View Full Version : Do you eat well?
Medic
12-27-2008, 02:47 PM
I have been going to gym for about 4 months ive noticed eating healthy is some times cheaper and obviously helthy way to live.
I know some foods are hard to prepare quickly, you can make food the night before.
Snacks are simple, fruits, nuts & salads
Main meals grilled chicken baked, potatoes, boiled eggs, oats.
If you eat these you will feel better and also these are high energy foods.
Try it out. This is a pic of Ronnie Coleman a police man.Obviously he also trains and is on supps (Whey). Another good product is Nitrox tabs, this is very good to keep you awake on long shifts.
marineman
12-27-2008, 02:58 PM
I'm on a very strict see food diet. If I see food, I eat it. That picture of ronnie coleman sure did jack me up to go find a needle though :rolleyes:
Medic
12-27-2008, 04:20 PM
HAHA im talking natural here lol. He is ummm not so natural but eats like an animal summing like 1kg or grilled chicken just for lunch.
EMTCop86
12-28-2008, 04:01 AM
Haha cheaper? Are you kidding? Ever since I started eating healthier with more fruits and veg my grocery bill has gone up!
Medic
12-28-2008, 09:11 AM
No I found that veg is cheaper than chips(grow our own and buy excess), choc etc. It depends what it is your eating, chicken is much cheaper than my read meats, R30 for 4 breasts compared to R100 for 300g stake. If you buy a bottle of coke R15 and fruit juice is R15.Water is free from a tap. Apples and oranges are about R2 ea and buy packs of 8.R16. Brown rise is cheaper than White.
daedalus
01-01-2009, 08:14 PM
You mean like Carl's Jr and In n Out?
Everyday?
Cause thats how I eat at work
:sad:
Sapphyre
01-01-2009, 08:19 PM
Heh, I actually eat better at work than I do at home...But, maybe that's cause I work nights, not many choices to walk into at 3am
KEVD18
01-01-2009, 08:57 PM
this picture taken shortly after i got into ems:
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v181/KEVD18/me/EXT5.jpg
so ive never been a small guy.
this picture was taken a year ago, 4 years ish on the job:
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v181/KEVD18/me3.jpg
thats a good fourty pound difference anyway.
they dont call it the ems diet for nothing
Second
01-01-2009, 09:00 PM
yea I'm on the see food diet too but i weigh about 165 lbs 5'11"
Medic9
01-01-2009, 09:07 PM
Since working full time in EMS I have slowly put on a [I]few[I] pounds. I have found it very hard to eat regularly and healthy. Yesterday my day started with an interfacility txp at 5 am. On the way back I grabbed a med coffee and two donuts from Dunkin Donuts. I didn't get to eat again until 1800 that night between E-calls. Got to swallow (tasted it later) a southern style chicken sandwich and a few sips of sweet tea.
Sitting down to eat = emergency call. EVERY time
I only eat at the finest restaurants, One of them is a castle that is white, another is run by this wonderful chef her name is Wendy, when i am in the mood for scottish i go to McDonald's, and then if i want poultry i go to a nice little place where the recipe was created by a Colonel. Recently i've been on leave, the EMS diet is true, i lost 10 lbs (4.5 kg), that will change:D
imurphy
01-01-2009, 09:14 PM
Warning: Not good advise!!
I agree with Kev. People DO put on weight working in EMS. Remember we do have a lot of time sitting on our asses!
I have actually LOST weight since I joined the service. This is from a number of reasons including:
1. I drink a lot of coffee. And that seems to fill me up so I don't feel hungry, and usually get by fine on 1 meal a day. As I said above, not good advice, but I've been like that for 4 years with no ill effects!
2. When I eat, the hospitals usually do good meals in the canteens
and the number 1 reason EMT's lose weight.....
Well, on our wages we can't afford to eat esp at rent week!! ;)
KEVD18
01-01-2009, 09:29 PM
ive been out of work for almost a year. very little fast food, lots and lots of home cooked meals. i cook every day. i use things like real butter(lots of it) heavy cream, bacon, beef thats only 75% lean, bread, pasta potatoes etc etc etc. i eat pretty well. i actually eat more when im not working than when i am.
in the last year, using the above "method", i have lost almost thirty pounds with zero effort whatsoever. no gym, no jogging, no counting points. i actually reduced my activity level and lost weight. all i changed was no fast food, no 8 trips to the coffee shop a day, no moutain dew and fritos from the er vending machine. just actual food.
call it bs, call it a myth, call it weak will power, i dont care what you call it. the ems "diet" is legit.
traumateam1
01-02-2009, 02:31 AM
Always fresh.. Always Tim Hortons. Kinda catchy tune anyways.
Medic
01-02-2009, 03:16 AM
1 of the biggest person muscle wise i ever saw was a Flightmedic, between calls he would do weights. He was HUGE. Also my gym is across the road from a fire station so the ff come to the gym often. They are also quite big.
marineman
01-02-2009, 03:21 AM
ive been out of work for almost a year. very little fast food, lots and lots of home cooked meals. i cook every day. i use things like real butter(lots of it) heavy cream, bacon, beef thats only 75% lean, bread, pasta potatoes etc etc etc. i eat pretty well. i actually eat more when im not working than when i am.
Where do you find 75% lean? I live in cow country USA and the best I can find is 80% lean. I love me some good 'ole fattening cow. Just sent one to slaughter today so we'll be eating good soon.
DT4EMS
01-02-2009, 10:18 AM
I don't eat as healthy as I wish I could. With 3 kids still at home and trying to survive on a cops salary purchasing "healthy" is not as easy as I wish it could be.
Since I pack my lunch for work........ french fries and burgers are a non-issue with me.
And I have to comment on Ronnie Coleman........ luv the guy.......... but he is a pro-bodybuilder. There are sperate competitions completely for "Natural" and guys like Ronnie. There is usually about 100lbs in weight difference between the two.
The reason............. juice............ and it's not grape or apple......... it doesn't come in a cup either :)
Spend some real time in a gym and you will know who your "juicers" are. It doesn't' take long to notice the guy that is 506 and weighs 250 sporting a 6-pack and a 450lb bench. :)
Kip
abriggs
01-02-2009, 12:24 PM
I usually eat pretty healthy, and I go to the gym regularly, but I did that before getting into EMS, so it wasn't as hard...
phabib
01-02-2009, 12:30 PM
I was going to say I've gotten better but I'm eating Mike and Ikes for breakfast.
I guess the answer is no.
gillysaurus
01-02-2009, 02:55 PM
No, I don't. I chalk it up to being a college student, though, more than I blame it on EMS. Though EMS definitely doesn't help.
My diet consists mostly of Fruit Loops and pizza from Little Ceasar's. I try not to drink coffee or go out to fast food more than twice a week, but my willpower is very little when it comes to Starbucks and Happy Meals ^_^
In a fit of guilt, I decided to start swimming a couple times a week. It's working really well and is a great stress reliever, but I'm pretty sure my diet isn't going to make any drastic change for the healthier any time soon.
jochi1543
01-02-2009, 11:29 PM
I've put on like 10 lbs in the last 2 months (2 of them in school, 1 also working FT). My major downfalls are eating out of boredom (work takes care of that) and from stress (thank school for that one). I also have this weird thing where I find it hard to eat healthy unless I work out. Unfortunately, there is no gym in town where I work. There's a pathetic excuse for a gym at the oil patch camp a few minutes away, with no TV or music (and I can't listen to my iPod because I might miss a call). In -40 weather with a foot of snow, I'm not exactly burning with desire to go there and have 300 sweaty nasty men stare at me in complete silence while I'm on the elliptical.:ph34r:
On school days, I try to make it to the gym at least once on the 4 days I'm in class (ideally twice), but that means that 2 out of the 3 evenings I spend at home are almost entirely dedicated to that. Considering I have no days off at all right now, it's awfully tempting not to go.
I've made a compromise with myself to try and not GAIN any more weight until school's done in late January. I can focus on actually losing it later. I'm also thinking of buying a used elliptical or something for work, so I can work out here without having to venture outside into the Arctic. The challenge is finding one that will fit into my compact car...:wacko:
JonTullos
01-03-2009, 09:26 PM
I sure don't eat "right". However, I've discovered that if I go to the gym regularly I do alright as long as I do a bunch of cardio in addition to weights.
Hardee's is a weakness. I've braved the monster burger... three times. A friend of mine claims that he got chest pains while watching me eat it. LOL
el Murpharino
01-05-2009, 12:10 PM
It's not that difficult to eat right, and anyone that says it's tough is full of it, though it may not be as tasty as a monster burger, fries, and a jumbo coke. The night before you work, or the morning of work, make some turkey sandwiches on whole wheat bread, throw in a ziploc bag of celery and a small jar of peanut butter for a snack, maybe some dried fruits or bring a few apples...for example. If you're really concerned about it, make your meals the night before - brown rice, chicken breasts, vegetables, fruits, lean meats, tuna fish....there are plenty of options out there. Laziness and excuses are the easy way out.
Hal9000
01-05-2009, 12:21 PM
It's not that difficult to eat right, and anyone that says it's tough is full of it, though it may not be as tasty as a monster burger, fries, and a jumbo coke. The night before you work, or the morning of work, make some turkey sandwiches on whole wheat bread, throw in a ziploc bag of celery and a small jar of peanut butter for a snack, maybe some dried fruits or bring a few apples...for example. If you're really concerned about it, make your meals the night before - brown rice, chicken breasts, vegetables, fruits, lean meats, tuna fish....there are plenty of options out there. Laziness and excuses are the easy way out.
I always make food the day before. If I get really pressed and for some reason can't bring food to work, I make some extra time and grab some sandwiches on the way in. I rarely "have" to eat fast food. Personally, homemade is better anyway.
BossyCow
01-05-2009, 06:31 PM
Always fresh.. Always Tim Hortons. Kinda catchy tune anyways.
When I read that I heard the tune in my head.. lol
I stock my husband's food locker at work with canned soups. Nice easy quickly prepared meal for those crazy shifts when there isn't time to fix a meal. It's possible to find them with decent ingredients and low sodium/fat content. I stick to the Amy's Organics brand.
Now, if I could just get them to put a lock on the food buffet in the ER break room, cookies, chips, candy bowls, pot lucks for EVERYONE'S birthday/anniversary/promotion etc. Its not fair to leave that stuff out where the ambulance crews have to smell it while writing our reports.
Tatum
01-05-2009, 11:03 PM
I eat a lot of pilot bread and fruity pebbles.
BossyCow
01-15-2009, 12:15 PM
I've done it! We have tossed the large candy bowl from the fire station!
NebraskanPrincess
01-25-2009, 02:07 PM
I'm vegetarian :) And so long as I bring my bag of carrot sticks and avoid the fast food places, I'm golden. It helps that my gallbladder was taken out awhile ago as it makes me intolerant of greasy foods. Chinese food is my weakness. I'm working on the saying no of that :)
Sasha
01-25-2009, 10:22 PM
I ate terribly while working! There were days that I bought a big bag of skittles at the 711 and that was breakfast, lunch, and dinner because we were always busy and ran over our shift! Sometimes I skipped eating all together because I was just too irate or tired after work and then there was a week where I had taco bell or Tijuana Flats every day for dinner because it was quick and easy and I suck at cooking.
Now that I'm not working I can and have eaten a lot better.
fortsmithman
01-25-2009, 10:59 PM
I try to eat healthy. Sometimes I do and sometimes it's a bag of nachos.
BossyCow
01-26-2009, 01:46 PM
I'm vegetarian :) And so long as I bring my bag of carrot sticks and avoid the fast food places, I'm golden. It helps that my gallbladder was taken out awhile ago as it makes me intolerant of greasy foods. Chinese food is my weakness. I'm working on the saying no of that :)
Also vegetarian, one of my favorite pick-me-ups is Miso Cups. Miso broth sometimes with a bit of flavoring dehydrated. Just add to hot water ... very tasty and amazingly filling.
Chinese food can be okay if you find one that goes easy on the oil and sugar.
Medresponse44
03-15-2009, 02:59 PM
I usually like to eat food that I have made because I know what is in it, and not processed foods or fast foods.
Fredoman
04-01-2009, 03:08 AM
It's not that difficult to eat right, and anyone that says it's tough is full of it, though it may not be as tasty as a monster burger, fries, and a jumbo coke. The night before you work, or the morning of work, make some turkey sandwiches on whole wheat bread, throw in a ziploc bag of celery and a small jar of peanut butter for a snack, maybe some dried fruits or bring a few apples...for example. If you're really concerned about it, make your meals the night before - brown rice, chicken breasts, vegetables, fruits, lean meats, tuna fish....there are plenty of options out there. Laziness and excuses are the easy way out.
I agree, in the past I was quite a heavy set person. I went from a flabby 285 to a solid 205. Some things you just have to learn to do... Brush your teeth, take a shower, put your socks on, go to work, working out and eating correctly should be at the top of the list.
WarDance
04-02-2009, 02:08 PM
I'm not eating well right now because I'm in race training limbo but once my marathon training starts I will be starting a new diet.
15-20% protein, at least 50-55% carb, 30% fats. I'm increasing my carbs but I'm going to focus on getting in good ones...not stuff like white bread! I might as well just start buying bags of horse feed. It's got about the right balence of everything!
FTRPO
04-02-2009, 11:31 PM
I bet that would make you run further wardance.
WarDance
04-03-2009, 12:22 AM
I bet that would make you run further wardance.
What? Eating horse feed or following that diet? If I'm going to be that strict I'd better run pretty darn fast for a long time!
LucidResq
04-03-2009, 12:36 AM
I've done it! We have tossed the large candy bowl from the fire station!
Can I have it please?
Candy-addicted college student who works as medical assistant in an insanely busy OB GYN clinic that is constantly having huge lunches catered by drug reps.
My diet sucks but my input doesn't exceed my output, so I'm not gaining weight. However, I get very few fruits and veggies and my eating schedule is extremely erratic except for breakfast. The good news is, my diet is very low in red meat, saturated fat, cholesterol, etc.
HatchetHarry
04-07-2009, 02:26 PM
Since going to the fire academy I have definitely started eating well. I have always found fast food to be absolutely disgusting but my diet during college consisted of microwave food, pizza, BBQ, and of course beer lol so it was anything but healthy. Ive since revamped my diet with oatmeal, eggs, whey protein, lean meats, broccoli(only veggie I eat), sweet potatoes or other complex carbs, and fruit. I do have a cheat meal once in awhile thats usually a meatball sub on whole wheat, chicken wings, or BBQ.
EmsPrincess*
04-15-2009, 08:17 AM
I eat very healthy. Salmon like three times a week, cottage cheese, nuts (lots of nuts), fruit, and broccoli like crazy. Only whole grains. My kids eat the same except on pizza night...lol...never met a piece of pizza I didn't like.
MrConspiracy
04-15-2009, 02:43 PM
I'm on the Moonshiner Diet:
"I'll eat when I'm hungry, I'll drink when I'm dry, and the moonshine don't kill me, I live 'til I die."
Actually, I have no idea what my eating habits are, because they're incredibly erratic. It seems to work out alright, in that I'm not malnourished or gaining weight, but I'd like to at least know how I'm eating and to do something about that horrible college-student sweet tooth.
apagea99
04-15-2009, 03:14 PM
I eat mostly healthy. The wife and I cook pretty much everything from scratch to avoid a lot of the added garbage you get in processed foods. About 2-3 times a month I get a huge craving for something horrible and I go eat it (Chinese buffet, Mexican food, Italian, Baskin Robins). You gotta have a bit of fun with your food :)
As a medic student, I've got to say that I'm not particularly successful at eating healthy, though I think I've found some good ways to side-step it a little. If you always go out somewhere, then one good way to dodge about 20 teaspoons of sugar, enough caffeine to kill a small horse, and several hundred calories is to pass on the soda altogether and order a bottled water instead. Another good way- at least, if you can get people at the drive-thru that actually listen- is to request your sandwiches without the mayo, sauces, etc on them and save yourself from a supermassive MI down the road. Another way to success is to avoid breaded foods, since that breading soaks up gallons of grease (they probably would've resolved the Exxon-Valdez incident a lot faster if they'd just thrown some breading out there).
Also, I've taken up the habit of doing enough weight training to burn into my glycogen stores (about 30 mins of weight-training) and then walking at a solid 3 mph for 90 to 120 minutes in my spare time. Haven't seen any weight loss yet, but I've just started. At least I feel noticably better.
WarDance
04-15-2009, 06:51 PM
As a medic student, I've got to say that I'm not particularly successful at eating healthy, though I think I've found some good ways to side-step it a little. If you always go out somewhere, then one good way to dodge about 20 teaspoons of sugar, enough caffeine to kill a small horse, and several hundred calories is to pass on the soda altogether and order a bottled water instead. Another good way- at least, if you can get people at the drive-thru that actually listen- is to request your sandwiches without the mayo, sauces, etc on them and save yourself from a supermassive MI down the road. Another way to success is to avoid breaded foods, since that breading soaks up gallons of grease (they probably would've resolved the Exxon-Valdez incident a lot faster if they'd just thrown some breading out there).
Also, I've taken up the habit of doing enough weight training to burn into my glycogen stores (about 30 mins of weight-training) and then walking at a solid 3 mph for 90 to 120 minutes in my spare time. Haven't seen any weight loss yet, but I've just started. At least I feel noticably better.
The best way I've found to eat healthy (as a busy college student) is to make lots of something healthy in advance. Since I'm a runner healthy equals lots of different pasta dishes. Right now I have some lasagna made with lean turkey and spinach for when I need some food fast. Having something healthy made and easily accessible keeps you from making those desperate taco bell runs....
FTRPO
04-16-2009, 10:24 AM
My diet is quite similar to HatchetHarry's, egg whites, chicken breast, oats, sweet potatoes, asparagus, fish, nuts, and any good proteins. Of course there is usually a day a week where you just eat what you want. I have learned you can pretty much eat your face off as long as your lifting weights and getting some decent cardio. Weightlifting requires a lot of calories to restore what you have lost. Also when your in a pinch having a protein shake pre mixed is always a life saver when you cant seem to get a meal in just slam a shake and your good for about an hour. Sams club around me has a 5 pound bag of protein which is about 72 servings for I think 27 dollars so it is very cheap to do. Eating healthy is guaranteed to make you feel better.
NEMed2
04-16-2009, 04:16 PM
I generally make all the food I eat, which means it's a huge pain when I get home at 12am, need to be up at 6 & need to finish cleaning the house, put away the laundry, yadda yadda yadda. But otherwise, it's significantly cheaper & much better for you. I've been on South Beach since before it was the new fad & then the passed fad, & lost over 60 lbs.
That doesn't mean I don't occasionally splurge at 3am coming back from a transport, but really, what's a spicy chicken burger between co-workers anyway?
Mountain Res-Q
04-16-2009, 04:45 PM
On Ambulance: My diet consisted of 80% Sonics (becasue we got 50% off if we were in uniform) and 20% whatever my partener begged for that day. I gained weight. :blush:
As the EMT Supervisor for the Snow Park: We got all food free from teh kitchen. But the menu consisted of Hamburgers, Hot Dogs, Fried Chicken Sandwiches, and my favorite NACHOS! I would have gained weight if it weren't for teh hours of trudging through snow. i actually lose 10-15 pounds a season, no thanks to the food. <_<
On Search and Rescue: Traditionally you would think that we would be eating mostly trail mix and MRE type foods. This is true on the multiday wilderness searches. But for the short searches, rope rescues, swiftwater rescues, and dive calls we are typically near the roadways and our deputies see to it that we get lunches "dispatched" out to us. And when we are done, we all head over to the closest restaurant for a county-provided meal (pizza, stake, sea food, whatever we feel like). So while the physical nature of SAR means I must stay in some amount of good health, the amount of food teh county brings us measn that we often get back to the SAR cache a little heavier then when we left. :sad:
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