Showing posts with label modeling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label modeling. Show all posts

Thursday, May 10, 2012

New Photo Shoot

Good day everyone!

Terry and I recently had a photo shoot in the whimsical forests of northern Michigan, where trees are at once alive and dead, and you are lucky to catch a glimpse of the animals as they pop up from the ground and scurry about. We could hear almost nothing, except a woodpecker in the distance, and the occasional burst of loud wind rushing through the trees. It was mostly overcast and dreary, but the sun still shined at moments. We shot in a few areas that we thought were the most interesting and tried to capture something subtly profound. The complete photo session is available to members of Liz LaPoint.com. Check it out :-)

We also visited a small town named Goodhart, right off Lake Michigan, where you drive down winding dirt roads among the forest to reach the lake homes. There was a tiny, old, one-room church with an accompanying cemetery. It looked abandoned, since we were there on a Sunday morning and there was not a soul in sight. We eagerly bounced out of the car to shoot in front of it all, when we were suddenly amidst an enormous swarm of little black bugs. We didn't realize they were literally everywhere, so we tried to move on and locate a new spot, but alas, the bugs won that war and we had to give up. There were so many of them, we couldn't open our mouths or we would have been eating bugs for brunch.

It wasn't until later that day that we discovered that the quaint little vacation town of Goodhart was home to a vicious murder of an entire family. It happened in the late '60s, when a family was in town from Detroit to spend the summer at their lake house. It is still considered unsolved.


Monday, November 21, 2011

How I Keep Model Fit :)

I was a skinny kid all through childhood and didn't even reach 100 pounds until I was almost 18. In my twenties I gained some pounds due to eating a lot of the standard American diet of meat and potatoes, and from including dessert with every dinner. Yikes.

Then I took it upon myself to do a little research into why someone would become a vegetarian. I was studying nutrition, biology, and anatomy at the same time. I was so moved emotionally and intellectually by the flood of new information and philosophical discussions involved that I decided to try it one morning. I quit eating animals cold turkey (no pun intended) and never felt better! The first change happened within a week. I gained a ton of energy. You don't realize how unhealthy you are or out of shape you are until the changes take place. Before, I thought I was perfectly healthy just because I didn't smoke and didn't suffer from a major illness, but after I also started dropping pounds (45 in total) I realized I was unhealthy before my diet change. Another major bonus: I didn't catch a cold or flu for 6 years. Before, I was always sick. If there was something going around, I was bound to catch it. At the time, you think that's normal. But after 6 years went by before I was sick again, I realized that it was a sign of how my poor diet was suppressing my immune system. Consuming more plant foods boosts your immune system. Anyway, a vegetarian diet has kept me slim ever since.

It drives me crazy when I hear someone say "So and So can eat whatever they want/eats like a pig/eats dessert every day and doesn't gain any weight" or "I don't know why So and So is overweight because they don't eat a lot". The truth is, we aren't around this So and So all day every day, so we don't really know how much or how little they eat. We see what they eat in one sitting once a day or once a week and assume that's how they eat even when we are not around. In other words, you don't know if that skinny person who just downed a burger and fries went home and didn't eat anything else the rest of the day and you don't know if that obese guy who just ate a Greek salad didn't go home afterward and spend the rest of his evening polishing off a large pizza and gallon of ice cream. With the rare exception, how much we weigh boils down to how many calories we consume and how many we burn. People who want to blame it on metabolism are lying to themselves because it makes them feel less responsible and therefore less guilty.

I encourage everyone to try a meatless diet for a week or two and see how much better your body runs. Seriously, it was one of the best decisions I ever made.

PS: The best thing about a meatless diet is the absence of disgusting gristle, fat, and bloody veins in your food. Yuck.