OCTOBER 8TH
OCTOBER 13TH
BTCF Board Member Dr. Gia Marson talks with Goop about helping loved ones with an eating disorder.
Breaking the Chains and NEDA
Breaking the Chains Foundation partnered with NEDA in support of National Eating Disorder Awareness Week on February 26 – March 4th by promoting awareness via a variety of our social media networks, celebrity support, sharing NEDA’s screening tool through our social media platforms, as well as having our own online event through out the week. Also joined NEDA in forming our own team for the Los Angeles NEDA Walk on April 7th, walking and raising funds in support of stopping eating disorders.
GREAT NEWS
The award winning short film “FINDING ALICE” was an Official Selection both as a short film and written word in The Hollywood Dreamz International Film Festival and Writer’s Awards in Las Vegas, August 2017!
UPCOMING NEWS
STAY TUNED! – BTCF YOUNG HOLLYWOOD CAMPAIGN
An Interview With Kennedy Jean Garcia
Artist Blogs“Don’t be a bully, be a bestie!”
AN INTERVIEW WITH KENNEDY JEAN GARCIA
BTCF: What drew you to become an actor, dancer, and model?
KENNEDY: Dance – I always loved to dance even before I could walk. My mom said that when I was a toddler and dancers would come on TV, I would point and say “that!” After I finished chemotherapy and spine fusion surgery, I started my first ballet class and I’ve been dancing ever since. I started modeling when I was 5 or 6 for small shops on Instagram and loved it! And was on my first movie set when I was 5. I knew then that I wanted to do more!
BTCF: For those who aren’t familiar with Down Syndrome, what can you please share about this for a better understanding and well as what makes a person with Down Syndrome unique?
KENNEDY: Down syndrome is an extra copy of the 21st chromosome. You get 23 from your mom and 23 from your dad and people with Down syndrome have one extra. It’s part of your body. You can’t catch Down syndrome from someone who has it and you can’t take it away. I’ll have Down syndrome forever.
People with Down syndrome are unique because we have physical characteristics that identify us. Some of these are almond shaped eyes, a flat bridge on our nose, smaller mouths and ears, short stature and sometimes a single crease across our palm. Not everyone with Down syndrome has every physical characteristic, but it’s cool because we can identify each other when we are out. It’s like being part of a cool club!
BTCF: Your personality creates an instant smile for those who meet you. What makes Kennedy Garcia unique?
KENNEDY: I am unique because I am me! I am an actress, a dancer, and a public speaker who has Down syndrome but mostly I am a teenager who likes to have fun and eat ice cream! I love my life!
BTCF: There are a variety of health problems including leukemia that you have had to overcome and have dealt with both doctors and others who said you would not ever have a good quality of life. Who has been your support team through it all? Anything else you would like to share about this that is important to you?
KENNEDY: My family is my support team. My mom never gave up on me and pushed me to be the very best ME I could be. She never listened to anyone who said I can’t… and now I don’t either.
BTCF: As an influencer with a big following, you are so fun and energetic on your tik tok and always manage to leave your viewers with an uplifting feeling, what motivates you when creating your tik tok posts?
KENNEDY: I just love to dance, and I love to collab with other people and have fun too! It really just makes me happy when people want to dance with me.
BTCF: Speaking of tik tok – you were on our BTCF Team at the LA NEDA Walk in April and being a dancer, you taught our board member/celebrity ambassador Courtney Hope a dance which was so fun! How do you think this creates community with your viewers?
KENNEDY: I hope it makes them happy! I think it’s so fun to dance with people I’ve admired for a long time and especially when I get to teach them dances. It’s so fun! I hope my viewers love it too!
BTCF: Being a motivational speaker, can you share a little bit about the stigma surrounding Down Syndrome and ways that you break down the barriers when giving insight to youth and how creating more awareness can build bridges?
KENNEDY: I go into schools all over and speak about Down syndrome and how to be friends with people with disabilities. Because really, I am just a pretty typical teenager just like them and I want them to not be scared of people like me. It’s easy to be friends with people with disabilities. Just go over and say hello. It could be the start of a beautiful friendship.
BTCF: When did you start modeling and what was your first experience like? Was that the moment you knew the entertainment industry was for you?
KENNEDY: I started modeling on IG when I was 5 for small shops. They would send clothes and we would send back photos. It was so fun! Then American Girl booked me for my first big job in LA and I had a blast! I wanted to do it forever!
BTCF: What are 3 positive messages you can share with youth when it comes to social media working toward self-acceptance and self-compassion?
KENNEDY:
BTCF: As a very young girl, you had to wear what was called a “halo” on your head for six months, can you share its purpose and how it helped your body function better?
KENNEDY: I had a gap in my spine that was very dangerous and needed spine fusion surgery. They took bone from my hip and put it in my neck with metal plates and wires. Then they put me in a halo to heal from that. Without it, I could have been paralyzed, so it really saved my life.
BTCF: BTCF uses the power of art and expression to create inner healing and connection with one’s overall mental health including prevention of body-focused stigma. How do you use art as a healing tool for yourself?
KENNEDY: My art is dancing. I love to dance when I’m in a group or on stage or just alone in my room. It makes me happy and brings me peace. I feel happiest when I’m moving.
BTCF: What does inclusivity mean to you when it comes to over health and well-being?
KENNEDY: Inclusion is everything. I have always been included in my schools, in my community, and now in the entertainment industry. It has sometimes been a fight, but it’s so worth it.
BTCF: What was it like to be a featured model in the launch of Mille Bobby Brown’s makeup line? What did it mean to you personally?
KENNEDY: That was one of my favorite jobs! I was so excited to work with a brand that I love and an actress I admire. It was a great representation of inclusion as well! Florence by Mills has continued to collab with me which is awesome too!
BTCF: When it comes to combating stereotypes and inspiring youth who have Down Syndrome, what are 3 things you can share with them?
KENNEDY:
BTCF: Social media is a tricky thing – what are three things you would advise youth when navigating through it when it comes to what appearance ideal means?
KENNEDY:
BTCF: For those who struggle with any disability and/or health challenge – do you have one message you would like to share with them?
KENNEDY: Never forget you are strong, smart and beautiful.
BTCF: What are your hobbies outside of the entertainment world?
KENNEDY: I love to go to the beach, hang out with my friends and my boyfriend, eat sushi, and go to the mall.
BTCF: What are 3 of your favorite self-care tips and ones you do for yourself?
Thank you, Kennedy, for sharing!
To check out more about Kennedy and her news – please visit:
www.Instagram.com/kennedyjean04
imdb.me/kennedyjean04
June’s Recipe: Banana & Strawberry Foster
Canvas of Culinary ArtsBananas and Strawberry Foster
by Chef Gason Nelson
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
1/2 cup dark-brown sugar
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
Few splashes of vanilla extract
1/4 cup good quality dark rum
8 ounces strawberries, hulled and sliced in half
8 oz sliced bananas
1 loaf of butter cake or pound cake
Instructions
Heat butter, sugar, cinnamon, vanilla extract, and rum in a medium skillet over medium-low heat. Cook for 4-6 minutes, stirring while you cook. If the mixture catches on fire, turn off the heat until the flame subsides and then continue cooking.
Add strawberries & bananas, stirring to make sure they are all coated until warmed through, 2-3 minutes.
When it Comes to Exercise, More Isn’t Always Better
Blog, Health & Fitness ConversationsTrain Smarter, Not Longer
The other day, I posted a screenshot of my Oura ring data on social media. I do this sometimes to be transparent and show that as a fitness coach, I follow my own advice.
I’d had a reasonably active day, skateboarding, playing basketball, and running sprints, not to mention taking my dog on several walks. All in all, I’d averaged around 16 miles walking equivalency, 25,000 steps, and 2,800 calories burned by 8 pm. Not a bad day, activity-wise. I was tired, but in a good way — looking forward to sleep that night, but not that feel-like-I’ve-been-hit-by-a-truck type of tired.
Soon after I posted, a follower responded, suggesting I get a Peloton. His reasoning: I could burn way more calories than that in a day with a sweaty spin session.
Now, I have nothing against Peleton or spin classes. I know many people who love using a Peleton to get in a quick at-home sweat session. I also fervently believe that any movement is good movement. If you enjoy what you’re doing — great. Keep doing it.
But indoor bike rides with twenty-somethings dancing and shouting motivational mantras are not my thing. And neither is making maximum calorie burn my main goal.
This wasn’t always the case. When I first started exercising after college, I struggled with body image issues and disordered eating. I was firmly in the “more is better” camp — often, I wouldn’t let myself stop exercising for the day until my fitness tracker informed me I’d burned 4,000 calories (a lot for a 130-pound girl). Sometimes, this meant doing jumping jacks five minutes before midnight until I finally hit that magic number.
This obsession with exercise took over my life. At the time, I thought about little else other than exercise and food. I was always exhausted and constantly had nagging injuries.
I now know this unhealthy cycle was a form of exercise addiction, an unhealthy obsession with exercise to lose as much weight as possible. My constant focus on more-is-better put me at risk for behavior that did more harm than good. Unfortunately, I still see this mindset perpetuated by much of the fitness industry. The message often portrayed by gyms and fitness classes is that you should always go longer, push harder, and do more. But here’s why the focus on more exercise is a trap:
It puts the focus solely on appearance or weight loss
When your goal is to simply burn as many calories as possible during a workout, you’re likely focused on weight loss or appearance-related goals. This can be fine as a short term goal, or if you need to lose a significant amount of weight for health reasons — but for long-term health it isn’t sustainable.
Why? For two important reasons:
1. With the more-is-better mindset, there’s rarely an endpoint. It’s almost impossible to know when enough is enough.
When I fell into this way of thinking, I’d always leave a workout session thinking I should have done more. 4,000 calories a day? Why not 4,500? One workout class? Why not two?
Not only does this put you in a never-enough cycle of guilt, it can also do more harm than good. For example:
Despite what the fitness industry says, more exercise is not always better.
2. Research shows that appearance is the least motivating reason to work out — which is why people with appearance-related goals consistently experience yo-yo workout motivation.
One reason this may be the case is that when you set an appearance-related goal, the pull between your future self (I want to fit in a smaller pair of jeans) and your current self (I want to eat this cookie right now) just isn’t strong enough to change your behavior in the moment. Without a deeper reason behind your decisions, it’s a lot easier to give in to what’s in front of you. Rather than focusing only on appearance-based goals, I encourage my clients to create goals based around performance, adventure, or learning new skills, sports, or activities. These types of goals add joy to your life while helping you stay more motivated long-term.
Cardio can be addictive
One of my biggest gripes with group fitness classes, whether in person or online, is that they make the focus all about cardio, with the goal usually being to burn as many calories as possible. Some cardio is obviously healthy. Regularly getting your heart rate up does wonders for your body and mind, helping to ensure long-term health, increase energy levels, decrease depression and anxiety, and so much more. Research shows we should all be getting at least 150 minutes of moderate aerobic activity or 75 minutes of intense aerobic activity every week.
Cardio can also give us a euphoric feeling, or what’s known as runner’s high. Despite the name, it can occur with nearly any form of aerobic exercise. You may feel a runner’s high when your activity has caused chemical changes in the body and brain, similar to the changes that happen when people take opioid drugs.
The result is that we can actually get addicted to cardio — just like we can get addicted to drugs.
Psychologist and addiction specialist Elizabeth Hartney warns that this frequent high exposure to drug-like opioids due to excessive exercise can lead people to overexercise at the detriment of their health. Too much exercise can lead to overtraining syndrome, resulting in fatigue, sickness, injury, lack of motivation, and loss of performance. It can also become an unhealthy obsession, taking over everything else as the sole pleasure of life.
Train smarter, not longer
Don’t just fall into the more-is-better trap. Making it your goal to burn as many calories as possible in every workout puts you at risk for an unhealthy mindset and even possible exercise addiction.
Instead, get to the root of why you’re exercising and aim to train smarter — not longer.
If you want to lose weight for health reasons or to feel better in your body, steady-state cardio isn’t everything. Other useful forms of exercise are high-intensity interval training (HIIT) and sprinting, which as a bonus, can help increase your metabolism so that your body burns more calories at rest.
If your goal is to be healthy and fit and increase your healthspan, the number of years you’re healthy and able to do the things you love, cardio is an essential piece of that. But so are resistance training, flexibility, mobility work, and nutrition. Don’t put too much focus on one versus the other.
If you want to make exercise a part of your lifestyle, find something you actually enjoy doing. Think about those performance, adventure, or skill-based goals I mentioned above. If you’re not sure what your goals are, think about the things you loved doing as a kid, and do those.
Also, make sure to enjoy life. If, as it did for me, exercise ever takes up too much of your life, you can be sure something is wrong. Peleton can be a part of that, but it doesn’t have to be. Aim for balance and never use exercise as a form of punishment.
Ultimately, exercise should be a source of joy, meaning, and connection in your life.
“Movement offers us pleasure, identity, belonging and hope. It puts us in places that are good for us, whether that’s outdoors in nature, in an environment that challenges us, or with a supportive community. It allows us to redefine ourselves and reimagine what is possible. It makes social connection easier and self-transcendence possible.” — Kelly McGonigal