Archive for the 'Fashion' Category

Girl Scout Cookies and Weight Watchers

March 1, 2008
Girl Scout Brownie - Michelle

Girl Scout Brownie - Michelle

Our first boxes of Girl Scout cookies arrived last Friday. There were 2 boxes which my husband had ordered from his friend. He only shared a few Somoas with me.

I had ordered several boxes from a neighbor, but had yet to receive them. Well, I got my six boxes today, and my dilemma is what to do as a Weight Watcher.

I have a long history with the Girl Scouts, as I was one. View the lovely photo of me in my Brownie outfit (very figure flattering) in the 1980’s. My mom was even a leader for my troop for a number of years.

We had fun singing songs, going on trips and camping, but one of my best memories is of the cookies. Our house would be full of the cases of cookies, where my mom had to sort and distribute them to the girls in her troop.

My favorites are Thin Mints, Samoas and Trefoils who have kept their lovely 70’s shape throughout the years.

Now I have a daughter of my own who can join the Girl Scouts when she starts school, but that’s a few years off.

I know I can count the points for the cookies, but for me, it’s hard to resist only having 3, 4 or 5 cookies. I usually can eat half a box of cookies a day. My 6 boxes could be gone before the end of the week. I know I can freeze them too, and the Thin Mints in particular taste particularly yummy frozen.

I looked up the points, and the best amount of cookies for the points turns out to be the Trefoils with 5 cookies for only 4 points. I had even ordered a box of the Sugar Free Chocolate Chip cookies to try, but turns out you only get 3 cookies for 4 points!

Here are the points values that I calculated from Little Brownie Bakers.

Cookie Amount Points
Trefoils 5 cookies 4
Thin Mints 4 cookies 3
Samoas 2 cookies 4
Do-si-dos 2 cookies 3
Tagalong 2 cookies 4
All Abouts 3 cookies 4
Sugar Free Chocolate Chip 3 cookies 4
Lemon Chalet Cremes 1 cookie 2

So far today, I’ve only had five Thin Mints (and put down 3 points on my WW tracker), but it’s going be hard to make it through tonight, the rest of the weekend, and heck, even the rest of the week. What’s a girl to do?

Culture Jam book review

November 13, 2007
Culture Jam

Culture Jam

I started this book, Culture Jam How to Reverse America’s Suicidal Consumer Binge – And Why We Must, towards the end of grad school, and just picked it up again and finished it this past week. I’ve wanted to read it for a few years now, and finally got around to it. It’s authored by the founder of Adbusters Magazine, Kalle Lasn.

A few points I found particularly interesting and relevant to food, fat and consumerism. In the chapter, The End of the American Dream, Lasn writes about postwar America and says “People gobbled takeout and started getting fat.” He concludes the chapter with a story of Elvis getting fat, and his death “Elvis devoured pills and fried-banana-and-peanut-butter sandwiches, suppressing the pain of being Elvis and seemingly trying to lose himself inside his own expanding girth.”

He likens the Elvis story to the old American Dream. “Our bodies, minds, families, communities, the environment – all are consumed.”

He also writes in the chapter Demarketing Loops about uncooling fast food, and uncooling the fashion industry. The book was published in 1999, and I had forgotten some of the advertising campaigns he mentions, but reading about them brought back memories.  He writes about the 1995 Calvin Klein campaign where young models were filmed in basements and were so offensive they were investigated by the U.S. Justice department.

Interspersed with the text are samples of his spoof ads and un-commercials including the Obsession Fetish 30 second TV spot.

I loved this paragraph,

“The first stage of demarketing our bodies involves realizing the true source of our self-esteem problems. It’s important to understand that we ourselves are not to blame. Body-image distortions, eating disorders, dieting and exercise addictions….They’re are responsibility, but they are not our fault. The issue is primarily a cultural and corporate one, and that’s the level on which it must be tackled. We must learn to direct our anger, not inwardly at ourselves, but outwardly at the beauty industry.”

The book is a little dated, but still very relevant. A lot has changed in 8 years, but we are still facing the environmental crisis that we were back then, including the assaults on our minds, bodies and the environment by corporate America. 

Shut down your computer, turn off your TV; pick up this book and read.

Fat workout clothes and sports bras

November 7, 2007

Fat fashion is kind of an oxymoron. Try finding workout clothes that look decent, fit comfortably and are affordable in plus sizes. One of many issues is that in addition to being fat, I’m also tall and frugal.

I did have some pretty comfortable Curves workout shirts from my days working out there, but don’t really like wearing them to my new gym. Also, when doing jumping jacks and arm stretches above my head, my fat belly tends to hang out and is quiet embarrassing. I needed to find some new workout shirts. I looked at the tag in one of my Curves shirts and it had the label Quail Hallow, so I did a search and found some at Care Free Casuals.

They have plain scoop necks or v-necks and are only about $4 each, so I bought three. They are cut generously and long enough to hide my gut most of the time, and come in a long sleeve version for fall and winter.

I usually wear biker shorts or comfortable pants when working out, but finding sports bras is also difficult if you are a size D. They can run pretty high too if they are good ones. The sports bra Oprah recommends, Enell, is $60 per bra.

I went to try one on this weekend at Sports Her Way (which was referenced on the Enell website), took it to the dressing room and did a little jogging in place. I wasn’t that impressed. It performed about the same as my other sports bras from Target.

I did need a new sports bra though, so I bought one on clearance for $24. Yesterday I went for a walk and alternated running in there too, and it performed pretty well.

I’ll stick to my cheap sports bras.