Tag: healthy eating

  • Starting From Here

    Starting From Here

    The Backline of Midlife

    Some beginnings don’t come with fireworks.
    No declarations.
    No big reveal.

    Just the quiet drag of a box across the floor, the hum of a fan in a new space, and the kind of silence that finally feels like possibility instead of loss.

    This is where I’m starting from.


    Starting From Here

    The Year That Broke Me a Bit

    I spent the last year feeling like I was on the outside of my own life, watching it from somewhere slightly removed.
    Work dried up. Not all at once, but enough to make me question everything I’d built. I’ve always made it work—pieced things together, freelanced, created—but this time was different. The financial stress cracked open everything else: my health, my mindset, my ability to keep pretending I was okay.

    My body followed.
    Weight gain—again.Ive talked about the roller coaster. Its exhausting and my fault.
    Knees giving out. I should have listened to Dr Armstrong so many moons ago. Hockey was hard on my knees.
    Stomach wrecked. Tammy says it’s likely IBS… I just want it to stop
    Eyes are deteriorating, especially the left one with BRVO, like my body was trying to say what I wouldn’t admit: something has to change..


    Backline of Midlife

    This isn’t some victim arc.
    I’ve had incredible accomplishments.
    Graduated in graphic design and advertising back when it meant sketch pads, markers, typesetting by hand.
    I cut my teeth in the early days of the internet—when websites were built line by line, when communities were carved out in forums and chatrooms, before social media ruled the world.

    Payment processing, digital communities, early social platforms, media creation—been there, built that.
    I’ve worked with big clients, hungry startups, small dreamers chasing something real.
    Earned my stripes in the digital trenches when it wasn’t glamorous, just necessary.

    But even with all that under my belt, I’ve often coward in the presence of my own fears.
    I let perfectionism box me in.
    I let pain pull me sideways.
    I let plain old panic shut down the bigger parts of me that wanted to show up in the world.

    Now, at the backline of midlife, I feel the edges of time pressing in.
    Not crushing, but undeniable.
    There are fewer chances left to squander, and I don’t want to waste another one.
    It’s time I got the most from my life.
    Starting from here.


    Leaving the Old Life (and the Old Me)

    I left a senior marketing role in 2015—interim director of marketing, with the steady paycheck, the corporate ladder stretched out before me like a conveyor belt to retirement. I could see exactly where it was all going.
    And I didn’t want any part of it.

    I wanted sun on my skin, salt in my hair, dirt under my nails from building something of my own.
    Not just marketing other people’s stories—but living mine.

    I wasn’t new to travel. I had seen pieces of the world already—London, Amsterdam, Scotland, Mexico.
    Everywhere I went, something stirred.
    A deep, stubborn longing for more.

    When I was in my teens, I dreamed of moving to a small beach town in Mexico.
    I pictured it vividly: a little cabin steps from the ocean, days spent surfing, swimming at dawn, shaping sculptures and creating art under the slow spin of a ceiling fan.
    No internet. No emails. No urgency.
    Just life, raw and real.

    Of course, life doesn’t bend so easily.
    We need money.
    We need structure.
    We get pulled into jobs, into deadlines, into expectations.

    But that dream never really left me.
    And in 2015, when I landed in Isla Mujeres, it felt like maybe, finally, I could build something close to it.

    I thought Isla would be my hub.
    A place to launch more adventures, to travel, to explore, to live light and free.

    But it wasn’t meant to be.
    Life had other plans.

    I fell into a relationship.
    Six years deep, and complicated in every direction.

    It ended in late 2021, maybe early 2022, though honestly, endings like that don’t stick neatly to a calendar.

    The healing wasn’t clean either.
    The loss wasn’t just about someone else—it was the loss of a part of myself I had finally found.

    During those years, I had glimpsed a version of me that was more real than I had ever known.
    I believed in myself, in what I could create, in what I deserved.
    I saw my own strength in ways I never had before.
    When it ended, I didn’t just grieve the relationship—I grieved the clarity it had given me.

    At first, I tried to merge what I had found with who I had always been.
    It was messy, hopeful work.
    I lost nearly 50 pounds.
    I trained, hard.
    I moved my body with purpose again.
    I dug deep.

    I was starting to find a groove—a rhythm that felt like mine.

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    And then, mid-2023, I met Tammy.
    The woman I share my life with now.

    Tammy didn’t fix anything.
    She didn’t rescue me.
    She simply saw me—fully—and gave me room to stand in my own skin again.
    Flawed, creative, saltwater-wired, and endlessly curious.

    With Tammy, I found permission to be the Sam I had worked so hard to rediscover.

    But even with love in my life, something still wasn’t clicking.
    The rest of my world was out of alignment.

    I was still clocking hours on work that drained me.
    Still hustling for survival instead of reaching for meaning.
    Still waking up with a weight in my chest that said, “this isn’t it.”

    I wasn’t living.
    I was surviving.

    And no matter how much love surrounded me, I knew—deep down—that I had to make a change.
    Not for anyone else.
    Not for validation.
    For me.

    To honour the dreams I planted when I was young.
    To finish the journey I started when I walked away from that safe marketing desk ten years ago.

    Starting from here.
    Starting with me.


    The Move That Mattered

    The move wasn’t filmed.
    Too real.
    Too heavy.
    Too damn exhausting.

    But that’s part of the story too.
    Maybe the most honest part.

    There’s a version of moving that looks good on camera—timelapses of boxes stacked neatly, friends laughing while carrying a couch, the golden light of “new beginnings” shining through spotless windows.

    This wasn’t that.

    This was sweat and swollen fingers.
    This was three solo golf cart trips across cracked streets, leaking oil the whole way, knees burning and begging for relief.
    This was loading and unloading until my hands cramped, wondering if I’d even make it through the day.
    Then my buddy Cosne showed up—steady, no questions asked—and for a while, the weight felt a little lighter, the grind a little less brutal.
    But the real shift? That still had to happen on my own.

    I can show you glimpses—cardboard bruised from the weight, clothes stuffed hastily into bins, plants buckled under the heat, the last sad pizza box from the final night in the old place.

    I can show the boxes, the unpacking, the little pieces of “before” making their way into “after.”
    The random receipts from a version of my life that doesn’t quite fit anymore.
    The notebooks half-filled with plans I outgrew without even noticing.

    But the real shift?
    That didn’t happen in the packing.
    It didn’t happen in the lifting or the sorting or the swearing under my breath.

    It happened after.

    It happened when the last box hit the ground and the echo in the new apartment was mine alone to hear.
    It happened sitting outside on the new patio—bare feet on cool concrete, sweat still drying on my skin, heart still hammering from the weight of it all.

    It happened when I realized I wasn’t running anymore.
    I wasn’t clinging to what had been lost.
    I wasn’t trapped by what hadn’t worked.

    I was breathing.
    For the first time in what felt like forever, I was breathing on my own terms.

    And that’s when I knew.

    This wasn’t just a move.
    This was a reset.

    Not loud.
    Not polished.
    Not pretty.

    But real.

    And real is enough.

    packed boxes

    This space has a garden.
    It’s not big or flashy, but it’s enough.

    Enough to feel the sun stretch across my skin first thing in the morning.
    Enough to sit outside with a coffee, barefoot, letting my mind settle before the noise of the day creeps in.
    Enough to watch the tiny anole lizards dart through the foliage, their quick green flashes a reminder that even in stillness, life moves.

    I arranged the plants myself—pots dragged from old places, new greens picked out carefully, a mix of old soul and fresh start.
    There’s something about setting them down, shifting them, making a space feel claimed and alive again.
    It’s not a manicured garden; it’s more of a living patchwork—wild in places, quiet in others, breathing around me.

    Some mornings I catch the sun just right, slanting through the leaves, casting soft shadows across the patio.
    Sometimes there’s just the sound of the wind clipping through the palms, the low hum of the island waking up.
    No headlines.
    No rush.

    Enough to remind me that peace doesn’t come from having more—it comes from creating room for what matters.
    Enough to remember that beginnings don’t always shout.
    Sometimes they whisper through the cracks and the roots and the quiet corners we make for ourselves.

    And here, in this small garden, in this small beginning, I’m learning to listen again.


    Starting From Here

    So this is it.
    No rebrand.
    No reinvention.
    Just a return.
    A return to someone I may have known once upon a time, in flashes and fragments.
    A person I desire—with all my heart, all my stubborn will, and all my worn-out soul—to rediscover again.
    To pull forward the pieces of myself I once trusted, and to find new things still worth learning, worth fighting for.
    To face my fears not with shame, but with a new-found perspective carved out on the backline of midlife, where the waves are slower but heavier, where every choice feels sharper because there’s less time to waste.

    I’m not looking for some dramatic arc.
    No reinvention worthy of headlines or hashtags.
    No curated story of triumph tied up in a bow.
    I’m looking for something simpler.
    I’m looking for truth—raw, unfiltered, mine alone.
    For health—not just in muscle or weight, but in spirit, in breath, in presence.
    For balance—between the hunger for more and the grace to stand still.
    For creativity that feels like oxygen, not obligation.
    For clarity strong enough to quiet the noise when the doubts come calling.

    I’m looking for the version of Sam that’s been there all along—
    quiet beneath the stress, steady beneath the stories, stubborn beneath the scars.
    The version of me who didn’t quit, even when it would have been easier.
    The version who still knows how to trust salt air, deep water, and the messy, beautiful business of trying again.

    This year, I choose to move with intention.
    Not to rush.
    Not to prove.
    But to build slowly, piece by piece, a life and work that reflect who I am—not who I think I should be, or who the world told me I was supposed to become.
    I choose to honour my body, even in its brokenness, even in its betrayals.
    To feed it.
    To listen to it.
    To stop punishing it for being human.

    I choose to tell real stories.
    Stories that don’t need a filter.
    Stories that don’t have a clean ending yet.

    I choose to live the dream I set out to chase ten years ago—even if it looks different now.
    Even if the edges are worn and the road is not the one I mapped out when I started.

    Because it’s still my dream.
    Because I’m still here.
    Because the ocean’s still out there waiting.

    This is my reset.
    This is my backline.
    This is my hand on the board, eyes on the horizon, ready for the next wave.

    And I’m starting from here.

  • Vegan Banana Bread

    Written By Sam Martin

    A Deliciously Sweet Treat When You Get Those Cravings

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    Every so often enjoying a great tasting loaf of banana bread as a sweet treat is absolutely delightful. Especially when itis this decadent but nutrient rich recipe. This is so tasty that it has officially become a fan (the two of us here in the house) favourite. Careful, we struggle not to eat it all in one sitting.

    You can make this banana bread in one large bowl, or split it into 2 of liquid and dry. Either works. We use thawed frozen bananas, from the smoothie stash, mashed up with palm sugar, vanilla and melted coconut oil. Sometimes I will add a touch of maple syrup for the sweetener as well.

    There are different things we do to make the recipe different. Nothing like a little variety in your banana bread. The first one we made was simple, some walnuts. Plan and simple. The next one we tried dried cherries in addition to the walnuts. The last time we made it, we added chocolate chips. This was our favourite version.

    We like it warm out of the oven.
    Find the Recipe Below

    Vegan Banana Bread Recipe

    Pre-heat the oven to 375 degrees
    This entire recipe is made in 2 bowls

    Bread Base – Dry Mix
    3 cups flour mix (1.5c all purpose / .5c coconut / .5c oats
    1.5 tablespoons baking powder
    1 teaspoon baking soda
    1 tablespoon ground flax seed
    1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
    pinch of ground gloves

    Wet Mix
    4 frozen mashed bananas
    1/4 cup coconut sugar
    1/4 cup maple syrup
    1/4 cup melted coconut oil
    1 teaspoon vanilla

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    Vegan Banana Bread RecipeBoasting lots of nutrients, this homemade low glycemic banana bread is a great way to make something delicious at home.

    Make the Banana Bread

    It is time to put all your ingredients into the bowl. Mix them together with a spatula until you have a thick sticky pancake like consistency. You would be able to use the spatula to move the mixture from the bowl to the loaf baking pan.

    Before you place the mixture into the bread pan, be sure to create a non stick coating over the surface of the pan. Grease the pan with some coconut oil and flour the surface after that. Instant non stick surface.

    This is where you can add in walnuts, chocolate, whatever really suits your fancy! We are considering pineapple and coconut cashew. It really depends on what you like.

    Bake in the oven at 350 degrees for 45-55 minutes

    Want more recipes

    We are creating new recipes all the time. We will be posting the best ones once we have a final product we are proud of. Our recipes are always delicious and nutritious, taking caloric intake as well as macro and micro nutrients into account.

    Delicious moist vegan banana bread fresh from the oven!
    Delicious moist vegan banana bread fresh from the oven!

    We really love trying recipes from The Minimalist Baker and Fresh Baked Harvest as well.

  • Time to Lose Weight & Be Fit

    FitnessNutrition

    Written By Sam Martin

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    Over the years I have not been kind to myself. My story is not unique, there are so many people out there who have and still struggle with their own health and weight. Living a rollercoaster ride of weight loss and gain. I was a childhood athlete who grew up to be an adult obesity statistic.

    At my highest I was 325lbs. That was the first time being overweight scared me. Having developed high blood pressure and Acid Reflux, the Dr and Nutritionist were straight up, LOSE WEIGHT! This was 2010. During the last 10 years I have been down to 247 lbs and up to as high as 290 recently.

    In August of 2007 a move to LA weight management become uneasy. Despite gaining back 10 lbs I was confident I could continue the good health path. FAILED Again. An emotional eater, in 2008 my father passed away, I was living unhappily with a woman who was also overweight and I ate away the pain. We visited in Toronto in October 2010 to attend my best friends wedding. When looking at the picture it became strikingly clear that the problem had returned, BIG TIME. This is when I weighed in at over 325lbs. It was absolutely horrifying.

    Returning to LA, determined to find a trainer and lick my obesity problem. I met Billie in November 2011 and honestly she was the perfect fit. With Billie’s guidance I was again on my quest to lose weight and be fit. Soon I became a beast in the gym and worked my way down to 255 lbs This was end of summer 2012. During that period I never gained any weight back, despite the heartache of now losing my mother.

    December 2012 I returned again to Toronto for the holidays. I threw discipline out the window and… When my TN1 Visa was denied and the woman I was in love with seemed ok with me staying in Toronto for a bit, I settled in, back in the T Dot, back, seemingly happy, but not caring about myself again. I replaced workouts with binge eating, finally realized the great loss I had experienced plus, as much as I loved my friends here, I missed LA and this amazing woman I had fallen in love with. I blew all that happiness on Chips, dips and candy.

    Soon everything and everyone was to blame for my misery. When the relationship started to go south, when the cold was unbearable, everything was an excuse to be unhappy and soon I found myself slowly gaining it back. Pants that were loose when I returned were now skin tight. T-Shirts not long enough to cover my huge belly and an HR woman who was frankly rude in her delivery but correct in how unkempt I looked. I did not care. I was depressed and for 2 more years I would suffer silently each night or every weekend with this… my comfort foods. Pure sugars and toxins.

    The pattern dragged on bringing me back up to 287 by September 2014. Pretending I still loved my job, pretending I was happy in my life when the truth was I was completely unhealthy and a sedentary pile of processed junk food. (They say you are what you eat) It is no wonder I had gained all that weight back.

    All that unhappiness took me to therapy. Like finding a trainer I did my research met a few people and found the person I felt I could share and be vulnerable enough to help heal the broken Sam. In a couple of months I was confident enough in myself to leave behind the job I was extremely unhappy at and start my own business. By the spring of 2015, the only issue I had not conquered was my weight. Finally happy again it was time to begin the arduous task of motivating myself to take action.

    The Change Occured

    July 1st 2015 I set a 3 month goal to see how I could do on my own, the only motivation… MY LIFE! I had to commit myself to the work necessary to change old habits into new. Adopt a healthy active lifestyle and treat my body like the temple it is.  The first step to being completely happy with myself was in my own ability to love myself enough to take care of myself. As an overweight person I was not living the life authentic to to who I truly felt I was from the inside out.

    The first 3 months were fantastic, I was confident I had made the important lifestyle changes necessary to achieve my goals. The trick about health is it is so easy to be overweight. Without even realizing it we are eating food that our bodies were not designed to process. I know McDonalds tastes good, I know a sweet sugary dessert will delight me in ways my endorphins can’t handle, I also know each time I choose to put that stuff into my body I am slowly killing myself. And I want to live.

    Not only do I want to live, I want to pay it forward. I want to share with as many people as I can the importance of clean healthy living. I am going to open up my world to public judgement and put my results out there. I want people to see it does not take a Keto, South Beach, Atkins anything diet that restricts your calories or provides fake processed foods from a cardboard box to lose weight. I am going to share a real lifestyle change and choices, foods that heal, that work with our bodies. I will demonstrate that eating can be a delight without killing you.

    But I Fell Off the Wagon

    I own the mistakes I have made in the past and feel ready to make better choices again. I will say this many times. I know the struggle, it is not easy. I will make mistake, plateau, wonder what is working and what is not. I have a starting point, knowing what has worked in the past. I have an end point, goals, an ideal weight and determination.

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    Welcome to Sam’s journey! Choose to follow me, to praise me, to chastise me, I am prepared for it all. I am prepared to come out of lockdown changed

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