Thanks ladies! I'm enjoying my beautiful surroundings myself.. Can you blame me for rather taking my cardio outside than in the gym after having seen the scenery.

Here comes my wisdom for today:
It's easy to ignore what you don't know. It's hard to ignore what you do know.
When I learn about nutrition, it's that much harder to eat wrong. When I learn about the effects of exercise, it's that much harder not to do it.
When I count my nutrients and calories, I'm suddenly very reluctant to eat above my calorie limit or below my nutrient goal. When I don't count, I don't know so it won't bother me much to eat whatever.
When I don't think how I've exercised (or not) today, it doesn't bother me to be stationary all day. When I set a goal to get some form of exercise every day, it really starts to bug me if I don't get to that goal.
Since both nutrition and exercise affect my health in long term, the immediate results seldom are enough to guide my actions. It takes intellectual decisions instead of doing how I feel to get these things right. And hopefully, in years to come these good habits will replace the old, not so good habits. Before that happens, I need to keep making informed decisions instead of intuitive ones.
The information is also supposed to keep the panic at bay. When the scales don't budge for three weeks, I'm getting my happy attitude from the knowledge that I'm doing everything right. When the number finally changes for the better, it's time for cheers, when it doesn't, it's easy to figure out, possibly with the help of a professional, where I went wrong, since I know exactly what I did the past three weeks.
Needless to say, I'm going back to calculating and writing everything down now that I finally have the time again. They say curiosity killed the cat, but I say curiosity is what's going to keep this cat alive!

Julie