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006 – Eating Clean and Green with Treva Thompson


We’re on episode 006 of the Elite Road Warrior podcast! This week is another interview episode. This week we talked with Treva Thompson, a dear friend and functional diagnostic nutrition specialist.

What you’ll learn in this episode:

4:10 – Three reasons it is so hard to eat healthy on the road.

7:00 – Why eat clean and green?

8:12 – Clean and Green: a description

8:25 – Food that comes from a plant, eats a plant, but not made in a plant.

10:25 – “Keeping it green”

12:20 – Types of fuel: Long term, short term, sustainable fuel

12:50 – Healthy Fats! (Yes, its a real thing)

14:00 – Healthy eating starts at home.

14:30 – Cook once and eat twice

16:10 – Make The Healthiest Choice on the road (throwback to Episode 005)

17:00 – Eating healthy is a sliding scale with extremes on either side

18:30 – Remember to eat breakfast!

19:15 – Your body may revolt, but keep it simple.

20:20 – Turning simple eating into more energy

20:48 – Elite Road Warrior Assessment

22:30 – Why do you have those “cravings”?

26:15 – Closing thoughts

27:35 – Sneak peek of episode 007

Whole Food Diet: Whole milk, whole chicken, and whole eggs. Keep it simple! Share on X Start at home, if you don't you will FAIL. #CookOnceEatTwice Share on X You are on the journey to healthy. You don't have to be perfect. Share on X Improve daily. #StartSimple Share on X Eat like a king for breakfast, a prince for lunch, and a pauper for dinner. Share on X

Resources from today’s episode:

Road Warrior Assessment – What Level of Road Warrior Are You?

Treva Thompson’s website: http://livingtree.co/

Written by Bryan Buckley · Categorized: Carry a Controlled Substance, Clean & Green, ERW Podcast, FUEL, Hydration

005 – Changing Your Four Letter Word on the Road


Welcome to Episode 005 of The Elite Road Warrior Podcast Show Notes! In this episode, we’ll discuss how to change your “four letter word” on the road.

What You Will Learn In This Episode:

3:00 – FOMO defined

3:35 – “Freak show of Glutton”

3:52 – Four assumptions of FOMO

7:30 – The Road Warrior Assessment commercial

8:15 – Make the easiest choice, the questions

9:20 – The new four letter word: MTCH

9:50 – Four ways to maximize MTHC

16:00 – The second mistake

16:30 – Key takeaway from this episode

Ideas Worth Sharing:

Plan ahead when eating out on the road. Giving a little time now for research can make a huge difference in the future Share on X Letting the server know about your intention for healthy eating is an easy way to get support for your on-the- road health goals. Share on X Top-Shelf Road Warriors are be willing to sacrifice now for a better later. Share on X Remember, only you can control your nutrition Share on X Be willing to sacrifice the short term for the long term Share on X

Links and Resources in Today’s Episode:

Road Warrior Assessment – What Level of Road Warrior Are You?

Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones by James Clear – Learn More

Written by Bryan Buckley · Categorized: Embrace Better, ERW Podcast

004 – Interview with Allan Misner


Welcome to Episode 004 of The Elite Road Warrior Podcast Show Notes! In this episode, we’ll hear from Allan Misner of 40+ Fitness.

What You Will Learn In This Episode:

4:24 – Allan’s backstory and how it changed his life
9:50 – What Allan’s life looked like as a business traveler and stay in shape
12:08 – How a business traveler 40+ could even begin to get in shape on the road
16:28 – The Road Warrior Assessment
17:13 – GPS / STREETS /CARGo Methodology
25:17 – What he would say to the brand new Allan road warrior

 

Ideas Worth Sharing:

I was unhealthy, unfit, and not happy but my career was the only thing going well for me. #40+Fitness Share on X

If you don’t take care of yourself, absolutely no one else will Share on X

Exercise is important but it’s not the only factor - it starts and finishes with your nutrition Share on X

Change starts with commitment then strategies to reach your ultimate goal Share on X

Hotel breakfasts are nothing more than carb-bombs! Share on X

Know yourself and do the things that will keep you on track Share on X

 

Links and Resources in Today’s Episode:

Road Warrior Assessment – What Level of Road Warrior Are You?

The Wellness Map book

https://40plusfitnesspodcast.com/welcome-to-listeners-of-the-elite-road-warrior-podcast/

 

Written by Bryan Buckley · Categorized: ERW Podcast, FUEL, MOVE, PERFORM, Podcast

8 Simple Ways to Wreck a Good Night of Sleep on the Road

Sleep. So many of us have a love/hate relationship with sleep.  To some, it’s something you have to do not want to do and yet to others, they seem to sleep their life away.

Ironically, it’s the one thing we do every day more than about anything else except work. Yet most of us are really bad at it. Seriously, how do you suck at sleep?

I go through phases where I get to bed later on the road for business but have a quiet morning when I’m more consistent with my bedtime at home but the house is up and moving earlier.

And it’s a challenge if you’re in a different hotel bed from one night to the other, dealing with foreign noises and light.

As a preface, I was an over-achiever who had a knack at stealing precious sleep hours so these 10 simple ways to wreck a good night of sleep come from a doctorate-level of personal experience. How many of them are true of you? (By the way, more is NOT better for you over-achievers). Are you ready?

8 Simple Ways to Wreck a Good Night of Sleep on the Road

1) Don’t Value Sleep

Make sleep a necessary evil. Do it only when you absolutely have to. After all, aren’t you there on this business trip to work every possible moment?!

Just get to it when you get to it. Ironically, we would never say we don’t value sleep but our actions or our sleep proves otherwise.

The truth is you know to make sleep a priority. It’s just a matter of doing it.

High quality sleep fortifies your immune system, balances your hormones, boosts your metabolism, increases your physical energy, and improves the function of your brain.

Holy Shut-eye. Batman, that’s a lot of benefits!

But sleep must matter to you. It has become a bigger deal in your life to move your energy needle.

Don’t fall for the lie that you can gain more time by stealing from sleep.

Being awake is catabolic (breaks you down) and being asleep is anabolic (builds you up) and heightens the growth and rejuvenation of the immune, skeletal, and muscular systems. Basically, sleep rebuilds you and keeps you youthful.

Research shows that after just 24 hours of sleep deprivation, there is an overall reduction of 6% in glucose reaching the brain. Simple translation: you get dumber – more dumber.

This is also why you crave candy, chips, doughnuts, and other starchy, sugary things when you’re tired. Your body is trying to compel you to get that glucose back to your brain as soon as possible.

Your partial love and the prefrontal cortex actually lose 12 to 14% of their glucose when you don’t sleep. These are the areas of the brain we most need for thinking, for distinguishing between ideas, for social control, and for being able to tell the difference between right and wrong. Have you ever made a poor decision late at night and wouldn’t have made normally. You ask yourself, what was I thinking?

When you’re sleep-deprived, you’re setting up what Shawn Stevenson calls a “steel cage match between your willpower and your biology.” The deck is stacked against you.

START HERE:

You think you need more time when you actually need more energy and that starts with sleep. If I’m rested, I’m more likely to make better eating choices, workout, and feel better about my day. So, start by making it a priority and applying as many of these ideas.

 

2) Give Me Light and Make Me Warm

After all, light before bed and while I sleep doesn’t matter. It sure hasn’t so far, right?  On the road, you may be so tired that you fall asleep with the lights on.

Actually, you’re in the dark on this one.

Sleeping in complete darkness is so significant that nighttime light has been called “light pollution” and refers to any adverse effects of artificial light.

One of the most devastating impacts of this light pollution is its effect on the production of melatonin. Studies show that exposure to room light during sleep hours surprises melatonin levels by more than 50%. And a Harvard Medical School study found that exposure to light at night throws the body’s biological clock out of whack. Again, not good.

The truth is we need a blackout to optimize our sleep.

 Secondly, Make Me Warm!

Most people are completely unaware of how temperate effects our sleep.

When it’s time for your body to rest, there’s an automatic drop in your core body temperature to help initiate sleep. If the temperature in your environment stays too high, then it can a challenge for your body to get into the ideal state for restful sleep.

Now, just because you’re sleeping, doesn’t mean the quality of your sleep is great.

Studies show the optimal temperature range for sleep is between 60-67 degrees. The truth is you need a much lower temperature in your room than you realize.

START HERE:

1.  Dark the room out – curtains/alarm clocks – I use a clip to keep the hotel curtains shut and wash clothes / electrical tape (I bring with me) for those annoying little lights in a hotel room.

2.  Start slowly dropping the temperature in your room at night – I actually start the moment I walk into my hotel room then drop it even further a few minutes before bed. Check out this excellent article for more detail HERE.

 

3) Work from a Screen or Watch a Screen Right Up to Bed

Be on your computer, phone, tablet, or watch TV and you’re killing this one. And if you want extra points, do them all at the same time. This is SO easy to do with business travel.

Now, this is a guarantee to jack up your sleep – and it was totally me. I was constantly up late, TV on, working on my computer, stadium lights on (violating #2) right up to bed. Then wondered why I couldn’t fall asleep right away and my quality of sleep was horrible.

Why does it matter if you’re on a screen or not before bed?

There is an artificial blue light emitted by electronic screens that trigger your body to produce more daytime hormones and disorients your body’s natural preparation for sleep. You don’t even realize how these blue wavelengths affect your sleep let alone keep your mind active. This one change made a huge difference for me. Tough but worth it.

It’s hard to notice this blue light when you’re up close and personal to what you’re watching. But if you were to step way back you’ll notice. I especially notice it when you drive by someone’s house at night and the tv is on and the house is filled with this glowing and captivating blue light.

STAT:

Mariana Figueiro, PhD of the Lighting Research Center at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, NY and her team’ research showed that just 2 hours of computer screen time before bed was enough to significantly suppress people’s nighttime release of melatonin. When your melatonin secretion is thrown off, it will intrinsically throw off your normal sleep time. And continual use could lead to chronic disruption of circadian rhythms. And this could increase your odds of serious health issues.

Why is this hard? Dopamine is extracted as we search and seek, and find “that next thing”. It gives us a mini high and keeps us alert and dopamine is tied to motivation and alertness. Not good.

We need serotonin which is tied to contentment and relaxation.

Cutting back on your screen time at night is likely the number one thing you can do to improve the quality of your sleep immediately.

START HERE:

Your body and mind need to prepare for sleep and this one step could possibly be the number one thing you can do to improve your sleep quality immediately. Start by unplugging incrementally by 15 minutes, then 30, 45, and eventually 60 minutes and see how much better you sleep.

 

4)  Sleep Random Amounts Every Single Night

Make sure you are as inconsistent as possible. 6 hours one night. 8 hours one night. 5 hours another night.

If you find yourself with two nights of consistency, this should scare you.

The truth is you need to go old school on your bedtime.

Old School eh?

Renowned neurologist, Kulreet Chadhary, MD says, “Timing your sleep is like timing an investment in the stock market – it doesn’t matter how much you invest, it matters when you invest.”

In order for you to get your ideal hours of sleep, you need to get your body on a schedule to get to bed at a preset time as often as possible. When you line your body up with its natural secretion of the hormone, your sleep benefits dramatically increase as well. Money sleep time is between 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. so the more you get rest during that window, serious bonus points. You actually feel more rested from sleep during that time. This will also allow your body’s circadian rhythm to get back on track.

According to the book Sleep Smarter, around 10 pm, your body goes through a transformation following the natural rise in melatonin. The purpose of this transformation is to increase internal metabolic energy to repair, strengthen, and rejuvenate your body. If you’re asleep as normal during this phase, all is well. However, if you’re up when 10:00 p.m. hits, that in case in metabolic energy can be experienced as a “Second Wind.”

It’s important to understand that your body’s ability to repair itself, remove free radicals, and maximize hormonal output is greatly inhibited when you allow yourself to stay up and move into that second wind.

Terry Cralle, in the book, Sleeping Your Way to the Top, talks about a sleep window to go to bed every single night and have your body begin to prepare for that CONSISTENT window.

 

START HERE:

Schedule it. Set a time (or a short window) and dude, stick to it! Set an alarm for bedtime just like you do to get up. Then begin increasing that time by 15 minutes until you feel rested. I know that every night on the road could be unpredictable but I know I have more control than I care to admit and it’s usually one night, two tops, that I don’t have control of my bedtime if I really wanted.

 

5)  Do Whatever You Feel Like Close to Bed Time

Eat late, lights on everywhere in the room. And if you can watch something then plop into bed.

And the reality is most of simply don’t make any correlation between our activity before bed and why we can’t sleep. Imagine that.

I was SO guilty of this one. I had no consistency except being inconsistent added on with stimulus overload, then wondered why I couldn’t fall asleep. Thank you Captain Obvious.

The truth is we need an evening bedtime routine to prepare our bodies to sleep.

Once you know your ideal bedtime, you can back up what is required in your evening. The idea is setting a routine that will allow your body AND your mind to transition to sleep.

But most of us just stop working or turn off the tv, fall into bed, and wonder why we’re not sleeping with our mind still racing.

Choose to do something, anything but watch a screen. Your body and mind can be trained and need to have the consistency to prepare for its recharge and repair time.

START HERE:

Start by choosing activities that prepare you for bed: planning for tomorrow, turning down lights, putting things away from today and out for tomorrow, putting on your bed clothes (whatever THAT may be), brushing your teeth, etc. Anything that can become a routine to get you to prepare your body and mind for sleep.

 

6)  Have Caffeine Whenever You Want Since It Doesn’t Affect Your Sleep

Most people actually believe that caffeine consumption even late in the day or before bed doesn’t affect their sleep.

One reason is that they drink caffeine ALL the time. Another reason is they don’t know what sleep is like WITHOUT caffeine in their system.

A study in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine by Dr. Drake, said, “drinking a big cup of coffee on the way home from work can lead to negative effects on sleep, just as if someone were to consume caffeine closer to bedtime.”

The study gave participants caffeine at three different times:

  • Immediately before bed
  • 3 hours before bed
  • 6 hours before bed

And do you know what the results showed? ALL showed measurable disruptions in their sleep.

I used to be a Mountain Dew addict and would have it before bed along with something salty. Little did I know what this caffeine was doing to my sleep.

The truth is many of us need to check into caffeine rehab.

The primary effects that caffeine has on sleep are to lengthen the time it takes to fall asleep and to decrease the total amount of sleep obtained. Not cool. Most people are simply not aware of its effects because they’re drinking caffeine almost all of the time. Check into caffeine rehab and see the difference for yourself.

START HERE:

Have a caffeine curfew. Limit caffeine in your system at least from dinner on with the ultimate goal of six hours before bed. Why? Because caffeine stays in your system at least that long and will linger to affect you in negative ways. It’s the gift that keeps on giving.

 

7)  Move as Little As Possible Throughout the Day

Sit sit sit. Get up late so you don’t work out. Sit in the airport, car, meetings, office, meals, couch before bed.

The truth is there is a direct correlation between being active and sleeping quickly and soundly. You gotta move, man!

The more you move, the more your body wants and needs restorative sleep.

A study published in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine found that patients with primary insomnia had a massive improvement in sleep quality when they added in a consistent exercise regimen.  Here were the results:

  • A 55% improvement in sleep onset latency (they fell asleep faster)
  • A 30% decrease in the total wake tie during the test
  • An 18% increase in total sleep time during the test
  • A 13% increase in sleep efficiency (improved the quality of their sleep)

All this from exercise. Not sleeping pills, alcohol, rubbing a magic sleep lamp but exercise.

If you workout, this is Go Time for your body to repair itself and transform the way you want it too. But even more walking and movement will help.

The earlier you work out the better, but movement and exercise is still king for a killer night of sleep. You will fall asleep fast and improve the quality of sleep the more you up your game and move!

START HERE:

Start by doing whatever you can to add more movement into your say. Stand when you can. Park further away. Take the stairs. Add push-ups or jumping jacks. Anything! Ideally, balance between cardio and strength training and your sleep will dramatically improve!

 

8)  Have a Night Cap Drink or Three

Nothing beats a little sauce close to bedtime. After all, it usually knocks me right out so it has to be good for my sleep, right?

The truth is alcohol may make you sleepy and knock you out quickly but the quality of your sleep is dramatically affected.

You won’t fall into deeper, consistent levels of REM sleep, and your brain and body won’t be able to fully rejuvenate. This is why people generally don’t feel that great after waking up from an alcohol-laced sleep. (Not to mention the kind or quantity you had to drink)

Quality of overall sleep is more important than falling asleep quickly or that “one more drink” mindset.

This is such a challenge and temptation for many on the road. I claimed it was “part of the job” but between us girls, I leveraged this as an excuse to extend it further into the evening that was truly necessary “for business sake.”

START HERE:

Start with limiting or eliminating alcohol after dinner. I’m all for a glass or two of wine with dinner, but then step away from the bottle (and of course not every night! – note to self). Be aware of the true affect alcohol plays in your actual rest. Three hours before bed is a good rule. Another role is one glass of water with one alcoholic drink.

 

Closing Thoughts:

Just how many of the 8 are reflective of you?  In the end, it’s easier than you think to wreck your sleep.

Now, the challenge is to apply the start here suggestions and make some necessary changes to improve your sleep and watch your waking hours dramatically improve for the better on the road.

So, what now? Here are two suggestions:

1.  Choose one of the ten to change on your next trip – something was obvious and stood out to you big time – change it tonight

2.  Raise your awareness – you may not realize you’re doing some of the other ones- take note and change thy ways!

 

I challenge you to really focus on what could be wrecking your sleep and begin to make adjustments to gain an energy edge in your work and home life. Sleep on it.

 

 

 

 

 

Written by Bryan Buckley · Categorized: REST, Sleep

How You Can Dramatically Increase the Success of Your Business Trip In Just One Day

I’m on a flight right now and eating homemade scrambled eggs, sautéed spinach and kale, cut up bell peppers and cucumbers with cherry tomatoes.

I do this every flight out of town.

On the other hand, I’m sitting next to Ed McMuffin Man. Have you seen him?

Right now he’s inhaling an Egg McMuffin, two hash browns, and washing it down with a jumbo Diet Coke. Diet, of course.

Does that make me better?

Well… I’ll let you be the judge.

Get to the Point

The point is we’re both on the 1st day of a business travel trip and we both made an anchor decision on how we’re starting off our trip.

He’s now in a coma while his phone is still on playing a movie. It’s not pretty.

I’m choosing to write. Again, you are the judge.

Unknowingly, he’s making decisions that are setting the tone for the rest of his trip.

I see this kind of guy ALL of the time when I travel. And there’s a reason he’s overweight, marginally effective, and lacks energy.

Daniel Pink in his latest book, WHEN, talks about Beginnings – Starting Right, Starting Again, and Starting Together.

His premise is what he calls False Starts, are MORE due to WHEN than WHAT.

If we do certain activities at the wrong time no matter if they’re the right activities, they simply will not have as strong as results.

For example, the 1st day of the year, or month, or week are what social scientists often call a “temporal landmark.”

Just as we use landmarks to guide us as a visual marker, we leverage these “Stand Out Days” from what Daniel Pink calls, “the ceaseless and forgettable march of other days and their prominence helps us find our way.”

 

Research to Prove It

In 2014, three scholars from the Wharton School of the University of Penn published this breakthrough paper in the science of timing that opened up our eyes to the understanding of the use of temporal landmarks and how we can leverage them for new beginnings or fresh starts.

These scholars analyzed 8.5 years of Google searches. They found that certain word searches spiked dramatically on key “fresh start days” and triggered a predictable motivation in people.

Daniel Pink noted there are two types of Temporal Landmarks: Social and Personal

1. Social – those everyone shared: Mondays / New Month / New Quarter / Holidays

2. Personal – unique to the individual: Birthdays / Anniversaries / Job Changes

Interestingly, two things happened whether social or personal temporal landmarks were used:

1. They allowed people to open “new mental accounts” in the same way a business closes the books at the end of one year and opens new books in the next year.  It’s a break from the past mistakes and imperfections and leaves us confident about “what could be”. Key Marker: New Years Day or Birthday.

2. They also interrupt attention to the everyday minutiae causing people to take a big picture view of their lives and focus on achieving their goals.

As the Wharton scholars concluded, “People can strategically create turning points in their personal histories.”

 

I call this concept Anchor Days and here’s my definition of an Anchor Day:

“Key behaviors done on a specific date to serve as a kickstart for a period of time”

 

The power is in the word: ANCHOR.

What does an anchor do? The trusty dictionary defines an anchor as “A device used to prevent the craft from drifting (due to wind or current).”

We’re the Craft in the analogy and the drift is ANYTHING that takes us where we DON’T want to go!

You think about an Anchor. When it drops and takes hold, you don’t go anywhere or anywhere soon.

And since we’re notorious for drifting especially if we don’t start out strong hence the Power of an Anchor Day.

Let’s break down the key aspects of an Anchor Day…

There are THREE Key Aspects of an Anchor Day to be effective and be powerful:

1. Set Date – there must be a CLEAR starting date – This is the WHEN – a “specific day”

2 Catalyst Behavior – Key actions you need to do – This is the WHAT

3. Specific Triggers – reminders or cues / IF this, THAN that = WHERE

 

All three aspects are critical for an effective Anchor Day that gives you sustainable energy and incredible results.

Ideally, you combine the specific day/catalyst behaviors / specific triggers into a plan to make the most of the Anchor Day.

Anchor Days require Intention and Discipline.

They don’t “just happen”.

Did you catch that?

Anchor Days require Intention and Discipline.

You must INTEND to do them and they cause you to exert effort which requires discipline.

But the payoffs are absolutely huge.

So few people do them that when you create and implement an Anchor Day you’re already in a very elite group of high performers who are living with an Energy Edge.

Now, the goal is to find what potential days could be your own Temporal Landmarks and for business travelers, there is an obvious one.

 

Here are my own personal on-going anchor days on a consistent basis:

1. Mondays

2. New Month

3. New Quarter

4. 1st day of a business trip

Now, if you’re a business traveler there is an obvious one. Let me drill down on one that makes the biggest impact for me on a consistent basis:

My work is business travel a majority of the time and every trip has one major thing in common: the 1st day.

As a result, having an Anchor Day is absolutely key for me.

I’ve learned through the years the MOST IMPORTANT day of business travel for me is the 1ST day of the trip.

Why?

It’s rather simple. Because how the 1st day goes, the rest of my trip usually goes. A creature of habit.

If I can establish an “anchor” of certain behaviors on my 1st day, they will be my anchor keeping me grounded for the rest of the trip.

On the flip side, I witness first-hand business travelers with shallow or no anchors and their 1st day of the business trip is inconsistent and all over the place.

And I’ve learned, once the train leaves the station, or in my case, the plane leaves the airport, I need to work my Anchor Day Plan.

Not going to be THAT guy anymore. Sorry Ed McMuffin Man (not really).

 

Personal Example…

So, let’s work through the three aspects of an Anchor Day in my example of a Road Warrior:

Set Date – 1st day of my business travel – this is my WHEN

Catalyst Behaviors – What I EAT / How I MOVE / When I Sleep

 

And here are some examples for me personally:

1. Taking my Breakfast with me – I no longer leave this chance (AND if I have a healthy breakfast I’m FAR more likely to have a healthy lunch/dinner)

2. Movement – When I choose to stand more than sit, walk every chance I can, and get at least a few minutes of exercise no matter what and where I will feel so much better

3. Develop – I make sure I carve some time to develop both professionally and personally (which usually means reading)

4. Connect/Check in with Home – this is done by early morning videos/audio/text messages so my family has them from me before they even wake up

5. Rest – Early Bed Time – this is SO key the 1st day because most of the time I have an early flight and changing time zones

 

Now, remember, after the Set Date and Catalyst Behavior, is the 3rd aspect of the Anchor Day which is…

Specific Triggers – reminders or cues / IF this, THAN that = WHERE

Water bottle / Tupperware / snack bag out the night before
Apple Watch alarms – stand/drink water
Book in my work bag on the flight

What This Means to You…

What if you created your own Anchor Day on business travel? You have the same thing in common as me that every trip has a 1st day.

Here’s the challenge, what behaviors could be a catalyst for the rest of your trip’s success?

And what triggers could you put in place to make them a reality?

Let me give you some key areas:

Food
Movement (standing/walking / working out)
Personal and/or Professional Development
Checking in back home
Proper rest

The Challenge – Find a way to leverage the 1st day of your trip focusing on catalyst behaviors and creating specific triggers to make it happen. You got this.

 

 

 

 

Written by Bryan Buckley · Categorized: PERFORM, Productivity

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