Tag: Susan Hanna

  • Why You Can Lose Inches Even When the Scale Does Not Move

    If your clothes are fitting better but the scale is not moving, you are not crazy.

    And you are not necessarily failing.

    This is one of the most frustrating things women ask me about:

    “How can I feel smaller, look a little different, and still weigh almost the same?”

    I understand why that feels discouraging.

    Most of us were taught to measure progress by one number. If the scale goes down, we feel proud. If it stays the same, we assume nothing is happening.

    But your body is more complicated than that.

    The scale measures total body weight. It does not tell you what changed.

    It does not tell you whether your waist is smaller.

    It does not tell you whether your legs are stronger.

    It does not tell you whether your clothes fit differently.

    It does not tell you whether you are holding more water this week.

    It does not tell you whether your routine is becoming more consistent.

    It is one piece of information, not the whole story.

    When I was losing my 70 pounds after 60, I had to learn not to let the scale boss me around every day.

    I still paid attention to it.

    I am not against weighing yourself.

    But I also learned to pay attention to my clothes, my measurements, my strength, my energy, and whether I was actually doing the things I said I wanted to do.

    That helped me stay steadier.

    Because some weeks, the scale did not tell the whole truth.

    One reason this happens is water.

    Your body weight can shift from normal fluid changes. Saltier food, a harder workout, travel, poor sleep, stress, hormones, and digestion can all affect what you see on the scale.

    That does not mean you gained fat overnight.

    It means your body is not a spreadsheet.

    For women over 35, this can feel especially aggravating because we may already be dealing with busier lives, changing hormones, more stress, less sleep, and years of diet frustration.

    So if you weigh on the wrong morning, you may get a number that makes you want to quit, even though the trend is still moving in the right direction.

    Another reason is body composition.

    Body composition is just a plain way of saying what your weight is made of: fat, muscle, water, bone, and everything else.

    If you are strength training, eating more consistently, and getting better nutrition, your body may start changing shape before the scale gives you the satisfaction you wanted.

    You may notice:

    • Your jeans button more easily.
    • Your waist feels different.
    • Your arms or legs look firmer.
    • You feel stronger in the gym.
    • You carry yourself differently.
    • Your belly does not feel as bloated at certain times.

    Those things matter.

    They are not imaginary just because the scale is slow.

    This is one reason I care so much about strength training.

    I lift heavy 4 to 5 times a week now, and it changed how I think about my body.

    Not because every woman has to train exactly like I do.

    But because strength gives you another way to see progress.

    If you can pick up heavier weights, walk farther, climb stairs more easily, or feel steadier in your body, that is progress.

    It may not always show up immediately as a lower number.

    But it still matters.

    The mistake is treating the scale like a judge instead of a tool.

    A judge tells you whether you are good or bad.

    A tool gives you information.

    The scale should be a tool.

    If it gives you information without stealing your peace, use it.

    If it ruins your whole day, you may need a different rhythm.

    Some women do better weighing once or twice a week.

    Some women like daily weighing because it helps them see normal ups and downs instead of panicking over one number.

    Some women should talk with a healthcare provider or counselor before tracking closely, especially if weight tracking has become obsessive or tied to disordered eating patterns.

    There is no one perfect rule for every woman.

    What I do recommend is tracking more than one thing.

    Here are the measurements I like:

    Waist measurement.

    Hip measurement.

    Progress photos in the same clothes and lighting.

    How your clothes fit.

    Your energy.

    Your strength.

    Your consistency.

    Your sleep.

    Your digestion and how you feel after meals.

    Those give you a fuller picture.

    If the scale is flat for two weeks, but your waist is down an inch and your workouts are stronger, I would not call that failure.

    I would call that information.

    I also want women to be careful with the phrase “nothing is working.”

    Before you say that, ask:

    Am I comparing one morning to another morning?

    Am I looking at the trend over several weeks?

    Are my clothes changing?

    Are my measurements changing?

    Am I stronger?

    Am I eating more consistently than I used to?

    Am I drinking more water?

    Am I getting enough protein and balanced meals?

    Am I being honest about weekends, snacks, bites, and stress eating?

    Those questions are more useful than beating yourself up.

    This is also where a simple nutrition routine can help.

    For me, Herbalife products are part of my routine, and I am an independent Herbalife Distributor.

    That does not mean a product magically changes your body.

    It does not.

    But a steady shake routine, protein support, and a more structured day can help some women stay more consistent.

    And consistency is what lets you actually evaluate progress.

    If every day is random, it is harder to know what is working.

    If your meals, movement, water, and sleep are becoming more steady, you have better information.

    Here is what I would tell you if you were sitting across from me:

    Do not quit just because the scale is slow.

    Do not ignore the scale completely if it gives useful information.

    But do not let it be the only thing you use to decide whether your work counts.

    Measure your waist.

    Notice your clothes.

    Track your strength.

    Look at your consistency.

    Give your body enough time to show a pattern.

    And if something truly is not changing after several weeks of honest consistency, then adjust the plan instead of attacking yourself.

    Progress is not always loud.

    Sometimes it is a waistband that feels better.

    Sometimes it is a walk that feels easier.

    Sometimes it is choosing a normal meal instead of giving up.

    Sometimes it is looking in the mirror and realizing you are starting to look stronger, even before the scale agrees.

    That counts.

    Do not let one number make you miss the rest of the story.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can you lose inches without losing weight?

    Yes, it can happen. The scale measures total weight, but inches and clothing fit can change because of body composition, normal fluid shifts, digestion, strength training, and changes in consistency. It does not always mean fat loss, but it is useful progress information.

    Why do my clothes fit better if the scale is the same?

    Clothing fit can reflect changes in measurements, posture, muscle tone, bloating, and where your body is changing. The scale cannot show those details.

    Should I track measurements instead of weight?

    You do not have to choose only one. Many women do better tracking weight trends, waist and hip measurements, photos, strength, clothes fit, and consistency together.

    How often should I measure my waist?

    Once every 2 to 4 weeks is enough for most people. Use the same tape, same general time of day, and same measurement location so the numbers are more consistent.

    Does strength training make the scale move slower?

    It can for some people, especially when normal water shifts and training recovery are part of the picture. Strength training may also improve how your body looks and functions even when scale weight changes slowly.

    Next Step

    If you want help building a routine that gives you more than just a number to chase, start with Susan’s free 7-Day Simple Start Plan

    Helpful Links

    Disclosure

    Susan’s results are her personal experience. Results vary. Her transformation involved consistent nutrition habits, regular exercise, strength training, support, and lifestyle changes. Susan Hanna is an independent Herbalife Distributor and may earn income from product purchases. Herbalife products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease. This content is for general wellness and educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Talk with your healthcare provider before changing your diet, supplement routine, or exercise plan, especially if you have a medical condition, take medication, are pregnant or breastfeeding, have a history of eating disorders, or are using weight-loss medications.

  • What to Do After One Bad Day of Eating

    One bad day of eating does not mean you failed.

    It means you had one bad day of eating.

    That may sound obvious, but I think this is where a lot of women lose themselves.

    Not because of the one messy day.

    Because of what they tell themselves after it.

    They say:

    “I ruined everything.”

    “I knew I could not do this.”

    “I might as well wait until Monday.”

    “I already messed up, so what is the point?”

    That thinking can do more damage than the actual food.

    One imperfect day does not have to become a lost week.

    When I lost 70 pounds after 60, I had to learn how to stop turning one hard day into a full restart.

    That was not automatic for me.

    It took practice.

    I had to learn that consistency does not mean every day is perfect.

    Consistency means I know how to come back.

    So if you had one bad day of eating, the first thing I want you to do is stop punishing yourself.

    Do not starve yourself the next day.

    Do not decide you have to do some extreme workout to “make up for it.”

    Do not turn the whole thing into a shame spiral.

    That usually does not create a healthier routine.

    It creates more pressure.

    Instead, come back to the next simple thing.

    Drink water.

    Eat a real meal.

    Pay attention to protein.

    Take a walk if that feels reasonable.

    Go to bed at a normal time.

    Ask for support if you feel embarrassed or stuck.

    Nothing dramatic.

    Just the next honest step.

    The second thing I would tell you is to look at what happened without attacking yourself.

    There is a difference between honesty and shame.

    Honesty asks:

    “What made yesterday harder?”

    Shame says:

    “What is wrong with me?”

    Those are very different questions.

    Maybe you skipped breakfast and then felt out of control later.

    Maybe you did not have anything easy planned.

    Maybe you were tired.

    Maybe the day got stressful.

    Maybe you were taking care of everyone else and did not pay attention to yourself until you were already hungry.

    Maybe it was just a normal human day.

    You can learn from it without making it your identity.

    The third thing is to avoid the Monday trap.

    If today is Wednesday, come back Wednesday.

    If it is Saturday, come back Saturday.

    You do not need a ceremonial restart.

    You do not need a brand-new notebook.

    You do not need to clear the whole pantry and make a speech to yourself.

    You need the next useful choice.

    This is one reason I care so much about simple routines.

    When your routine is simple, it is easier to come back to it.

    Breakfast.

    Water.

    Protein.

    Movement.

    Support.

    Those anchors matter because they give you a place to return.

    If your routine is too complicated, one messy day can make everything feel broken.

    But if your routine is built around repeatable basics, you do not have to rebuild your whole life after one imperfect meal.

    You just return to the basics.

    For me, simple nutrition tools can help with that.

    I do use Herbalife products as tools in my own routine, and I am an independent Herbalife Distributor.

    For some women, a shake routine can make breakfast easier.

    Protein support can help make the next day feel more structured.

    But products are not punishment.

    They are not magic.

    They do not erase yesterday.

    They are simply tools that may help make a routine easier to repeat.

    The bigger picture still matters: real food, water, movement, sleep, support, and consistency.

    The fourth thing is to be careful with the words you use.

    If you call the whole day a disaster, you may act like it was a disaster.

    If you call yourself a failure, you may treat yourself like one.

    But if you say, “That was one messy day, and I know what to do next,” you give yourself a way forward.

    That matters.

    Women over 35 often carry a lot.

    Family.

    Work.

    Caregiving.

    Hormonal changes.

    Busy homes.

    Years of diet history.

    Old disappointment.

    So when one day goes badly, it can stir up a lot more than food.

    That is why support matters.

    Sometimes you need someone to remind you that you are not starting from zero.

    You are returning.

    Here is the reset I would use:

    Do not punish yourself.

    Drink water.

    Eat a simple meal.

    Get some protein.

    Move gently if you can.

    Ask what made the day harder.

    Come back before Monday.

    Repeat the basics.

    That is it.

    Not glamorous.

    Not dramatic.

    But useful.

    If one bad day of eating has turned into a pattern of starting over, my free 7-Day Simple Start Plan can help you build a gentler first week.

    It is simple on purpose.

    It gives you a way to come back without shame, punishment, or perfection.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Did I ruin my progress with one bad day of eating?

    One imperfect day does not have to ruin your progress. The next step is to return to simple basics like water, a real meal, protein, movement if appropriate, and support.

    Should I skip meals after overeating?

    Susan does not recommend using punishment as a reset. A more practical next step is to return to a normal, simple meal and talk with a qualified healthcare professional if you need personalized guidance.

    Can Herbalife products help me reset after a bad day?

    Herbalife products may be tools inside a broader routine for some women, but they do not erase a bad day and are not magic. Susan is an independent Herbalife Distributor and frames products as routine support only.

    What should I do if bad eating days keep happening?

    Look for the pattern without shame. You may need a simpler breakfast, more planning, more support, better meal structure, or professional guidance depending on what is going on.

    Next Step

    Get Susan’s free 7-Day Simple Start Plan

    Helpful Links

    Disclosure

    Susan’s results are her personal experience. Results vary. Her transformation involved consistent nutrition habits, regular exercise, strength training, support, and lifestyle changes. Susan Hanna is an independent Herbalife Distributor and may earn income from product purchases. Herbalife products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease. This content is for general wellness and educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Talk with your healthcare provider before changing your diet, supplement routine, or exercise plan, especially if you have a medical condition, take medication, are pregnant or breastfeeding, have a history of eating disorders, or are using weight-loss medications.

  • How I Stay Consistent While Raising Gabby

    Consistency looks different when people need you.

    That is one of the biggest lessons I have learned in this season of life.

    David and I are raising Gabby, and that means my days are not always neat, quiet, or predictable.

    Some mornings start earlier than I planned.

    Some days need more patience than I expected.

    Some weeks do not look anything like the routine I thought I was going to follow.

    But that is real life.

    And if your health routine cannot survive real life, it probably will not last very long.

    I think a lot of women understand this immediately.

    You may be caring for children, grandchildren, a husband, aging parents, a home, a job, or several of those things at once.

    You may be the person everyone expects to remember the appointments, the groceries, the laundry, the meals, the phone calls, and the details nobody else seems to notice.

    By the time you finally think about yourself, you may already be tired.

    That does not mean you are lazy.

    It means you are carrying a lot.

    When I lost 70 pounds after 60, my life did not suddenly become easy.

    I did not find some perfect season where nobody needed me and every day went according to plan.

    I had to learn how to take care of myself inside the life I actually had.

    That meant I could not depend on motivation.

    I needed anchors.

    Small things I could come back to again and again.

    For me, one anchor is having a simple morning routine.

    I do better when I do not have to make a brand-new decision about breakfast every day.

    If I already know what I am going to do, it removes friction.

    That might be a simple shake routine.

    It might be protein with breakfast.

    It might be water first thing.

    It might be getting dressed for the gym before I can talk myself out of it.

    The point is not that every woman has to do it exactly like I do.

    The point is that consistency gets easier when the first few steps are already decided.

    Another anchor is having a small version of the routine.

    This is important.

    If you are raising a child, caring for family, or managing a busy home, you need a routine that has a backup version.

    The full version might be a workout.

    The small version might be a walk, a few sets at home, or simply getting back on track at the next meal.

    The full version might be a planned dinner.

    The small version might be choosing something with protein instead of grazing all evening.

    The full version might be a calm morning.

    The small version might be water, a simple breakfast, and five minutes to breathe.

    You are not failing when you use the small version.

    You are staying connected to the routine.

    Raising Gabby has reminded me that life is not always going to pause so I can take care of myself.

    So I have to make taking care of myself part of the day, not something I only do if everything else is finished.

    That was a hard lesson for me.

    Women are very good at postponing themselves.

    We tell ourselves we will start after the house is settled.

    After the busy week.

    After the family needs less.

    After we feel more ready.

    But sometimes the people we love need us for a long time.

    So the question becomes:

    How do I care for them without disappearing from my own life?

    For me, strength training has become part of that answer.

    I lift heavy weights four to five times a week because I want to stay strong.

    I want energy.

    I want muscle.

    I want to be able to keep showing up for the people I love.

    That does not mean every woman needs my exact gym routine.

    But I do believe women need to stop thinking of strength as optional.

    Especially as we get older.

    We need bodies that can carry groceries, pick things up, climb stairs, hold children, recover from hard days, and keep moving.

    Nutrition is another part of that answer.

    I use simple routines because they help me avoid starting over every few days.

    Herbalife products can be useful tools for some women, and I am an independent Herbalife Distributor.

    But I never want to make it sound like a product does the work for you.

    It does not.

    A product can make one piece of the routine easier.

    It can help you create a simple breakfast.

    It can support a protein habit.

    It can reduce one decision in a busy day.

    But it still belongs inside a bigger routine that includes real food, movement, water, sleep, support, and coming back when life gets messy.

    This is what consistency looks like for me now:

    I repeat the basics.

    I keep breakfast simple.

    I pay attention to protein.

    I drink water.

    I lift.

    I come back after a hard day instead of turning one hard day into a lost week.

    I ask for support when I need it.

    I do not require my life to be perfect before I do the next right thing.

    If you are in a busy season, I want you to hear this clearly:

    You do not need a dramatic restart.

    You need a few steady anchors.

    You need a routine that respects your real life.

    You need a way to come back without shame.

    You need support that does not make you feel embarrassed for being human.

    That is why I created my free 7-Day Simple Start Plan.

    It is not a perfect plan for perfect women.

    It is a simple first-week guide for women who are tired, busy, and ready to stop starting over.

    If you want help taking the next step, start there.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How can caregivers stay consistent with healthy routines?

    Start with a few repeatable anchors instead of a complicated plan. A simple breakfast, water, protein, a small movement goal, and a backup version of your routine can help you keep going when family life gets unpredictable.

    What if my day changes because family needs me?

    Use the small version of the routine. That might mean a shorter walk, a simpler meal, or getting back to water and protein at the next opportunity. The goal is to stay connected to the routine instead of quitting because the day changed.

    Does Susan use Herbalife while raising Gabby?

    Yes, Herbalife products can be part of Susan’s routine, and Susan is an independent Herbalife Distributor. She presents products as tools inside a broader routine, not as magic or as the only reason for her results.

    Is it selfish to take care of myself while caring for family?

    No. Taking care of yourself can help you keep showing up with more steadiness, strength, and energy. This does not mean ignoring family responsibilities; it means building small habits that keep you from disappearing inside them.

    Next Step

    Get Susan’s free 7-Day Simple Start Plan

    Helpful Links

    Disclosure

    Susan’s results are her personal experience. Results vary. Her transformation involved consistent nutrition habits, regular exercise, strength training, support, and lifestyle changes. Susan Hanna is an independent Herbalife Distributor and may earn income from product purchases. Herbalife products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease. This content is for general wellness and educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Talk with your healthcare provider before changing your diet, supplement routine, or exercise plan, especially if you have a medical condition, take medication, are pregnant or breastfeeding, or are using weight-loss medications.

  • My Favorite Simple Breakfast Routine

    Breakfast does not have to be complicated to be useful.

    In fact, for a lot of women, complicated is exactly the problem.

    Too many choices.

    Too many rules.

    Too much thinking when the day is already starting fast.

    That is why I like a simple breakfast routine.

    When I lost 70 pounds after 60, I had to learn how to make parts of my day easier to repeat.

    Not perfect.

    Repeatable.

    That matters.

    Because a routine you can actually come back to is more useful than an impressive plan you abandon by Wednesday.

    For me, breakfast is one of the best places to simplify.

    The morning sets the tone.

    If I start the day scattered, skipping meals, or waiting until I am too hungry to think clearly, the rest of the day can get harder.

    But when I have a simple plan, I do not have to negotiate with myself as much.

    I already know the next step.

    My favorite kind of breakfast routine is simple:

    Water first.

    Something easy and repeatable.

    Some attention to protein.

    No drama.

    No perfection.

    No pretending one breakfast has to fix the whole day.

    For some women, that might be eggs and fruit.

    For some, it might be Greek yogurt.

    For some, it might be a simple shake routine.

    For some, it might be whatever keeps them from skipping breakfast and then feeling out of control later.

    The exact meal can vary.

    The point is to reduce the decision load.

    I do use Herbalife products as tools in my own routine, and I am an independent Herbalife Distributor.

    A shake routine can be helpful because it is easy to repeat.

    But I want to say this clearly: the shake is not magic.

    It is not a guarantee.

    It does not replace consistency, movement, hydration, sleep, or support.

    It is a tool that can make one part of the day simpler.

    And for busy women, simpler can matter.

    If you are trying to build your own breakfast routine, I would start with three questions:

    What can I realistically do most mornings?

    What helps me feel steadier instead of scattered?

    What is easy enough that I will not quit after one busy day?

    Those questions are more useful than trying to copy someone else’s perfect plan.

    Here is an example of a simple first step:

    Put your water where you will see it.

    Decide on one breakfast option before morning.

    Keep the supplies easy to reach.

    Do not make yourself decide from scratch every day.

    That little bit of planning can make the morning feel less chaotic.

    And when the morning feels less chaotic, it is easier to make the next good choice.

    Not because you are suddenly perfect.

    Because you made the first decision easier.

    I think women over 35 often underestimate how much decision fatigue affects consistency.

    We blame ourselves for not having enough willpower.

    But sometimes we are just tired from making too many decisions for too many people.

    That is why a repeatable breakfast can be such a practical win.

    If you are tired of starting over, do not begin by trying to fix everything.

    Begin with one repeatable morning choice.

    One breakfast.

    One glass of water.

    One routine you can come back to.

    That is enough to start.

    And if you want help choosing a simple first week, my free 7-Day Simple Start Plan can help.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is a simple breakfast routine for weight-loss support?

    A simple routine may include water, one repeatable breakfast option, and attention to protein. The goal is to reduce decision-making and create a morning habit that is easier to repeat.

    Does Susan always use a shake for breakfast?

    Susan uses Herbalife products as tools in her own routine, but the right breakfast routine depends on the person. A shake can be convenient for some women, but it is not the only option.

    Can a breakfast routine guarantee weight loss?

    No. A breakfast routine does not guarantee weight loss. Results vary, and long-term progress depends on overall nutrition habits, movement, consistency, support, and individual factors.

    Why does breakfast matter for busy women?

    For many busy women, breakfast is where the day starts to get chaotic. A repeatable breakfast routine can reduce decision fatigue and make the first healthy choice of the day easier.

    Next Step

    Get Susan’s free 7-Day Simple Start Plan

    Helpful Links

    Disclosure

    Susan’s results are her personal experience. Results vary. Her transformation involved consistent nutrition habits, regular exercise, strength training, support, and lifestyle changes. Susan Hanna is an independent Herbalife Distributor and may earn income from product purchases. Herbalife products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease. This content is for general wellness and educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Talk with your healthcare provider before changing your diet, supplement routine, or exercise plan, especially if you have a medical condition, take medication, are pregnant or breastfeeding, or are using weight-loss medications.

  • How to Stop Making Weight Loss So Complicated

    I think a lot of women are not failing because they are lazy.

    They are failing because the plan is too complicated to live with.

    Too many rules.

    Too many decisions.

    Too much starting over every Monday.

    Too much pressure to do everything at once.

    I understand that cycle.

    When you are tired of your weight, tired of your clothes feeling wrong, tired of low energy, or tired of feeling disappointed in yourself, it is tempting to look for a dramatic reset.

    The stricter plan.

    The perfect grocery list.

    The all-or-nothing challenge.

    The version of Monday where everything is finally going to change.

    But real life usually arrives by Tuesday.

    And if the plan only works when life is perfect, it is not much of a plan.

    When I lost 70 pounds after 60, I had to learn this the practical way.

    I did not need more pressure.

    I needed fewer decisions.

    I needed a routine I could come back to after an imperfect day.

    That is very different from trying to be perfect.

    One of the first ways to simplify weight loss is to stop asking, “What is the most impressive plan?”

    Ask this instead:

    “What can I repeat?”

    Can I repeat a simple breakfast?

    Can I repeat drinking more water?

    Can I repeat a short walk?

    Can I repeat getting more protein at one meal?

    Can I repeat asking for help instead of disappearing when I feel embarrassed?

    That is where progress often begins.

    Another way to simplify is to stop changing everything at once.

    You do not have to fix breakfast, lunch, dinner, snacks, water, exercise, sleep, stress, and your whole kitchen by tomorrow morning.

    That sounds strong when you are motivated.

    But for many women, it becomes too much to maintain.

    Start with one part of the day.

    For many women, that is breakfast.

    For others, it is water.

    For others, it is not skipping meals and then feeling out of control later.

    One part of the day is enough to begin.

    This is also why simple tools can help.

    A planned breakfast can help.

    A shake routine can help if it fits your day.

    A water bottle can help.

    A short walk can help.

    A few basic groceries can help.

    Herbalife products may be tools inside a routine for some women. I am an independent Herbalife Distributor, and I can help women think through whether that makes sense for them.

    But the tool is not the whole answer.

    The routine matters.

    The repeatability matters.

    Your real life matters.

    If you have been making weight loss complicated, I would start here:

    Pick one simple breakfast.

    Drink water before the day gets away from you.

    Pay attention to protein at one meal.

    Move your body in a way you can repeat.

    Do not quit because one day was messy.

    Ask for support before you disappear.

    That may not sound dramatic.

    But dramatic is not always what changes a life.

    Repeatable does.

    I want women to feel less trapped by the idea that they have to become a completely different person overnight.

    You do not.

    You need a first step that makes sense.

    Then another.

    Then another.

    That is how simple routines become a new way of living.

    If you are tired of starting over, my free 7-Day Simple Start Plan can help you begin without shame or perfection.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Why do complicated weight-loss plans fail?

    Complicated plans often require too many decisions and too much perfection. For busy women, a simpler routine is often easier to repeat when real life gets messy.

    What is the simplest way to start losing weight?

    Start with one repeatable habit. That may be a simple breakfast, more water, a short walk, or paying attention to protein at one meal. The best first step is the one you can actually repeat.

    Can Herbalife products help make weight loss simpler?

    Herbalife products may be useful tools for some women, especially if a shake routine makes breakfast easier. Susan is an independent Herbalife Distributor, but products are not magic and do not replace consistency, balanced nutrition, activity, hydration, or support.

    What should I do after one messy day?

    Do not turn one messy day into quitting. Come back to the next simple action: water, breakfast, movement, or asking for support.

    Next Step

    Get Susan’s free 7-Day Simple Start Plan

    Helpful Links

    Disclosure

    Susan’s results are her personal experience. Results vary. Her transformation involved consistent nutrition habits, regular exercise, strength training, support, and lifestyle changes. Susan Hanna is an independent Herbalife Distributor and may earn income from product purchases. Herbalife products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease. This content is for general wellness and educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Talk with your healthcare provider before changing your diet, supplement routine, or exercise plan, especially if you have a medical condition, take medication, are pregnant or breastfeeding, or are using weight-loss medications.

  • What Herbalife Products Do I Actually Use?

    One question I get is simple:

    “What Herbalife products do you actually use?”

    I understand why women ask that.

    If you are thinking about starting, you do not want a complicated list. You want to know what is practical, what fits real life, and what someone like me actually reaches for when the day is busy.

    Before I answer, I want to be clear about something important.

    Herbalife products are not magic.

    They did not do the work for me.

    My 70-pound weight loss after 60 came from consistency over time: nutrition habits, movement, strength training, support, and learning how to keep going after imperfect days.

    Products can help make a routine easier, but they do not replace the routine.

    The first product category I usually talk about is a shake routine.

    For many women, breakfast is where the day starts to fall apart. Not because they do not care, but because mornings are busy and decision fatigue is real.

    That is why a shake can be helpful.

    It gives you a repeatable option instead of standing in the kitchen wondering what to do while everyone else needs something.

    Herbalife’s Formula 1 Healthy Meal Nutritional Shake Mix is designed as a convenient shake mix with protein, fiber, vitamins, and minerals. The way I think about it is simple: it can be a practical meal option when it fits your day.

    The second category is protein support.

    As I got stronger and started lifting more consistently, I paid more attention to protein.

    That does not mean every woman needs to obsess over numbers. It means many women, especially as we get older, need to stop treating protein like an afterthought.

    Some women use a shake plus additional protein support because it makes the routine easier. Herbalife has protein options that can be used with a shake routine, but the exact setup should fit the person, the goal, and the day.

    The third category is simple drink support.

    Some women struggle more with hydration and afternoon energy than with breakfast.

    That does not mean they need a dramatic plan. Sometimes they need a better rhythm: water, a planned drink, a walk, or a simple break before they start grabbing whatever is easiest.

    This is where I may talk with someone about what they are already doing and what feels realistic.

    The product itself is not the starting point.

    The person’s day is the starting point.

    Are mornings chaotic?

    Are they skipping meals and then overeating later?

    Are they struggling to get enough protein?

    Are they tired of trying to create a perfect plan and then quitting by Wednesday?

    Those questions matter more than a product list.

    If you ask me what I use, my honest answer is that I build around simple routines first.

    A shake routine can help.

    Protein support can help.

    Simple drink habits can help.

    But none of those things matter much if the routine is too complicated to repeat.

    That is why I do not want women to start by buying a cabinet full of products they do not understand.

    I would rather help you choose a starting routine that makes sense for your life.

    Maybe that is breakfast.

    Maybe that is protein.

    Maybe that is a simple first week before you decide anything else.

    If you want help, ask me.

    Tell me what your mornings look like. Tell me where the day falls apart. Tell me what you have tried before and what made you quit.

    Then we can talk about whether Herbalife products fit into a simple plan for you.

    Not because products are magic.

    Because the right tool, used in a realistic routine, can make consistency easier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does Susan believe Herbalife products caused her 70-pound weight loss?

    No. Susan’s transformation involved consistent nutrition habits, regular exercise, strength training, support, and lifestyle changes. Herbalife products may be tools in a routine, but they are not magic and results vary.

    What Herbalife product does Susan usually start with?

    For many women, Susan starts by discussing the routine first, especially breakfast and protein. A shake routine may be a practical starting point for some people, but the right option depends on the person’s day and goals.

    Is Formula 1 a meal replacement?

    Herbalife describes Formula 1 Healthy Meal Nutritional Shake Mix as a convenient shake mix with protein, fiber, vitamins, and minerals. Product use should still fit within a balanced diet and realistic lifestyle routine.

    Should I buy several products at once?

    Not necessarily. Susan’s approach is to start with a simple routine that fits your life. More products do not automatically mean better consistency.

    Next Step

    Ask Susan what Herbalife routine fits your day

    Helpful Links

    Disclosure

    Susan’s results are her personal experience. Results vary. Her transformation involved consistent nutrition habits, regular exercise, strength training, support, and lifestyle changes. Susan Hanna is an independent Herbalife Distributor and may earn income from product purchases. Herbalife products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease. This content is for general wellness and educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Talk with your healthcare provider before changing your diet, supplement routine, or exercise plan, especially if you have a medical condition, take medication, are pregnant or breastfeeding, or are using weight-loss medications.

  • How Busy Moms and Grandmothers Can Create a Morning Nutrition Routine

    Mornings can get away from you fast.

    If you are a mom, grandmother, caregiver, homemaker, or just the person everyone seems to need first, you already know what I mean.

    Some mornings start with good intentions.

    Then somebody needs breakfast. The phone rings. The laundry is waiting. A child needs help. A grandchild needs attention. You look up and realize you have taken care of everyone except yourself.

    I understand that season of life.

    David and I are raising Gabby, and I know what it feels like to have real responsibilities waiting before the day has even had a chance to settle.

    That is one reason I believe a morning nutrition routine should be simple.

    Not fancy.

    Not perfect.

    Not something that requires you to become a completely different person.

    Simple enough that you can come back to it, even when the morning is not calm.

    When I lost 70 pounds after 60 and learned how to keep going, I had to stop making everything harder than it needed to be.

    I did not need a complicated morning.

    I needed a repeatable one.

    That is the difference.

    For many women, the first helpful step is deciding what “good enough” looks like before the day gets loud.

    Maybe that means drinking water before coffee.

    Maybe it means having a simple breakfast option ready.

    Maybe it means using a shake routine because it is easier than skipping breakfast and then feeling scattered later.

    Maybe it means setting out a shaker cup, protein option, or breakfast supplies the night before.

    The point is not to impress anyone.

    The point is to reduce the number of decisions you have to make when you are already busy.

    Here is a simple morning routine I would suggest to a woman who feels overwhelmed:

    First, drink water.

    Second, choose one breakfast you can repeat.

    Third, include some protein if you can.

    Fourth, give yourself a realistic next step instead of a perfect plan.

    That may sound too simple, but simple is often what busy women can actually use.

    If Herbalife products fit your routine, a shake can be one way to make breakfast easier.

    I am an independent Herbalife Distributor, and I do use products as tools in my own routine.

    But I want to be clear: a product is not magic.

    It is not a substitute for consistency, overall nutrition, movement, hydration, sleep, or support.

    It is a tool.

    And a tool is only helpful if it makes your real life easier.

    One of the biggest mistakes I see women make is waiting for the perfect morning.

    The perfect morning may not come.

    But a better morning can start with one repeatable habit.

    One glass of water.

    One simple breakfast.

    One walk.

    One plan you can actually remember when life is moving fast.

    If you are tired of starting over, do not start with everything.

    Start with the first hour of the day.

    Make that hour a little less chaotic.

    Give yourself one thing you can do before the day starts pulling at you.

    You are allowed to take care of yourself while you are taking care of other people.

    That is not selfish.

    That is how you build a routine that can last.

    If you want help starting simply, my free 7-Day Simple Start Plan is a good first step.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is a good morning nutrition routine for busy women?

    A good routine is one you can repeat. For many women, that may mean water, one simple breakfast option, some protein, and a realistic plan for the next small step.

    Do I have to eat breakfast to lose weight?

    Different people prefer different routines. The point is not to force one rule on every woman. The goal is to avoid chaotic decision-making and build a pattern that helps you feel steady and consistent.

    Can Herbalife shakes fit into a morning routine?

    For some people, yes. Susan uses Herbalife products and is an independent Distributor, but products are tools inside a broader routine. They do not replace consistency, balanced nutrition, movement, hydration, or professional medical guidance.

    What if my mornings are unpredictable?

    Then the routine should be even simpler. Set out what you can the night before, choose one repeatable breakfast, and focus on the first small action instead of trying to control the whole day.

    Next Step

    Get Susan’s free 7-Day Simple Start Plan

    Helpful Links

    Disclosure

    Susan’s results are her personal experience. Results vary. Her transformation involved consistent nutrition habits, regular exercise, strength training, support, and lifestyle changes. Susan Hanna is an independent Herbalife Distributor and may earn income from product purchases. Herbalife products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease. This content is for general wellness and educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Talk with your healthcare provider before changing your diet, supplement routine, or exercise plan, especially if you have a medical condition, take medication, are pregnant or breastfeeding, or are using weight-loss medications.

  • What to Expect When You Ask Susan for Help

    Sometimes the hardest part is not knowing what to ask.

    You may know you want to feel better.

    You may know you are tired of starting over.

    You may even be curious about Herbalife or a simple shake routine.

    But then the hesitation starts.

    “What if I do not know enough?”

    “What if I am embarrassed?”

    “What if she tries to sell me everything?”

    “What if I have failed too many times already?”

    If that is where you are, I want you to know what actually happens when you ask me for help.

    First, I am not going to shame you.

    I know what it feels like to need a reset. I lost 70 pounds after 60, and that did not happen because every day was perfect.

    It happened because I learned how to keep coming back to simple routines.

    So if you tell me you are tired, overwhelmed, inconsistent, or unsure where to start, I am not shocked by that.

    That is real life.

    Second, I am going to ask about your day.

    Not just your goal weight.

    Not just what products you have heard about.

    Your actual day.

    What does breakfast look like?

    Where does the day usually fall apart?

    Are mornings hard?

    Do you skip meals and then feel out of control later?

    Are you trying to take care of everyone else first?

    Have you tried plans that were too complicated to repeat?

    Those answers matter because a routine has to fit the person using it.

    Third, I will help you find a simple first step.

    That may be a breakfast routine.

    It may be drinking more water.

    It may be paying more attention to protein.

    It may be a shake routine if that makes sense for your life.

    It may be starting with my free 7-Day Simple Start Plan before you decide anything else.

    The goal is not to overwhelm you.

    The goal is to help you stop standing at the starting line.

    Fourth, if you ask about Herbalife, I will answer honestly.

    I am an independent Herbalife Distributor, and I may earn income from product purchases.

    I do use Herbalife products as tools in my own routine, and I can help you understand how they might fit.

    But I do not believe products are magic.

    They do not replace consistency, food choices, movement, hydration, sleep, or support.

    They are tools.

    The question is whether a tool makes your real life easier.

    Fifth, I will not promise you a result I cannot guarantee.

    My 70-pound weight loss is my personal experience. Results vary.

    Your body, schedule, health history, stress level, responsibilities, and consistency all matter.

    I can encourage you. I can help you simplify. I can help you choose a practical starting point.

    But I will not pretend there is one perfect product or one perfect plan for every woman.

    If you message me, you do not need to have the perfect words.

    You can simply say:

    “I need help starting.”

    Or:

    “My mornings are hard.”

    Or:

    “I want to know if a shake routine makes sense for me.”

    Or:

    “I am tired of starting over.”

    That is enough.

    You do not have to be confident before you reach out.

    You do not have to have everything figured out.

    You do not have to explain why it has been hard.

    You can start with one honest message.

    And then we can look at the next practical step together.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Do I have to know what Herbalife products I want before asking Susan?

    No. Susan can help you think through your routine first. The goal is not to start with a product list; it is to understand what kind of simple support may fit your day.

    Will Susan pressure me to buy products?

    Susan’s approach is trust-first and routine-first. She is an independent Herbalife Distributor and may earn income from product purchases, but products should be tools inside a realistic plan, not pressure.

    What should I say when I message Susan?

    You can keep it simple. Say, “I need help starting,” “My mornings are hard,” or “I want to know if a shake routine makes sense for me.”

    Can Susan give medical advice?

    No. Susan is not a medical provider. Her support is general wellness, encouragement, practical routine-building, and Herbalife product education when appropriate. Talk with a qualified healthcare provider about medical conditions, medications, pregnancy, breastfeeding, or major diet/exercise changes.

    Next Step

    Ask Susan what first step fits your day

    Helpful Links

    Disclosure

    Susan’s results are her personal experience. Results vary. Her transformation involved consistent nutrition habits, regular exercise, strength training, support, and lifestyle changes. Susan Hanna is an independent Herbalife Distributor and may earn income from product purchases. Herbalife products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease. This content is for general wellness and educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Talk with your healthcare provider before changing your diet, supplement routine, or exercise plan, especially if you have a medical condition, take medication, are pregnant or breastfeeding, or are using weight-loss medications.

  • What Strength Training Did for My Body After 60

    Strength training changed how I saw my body.

    Not overnight.

    Not because I suddenly became a different person.

    But slowly, as I got stronger, I started to feel different in my own skin.

    When I lost 70 pounds after 60, the scale mattered at first. Of course it did.

    But over time, I realized I did not just want to be smaller. I wanted to feel capable.

    I wanted to feel strong enough for real life.

    Strength training gave me a new way to measure progress.

    Some days the scale did not tell me much. But I could tell when I was lifting more, standing taller, moving better, or feeling more confident walking into the gym.

    That kind of progress matters.

    I lift heavy weights 4-5 times a week now.

    That may sound intimidating if you are just starting, but please do not hear it that way. My routine now is not where every woman has to begin.

    The beginning can be very simple.

    One short workout. One set of weights. One walk. One decision to stop treating your body like it is already too late.

    I think many women over 35, 45, 55, and 60 have been taught to focus mostly on getting smaller.

    I understand that. I wanted to lose weight too.

    But there is something powerful about also asking, “How do I want to live in this body?”

    Do I want more energy? Better balance? More confidence? More strength for the people who need me?

    For me, strength training became part of the answer.

    It helped me feel less fragile. It gave me a reason to care about protein, recovery, and consistency. It made me respect what my body could still learn.

    And honestly, it made me proud.

    That does not mean every workout is perfect.

    It does not mean I always feel motivated.

    It means I have learned to keep showing up in a way that fits the woman I am becoming, not just the weight I used to be.

    If you are starting later in life, please do not let that embarrass you.

    Starting later still counts.

    Starting small still counts.

    Starting again still counts.

    You do not have to begin with heavy weights. You do not have to know everything. You do not have to feel confident before you start.

    You can start with one practical step.

    That is how most real change begins.

    If you want a simple first week, my free 7-Day Simple Start Plan can help you begin without shame or perfection.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Do I have to lift heavy weights to start?

    No. Susan lifts heavy weights now, but a beginner can start much smaller. The first step may be a short workout, light weights, walking, or simply building confidence with movement.

    Is it too late to start strength training after 60?

    Susan’s experience is personal, but her message is that starting later still counts. Anyone with health concerns, pain, balance issues, or medical conditions should talk with a qualified healthcare provider before beginning a new exercise routine.

    Why does Susan talk about strength instead of only weight loss?

    Weight loss was part of Susan’s journey, but strength helped her feel more capable, confident, and connected to her body. The goal is not just being smaller; it is building a routine that supports real life.

    How does nutrition fit with strength training?

    Susan pays attention to simple nutrition habits, protein, hydration, and consistency. Herbalife products may be tools in her routine, but they do not replace exercise, balanced nutrition, or professional medical guidance.

    Next Step

    Get Susan’s free 7-Day Simple Start Plan

    Helpful Links

    Disclosure

    Susan’s results are her personal experience. Results vary. Her transformation involved consistent nutrition habits, regular exercise, strength training, support, and lifestyle changes. Susan Hanna is an independent Herbalife Distributor and may earn income from product purchases. Herbalife products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease. This content is for general wellness and educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Talk with your healthcare provider before changing your diet, supplement routine, or exercise plan, especially if you have a medical condition, take medication, are pregnant or breastfeeding, or are using weight-loss medications.

  • The Difference Between a Product and a Plan

    A product can be helpful, but a product is not the same thing as a plan.

    That is one of the most important things I tell women who ask me about Herbalife.

    I am an independent Herbalife Distributor. I use Herbalife products, and I do believe they can be useful tools for some women. But I do not want any woman to think a product replaces the bigger routine.

    The routine is what carries you through real life.

    A product can make one part of the day easier.

    A shake can make breakfast more predictable. A protein option can help you plan instead of grabbing whatever is nearby. A simple routine can reduce the number of decisions you have to make when you are tired.

    That matters because a lot of women are not failing from lack of desire. They are overwhelmed, busy, and trying to make too many decisions at the hardest part of the day.

    A product cannot live your life for you.

    It cannot make you sleep. It cannot lift weights for you. It cannot drink your water, plan your backup meal, or decide that one imperfect day does not mean you failed.

    That is why I do not talk about Herbalife as magic. I talk about it as support inside a routine.

    A plan does not have to be complicated. In fact, I think many women need a simpler plan, not a harsher one.

    A simple plan might include a predictable breakfast, a protein goal, water cues, a short walk, a backup snack, and someone to check in with when the week gets messy.

    When I lost 70 pounds over 3 years and kept it off, the biggest shift was not perfection. It was learning how to come back to a routine.

    If Herbalife fits your life, it should make the routine easier, not more confusing.

    For one woman, that might mean a shake for breakfast. For another, it might mean help with protein or a better afternoon option. For someone else, the first step may not be a product at all. It may be looking honestly at where the day breaks down.

    That is why I like to ask questions before recommending anything.

    Before you decide what to buy, look at your actual day.

    Where do you struggle most? Breakfast? Snacks? Dinner? Energy? Consistency? Starting over after the weekend?

    The answer matters because the product should serve the plan. The plan should serve your real life.

    If you want help choosing a simple first step, start with my free 7-Day Simple Start Plan.

    Next Step

    Get Susan’s free 7-Day Simple Start Plan

    Disclosure

    Susan’s results are her personal experience. Results vary. Susan Hanna is an independent Herbalife Distributor and may earn income from product purchases. Herbalife products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease. This content is for general wellness and educational purposes only and is not medical advice.