5.26.2015

Cracking the Secret Language of Restaurant Menus

Eating at a restaurant can be a great way to enjoy some good food and even spend quality time with friends or family. Unfortunately, eating out can also pose a significant threat to your regular healthy eating habits. You don’t have to stop eating out or avoid certain restaurants to stick to your healthy eating habits! This is the third and final article in a series discussing the pitfalls of eating out. The first two articles discussed how to eat out without eating too much while still getting enough variety in your meals.

Eating out, by itself, is not necessarily what poses a health risk. More often, the threat is posed by eating behaviors and food choices made while eating out. Restaurant dishes may contain way too many Calories, too many carbohydrates, too much fat, too much salt, too much sugar, highly-processed ingredients, or not enough variety/nutrients. Additionally, some dishes that are presented as healthy or “lighter” options are not as nutrient-dense as you may think. One example of this is a salad that is primarily comprised of iceberg lettuce or has very few other healthier food items (other vegetables, fruits, lean protein) on it.

5.19.2015

Looking For an Apple in the Barbeque Joint

Eating at a restaurant can be a great way to enjoy some good food and even spend quality time with friends or family. Unfortunately, eating out can also pose a significant threat to your regular healthy eating habits. You don’t have to stop eating out or avoid certain restaurants to stick to your healthy eating habits!  This is the second in a series of articles discussing the pitfalls of eating out. The first article discussed ways to avoid eating too much.

Even if you’re disciplined about making healthy food choices on a regular basis, it can still be challenging to maintain this habit when you go out to eat. One healthy strategy that can be particularly difficult to stick to when you’re at a restaurant is eating a balanced variety of food groups and nutrients.

5.12.2015

How to Eat Out without Eating Too Much

Eating at a restaurant can be a great way to enjoy some good food and even spend quality time with friends or family. Unfortunately, eating out can also pose a significant threat to your regular healthy eating habits. This is the first in a series of articles discussing the pitfalls of eating out. You don’t have to stop eating out or avoid certain restaurants to stick to your healthy eating habits!

Many restaurants in the US serve exceedingly large portion sizes. This, in combination with a number of other psychosocial factors, leads most of us to overeat when we eat out. Last Thanksgiving, I published a guide to help you enjoy the holiday meal without over-doing it. While you may not be able to follow all of the tips provided in that guide, there is still some advice in that article that applies to eating out: you can’t always control the size of your dishes, portions served, or eating utensils, but you can control how much you consume by adapting several of the tips given here last November.

5.05.2015

Muscle Imbalances and Poor Posture: A Dangerous Cycle

Using a muscle group more than its counterpart leads to imbalances in strength, flexibility, resting length, and muscle efficiency between these two groups. These muscular imbalances can lead to poor posture, pain, and injury. Instrumentalists are particularly vulnerable to developing muscle imbalances due to the repetitive motions and long hours with insufficient breaks that seem to go hand-in-hand with playing a musical instrument.

4.28.2015

Why You Should Never Force Your Turnout

Dancers, especially those in ballet, are expected to utilize a rather large amount of external rotation of the legs, called turnout. Anatomically speaking, turnout is the combination of external rotation of the hip joint, tibial torsion (slight external rotation of the lower leg as compared to the thigh), and slight external rotation of the foot. Turnout is supposed to be created and maintained through hip/pelvis and thigh musculature. However, in an effort to achieve the largest degree of turnout possible, some dancers “force” turnout, using the friction from the floor to hold the foot in a more turned out position than the dancer can achieve using the hip and thigh muscles.

4.21.2015

Fuel for Healing

Giving your body what it needs can keep you healthy, help you achieve or maintain your target weight, improve your physical and mental performance, and improve your mood. “Giving your body what it needs” can include resting from physical activity, staying hydrated, and eating nutritiously. Unfortunately, performing artists can have a difficult time integrating these healthy behaviors into their daily routine.

Rest and hydration guidelines have been presented previously, so this article focuses on the importance of nutrition on injury prevention and recovery.

4.14.2015

4 Behaviors that Hurt Your Voice


Vocal health problems like hoarseness, fatigue of the voice, pain, and vocal cord lesions are caused by vocal abuse (using the voice in a way that damages your voice and vocal health) or vocal misuse (habitual vocal strain). While it’s easiest to identify and avoid isolated instances of vocal abuse (like screaming/yelling or cheering at a sporting event or concert), it may be more important for long-term vocal health to recognize and stop the vocal misuse that happens on a regular basis.