Going on a ?one type of food diets? will not be effective, and such a restricted diet defeats you mentally. Most diets are just too unrealistic for a person's lifestyle. Plus they don't supply enough basic nutritional needs for people to stay with them. Balance is the key and attitude is the key to keeping balance!! I'll say it again, "Balance is the key and attitude is the key to keeping balance!"
How do you look at food? Focus on what's important.
Ask yourself, ?Why do I eat?? Most will say, ?I eat because I have to.? Well, think about it. Do you? If you eat just because you have to, then your choices will be more for taste.
If you ate with the attitude that food was fuel, then how would you eat? You may be more likely to make a quality choice. Your attitude toward food is very important! As far as weight loss goes, it's really more about how you feel and look to yourself. Not about the number of pounds lost, per se. A person can lose 100lbs. and still be unhealthy if proper exercise is lacking, or the weight loss was too rapid, etc. So its not all about "how much" weight a person loses. We have to stop thinking about dieting and focus more on overrall health, which may encompass losing some weight to get to a healthy state.
Pattern of eating
Do you drive the same way to work every day? Do you go to the same grocery store? Do you hang out with the same people most of the time? The same thing is true with your food.
Chances are you eat at the same time, gobble up the same food types and in most cases, you take in roughly the same amount of food on a weekly basis? Your body gets used to eating the same types and same amounts. As in exercise, it is really important to incorporate a variety of foods in our daily eating to keep it off guard, so to speak.
Is the TV your enemy?
Why do you think advertisements are so powerful? They spark something inside of you and immediately you find yourself on autopilot going to the refrigerator or the next fast food joint to get something you don't need. Recognize this so you can make better choices.
How much is enough? Control your portions.
Being aware of how much you eat at one time is very important. Even if you are eating the healthiest of foods constantly, keep in mind that balance is the key. Remember the saying "Too much of a good thing, can be bad". Even though some food may be considered a good food type, an extra hundred or two calories a few times a week adds up. Learn to push away from the table.
Plan Ahead
This may sound like common sense, but with our busy lifestyles, planning meals in advance is far from simple. However, planning is essential.
For most of us all we can do to just keep up with the day's activities, much less cook in advance. It really boils down to time management. If you have good choices in the refrigerator, you will be more likely to eat that food. When healthy foods are unavailable, you will go out of your way to the pantry, pizza parlor, or fast food restaurant for immediate gratification.
In a nut shell:
In some instances what we eat, when we eat it and how much we eat is due to a physiological reaction. However, it could be both emotional and physiological.
Diabetes is at an all-time high in adults and in teenagers. Often, when you wait too long in-between meals, blood sugar levels drop. This is when you may crave foods you normally don't eat.
One very easy practice to take is to try to control your blood sugar levels daily by watching the types, the amounts, and the times that you eat. Eating right has a lot to do with how you look at food, how much you eat and what you eat. Recognize if you have eating patterns. The patterns may be lifestyle, emotional, physically related or all the above. Planning meals and shopping ahead solves a lot of the poor decision making. Learn to push yourself away from the table. YOU WILL EAT TOMORROW!
If you have excessive eating habits, they may be emotionally related. Figure out your bad habits and counteract them.
Plan the week, if possible. You'll make better choices if you have better choices from which to choose.
Keep up with your progress. Make journal entries regarding your eating twice a month with times, types and amounts of food eaten.
Snacking throughout the day on healthy fruits and snacks helps overeating.
This isn't the nature channel where you have to eat until you burst. Eat until "comfortably" full.
Here's a trick: Try eating with your opposite hand. This will help control your portions.
As always, be sensible when it comes to food and your health. Most of weight loss is common sense, unfortunately, we live in a fast food society that doesn't use the common sense that often, especially, in relation to our eating habits.
A University of Missouri researcher studied a specific amount of participants and watched to see what program helped people...
- lose body fat - lose body weight - gain health benefits
These participants stayed with their particular program for 12 weeks.
They only issues I have with this is they didn't say what the fitness group did and they didn't say if the Weight Watchers groups did anything else to help out.
There's only one place to go from here...
The Results:
Steve Ball, assistant professor of exercise physiology in the MU College of Human Environmental Sciences... geezz... how is that for a title?
Anyway, he found that those who participated in the Weight Watchers program had no affect on their body fat percentage. In fact, In a lot of them it went up. The amount of lean body mass these participants had also when down.
The groups that did some fitness program at a gym had very little drop in body weight but did find a decrease in abdominal fat. They also witnessed an increase in lean body mass.
Finally, the weight watchers group had a much higher percentage of participants finish the program because they were part of a support group. The support group provided them the motivation to keep going when things got difficult.
The gym group found that a lot more would give up... in fact Mr. Ball states that on average 50% of people who start at the gym will give up 6 months later. This due to a lack of support and motivation.
All in all...
No wonder the best results would come in doing both the fitness program and the Weight Watcher program in this case. And why is this so?
Weight Watchers is a nutritional program and it proves that if you watch what you eat then you will lose weight. But not all weight is good weight to lose.
Losing weight through nutrition and building muscle through an effective fitness program will...
- raise your metabolism - increase you lean body mass - decrease you body fat - improve you mood - improve you body - and so much more!
There is only one place to go from here. You need both a nutritional program and a solid fitness program. Sure Weight Watchers can work, but you need something. In regards to fitness you need to lift weights... it's just as simple as that.
The support group for motivation is HUGE. Don't sit there hanging by a thread... get involved in The Art of Weight Lifting for both motivation and fast acting fitness programs.
Both Jeff Warner & Dan Boyle are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Jeff Warner has sinced written about articles on various topics from Beauty Tips. Jeff Warner is a health and wellness researcher who is committed to finding the best solutions to weight loss problems to maintain overrall health. LOSE WEIGHT NOW! Discover a new way to shed those pounds and increase energy using the power of apples. Che. Jeff Warner's top article generates over 590 views. to your Favourites.
Dan Boyle has sinced written about articles on various topics from Fitness, Nutrition and Body Building. Dan Boyle is a National Academy of Sports Medicine certified personal trainer. He has been involved in the fitness industry for more than 7 years. If you would like to learn more about support groups and join one, visit. Dan Boyle's top article generates over 4400 views. to your Favourites.