By Tom Gilliam, Ph. D. The holidays are here in full (fattening) force. And unfortunately for the health conscious, along with the tinsel and the tree comes the onslaught of temptation: the rich turkey gravy, the dressing, the sugar cookies, the eggnog, the pieâall those comfort foods that taste especially comforting during a recession-marred holiday. But as we mentally prepare ourselves to push away from the festively set table, itâs easy to forget we arenât the only ones facing tempting treatsâour kids are too. Thatâs right. Between parties at school and stockings stuffed with sugary surprises, our kids are just as susceptible to the guilty pleasures we allow ourselves during the holiday season. The bad news is that the âspecial occasionâ indulgences we allow during the holidays can quickly morph into harmful bad habits for our childrenâhabits that will last long after the gifts have been unwrapped. A lifetime of fitness always begins at home, and thatâs also true when the home is covered in tinsel and lights. Research shows over and over that the only way to combat childhood obesity is to make nutrition and exercise family priorities. And while itâs okay for them to indulge a little bit during the holidays, you should gently steer your kids away from the third buttery dinner roll and the double handful of chocolate candy. âItâs no surprise that childhood obesity is a growing problem in the U. S. In fact, the New England Journal of Medicine recently reported that one in three kids is now overweight or obese. This reality has encouraged more and more companies to teach the âfamily fitnessâ principle to their employees, helping the âget kids and families healthy togetherâ trend gather momentum. Kids live what they learn, and parents are their number one source of information. If they see you making unhealthy choices, they will naturally assume itâs okay for them too. With busy holiday schedules and tightened budgets, it may seem impossible to come up with new and creative ways to help get your family on the fitness bandwagon. Not so. Making just a few simple changes to your familyâs daily routine can have a huge impact on everyoneâs overall fitness. Here are some tried and true tips for getting your family in shapeânot only during the holidays but at any time of the year:Find âhiddenâ exercise in your holiday housekeeping routine. It may seem like a no-brainer, but good old fashioned chores can be one of the best ways to keep in shape. And, luckily, there are many reasons to do chores this time of year. Be sure to involve your kids in any pre-holiday festivities clean-up or just the general tidying up of the house. Vacuuming, dusting, mopping, sweeping, and taking out the trash are all ways your kids can do their part for the family while helping to get in the physical activity they need each day. Crank up the volume on some good music during chore time to get everyone moving and the house will be clean in no time! Brave the frosty air and enjoy winter workouts. On snowy days, get bundled up and get moving. Go sledding, build snow angels, and have a snowball fight with your kids. If youâre near a city, hit the sidewalks and enjoy the holiday window displays. Or if itâs too cold or rainy, visit an indoor sports facility like a batting cage or an indoor rock climbing center. It certainly beats sitting inside being a couch potato! Alleviate winter break boredom with a spirited game of Duck, Duck, (Christmas) Goose. Know how restless your kids get when theyâre out of school for a few weeks? Add instant entertainmentâand sneak in some exerciseâby showing them the games you used to love to play when you were a kid. Teach them all about Red Rover; Mother, May I?; Duck, Duck, Goose; and Red Light, Green Lightâthen spend an hour after dinner playing one of them. Itâs a great way to stay active and create some special childhood memories for your own children. Check out www. gameskidsplay. net for a complete listing of instructions plus other suggestions for new games to learn and try together! Model good âsnackingâ habits. As mentioned before, your kids learn their eating and exercising habits from you. If they see you make a healthy snack choice like an orange instead of reaching for yet another handful of holiday party mix, theyâll go for the good stuff too. But donât rely on pure willpower. Try to keep the house low on junk food. Help kids avoid temptation by keeping the house stocked with healthful and delicious snack foods like yogurt, fresh fruit, raisins, and natural peanut butter. Just because itâs the holidays doesnât mean itâs okay to gorge on sugary and fat-filled foods. On the other hand, donât ban all holiday treats. When trying to get the family eating more healthfully, many parents make the mistake of throwing out all of the candy, cookies, juice drinks, and other foods that kids tend to love. That is the wrong approach. Donât make any food totally off limits. As long as food is consumed in moderate amounts, itâs okay! Making something off limits can cause your child to binge on treats when they are available at school or at Grandmaâs. Besides, the holidays just wouldnât be the holidays without the occasional Christmas cookie or Hanukkah doughnut. Make exercise a daily habit. Whether itâs a 30-minute stroll after dinner each night or a weekly trip to the local walking trail, make exercising with your family a consistent routine in your day-to-day lives. Besides being good for you, it can help you alleviate some holiday stress and help your kids burn off some of their excited energy. When itâs a part of your regular schedule, like going to Grandmaâs on Sundays or having spaghetti for dinner on Thursday nights, your kids will expect it. And who knows? If you keep up the fitness routine, your kids might even look forward to the additional family time. Set up a holiday fitness competition. Kids are naturally competitive. Use that quality to their advantage. Buy everyone a pedometer and tell the kids that whoever logs the most miles gets to open the first Christmas or Hanukkah present. Alternately, create a goal that the whole family can work on together. Set a number of miles for the week and chart each family memberâs progress at the end of the day. At the end of the week, if the family has achieved their collective goal, then celebrate with a movie night or a special (low-fat!) frozen yogurt treat. Encourage kidsâ culinary curiosity. You should never stand in the way of your child trying something new, even if you suspect she wonât like it. Always encourage their interest in trying new foods and you will be rewarded when they discover they do like broccoli and Brussels sprouts. You might also be surprised by what you can sneak by your kids. The holiday season is a great time for them to try out foods they donât eat every day that are nutrition powerhousesâpumpkins, cranberries, and spicy teas, for example. Let them help make the figgy pudding. Kids love to help in the kitchen, and by allowing them to be a part of the food prep process, you can seize a great learning opportunity. And theyâll especially enjoy having a hand in preparing your Christmas, Hanukkah, or Kwanzaa feast. Explain to them why you use certain foods and techniques to be healthier. Allowing your kids to help in the kitchen gives them a sense of ownership over the meal, and they will be more eager to gobble up a healthy dinner that they had a hand in cooking! Sneak âfitnessâ gifts into their stockings. There are lots of great (and inexpensive) resources out there that can help you keep maintaining a healthy lifestyle on your kidsâ minds. For older kids a subscription to a fitness magazine might make a good stocking stuffer. You might also throw in a fitness DVDâbeginnerâs martial arts and beginnerâs yoga or pilates are great options. For younger kids, my own series of brightly illustrated childrenâs books, featuring cartoon characters Heart âEâ Heart and friends, is a huge hit and a great way to get them thinking about healthy living. And jump ropes, stretch bands, and dumbbells are appropriate gifts for kids of all ages and can be bought for under $10. While the recession has caused many families to cancel fitness club memberships, the good news is that many, many fitness items are reasonably priced. You donât have to bust your budget to give your kids the best gift of allâthe keys to a healthy life. Remember, getting fit and healthy is not about going to extremes. Itâs about making small, gradual, incremental changes in your day-to-day life. And thatâs why the holidays are a good time to help your kids start the processâthereâs something valuable about practicing the art of moderation in a season known for the exact opposite. You know the cliché about New Yorkâif you can make it here, you can make it anywhere? Well, the same is true of the holidays. If you show your kids they can exercise when itâs 20 degrees outside and they can stop with two sugar cookies instead of wolfing down six, think how much easier it will be to make healthful choices when itâs warm outside and thereâs no endless supply of treats to tempt them. Get them in the habit now and maintain it all year long; eventually theyâll grow up to be what you want them to be: healthy and happy adults. # # #About the Authors:Thomas B. Gilliam, Ph. D. , is the founder and president of T. Gilliam & Associates, coauthor of the book Move It. Lose It. Live Healthy. : The Simple Truth About Achieving & Maintaining a Healthy Body Weight, creator of the Move It. Lose It. Live Healthy. ® wellness program, designed to teach workers how to achieve a healthy body weight, creator of www. moveitloseitlivehealthy. com, and founder and owner of Industrial Physical Capability Services, Inc. (IPCS). Since 1982, Dr. Gilliam has designed and managed many corporate fitness centers ranging from 500 square feet to 34,000 square feet. He has established a variety of wellness programs to deal with such health issues as high blood pressure, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, physical inactivity, stress, osteoporosis, low back pain, and many more. In addition, Dr. Gilliam is a pioneer and acknowledged expert in the field of dynamic strength testing for industry based on the sports medicine model. Since 1982, he has provided isokinetic physical capability assessments for Fortune 1000 companies through his company Industrial Physical Capability Services, Inc. (IPCS) (www. ipcs-inc. com). Dr. Gilliamâs programs have dramatically reduced workersâ compensation costs and decreased injury incidence and severity rates for major industrial clients. In addition, Dr. Gilliam has been instrumental in identifying and presenting to industry the higher risk for injury and disease caused by obesity in the workplace. Dr. Gilliam is the creator of the Heart âEâ Heart program, which is a healthy lifestyle program for children and their families. He was the principal investigator in a National Institutes of Health research study investigating the impact of physical activity and nutritional habits on heart disease risk in young children. Conducted in the late 1970s, this research resulted in numerous scholarly publications and television and radio interviews throughout the world, including NBCâs Today Show and NBCâs Nightly News with its science editor, Robert Basel. In 1973, Dr. Gilliam earned a doctorate degree in exercise physiology with a minor in graduate statistics and research design from Michigan State University. From 1974 to 1982, Dr. Gilliam was a tenured faculty member at the University of Michigan. Before resigning from his tenured faculty position, he was involved with numerous funded research projects (i. e. , N. I. H. , Kellogg Foundation, State of Michigan, and others) that resulted in twenty-nine refereed scholarly publications. Jane C. Neill, R. D. , L. D. , is the 2004 recipient of the Nutritionist of the Year Award for the State of Alabama Public Health. She is an active member of the American Dietetic Association and currently employed by the Alabama Department of Public Health, where she works with the WIC (Women, Infants, and Children) program as a WIC coordinator and a licensed dietitian. She has worked in the WIC program for over ten years, providing daily nutrition counseling for women, infants, and children. While on the staff as a registered dietitian at the University of Michigan Health System in the late 1970s, Jane was instrumental in working with Dr. Gilliam as an investigator on the National Institutes of Health research study to investigate the impact of physical activity and nutritional habits on heart disease risk in children ages six to eight years. Ms. Neill is a member of the team that developed and wrote the Heart âEâ Heart program for children and their families. She received her bachelorâs of science degree from the University of Alabama in 1977 in food, nutrition, and institutional management. Ms. Neill has been working as a registered dietitian for over twenty-seven years. About the Book:Move It. Lose It. Live Healthy. : The Simple Truth About Achieving & Maintaining a Healthy Body Weight (Move It. Lose It. Live Healthy. , LLC, 2008, ISBN-13: 978-0-9762703-5-5, ISBN-10: 0-9762703-5-8, $19. 95) is available in bookstores nationwide and through all major online booksellers. For more information, visit www. moveitloseitlivehealthy. com.
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The Festive, Fit Family: Ten Ways to Combat Childhood Obesity by Getting the Whole Family Healthy…Holiday Style
Name That Victorian Style Home!

Many people think they know what they’re looking for when they want a “Victorian style” home. However, “Victorian” is a misnomer. It refers to a period of time, rather than a type of housing. The homes you think of as Victorian actually have their own names and origins. When you’re looking for a specific type of home, it may help to know the exact home style you are looking for. Most Victorians share a number of features, including bay windows, ornate detailing of eaves, dormers and columns, and wraparound porches. The style most popularly known as “Victorian” is actually the Queen Anne style. This home type was named, not so much for architecture during the reign of Queen Anne (from 1702 to 1714), but for the misattribution of the term from descriptions in William Makepeace Thackeray’s novel “The History of Henry Esmond, Esq. , A Colonel in the Service of Her Majesty Queen Anne”. You will know a Queen Anne by its asymmetrical design: windows, turrets, porches on multiple stories and the exquisite detailing on nearly every part of the home, including “gingerbread” trim, decorative moldings and sculptured columns. The bay windows that afford residents a “window-seat” are also a defining feature. The Queen Anne is unique for its enduring presence in popular culture as “Victorian”, but it is not the first, nor the last Victorian era home style, being in vogue from the 1880s to around 1910. The first style known as “Victorian” is generally agreed to be Gothic Revival, which emerged in the early-mid 1800s, around 1840. These homes were patterned after medieval churches, with the steeply sloping roof and pointed-arch windows that were characteristic of those buildings. Since middle-class Victorians could not afford the detailing that went into a classic Gothic Revival home, they went with a squarer, less ornamented style that came to be known as Folk Victorian. The Italianate, reminiscent of the great manses of northern Italy, albeit in a smaller form, came into vogue in the 1860s. The segments of the house were often built asymmetrically, to evoke a feeling of the rambling Italian villas it was trying to emulate. Second Empire homes were in vogue at the same time as the Italianate, but features a “mansard roof”- a roof that is as flat as possible to make the most of the attic area. Dormer windows are usually installed in the attic in this type of home. The Stick style, emerging in the 1880s, is known for the contrasting planks on the exterior of the home and sometimes for the big overhanging porch on the second story. The Romanesque Revival and Shingle styles are unique among Victorian era homes, as they have little or no ornamentation. However, their construction makes up for that. Due to their construction materials and design, homes of this design were the domain of the super-wealthy or for public buildings. The Romanesque Revival is an all-stone building, with plain detailing for windows, doors and eaves. The Shingle style is just as it is named – shingles cover everything on the exterior. The Shingle eventually evolved into a more economical form that the middle class could afford and it is this kind of home that has survived into modern times. It is a good idea to get a good idea of what kind of Victorian home you are looking for. It is quite possible that some of the lesser known Victorians are hiding in your local MLS without proper identification.















