow into an incredible young lady.  And I helped: leading by example and keeping the doors to my heart open — even during those periods when the doors to hers closed.

That’s why the Raw Mom Summit, and the Raw Moms themselves, have been an amazing source of support and inspiration to me.

Any woman who has ever yearned to give her child the very best start in life possible…

Any mother who has felt the need to go against the grain of society’s standard parenting protocol because she knew there was a better way to live and to love…

Any mother who has ever questioned the status quo and believed that life and parenthood and the health of children could be better than it is, then what I am about to show you is something you’ve been waiting for.

“The Raw Mom Summit” is an online event starting on June 22nd and ending on June 30th. For 9 days and 9 nights the wisdom, experience and understanding of over 30 passionate health pioneers and some of the world’s leading experts in alternative health, are bringing their voices together in the name of building healthy families and empowered leaders of the next generation.

You can learn more about this FREE online event by clicking the link below.


Raw Mom Summit - The Evolution of Motherhood has arrived


Raw-Organizing My Kitchen

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

My 30-day cleanse has been interesting so far.  I find myself craving raw foods and head to the market daily to stock up with copious quantities of fresh vegetables and fruits.  I come home with arms full of fresh produce and nuts and quickly realize that my kitchen is short on storage space.  The cupboards are full of pastas I no longer eat but keep on hand for my honey-man.  The pantry is full of the canned soups he likes to eat and multiples of things like pancake mix that he always comes home with on the rare occasions he heads out to the grocery store (we have three unopened boxes of pancake mix in the pantry!).

So I set to re-organizing my kitchen.  For the next 30-days (at minimum) canned foods and pancake mix have been banished to the downstairs kitchen.  Pastas have been moved to make room for a few mason jars full of nuts and seasonings.  And the coffee maker that does not get any use has been stashed away to make room on the counter for my blender.  Ah… I feel better already.

If you’re experimenting with the raw diet or just want pointers on how to better organize your kitchen, the following article by Karen Knowler will help get you started.

Your Raw Kitchen Checklist
By Karen Knowler

Setting up a raw food kitchen is exciting and uplifting, especially when you are new to raw foods or taking your diet to a new level.

The following check points, taken from my “How to Get Started with Raw Foods” eBook, will help ensure that your raw food kitchen is as easy and functional to use as possible, making your chances of staying with the lifestyle much more likely and much more simple.

1) Keep your key pieces of equipment in a prominent and clear position, next to a plug point, plugged in and ready to go for whenever the need strikes!

2) Next to each piece of equipment keep the relevant foodstuffs and/or ingredients that you are going to be using with that appliance. For instance, I keep all my smoothie ingredients and a big bunch of bananas next to my blender, my fruit bowl next to my juicer and a chopping board next to my food processor (which is next to my juicer so serves them both).

3) Keep as much of the counter space completely clear as possible. This not only looks and feels better, but it means there is never an excuse not to make something because of lack of space or having to clear up first!



4) Group your foods into different places. For instance, I keep all my dried herbs, spices, sea veg and misc. other in one cupboard, my superfoods, flavourings and sweeteners on a shelf next to my blender, my salts, oils and sundried tomatoes in another corner where I may go to season dressings, dips or salads, and all of my nuts, seeds and dried fruits are kept in my “Lazy Susan” (the rotating half- moons that sit behind cupboard doors and are usually used to keep saucepans on!). Any cooked food items that I keep for my son or visitors I keep out the back in my utility room, so that they’re there for emergencies but are never the first things I see or easy to get to. All the rest of my food is kept in the fridge, with a few frozen fruits and/or raw ice-creams kept in the freezer.

5) Keep a good clean supply of water in a prominent location so it’s always close to hand. There are many ways to obtain good quality water, but this is probably something for later on. For the short term I advise NOT to drink tap water and at the very least invest in a basic jug water filter or investigate other more effective pure water systems.

6) Keep your sharp knives in a drawer, a knife holder or on a magnetic wall hanging as close to your chopping board as possible. This way you are always ready to chop and go!

7) Keep a notepad and pen, chalk board or pinboard with blank paper and pen attached close to hand so that when you start experimenting you can make notes or write down your new recipes as you go. Also great for making sure you know what to buy or order in when you run out of a certain ingredient, of course.

8) Keep your bowls, jugs and Tupperware containers all in one cupboard so that you know exactly where to find them when you need some containers.

9) Keep one drawer purely for housing miscellaneous tools such as salad servers, a hand held citrus juicer, your zester and grater, you measuring cups and your spatulas and any other utensils that you use as part of your fresh food prep.



10) Find a safe and a clean place to house your favourite recipe book/s and any other useful literature, but avoid the temptation to create clutter. Best to choose one or two frequently used books and keep the remainder filed safely elsewhere.

When you have made the necessary changes to you kitchen taking all of the above into account, run it past the all-important final check…

Final Check Questions



* Is my kitchen functional?

* Does it look spacious?

* Are things easy to get to?

* Are my most important accessories and appliances in clear view and/ or super-easy to reach for?

* Is my food well organised?

* Are my cupboards clear, clean and well organised inside?

* Are my “less healthy” foods and kitchen appliances harder (if not impossible!) to get to?

* Does my kitchen inspire me to take care of myself?

* Does it look beautiful?

* Have I made the most of this space?

* All things considered, have I set my kitchen up for success and does it inspire me to get creative?

This is just a tiny fraction of what you can do with your kitchen for making it the best it can possibly be. If you want to be hand-held and given my latest and most potent raw food kitchen secrets than Let’s Get Rawganized! will give you all you need and more!
© 2009 Karen Knowler

WOULD YOU LIKE TO USE THIS ARTICLE IN YOUR EZINE OR ON YOUR WEB SITE? You can, as long as you include this complete blurb with it: Karen Knowler, The Raw Food Coach publishes “Successfully Raw” - a free weekly eZine for raw food lovers everywhere. If you’re ready to look good, feel great and create a raw life you love get your FREE tips, tools and recipes now at www.TheRawFoodCoach.com.

Back on Track

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

It’s finally here - summer 2009!  The long winter is finally over.  Yesterday marked the first day of summer and here in Canada, it was a beautiful one: clear blue skies, nice warm temperatures.  I decided yesterday that today I would get back on track with my health.

I’m extremely lucky in that I have no major health problems and am relatively fit and healthy.  But I have been feeling off track a bit lately - not sticking to my daily exercise routine, eating a little more junk than I normally do and drinking a lot less water.  So no better time to get back on track than the first day of summer.  Will be doing a 30-day cleanse (want to join me, just leave a comment and I’ll get in touch) and committing to daily exercise.  I’ll even head back to the gym for a few sessions with my personal trainer.

As luck would have it, my inbox received this little gem of inspiration today:

The 3 Most Effective Tricks To Getting Back on Track With Your Food
by Tera Warner

Ooooh, I know you’ve been there, too. The on-again-off-again bingeing blues. The late night snacks and the  “I can’t believe I did that” episodes the morning after. We, the frequently food-obsessed health pioneers of the world, sometimes need a boost, a lift, a bump on the rump that gets us back on track with our food when we feel we’ve gone off the rails. So, here it is, my lovelies! My 5 Best Tricks for Getting Back on Track With Healthy Eating!

1. Drink water in the morning until you’re really, genuinely, honestly, truthfully hungry!

DrinkWaterIt is an unfortunate fact that most people do not know what “hunger” feels like. Hunger is as natural as sex. It makes sense that the feelings we associate with it be positive. Due to heavily intoxicated bodies, a lot of people have learned to associate headaches, dizziness and general irritation with the need for food and call it “hunger.” These symptoms are more commonly associated with signs of detox. When the body isn’t burdened by the demand of the digestive system, it can afford to start directing some of its resources to processing and eliminating toxins. That’s when headaches and irratibility start to show up. Hunger feels good! It pulls, it salivates and persists even after you drink a tall glass of water and wait a little while.

Being fussy about your food is another sign you’re not quite hungry enough. When you’re hungry, enough that decorative plants stimulate your salivary glands and you feel like you could “anything,” then you’re hungry. If you’re indecisive, don’t know what to eat or only want to eat specific  things, then chances are you’re still westling with toxins, processing food or simply not hungry yet.

2. Keep it simple.

If there’s one thing that throws me off the wagon, it’s over-seasoned, gourmet raw foods. “Raw Pizza” is a nice idea, but heavily salted or seasoned foods have a way of opening the flood gates to cravings and overeating. If overcomplicated, heavily seasoned foods create a problem, then guess what I recomend as the solution?…

Monomeals. That’s about as simple as it gets!

Just eat one food at a time until you’re no longer hungry. Eat apples for a day! As part of our support for participants of the program on How to Get Rid of Cravings and Emotional Eating, we do a seasonal monomeal cleanse. For 14 days starting on the equinox or solstice, we support each other through 14 days of simplifying our foods to the point that most of our meals contain only ONE ingredient. Melon milk, tomato soup, and other creative inventions come about along with an extraordinary sense of caaaaaalm that moves in. Reducing the sensory stimulation in the digestive tract helps restore a sense of balance and serenity you’ve probably not felt for a while.

You can also keep it simple by eating Green Smoothies for 3 days. That’s what our Green Smoothie Challenge participants do and it has an amazing effect on their energy and well-being. Even just THREE days is enough to feel a huge difference and get you back on track!

3. Declutter Your Space

OrganizeThey say that people manage their objects like they manage their thoughts. Looking around my office right now, I believe it! YIKES! ;-) Few things settle a restless spirit as well as clean dishes and a counter that’s been wiped clean. If your physical environment is “weighing” you down, then it won’t be hard to predict what your eating habits will be like. If you’re stuffing papers in all the wrong places, what are you shoving in your face that you’d rather not tell us about?

What if you took all the time you normally spend overeating and worrying about food into organizing a cluttered cupboard? What about sorting out a stack of unsorted mail instead of digging around in the pantry for another snack? Roll up your sleeves, put on the rubber gloves and bring order to your environment, so you can clear your thoughts and get your food back on track, too!

I’ve done or developed just about every cleanse you can think of. I know for a fact that it isn’t the sporadic bursts of good choices that count as much as the persistent, regular, healthy commitments you make over time. Drink water to stay hydrated, learn to recognize true hunger, keep your menu simple and organize your space to be a harmonious refelection of your life, dreams and values.

Then sit back and enjoy the adventure!!

Giving Up The Struggle

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

It was my birthday last week.  Another year faded away into happy memories.  My honeyman took me out for dinner and we had a nice quiet evening at home.  I love my birthday because inevitably people that I’ve lost touch with come back into my life that day to wish me a happy day… or they sneak back in a few days later with belated wishes.  It’s all good :-)

I had a cute note on my Facebook wall from my giggly-girlie friend, Tera, and it made me realize that I no longer struggle with being raw.  I used to have such a time of it but about five months ago, I went gluten-free and as a result, almost 90% raw. 

It’s odd but I used to try so hard to be raw.  To follow the recipes and menu planners laid out by experts.  I’d start a cleanse or declare my intention to be raw, all the while knowing that I wouldn’t fully commit… and then beating myself up about it when I didn’t stick to my plan.

But that all stopped earlier this year.  I just gave up the struggle.  I made the decision to go gluten-free January 1st and it was the smoothest transition ever.  I went on a great 30-day cleanse and dropped a few pounds and inches and then started to experiment again in the kitchen.  Left to my own devices, I drank a lot of smoothies and ate a lot of salads and fruit.  Before I realized it, two months had passed and not one cooked meal had settled in my tummy.

When you feel good about the food you eat and how it makes you feel, it’s easy to give up the struggle.  It’s hard to explain exactly how I finally became successful.  I just woke up one morning and knew that it was the day I was going to change my diet.  And I did.

I stopped struggling with myself and accepted that I was in charge of what I put in my body.  That no one could guilt me into eating what I didn’t care to eat.  That I have enough nutritional knowledge and experience to make sure I get enough food in my body. 

There are no rules, only love of self and the maturity to know that if I want a burger, I can eat that burger… and not beat myself up for it.

Happy birthday me… weclome to adulthood :-)

Karen Knowler Helps You Have A Raw Easter

Thursday, April 2nd, 2009

Are you looking for some quick, healthy and deliciously raw-friendly goodies to munch on this Easter? Then look no further!

Karen Knowler, The Raw Food Coach, has come up with some super-scrumptious sweet treats in her bestselling eBook, 50 Quick, Easy, Healthy and Delicious Raw Food Recipes … treats such as

  • Chocolate Milk
  • Chocolate Pudding
  • Date Candies
  • Banana Split

to name just a few! All these recipes are guaranteed to keep your sweet tooth smiling while everyone around you is gorging on the rather less healthy commercial alternatives over the next few days (plus you won’t be feeling sick at the end of it!).

Get your copy of Karen’s bestselling eBook recipe here
This has to be the perfect recipe for the best Easter ever!

Happy Easter!

Pineapple Green Smoothie By Frederic Patenaude

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

It’s been a while since I posted a smoothie recipe.  I enjoy them daily and lately it’s been my main meal for breakfast and dinner so I’ve been rotating through my collection of recipes.  Today I gave this one a try and it was delish!  I just had to share.  As featured in the February Raw Food Mentor menu planner available this month in Frederic Patenaude’s Raw Vegan Mentor Club.

INGREDIENTS:

1/2 cup water (optional)
1/2 whole pineapple, golden and ripe
1 whole mango, peeled and cubed (fresh or frozen)
6-7 whole leaves mint
2-3 cups of frisee lettuce (I used spinach)

METHOD:

Blend pineapple and mango together. Use water if desired.  Use the ripest pineapple you can find.  Add mint leaves, lettuce, and blend until smooth.

Winter In The Raw Part 1 ~ Setting The Scene

Friday, December 5th, 2008

Great article by one of my favorite Raw Foodists, Karen Knowlerin her eZine this week.  Reprinted here for your enjoyment! 

Winter In The Raw Part 1 ~ Setting The Scene

Although not technically in winter yet, it sure feels like it today as I write this article for you!

And it’s at this time of year that people curious about eating raw are asking, “How on earth do I go or stay raw in winter?”. Others, those who may have been eating raw for a few months or on and off for a few years even, may find that this is the time of year where cooked foods start to becme a very attractive proposition indeed!

In this article, the first of several, I’ll be addressing a number of factors and my intention is that by the end of it, no matter whre you are starting from, you’ll feel clued up about the approach you personally will be taking this winter so that you are at peace with your decision and can move into winter with a spring in your step rather than dragging your heels! In future eZines I’ll be getting into the more nitty-gritty aspects of eating raw in winter, featuring some great winter-warmer (raw) recipes to keep you smiling inside and out!

One of the most common questions I get asked, especially at this time of year, is “How do you stay raw in winter? I just can’t imagine not eating anything hot when it’s so cold. How can I do it?”

Well, I have to begin by saying that from what I have seen in others and experienced myself, it entirely depends on how new you are to raw foods. Eating raw in winter is a bit like training for a marathon - you can’t expect to run the whole way first time out; your body has to adjust and it has to adjust incrementally over a period of time.

I think the best way I can teach you about staying raw in winter is to share my own story with you. Through doing this you’ll be able to get an idea of the lengths of time involved, what to do and what not to do, and also why it’s important to see the raw food journey as something that has hills and valleys just like any other journey in life - sometimes you just have to accept what’s real and deal with it, so that you can press on and enjoy what lays over the other side!

My story begins in 1993 when I first discovered raw foods. I’d been dabbling since the spring of that year and doing really well on it. By the time it got to winter, naturally I felt colder than before and the thought of eating salads and tropical fruits throughout the winter wasn’t quite as attractive as it had been some months before! Bear in mind, however, that at this stage I was eating high raw and not all raw, so “staying raw” wasn’t the issue for me, just knowing how to keep warm without being tempted back into chips (fries) and greasy veggie-burgers and other more junky foods was my first and immediate challenge.

Well, those first few winters - about four of them - I approached the issue as I have done with all aspects of my raw eating: If it feels good do it, if it doesn’t - don’t. Yes, I wanted to eat as much raw food as possible, but if my body was freaking out about it, then there was no way I was going to force it on myself; that would be completely contra to everything I was aspiring to, which, besides eating raw, was a sense of greater wholeness, peace around eating and a better relationship with myself and my body.

So during those first four or so years I did the best I could. I ate as much raw as possible, but if I wanted porridge I ate it (but cooked it with water rather than milk and threw in lots of fresh banana, raisins and a big blob of honey). If I wanted a plate of chips with my salad I ate them (but they weren’t deep fried as they were years previously, they changed to oven baked, low fat, veg oil only). Jacket potatoes with mashed avocado, wholegrain rice or pasta with fresh wholesome sauces, or boiled potatoes swirled in olive oil, fresh garlic, chopped basil and lemon juice became my winter time staples. By eating these with salads I could happily stay high raw and get the heat I needed from those cooked foods while still keeping “with the program”.

By around year five I remember that I had moved into a cold, tiny, pretty drab flat for a short while and I can remember looking out of the kitchen window one day at the snow falling outside. I was about 6 months into what I considered to be my “100% raw forever if I can” phase and although I wanted to continue it, I said to myself “If I want cooked food this winter I shall have it, but if I don’t then I’ll just take it day by day and see what happens.” As it turned out, I had got so used to eating raw food having been doing it to such a high degree for so long that actually my body no longer wanted it. And so it was that I went through the whole winter not just cooked-food-free, but I didn’t even feel drawn to drinking herbal teas. That was pretty surprising, but it felt completely right. Cooked and hot foods no longer felt “right” at all and my desire for them had disappeared completely.

And this continued for the next five years in fact, where I didn’t eat any cooked food at all, apart from three weeks during pregnancy and that was in the February of 2002 and had nothing to do with the temperature outside!

What I learned from all of this is the following:

1) It takes time to go through a UK winter on all raw foods without feeling seriously deprived.

2) It probably can be done if you have a will of iron, but personally, because I am such a fan of the “whole person” approach, I do not recommend you forcing it until you feel genuinely ready, and this may take years (is there a hurry anyway?).

3) When I finally did stay raw throughout winter it became apparent to me that some of the previous cooked food longings during the colder months had been physiological for sure - the body does have to adjust - but I also became aware that a lot of it is also psychological, meaning that a lot of it is about habit and belief that hot food is necessary and this also has to be overcome to go all the way.

Although this has been my own experience I do need to add one final thing. Over the recent years I’ve become more interested in body types and blood types. While I’m no expert on either, what I have observed is that more “sturdy” types like me (I am slim now but certainly not skinny), seem to fare better on raw food all of the time, and those who have always been naturally lean can struggle more.

Personally I think the most important aspect to all of this is to look on wintertime as an opportunity to strengthen the relationship and intimacy you have with yourself and your body even further. Yes, there will be a tendency (just like there is in pregnancy!) to say “what the hell!” and eat whatever you want because the pulls to do so are stronger than normal, but I’d like to invite you to actually turn this inclination on its head and ask yourself, “How can I use the darkness, coldness and mystery of the winter to nourish myself at a deeper level via my food choices, my lifestyle habits and the way I utilise this special time of year to reflect on who I am and who I am becoming?”

Winter time may be cold, dark and even lonely in some regards, but unlike any other season it gives us the opportunity to turn inwards and see what’s real, what needs addressing and to take a look at how we can feed ourselves optimally now so that when spring comes around again we can awaken, ground, aspire, grow and blossom even more brightly next year than we have done during this. In this regard, winter becomes a gift, and a time of opportunity rather than challenge.

Choose to look on it this way and your winter in the raw will be a pleasure, especially when you know that a few months from now you can feel stronger, leaner and lighter in every regard than you currently do now, and that can only be a good thing!

__________________________

© 2008 Karen Knowler

WOULD YOU LIKE TO USE THIS ARTICLE IN YOUR EZINE OR ON YOUR WEB SITE? You can, as long as you include this complete blurb with it: Karen Knowler, The Raw Food Coach publishes “Successfully Raw” - a free weekly eZine for raw food lovers everywhere. If you’re ready to look good, feel great and create a raw life you love get your FREE tips, tools and recipes now at www.TheRawFoodCoach.com.

Breaking The Fast Of Day 1

Sunday, November 2nd, 2008

Well today is Day 1 of the Body Enlightenment System.  Day 1 starts with a fast.  Beginning last night at 6 PM and continuing to 6 PM tonight, we were to fast.  Nothing but sunshine, water and relaxation.  Ideally, you were encourged to spend time outdoors and as little time as possible in front of the computer.  I did the exact opposite.  I didn’t get outside at all today and spent the entire day in front of my laptop writing copy for a program I will be releasing soon called Smiling Customer Care: The No-Nonsense Guide To Being An Indispensible Customer Care Representative.  I just finished writing about 30 minutes ago (started at 8:30 AM this morning - so I’ve been at it for a full 7 hours) and I have yet to tear myself away from my machine.

Here’s the thing, I find work relaxing, particularly if it’s on those rare occassions when I actually get to work on projects in my business that I’m excited to release.  Don’t get me wrong, I love the work I do with others but I also have ideas and strategies of my own to share with the world.

Anyway, my point is that I modified the system to suit my needs.  It didn’t serve me to be spending a quiet, unplugged day today so I didn’t. 

How did I do with the fast?  Okay so far.  I still have about two hours to go before I break my fast and I’ve managed to keep hunger at bay by gulping down about 2 litres of water.  Up until 1:30 PM it was smooth sailing and then I could feel some hunger pangs.  I’m making a roast beef dinner for my honey-man tonight and started it on a slow roast at noon.  By 1:30 PM, my nosebuds were starting to be tickled by the smells wafting through my house from the kitchen to my office. 

By 2:30 PM I confess I broke down and “cheated” by grabbing a banana.  That will hold me clear through until dinner time, when I’ll break the fast with this tasty treat:

Breaking The Fast Drink

INGREDIENTS:
2 whole ripe mangoes
1 whole banana
1 stalk celery
1 handful spinach

METHOD:
For this recipe you don’t need any water, as the ripe mangoes should be juicy enough but in case you do, use less than a quarter cup just to get your blender started.  Blend the mangoes first.  Add in the banana.  Blend with the celery stalks and spinach until smooth.

I’ll be back tomorrow with an update on Day 2.  Guess I better look ahead and see what’s on the menu for tomorrow and make sure I have enough on hand. 

Kick Starting My 30 Days Raw

Saturday, November 1st, 2008

As I’m writing this post, I’m online listening to the Marathon Welcome call for the Body Enlightenment System.  I’ve been following the program since it’s inception - I was on the team that developed the program.  There’s quite a history to the development of the program but this isn’t the time or place.

I’ll be blogging about my experiences over the next 30 days.  The program is a 30 day raw program but it can be followed by people in various stages of their raw transformation.  I did the program two years ago and it was a complete failure for me because I had a lot of other stressors in my life that did not enable me to succeed in the program.  I also did not have adequate support in following the system. 

I’m excited to try the program again and am really looking forward to the new menu planners. 

The program is an amazing tranformational program.  I’m sorry I didn’t get a chance to tell you before the program started.  I’ve been buried knee deep in work lately and haven’t been posting as regularly as I should.  You can follow my journey on this blog.  The pretty little banner icon is below:

Body Enlightenment System - Don't Lose Weight Only to Find it Again

The program is a complete 30 day system for following a raw diet.  It includes complete menu planners for 30 days as well as support in 20 minutes of fitness and even a bit of organizational planning and goal setting.

The system has been followed successfully by 1,000’s of people world wide.  I’ve talked to many of them as they’ve gone through previous versions of the program and their stories of transformation are inspiring. 

I’m excited to try the program and can’t wait to see where I’ll be in 30 days.  Day 1 starts with a fast.  Beginning tonight at 6 PM until Sunday night at 6 PM, we fast.  There are many reasons why the program begins with a fast - I won’t detail them here.  But I will say that it feels that much easier to be doing the fast knowing that over 500 people worldwide are also fasting with me. :-)

Tonight, there is a Marathon Welcome call with Tera Warner, the designer of the Body Enlightenment System and my former colleague.  She truly is passionate about helping people overcome their food addictions - whether they are raw or not - and live powerful and empowering lives.  She is one of my few girlie friends and every call with her is a blast! 

If you get a chance to join the next session, I highly recommend it.  In the meantime, consider listening to the free teleclass series below:
The Truth About Your Food - The Blog
I’m excited to be exposed to a new expert in the field of raw foods and general health.  Dr. T sounds like an incredible individual with a wealth of knowledge.  To join me on the call, click here.