How to spring clean your lifestyle

The objective of spring cleaning your lifestyle is to refocus yourself, your family and others toward trying new foods and making healthy choices. (Thinkstock)
Take the “spring cleaning” challenge: 1. Commit your entire family to trying a new fruit and vegetable each week during the month of March. Make this fun by having the kids rank the new food on a scale from 1 to 10. (Thinkstock)
Vegetables And Fruits
2. Plan your meals to include different colored vegetables throughout the week (perhaps on Mondays, have the kids find a new yellow vegetable to try).   (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)
133880360.jpg
3. Swap out your standard grain for a whole grain half the nights of the week. Or try a new grain entirely, such as quinoa or couscous. (Thinkstock)
Grocery stores often sell family-sized packages of food. And recipes typically yield four servings or more. (Thinkstock)
4. If you eat out often, make it a goal to cook a meal at home one or two nights during the week (try this quick and easy recipe the whole family will love).   (Thinkstock)
This Nov. 8, 2011 photo shows pumpkin-roasted red pepper chili in Concord, N.H. This recipe uses a blend of ground bison and finely chopped boneless pork ribs, but any blend of lean meats can be used, including ground turkey or beef and chopped steak.  Also, this recipe can be made vegetarian by substituting beans for the meat.   (AP Photo/Matthew Mead)
5. Substitute plant-based proteins into one of your standard recipes (i.e. beans in place of meat in chili, tacos and more).   (AP Photo/Matthew Mead)
chopping onion
Ways to involve the community: 1. Conduct a “healthy recipe” contest for friends and family members. Bring grandparents, neighbors or family friends to be the judges and include a non-food-related prize. (Getty Images)
This April 18, 2011 photo shows grilled steak and spring vegetable salad in Concord, N.H. This composed salad of steak and spring vegetables uses the grill to cook and flavor the meat, as well as many of the other components of the dish.   (AP Photo/Matthew Mead)
2. Host an informal taste testing of new, healthier versions of recipes that you may commonly make for your children. This can be done in your household or in partnership with members of a daycare center, after-school care or even a scout troupe as a fun extracurricular.     (AP Photo/Matthew Mead)
produce fruit vegetables (WTOP/Paula Wolfson)
3. Organize a healthy food scavenger hunt at your local farmers market or grocery store. Everyone participating has to find the food items needed to make a healthy recipe. Then they can go home and try the recipe out for themselves. (WTOP/Paula Wolfson)
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The objective of spring cleaning your lifestyle is to refocus yourself, your family and others toward trying new foods and making healthy choices. (Thinkstock)
Vegetables And Fruits
133880360.jpg
Grocery stores often sell family-sized packages of food. And recipes typically yield four servings or more. (Thinkstock)
This Nov. 8, 2011 photo shows pumpkin-roasted red pepper chili in Concord, N.H. This recipe uses a blend of ground bison and finely chopped boneless pork ribs, but any blend of lean meats can be used, including ground turkey or beef and chopped steak.  Also, this recipe can be made vegetarian by substituting beans for the meat.   (AP Photo/Matthew Mead)
chopping onion
This April 18, 2011 photo shows grilled steak and spring vegetable salad in Concord, N.H. This composed salad of steak and spring vegetables uses the grill to cook and flavor the meat, as well as many of the other components of the dish.   (AP Photo/Matthew Mead)
produce fruit vegetables (WTOP/Paula Wolfson)

March brings about favorable weather changes and the turn of spring. While children are getting excited for spring break and outdoor activities, adults are simply enjoying the extended daylight when they leave the office. Although seasonal changes bring sunshine and warmth, our schedules also become busier and busier — with after-school activities, sporting practices and longer evenings spent outdoors.

These hectic schedules cause many families to fall off the healthy-eating wagon. Nutritious family dinners are pushed to the side, while takeout and quick, on-the-go dinners become more frequent. And by now, many have unintentionally learned to forgo their New Year’s resolutions. There’s no better time than the turn of the season to spring clean your lifestyle and get your family back on track. This spring, make a goal to start with small, attainable changes that can help lead to better overall health.

The objective of spring cleaning your lifestyle is to refocus yourself, your family and others toward trying new foods and making healthy choices. Out with the old and in with the new — foods, that is! It’s often helpful to think about the foods you can have (as opposed to the foods you can’t), and focus on creating an eating style with a variety of those choices included. This may require taking bites of new foods that you’re not already familiar with.

[See: 10 Healthful Snacks That Won’t Break the Calorie Bank.]

But it’s not always easy for kids — or adults — to be open to trying new things, so this spring, I challenge you to make it a family and community affair. Making changes on your own can be seen as a burden; therefore, it’s important to enlist support from those around you.

Take the “spring cleaning” challenge:

1. Commit your entire family to trying a new fruit and vegetable each week during the month of March. Make this fun by having the kids rank the new food on a scale from 1 to 10.

2. Plan your meals to include different colored vegetables throughout the week (perhaps on Mondays, have the kids find a new yellow vegetable to try).

3. Swap out your standard grain for a whole grain half the nights of the week. Or try a new grain entirely, such as quinoa or couscous.

4. If you eat out often, make it a goal to cook a meal at home one or two nights during the week (try this quick and easy recipe the whole family will love).

5. Substitute plant-based proteins into one of your standard recipes (i.e. beans in place of meat in chili, tacos and more).

[See: The 12 Best Heart-Healthy Diets.]

Ways to involve the community:

1. Conduct a “healthy recipe” contest for friends and family members. Bring grandparents, neighbors or family friends to be the judges and include a non-food-related prize.

2. Host an informal taste testing of new, healthier versions of recipes that you may commonly make for your children. This can be done in your household or in partnership with members of a daycare center, after-school care or even a scout troupe as a fun extracurricular.

3. Organize a healthy food scavenger hunt at your local farmers market or grocery store. Everyone participating has to find the food items needed to make a healthy recipe. Then they can go home and try the recipe out for themselves.

Another important thing to consider as you aim to make healthy changes and spring clean your lifestyle is to eat and drink the right amount for you. Often, moms, dads and kids of all shapes and sizes are given the same portion of food. Remember that part of making healthy choices is realizing what your body needs and what it could do without. A 6-year-old child has different nutrient needs than a 16-year-old athlete or any adult.

[See: 12 ‘Unhealthy’ Foods With Health Benefits.]

So, this spring I challenge you to spring clean your lifestyle by being involved, being creative and being open to try new things. And as always, consult with a dietitian if needed.

More from U.S. News

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11 Ways Rural Life Is Hazardous to Your Health

The 38 Easiest Diets to Follow

How to Spring Clean Your Lifestyle originally appeared on usnews.com

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