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Intro (0:00)

News and Views (0:56)
Stacy is doing well and really looking forward to her two-day work week ahead

Sarah's kids are off for the entire week of Thanksgiving, and the change in schedule has thrown her out of her routine loop at the start of the week

The late nights that Sarah has been having as of late, and what she is doing to put a stop to them before it impacts her health too much

How excited Sarah is to have the Crandalls arrive

Wishing everyone a Happy Thanksgiving

Matt and Stacy's Friendsgiving, see the full post on what they served and who came here

Sarah is really looking forward to having help with Thanksgiving dinner prep this year, and the plans to hopefully smoke two turkeys

If both turkeys don't fit into the smoker, there will be a turkey showdown between Russ and Sarah - check Sarah's Instagram feed to see what happens

Stacy's love for Thanksgiving

The Healing Kitchen arrived at Sarah's house this week and her feelings on it, and what Stacy enjoys about it

How and Why Sarah and Alaena simplified the look and feel, and there emphasis on making the book very clean and easy to use

This is the time of year that Stacy enjoys her 20%, eating the gluten-free foods and maybe a little more nuts than she typically would, knowing that her stress is lower and her body will have plenty of time to rest

This week's show is about challenges and making choices on how and where to alter the usual routine, and how to get it back when the time comes

The goal is to avoid treating paleo as just another yo-yo diet, and to make it behavioral not just about food priorities

For Sarah she is finally at that place where making the healthy choice is a natural habit, which has come with a long-term commitment

So how do you make paleo a habit so that it is your default?

Science with Sarah (26:45)
The biggest myth when it comes to habits is that it take 21 days to make or break them

Habit formation is a huge field of research in the science community

The length of time that it takes to form a habit (defined as performing a task without thinking about it) varies from person to person and varies based on what the task is

The average habit formation time frame ranges from 18 days to 254 days (8 months), with the average peek hitting at the 2 month mark

There are a lot of 21 day and 30 day challenges out there, and that amount of time isn't actually enough to make lasting habits by the end of that challenge, which is why people early into paleo find themselves on and off challenges a lot

Step one in being successful to form a new habit, is to acknowledge that it is going to take commitment beyond 21 or 30 days

It is also important for habits to be action centered

The protocol to making a habit, as found through research:
Decide what the goal is - what is the habit you want to form

Chose what the action is that will progress you towards your goal, and is something that you can do on a daily or routine basis that this habit would be performed

Plan when and where you will do that action

Every time you encounter that time and that place, do that action

Understand that it is going to get easier with time - keep at it and you will eventually reach your goal

Thinking of health goals in terms of habits because habits are conducive to health and they won't be something you stop - this is a more lifelong approach to health journeys

Reframing your mind and the power this can play when creating lifelong habits

How Stacy has empowered herself when faced with gluten to simply tell herself she doesn't want that and to feel accountable, responsible, and good about the choices she is making, as opposed to making emotional ones

As a reminder as we are entering the holiday season, if you have eaten something that you didn't intentionally set out to make the choice to do, remember that there is no emotion in food - it is neither good nor bad, move forward from the choice that was made and avoid creating a habit around food shame

What do you want? What makes you feel good? What gets you to a good place with health? And then set about creating habits based on the answers to these questions

Learning to identify where your lines are, making a choice, and being ok with your choices

Those who decide to paleo YOLO on holidays, especially when you do not have certain food allergies - and there is no shame that needs to be associated with the choices you make

If you are someone who doesn't yet know where your lines are, Sarah encourages you to go into the holidays with the mindset of - if I choose to have the pie than it is an opportunity for me to challenge wheat and conventional dairy, and I am going to find out how my body reacts to it

Set yourself up to feel in control when making choices

When you are approaching the holidays, if you know certain foods will make you ill, problem solve that ahead of time

For the foods you are making the choice to enjoy that are not the usual foods for you, make sure that your decisions are conscious and empowered, and not emotional

It is so much easier to bounce back/move forward when you make the choice to indulge

Questions & Answers (47:35)
Patricia - recommendations for snacks when traveling on a plane?
Stacy usually packs something sweet, salty, and then a protein

Steve's Paleo Kit

EPIC Bars

RxBars

Steve's Dried Strawberries

Dark Chocolate

All of these go really well with Stacy's boys, but they also back more carb dense snacks for them as well, like plantain chips

If Stacy is out and about and doesn't have something, salad and a bun-less burger is her go-to

Sarah noted all of the AIP friendly products:
EPIC Bar Bison, Bacon Cranberry and the Beef, Apple, Bacon

US Wellness Meats jerky

Pouched tuna

Packed salad, raw veggies, fruit

Dried fruit

Plantain chips

For Sarah's kids, she mostly packs them nut based products, Power Balls are a new favorite

US Wellness Meats pork rhinds

Justin - I don't have access to a kitchen, are there AIP-friendly pre-packaged foods?
Be sure to look into the items mentioned in the answer to the first question

Check out Target, Costco and Wal-Mart, they may have a lot of great options

If you have a mini-fridge, you will likely be able to find a rotisserie chicken without seasoning

You can also get salads without a pre-made salad dressing

Keep some olive oil and balsamic vinegar on hand

Fresh fruit

Canned seafood

Canned cod livers with some plantain chips

Dehydrated liver in pill form

SeaSnax

Refer to the Paleo Parents Costco shopping list for a lot of convenient ideas

Amazon Prime is a huge help with the items listed above, especially the subscribe and save feature

Have a wonderful kickoff to your holiday season!

Thank you for listening everyone - share the love with those you are close to!

Make sure you are working on those lifestyle factors to de-stress this holiday season

Outro (1:13:40)

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