In our apparently endless quest to shed our too, too solid flesh, we seek help from the diet gurus who populate the afternoon talk shows, the monthly magazines, the tabloids, and the endless infomercials. We scan the latest diet program and research reports on a never-ending quest for the secret ingredient that will inexorably melt that fat while giving us guilt-free pleasure. We may yell "Fire!" for help, but what we really want is chocolate.
And now they've given it to us. Without cheating on our diets or lying to our inner selves, we can now honestly quote recent scientific reports that declare that certain properties of dark chocolate are good for us. What a triumph! Godiva and Nestle and Hershey and Cadbury are not our enemies after all. Their decadent morsels are the dietary equivalent of a work-out - something we do to make us healthy and slender. As Woody Allen promised in "Sleeper," science has finally proved that junk food is good for us. It is a dieter's dream, an incredible fantasy transforming diet horrors into orgies of satisfaction.
Wake up and smell the (black, unsweetened) coffee! Does chocolate have a place in a healthy, well-balanced diet? Possibly. Does it merit inclusion in any serious weight loss program? Absolutely no. The key to any of the hundreds of diets out there is to increase activity and reduce the number of calories. No matter what kind of healthful substances it may contain, chocolate carries far too dense a calorie load to be included in any weight loss plan that can expect to have a modicum of success.
We weight watchers are so gullible, so naive, so desperate for relief from the drudgery and boring routine of a diet, that we clutch at any straw that promises an interruption to our misery. We embrace any concept or substance that will make us human again. We erase our guilt with the sure knowledge that we are only following the dictates of objective science.
A co-worker of mine bakes a variety of goodies and brings them in to sell to staff as a side business. She proudly informs her potential customers that she only uses dark chocolate which has been proven to be healthy. The gang goes wild, weekly buying her entire stock of cake and cookies. Munching down on their thousand calorie snacks, they positively purr with satisfaction that what they are eating is healthy and nutritious.
A voice in the wilderness, I remind them that healthy snacks like vegetables or fruit would confer the same benefits but would also avoid that insidious waistline bulge. Happy tubbies all, they assure me that I am not up-to-date on my knowledge of nutrition and that eating dark chocolate is a proven road to health and I should hop to it.
I look around me at women considerably younger than I am, ranging from pleasantly plump to obese. (Okay, there are one or two skinnies who eat anything they want but they are the rare exceptions in any group, even though the objects of all our envy). It is hard to reconcile the sight of a rotund woman, eyes closed in ecstasy, cheeks bulging, with the concept of optimum weight and health.
What are we doing? We are fooling ourselves yet again. We have convinced ourselves that as long as something we eat has some redeeming nutritional value, it's okay for us to eat it. We conveniently "forget" about the energy-in/energy-out equation that is the basis for stable and healthy weight. We assiduously avoid our secret internal recognition that what a skinny or normal weight can enjoy occasionally, we on weight loss programs can not. We assure ourselves that indulgences are necessary to keep up our morale and help us stay on our diets.
What diet? Any weight loss plan that promises us that we can eat all we want (and we want a lot) of any particular food, and never feel a pang of hunger, is, quite simply, a scam. Restricting our intake of food necessarily means that we can't keep eating the way we have in the past - remember, that's what got us fat in the first place.
Losing weight is tough, boring, frustrating and generally devoid of much pleasure. For the few seconds of elation we feel when we step on the scale and detect a definite loss, we must endure hours and days of refusing what we would like in order to do what we must to reach our goal.
Chocolate, like any food that excites and obsesses us, holds the seeds of our weight control destruction within it. Unlike so many foods we can avoid without a backward glance, it carries a toxic temptation that haunts our dreams, crushes our willpower, and murders our unceasing efforts to control our own appetites. It offers the promise of heaven: pure satisfaction for the pleasure centers of our brain.
It is a powerful weapon that we touch dangerously. It is almost impossible to handle it safely - one bite and the restraints fall off. Our taste buds, our tongues, our neurotransmitters, and our very being, all cry out for more. Like the junkies we are, we beg for one more fix.
It is impossible for an alcoholic to stop after the first drink, unthinkable for a meth head to walk away while crystals are still available, out of the question for a compulsive gambler to leave the table while there are still chips to play. For the true overeater, one taste of the sweet, smooth confection is a diet death sentence.
The only way we tortured weight control freaks can handle it is through total abstinence. One day at a time, we must fight the urge for one taste, one morsel, one shaved corner of a forbidden bar. The longer we can avoid the taste, the more its memory will fade but, like the addict, we will never totally eliminate the cravings and must constantly guard against relapse.
Substituting a low calorie chocolate alternative is tantamount to starting a methadone maintenance program - we no longer get high (gain weight) but we need a constant dosage to maintain a sense of well-being. As long as the taste of chocolate is a fresh and vivid memory, even if a low calorie version is used, the lure of the precious stuff remains and will eventually overwhelm our "no" power and lead to the dread of all we yo-yo overweighters: diet suicide.
Many people do not understand the essence of natural weight loss with eating only the amount they need for the amount of physical activity they perform. Unfortunately, the number of overweight American citizens is on the increase. Once you are overweight, you usually want to lose weight for a whole lot of reasons, some related to health, others having to do with looks. Research shows that wearing a pedometer each day really helps people to get more exercise and therefore either maintain or lose weight.
The truth is maintaining your weight is easier than losing those excess pounds and the heavier you become the harder it is to lose the weight. One thing we all know, is that weight gain is going to happen if we do not take steps to control it.
If you have lost weight with a calorie controlled diet and you are not increasing your activity, it won't take long for you to revert back to your old eating habits and you will begin to regain your weight. With a growing number of health problems related to weight and obesity, experts suggest following a natural weight loss program.
By taking 1000-2000 more steps each day can make a difference between weight gain, maintaining or losing weight. 2000 extra steps each day may sound like a whole lot at first, but you can spread it out over the day. You can take a stroll during your lunch break, park a little further away when running errands or when you go to work. You can take the steps instead of the elevator or take a walk in the evening around the block with a friend. Once you begin counting your steps with a pedometer, you will find new and creative ways to add more steps to your day.
To start, you will need to first establish how many steps a day you take right now by wearing your pedometer each day for a week and recording your daily steps. After a week add all the steps together and then divide by 7. This will give you your average daily steps. You can then see how many more steps you can add each day.
Maintaining a natural weight loss program means sticking to low fat meals that are high in fiber and contain complex carbohydrates with a moderate amount of protein. Manufacturers know that there is a huge market for low-fat or even fat-free products, but the propensity and popularity of these foods are not lowering the average weight of the nation.
What people fail to understand is that it's not just the fat in their food that is making them gain weight, it's the quantity of food they consume and caloric content of it. What happens is that overweight people think that if it's fat free they can eat more of it.
When to eat and how often can be a contentious subject. The latest thoughts suggest that keeping to regular meal times, eating low fat foods, and eating small nutritious snacks between meals may be the answer. Therefore, maintaining a healthy weight is just that; a natural weight loss program, with a low fat diet and increasing your activity, can help you to live a long healthy life.
Both Virginia Bola & D. Selanders 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.
Virginia Bola has sinced written about articles on various topics from Employment, Lose Weight and Interview Questions. Dr. Bola is a psychologist and an admitted diet fanatic, specializing in therapeutic reframing and the