Posts Tagged ‘Mindful eating’

How to Stay on Course with Your Diet Plan

Saturday, January 2nd, 2010

The trick with any diet when you have a significant amount of weight to lose is to make the diet so much a part of your life that it becomes a habit. For this reason, the kinds of diet plans that have worked best for me have been diets that involve most of the same foods I eat regularly– just less of it and in balance nutritionally. Some of these ideas were also offered on Dr. Oz’s show this past week to help a woman who needed to lose over 100 lbs.

You may substitute some things in your diet– for example,
>a few water crackers in place of a roll or piece of bread,
>a small piece of 70% or higher dark chocolate instead of that bowl of ice cream,
>a protein shake or a bowl of oatmeal sweetened with stevia for breakfast rather than a sweet roll or sugary dry cereal,
>a smaller baked potato with plain yogurt as a topping, or two green veggies rather than having any high carb veggie or grain for dinner,
>a small piece of lean meat that is broiled or baked rather than fried.

For most people these are small enough changes that after two or three weeks they will just become habit.

Write these healthy ingredients down each week on your shopping list and stick with the list. Don’t be tempted by impulse buying to get a lot of pre-packaged junk foods and snacks. They almost always contain too much fat, sugar and/or salt.

Another idea for staying the course is to eat slowly and mindfully. A psychologist friend of mine calls this “mindful eating.” Savor all the flavors. Eat without other distractions from TV or Internet. When you eat slowly and mindfully you allow time for your stomach to register the fact that it is receiving nutrition and is getting full. If you eat fast and in a distracted way, you tend to eat more because it takes 20 minutes or so for your stomach to register that it is full. To me, this is actually a much harder new habit to acquire than substituting and fixing smaller portions. It involves a real commitment to break the cycle multi-tasking in our busy lives and to pay attention to what we are putting in our mouths as a “main event” rather than just a distraction in our lives. Who knows, making the food the “main event” could just bring your family back together for meals!

Next, eat several small meals per day, not just one or two big ones. If you eat every 2 1/2 to 3 hours throughout the day you keep the brain from telling you that it is deprived. Eat the right kinds of small meals and you will never feel hungry and your body will metabolize your food better. Of course, the same kinds of substitutions as given in the list above should be made, adding things like a handful of almonds, a low fat protein bar or protein shake, celery and other green veggies or a small salad with an olive oil and vinegar dressing.

The diet plans I’ve been most successful with also allow moderate amounts of fruit such as berries and apples and veggies like carrots and tomatoes, and low fat yogurt. There are good plans that disallow fruits, certain veggies and dairy because they tend to spike blood sugar. I would tend to avoid these higher sugar fruits, veggies and dairy for a two or three week reset period for my diet, but then reintroduce them thereafter in moderate levels to use as snacks. Personally, my body is less likely to feel deprived if I have a full range of the food groups available to me as long as I limit my intake of those products that can spike blood sugar.

Exercise is a critical factor in a long term diet plan. This is another one that I personally find hard to work into a habit. When I do, it invariably helps to keep my diet on track with faster and more consistent weight loss and a greater feeling of well-being. Make sure that you have checked with your doctor before starting a physical exercise plan and don’t overdo. Still, you can’t let obesity be your excuse for never getting off the couch! Even if it starts with just a few stretches done while sitting in a chair, you must get more active in order to stimulate the metabolism! As you lose weight and feel more energetic, then get out of the house and take a walk or go to the gym for a light workout at least 3 or 4 days a weeks.

It will take maybe three weeks for any of these changes to become new habits. Once they are set in place, they should all be maintainable long term because they involve only small changes in lifestyle and no sense of being deprived.

Liz Nichols

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Thoughtful Eating

Tuesday, August 19th, 2008

I was talking with one of my health and wellness mastermind group last week, George Shears, who is a psychologist and an expert on the subject of “mindful eating.”  George has done research and led group sessions in a hospital setting on this topic.

George has used the process of mindful living to help people work through many types of issues– stress management and weight control being just a couple of the problem areas that can be analyzed based on this concept.

I hope shortly to interview George on a teleconference to go into greater detail on his tips.  Keep checking this blog for details.

Thoughtful, or mindful eating is the process of taking the time to savor and enjoy what we eat.  It’s also important to examine what is in our foods and supplements so that we know exactly what is going into our bodies.

We are dominated today by the fast food mentality.  Whether we’re physically kind of mindlessly going to the local Burgie fast food joint every day or we’re making quick microwaved meals that come out of the processed food sections of the grocery store, we eat according to a fast food mentality.  Very few people look at the nutrition charts in the fast food restaurant and make intentional choices based on nutritional value and calorie intake.  Likewise, few people look at the nutrition box on the cartons of the frozen and processed foods we buy at the grocery store.

Our food is prepared fast with little thought to nutrition, and it is eaten fast while we ‘re distracted with TV or conversation with friends, or the IPod or a good book or magazine.  We never think about what we are doing whether we’re buying, preparing or eating our food.

No wonder we’re fat! No wonder something like 60% of our adult population is overweight!

George Spears points out that it takes several minutes for the brain to register what we have eaten and to signal fullness to the stomach.  If we gulp everything down fast, we’ll almost automatically eat more than we need to satisfy our need for food.  Slow down!  Enjoy and savor every flavor. Understand how each element of the food we eat fits into our nutritional balance.

If we are mindful about what we eat each day, and our goal is to lose weight, we will lose weight simply by the act of being more mindful.

Liz Nichols

http://www.dietsupplementblog.com

http://dietingwithliz.blogspot.com

 

 

 

 

 

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Mindful Eating Teleconference

Sunday, October 26th, 2008

One of my colleagues, Dr. George Shears, is about to hold a teleconference on the subject

of “mindful eating” and the importance of eating thoughtfully and healthfully throughout life.

The teleconference is sponsored by the Healthy Life Institute.

Here’s the announcement for his session:

What if we could show you a system of eating which was so different from anything else you’ve ever seen, one that would show you a healthy and effective way to lose weight FOREVER?

Forget about your past dieting failures for a moment. You know the ones I’m talking about..the “yo-yo dieting” that progressively destroys your health and makes it virtually impossible to lose weight regardless of what you do?
Just focus on one thought right now……….WHAT IF you could lose weight successfully with no food restrictions and without feeling deprived?
Imagine what it would be like to at an ideal weight ALL THE TIME–so that when a big special event comes along, you don’t have to go on a crash diet.
Okay………get ready to be shown an Eating System which is so unique that you’re going to be anxious to begin immediately.
Well–as unbelievable as it may seem–there’s a “new kid” on the weight loss “block” that can do all of these things for you.
It’s as simple and as powerful as it is unique.
It’s called MINDFUL EATING.
You can be one of the first to learn all about it by getting on our upcoming FREE and LIVE web event entitled:
“MINDFUL EATING–7 WAYS IT CAN HELP YOU TO LOSE WEIGHT FOREVER”
Click here to get more info and register>> Get the Secret

P.S. – If you register now we will give you George’s special report: “MINDFUL EATING–7 WAYS IT CAN HELP YOU TO LOSE WEIGHT FOREVER”

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Thoughtful Eating

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

I was talking with one of my health and wellness mastermind group last week, George Shears, who is a psychologist and an expert on the subject of “mindful eating.”

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