Tag Archives: self directed life

The 5 Ways I Lost 20 + Pounds in Puerto Rico Naturally Without Really Trying

“Have you lost weight?”
“You look really great, what have you been doing?”
“You seem younger, more vibrant!”

Both Britton and I have been hearing this for a while now. The thing is, we don’t own a scale so we have no idea what we weigh. It just really doesn’t matter that much. It’s important to be a healthy weight and have a healthy body, but the number the scale says doesn’t really mean that much overall.  But the other day I saw a scale in someone’s bathroom and I stepped on. Sure enough I had lost over 20 pounds! That’s more than I’ve ever lost “trying” to lose weight dieting or exercising like when we were in the newspaper (and these 20 lbs I’ve lost are on top of about 10 that I kept off before moving here). I went from slightly overweight (around BMI of 27) to right at my ideal weight (BMI 23)! Wow! It got me thinking: When and how did that happen?

Kayak Cassie 5
Shortly after moving to Puerto Rico: October 2013 -About 20 lbs heavier

Cassie bikini
December 2015

I guess I knew by the way my clothes were fitting, the sizes I could wear and those comments from people that I must have lost some weight, but I had no idea it was that much! I really try not to obsess over weight or my body. If I feel good and confident that’s what really matters. I know this weight obsession is something especially women have been told we have to do in order to fit into society. But I reject that. I don’t buy into this one size fits all beauty BS.

But there is an epidemic of overweight and obesity spreading throughout the modern world, so it is something I am aware of at a personal level. And it is important to think about for your health. Having an extra 10 or 20 or more pounds is really hard on your body and causes inflammation that can lead to heart disease, diabetes, cancer and ultimately an early demise. There are all sorts of theories and reasons why this epidemic of obesity is happening and the best answer is…a combination of things. I believe it is mainly caused by the junk food industry. Check out these graphs  and see for yourself.

So whether it is because of societal pressure to be skinny or because you are also interested in not being an obesity statistic, many people with a few extra pounds will try everything they can to lose weight. And so of course there is a huge industry built on it. But the weight loss industry is hardly any help as they just want to sell you their products and make you feel that you can’t live in a healthy body without their system, shake, pill, or exercise video. It’s a multi-million (billion?) dollar industry and their goal is to keep you hooked on their stuff. Even if it works to help you lose weight, what have you spent getting it? (Probably lots of money and time doing something that doesn’t feel natural!) So I didn’t buy into any of that junk either. And those pyramid multi-level marketing “businesses” where you have to recruit all your social networks to sell somebody else’s questionable stuff? Whole other level of shaking my head.

Bookshelf
Britton October 2013

Britton bench
Britton Sept 2015 ~15 lbs lighter

And so while I understand that this is an issue of global proportions and a societal instead of just an individual matter, I also wanted to understand what I personally did to somehow lose 20+ pounds without trying! While this is anecdotal, it could perhaps be useful at a broader scale as well. I thought about what had changed in order for this weight to seemingly melt off of us. Maybe we could call it the Move-to-Tropical-Island-and-Live-a-Little-More-Naturally Diet.

You know how they say it can’t be a temporary diet, it must be a lifestyle change. Well, that in a nutshell is the key.

Here are the five things we do consistently now that our lifestyle has changed.

1) Eat to live, not live to eat
This is a great motto. Basically it means not to obsess over food. Life is about SO much more than eating. You should feed your body the nutrients it needs, enjoy it and move on. You shouldn’t need to analyze every calorie and write down every little thing. If you are eating naturally (see tip three), you shouldn’t need special powders, coaches and programs to track it. I used to track every little thing I ate in order to lose just a few pounds in Colorado and it drove me nuts because I felt so obsessed with every morsel or drop that went in my mouth. That just sets you up to be neurotic about food.

Eat just enough which for many people probably means a lot less than what you normally eat, especially restaurant servings. In general I eat a LOT less than I used to, but what I do eat is a LOT more nutrient rich.

Some people’s whole world revolves around the latest and greatest new restaurant or food place. That’s fine every now and then, but food is just a small part of life. It shouldn’t be the main focus. This also means to choose activities that aren’t food-based. Preferably activities that also include movement (see tip four)!

This tip also means eating when we are hungry (and not eating if we’re not). Sometimes we may not eat a traditional full meal. Sometimes breakfast is a full plate of eggs and peppers, plantains, cottage cheese, passionfruit, coffee, a cookie, toast and more. Sometimes if we’re not hungry it’s just a banana and coffee.

Listen to the needs of your body. I, for one, am not very hungry late at night, but Britton is. So he sometimes eats late and I don’t. I used to, just to be on the same page. That’s another key. Just because someone else is eating/drinking something doesn’t mean you have to! Think about your body as something that needs fuel. Then you will choose foods that help it thrive and not just give you spikes or emotional rewards as most junk food does. This also goes for drinking. I usually try to have an equal amount of water (or club soda) for every alcoholic beverage I drink because alcohol is not really fueling the body (but it can be a fun part of life if done carefully so I still include it in my chosen lifestyle).

On the farm with turkeys and a papaya
By looking the part, I become that -Farmer Cassie

2) Look the part.  Dress for success.
I don’t know a better way to say this. This tip isn’t just about weight loss, but really any goal you have. Life is like a big play. We get to play a role or many. When we moved to Puerto Rico we got to choose new roles. It’s sort of like the advice to dress for the job that you want not the job that you have. Act the part. Learn from the people who are playing a role you would like to have/live/look/do. Then fake it until you make it. If you want to look and feel good in your own skin, start doing that. Wear the type of clothes you would want to wear if you were in the role of your choice. If you want to feel good and confident, do the things that make you feel good and confident whether that’s a certain hairstyle, clothing, manner of talking, exercises, food, whatever. And then the spiral effects start happening. The more you feel confident the more you’ll hear that you look good and confident which only magnifies that feeling and makes you want to do more of that.

If I want to be a farmer, I wear my farmer boots and grow stuff. If I want to be a beach bum/surfer chick I wear my swimming suit and go in the water. If I want to be a rockstar I wear flamboyant sequin outfits and sing. Whether consciously or not, you are already in many roles in this play. So if you want a new one, cultivate it.

Mini watermelon cucumber
“Mouse melons” growing as weeds all over – Melothria scabra

3) Eat natural
This is the nitty gritty down and dirty prescriptive advice that is the cornerstone of most weightloss advice/books. It’s where all the arguments about this or that particular food. Gluten or not? Carbs or not? This diet or that. For me, I just want as natural as possible. And living on a tropical island we should be able to have natural/local/organic a lot more often! And by natural here’s what I mean in order of preference.

—a) Truly wild. Like a fish that was swimming in the sea is now my dinner sort of wild. Or a wild parcha vine drops a passionfruit and I eat it. A weed mousemelon snack. You know, caveman sort of foraging.

—b) I planted it or raised it and cooked it and know exactly everything that went into growing it. Our plantains, bananas, breadfruit, citrus, avocados, coconuts, sapodillas, mulberries, tamarinds, and other fruit trees. Our garden plants like basil, cilantro, or lettuce. Our chicken eggs. Our turkey meat. if I can grow it and pick it off a tree or harvest it from the ground or my birds/animals, it’s definitely natural.

Bounty of the finca 1
Just some of what we can grow here

—c) Someone I know planted or raised it or caught it and I can talk with them about all the stuff that went into that. This means friends and neighbors, people at the farmer’s market. Someone directly connected to your food at a local level.

—d) Someone I don’t know planted or raised it, but it is pretty clearly a single ingredient food close to its raw state.  Here’s where the grocery shopping may start coming into play and where you have to look at ingredients to make sure there is no industrial chemical and addictive crap (sugars, GMO commodity junk, fats, salts) added.

—e) Multiple ingredients, but most or all of them seem natural.  I try to go organic here as this is where it starts getting tricky. Things like chips or crackers or cheese or even canned beans or fish. You have to be careful here because the food industry tries to jump in and make false and confusing claims. This is where you have to really watch out for the industrial stuff like corn syrup, soy bean oil, hydrogenated oils, stuff that ends in -ose (hidden sugars), and all the preservatives and even what it was packaged in. In general I prefer to stay away from stores and closer to the finca for a large part of my food to keep it simple.

—f) Meals cooked by or shared with friends/family. Regardless of the ingredients the love that is felt sharing a meal is almost always worth eating because to me this is about filling the soul. I don’t worry about the components of these meals too much and just enjoy and appreciate all of it. I might not eat much, but I will eat some. Sharing a meal is the most natural thing in the world. And if it is also made with natural ingredients, even better! If you have anxiety about going out with friends/family because of what is going to be served, this is the most unnatural of all. I’ve never been much of a pork eater, but when in Puerto Rico…I eat lechón! 🙂

So on the flip side, what is not-natural? Commodity industrial “food” -most anything made of GMO pellet food like corn, soybean, canola and anything fed those things -like pretty much all conventional animal products- and also most wheat products since they are so processed. This means most packaged foods. It means practically all fast food or chain restaurant food. It is the kind of stuff that doesn’t rot. Stuff that is not natural in any of those above definitions I try to avoid. Still, I know that we live in a very un-natural setting and the cards are stacked against us. So I go for the 80/20 rule. 80%+ of natural eating and 20%  or less of unnatural foods. Once you know the difference, it’s very easy to eat naturally.

Things I avoid with all my might if at all possible: soda, cured meats, fried foods.

A note on treats and hunger.
If I’m super hungry and there is nothing else to choose, I may be stuck in a situation where I must eat something not very natural with low-nutrients/unhealthy ingredients. I have to be careful here because the more you eat of this junk the more you think it’s ok. It’s the addictive side of modern food. But if you are hungry, you should eat! It is natural to eat if hungry! But it is better to plan ahead or even go to the store and buy some single ingredient foods like bananas than it is to eat out almost always. And the more natural ingredients you eat overall, the less cravings you’ll have for crap junk industry commodity foods laden with added sugars, fats, chemicals and salts. This makes it all the easier to do without really trying.

And then there are the treats. For instance, I like a cookie in the morning with my coffee. I try to choose cookies with better ingredients, but it’s still a sugar/fat bomb. It gives me a smile in the morning and I’ve consciously decided it should be a part of my life like alcohol, but I just have one or two. Again, I eat to live, not live to eat them.

Here are some specifically helpful food for weightloss/health/vibrancy. Since we’ve lived in Puerto Rico our diet has changed quite a bit. I think these foods have helped a lot in our well-being and we eat them nearly every single day.

Scambled eggs
Example of a daily meal -scrambled eggs with peppers, garlic, avocados and fresh local fruit

Bananas. Great snack. Filling. On-the-go food. Always in season.Grows easily. Compostable wrapper.
Plantains/Breadfruit. Awesome as the main starch in a meal.
Coffee. Locally grown Puerto Rican coffee. So good. High antioxidants and a natural appetite suppressant.
Turmeric. So, so important for health. If you want to reverse aging, feel healthy and prevent diseases eat this! We eat fresh turmeric root daily!
Garlic. Like turmeric it is superfood. Helps avoid colds and illnesses. Great for the heart. Like most spices it’s a good seasoning so that you don’t have to use as much salt.
Chia seeds. One tablespoon a day. Naturally filling when eaten with water because they expand so it suppresses the appetite. Super high fiber, high omega-3s, great for the digestive system.
Coconut oil. Pretty much the only oil we use to cook. Good for everything from eggs to popcorn.
Our free-ranging chicken eggs. Perfect source of protein. Great source of vitamins.
Beans. High fiber. High protein. Inexpensive, filling and delicious.
Local fruits and veggies. Anything else we have locally or in season. Avocados. Starfruit. Passionfruit. Peppers. Watermelon. Coconut. Sapodilla. Tamarind. Oranges or fresh squeezed juice.

4) Move naturally
You should move your body. It’s that simple. We need it. We are creatures that need movement, exercise. Whatever you want to call it. I think that running on a treadmill or stationary bike or lifting weights or doing a workout video feels really fake. Sort of like a hamster on a wheel in a cage. And I guess if you are in a cage (stuck inside due to weather or at a job that is mostly sitting or whatever) it is definitely better than nothing. But Britton and I prefer to move naturally using our body to do things. Use it for transportation: walk, bicycle. Use it to dance. Use it to swim. Stretch. Carry heavy stuff. Make stuff. If you like doing those other things that were made in and by modern society, then by all means do it. These things just seems so foreign to the way we have evolved.

Snorkeling Cassie 3
Natural movement: swimming/snorkeling!

As for me I walk up and down the hill that is our finca at least 2-3 times a day. Britton even more! I walk around our area, downtown, on excursions and hikes, I walk on the beach. I swim and do other water activities. I do yoga and stretching in the morning. I sing and dance. I help Britton haul stuff over to the cabin. And if it is social I like to take exercise classes, play a sport or go salsa dancing. Natural movement should be a natural part of life. It shouldn’t be something you have to force yourself to do or you get mad at yourself for not getting your prescribed workout in. Again, it is the natural lifestyle. This lifestyle of ours naturally includes lots of movement.

5) Cultivate Purpose and Balance.
This is another one that is not really diet or exercise specific, but something that has been a big change in our lifestyle and that I think really has made a big difference. Not only has being self-directed helped us to look and act the part of our choice but it has helped us to be much more balanced. If we do any one thing too much you can tell. So we try to keep it varied. We go out with various people, we do various activities. We probably all have something of a routine, but we often break it and do something spontaneous. We try to put our friends and fun before any project. This has allowed us to really fine tune what is important to us. This includes our health. Because of the bigger picture, we are much less likely to just eat crap or watch crap tv or just go shopping. Instead of being on the unbalanced side of only consuming everything like we used to -eating, listening to music, watching TV, buying stuff; we are now producing -growing food, making music, creating videos, building a homestead. We are making stuff! This gives us purpose, direction and balances out the consumption/production scales (and apparently the weight scales too).

Horned Dorset pool
With this new life we never know what wondrous moments await

Weightloss seems like such a minor side effect of our lifestyle. The effects of more happiness, having more life purpose, feeling more connected with our environment and people and feeling more alive in general doing new and exciting things is so much more important. And so cyclical, because the more you feel those thing the more they come back. The cycle. The balance. We modern people always try to cut out some aspect and refine it into some linear form, but that rarely works. We “modernites” try to encapsulate something (sometimes literally in a pill), but it is nearly impossible to take out half the components and expect that something won’t be missing. So we went back to the basics. The whole is more than the sum of the parts. The combination of effects from our new life is not something that I can neatly summarize into 5 points, but hopefully this is a start. Go out there and live the life of your dreams. Your body, mind and spirit will thank you.

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Living a Self-Directed Life

In all of our striving to move to Puerto Rico, what was the underlying motivation? Great weather, new and friendly culture, growing/raising our own food, adventure? Yes, and more yeses!

IMG_2805

But truly the biggest motivation to moving here was to live a self-directed life. We just happened to choose this beautiful island in the Caribbean as the setting for our life. It could be wherever when you are truly directing your life. We could have stayed in Colorado, even, but decided to steer our lives toward something new and exciting to us.

I think that both Britton and I would say that we didn’t mind our 8-5 lives. We both added something of value in a small way at the places we worked. We felt the work we did was important to society and we both felt challenged personally with what we did every day. But there was one big thing missing: self-direction.

If you are working for someone else, you are by definition not self-directed. You are under the direction of the organization or business and under the direction of a supervisor or boss who makes sure you follow the larger goals of that organization. This is fine, and it is how most of society works. However, for people who want to write their own stories rather than play a part in someone else’s this may not be enough.

And for us, it wasn’t enough. So after work and on the weekends rather than just going to the movies or out to eat or shopping or some (usually expensive) hobby, we found things that would ultimately help us break free of the earn wages/spend wages vicious cycle. We went out and found investment properties, remodeled and managed them.  We sold stuff at the farmer’s market from our tiny garden. We rented out rooms in our house to medical students.

And while it was a lot of work and sometimes we felt that we were pushed to the edge,  these were the activities that ultimately helped push us over to financial independence and a full-time self-directed life, instead of just part-time.

Some people may not be confident in their ability to live a fully self-directed life, because this means that all of the risks are yours alone. There is no net beneath you. But on the flip side, this also means that all of the rewards are yours too! And people who choose to self-direct must be creative and envision what their life would look like if they could design it all themselves. This is not always easy if you are used to following someone else’s lead in being told what to do and what a final product should look like. That is why practicing part-time was a great way to prepare us for our full-time freedom. We tried to practice things at a small level that we knew we would also enjoy here in Puerto Rico, things like raising chickens, growing tropical plants in our living room, and having guests stay with us.

Baby Coffee Plants in Coffee Mug
We grew coffee beans inside in Colorado! Practice makes perfect!

That way, once we had the income part of the equation down, then came the fun part! We asked ourselves: What would we do with our time, when all of it belonged to us? Sure, we knew we would be “retired” but that doesn’t mean do nothing. And it’s a good thing we thought about this because in fact, it is quite the opposite. We just get to choose what it is. Sometimes it is working really hard in the hot sun, because it is worth it to us. Other times, it is paying someone else to do that because it is not. But all of the “work” is toward a vision that Britton and I design together.

In the case of our property here in Puerto Rico, we envision a lush tropical oasis with cabins, gazebos, water features, animals roaming around, an edible forest with fruit trees and gardens, jungle paths, treehouses and more. And in larger terms, this oasis of ours will serve as our base for any other travels, adventures and ideas we may think up in 5-10 years time.

Chickens and path
Happy chickens surrounded by food and flowers

This is simply an example of our what a self-directed life could be. It is filled with activities that make us feel that we are accomplishing something. We knew that we wouldn’t be content with just going to the beach every day (or some other similar activity). That is always fun, but it is just the reward or icing on the cake for moving toward our goals. Because we are self-motivated people, what we have realized is that we will constantly need something to work towards. When our dreams and big ideas begin to dwindle we will know we must be toward the end our life.

For me, happiness follows this equation: something to do, someone(s) to love and something to look forward to. When we are out here working on all of these things together, we may in the moment be groaning, but in the grand scheme of things we are in our element! We are exactly where we directed ourselves to be. We still are chock full of so many great, crazy and zany ideas! Life is a marvelous place when you set into motion your dreams and steer toward them every day.

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