Calorie counting, to paleo, to gluten-free, to gluten-free vegan, to 
Europe and back.  I have been around the block when it comes to dieting 
and lifestyle changes.  I have tried all of these on like a pair of 
Louie Vuittons.  And now, I am telling my story--not to convert you to any of the above or to challenge your views, but to inform and inspire those searching for their own, 
personal, health journey.  It's all about finding balance.
Let's start at the beginning.  Three years ago, I did my first cleanse. 
 I was raised in a house with a fridge packed with organic food and 
weeks full of 19 hour dance rehearsals.  In the midst of this, I would 
cover my salad in parmesan cheese and constantly reach for the 
"honey-wheat" bread-- all the while thinking I was the healthiest gal on
 the planet.  I was not in denial, I was not lazy, I was just misread 
and in the dark about my health.
When I went off to college, the mentality switch began.  Not only did I 
meet my super healthy, well-read roommate Hannah, but I also was also 
immediately cast in a dance show produced by SCAD.  I hate the "f" 
word....."f" word as in-fat.  I was not "fat", but I was unhappy with 
the state of my body and my depleted energy levels.  This is when the 
search began.  The search for health, weight loss and happiness.  I'll 
let you in on the biggest secret I've learned through all of this- you 
cannot search for weight loss or happiness.  Those things are a 
by-product of health.  If you merely search for weight loss you will get
 stuck in a perpetual cycle of money spending and mood swings---trust 
me. 
I started out by getting the app "my fitness pal" which is used for 
tracking calories and exercise.  Never will I ever count a damn calorie 
again.  That was the most miserable food experience I have ever 
encountered.  I limited myself for 1,200 calories a day from 
September-December.  And you know what?  I did lose a couple of pounds 
and felt OK, but I still was not giving my body the nutrients it craved,
 therefore, I was not able to keep it up. The truth of any 
"diet".  My body adapted to surviving on 1,200 calories a day which then
 made me hit a weight-loss plateau.  I was not a happy camper.  If you 
are eating the right foods with the nutrients your body needs, counting 
calories will be pointless because you will naturally crave less food.  
Feeding your body is the secret to weight-loss, not the opposite.
When I returned to school in January I began to research the paleo 
diet.  I had heard about "the caveman diet" back in high school when it 
was used as a quick fix before spring break, but I had never actually 
tried the lifestyle.  So, I became paleo from January-August of 2012.  
If you have not ever read it, I recommend Dr. D'Adamo's book "The 
Bloodtype Diet".  I am not an advocate of the full fledged diet, but I 
do believe that it holds truth.  It goes back to the origins of our 
bloodtype, where we emerged in history and how we adapted to our 
environments.  The proof that I have of this theory holding ground is my
 weight and iron levels.  I am blood type "A" which flourishes on a high
 carbohydrate, gluten-free, vegetarian diet.  When I went to the doctor 
in August and had been following the paleo diet, I had actually gained a
 few pounds and had low iron levels.  After converting to gluten-free 
veganism in the fall and filling my diet with millet, oats, veggies, 
fruits and non-gmo soy here and there, at my check-up in December my 
hormone and iron levels were normal for the first time in years, and I 
had actually lost weight.  
So how did I get from paleo to vegan you ask?  Well, it took a lot of 
reading, a lot of talking and a health documentary called "Forks over 
Knifes".  I have seen a lot of netflix health documentaries in my days, 
but that one is by far still my favorite.  What worked the best for me 
in the conversion was cutting everything cold turkey (no pun intended). 
 I did Dr. Oz's 48 hour detox and turned my back to animal products and 
all-things-gluten.
When I found out I was going to Europe, I wanted to be able to indulge 
in the culture and food.  So, in the spring, I slowly began to introduce
 animal products and a little bit of wheat here and there back into my 
diet.  My body did not feel like my body anymore.  Granted, I did 
backpack through Europe for a month, but I did not feel electricity 
running through my bones.  And it has taken me about a month to get back on track and detox my system.
So now, there are some days that I eat 100% vegan and some days where I wake up and decide I want scrambled eggs.  Whatever I put in my body, I just make sure that it is organic, clean and unrefined.  I want all of the vitamin and health benefits from my food.  Because guess what ya'll....We should EAT TO LIVE not live to eat...
Here are the facts-- when you introduce more kale less cesar 
salad, more fruit less welches fruit snacks and more millet bread less 
processed wheat bread into your diet, I guarantee you will improve your 
health.  Be a label whore.  READ The ingredients and understand what you
 are putting into your body.  Be educated.
It is baby-steps people.  There was a time I was eating pasta until 12:00 
am and three years later my fridge is found absent of animal products, 
dairy 
products and gluten products and my body full of vegetables, fruits, raw
 nuts, raw seeds and naturally gluten-free whole grains.  I am still 
constantly reading, learning, searching and digging for new information.
So here are my parting words of advice- eat more vegetables and fruit, 
get the gluten out of your cabinet (if you don't believe me read Wheat 
Belly by Dr. William Davis) and if you are going to eat animal products, and YES I sometimes do-
 know where they are coming from, making sure they are organic and free 
of GMOS (genetically modified organisms).  Be responsible and take over 
your health.  
xoxo
Sarah