5 Tips for Healthier Eating Steve Edwards Healthy - TopicsExpress



          

5 Tips for Healthier Eating Steve Edwards Healthy BreakfastAlmost everywhere we go were reminded that we need to eat better. We cant take a trip to the grocery store, read the paper, or browse the Internet without being reminded that were getting fatter and less healthy, and how we need to change our dietary habits. Along with this obvious information, were also given a smorgasbord of options that all promise to turn the tide on the obesity epidemic. Some of these are reasonable, but most are marketing gimmicks that are often expensive, rarely effective, and sometimes border on the bizarre. Below, we offer five simple, traditional, money-saving, and effective ways to take control of your diet. Enjoying a MealEat slow. As more and more daily activities get heaped on our plates, we tend to get bogged down and do everything in a rush. Learning to eat slower will help make each meal an experience. And the more that eating is an experience, the higher the likelihood that youll want to make it pleasant. One of the effects of eating slower is that youll tend to make better food choices. Furthermore, the slower you eat, the better chance youll have of not overeating. Your body registers when its full fairly quickly, but weve become a society of speed eaters who inhale far too many calories—before our natural responses even have time to take effect. Eating just a bit slower can be enough to allow your brain to feed you healthy signals. Also, chewing your food thoroughly has two additional benefits. For one, youll taste your food better. Therefore, if youre making better food choices, it will heighten the pleasure of the meal. It also aids your digestion process. Well-chewed food puts less stress on your body to break it down and, hence, youll feel more energized following your meal. How slow is slow? A study done at the University of Rhode Island showed that those who chewed their food thoroughly ate less in 29 minutes than those who chewed their food slowly ate in 9 minutes. So you can still slow down and have plenty of time to enjoy your lunch hour. Wine with a MealDrink less during meals. Most of us are aware that we dont drink enough water (more on this later), but meals are not the place to catch up. Liquid dilutes your stomach acids, which can counteract some of the work youve done following step one. Furthermore, washing down your food is exactly the opposite of what you want to be doing with your calories. The less you drink while eating, the more effective your meal will be. How we became a society that quaffs large quantities of liquid while eating is a bit of a mystery. No other animals do it naturally, so its most likely an effect of advertising. Not much can be worse for you than combining hamburger, fries, and a Coke, which some ads offer up as the pinnacle of a manly meal. Water alone, which is healthy, dilutes your stomach acids and should be limited, but coupling your meal with soda—even diet soda—is just plain awful. Not only does soda contain calories, it also contains phosphates and acids that change your stomachs ability to digest the food youre eating. Not to mention that they are all overly sweet, which interferes with your ability to savor the flavor of natural foods and negatively impacts your enjoyment of the meal. Theres probably a lot more rationale behind the fact that wine has been the meal accoutrement in most cultures. It tends to enhance the flavor of foods but, more importantly, its generally consumed in small quantities. A four-ounce glass of wine is plenty to wash down most any meal, and thats all the liquid you need. WaterDrink more water (except during meals). As weve stated time and time again, plain water is incredibly good for you and most of us dont drink enough of it. Beginning each day with a large glass of water is one of the best practices to turn into a ritual. This step alone both helps hydrate you for the day and can instill a habitual response for wanting to drink more water as you become dehydrated. Staying hydrated affects almost every aspect of your life. It makes you less hungry, so its one of the best weight loss tricks you can do. You cause less cellular damage, so youll function better on almost every level. Youll be more energized, think better, work out more effectively, and recover from workouts and stress quicker, and your skin will stay supple and young-looking. How much water you need varies, but most of us should drink six to eight or so eight-ounce glasses of it a day. This is, of course, highly variable, which is based on temperature, activity level, and the rest of your diet. A diet that is filled with natural foods that contain water—like fruits and veggies—will require that you drink less water, whereas the standard American junk diet of fast convenient foods, sugar, and fatty meats will require that you drink more. Do keep in mind that, while unlikely, you can drink too much plain water. This is mainly a concern if youre exercising a lot. Plain water dilutes your body salts—electrolytes—and excessive diluted amounts can cause a condition called hyponatremia. However, most of us consume far too much salt in our diets, making this diluting effect a positive one. For a normal person, hyponatremia isnt a concern unless youre drinking in excess of a gallon of water per day. FruitEat more fruit. Most of us dont eat enough fruit. Fruits offer us not only an abundance of fiber, water, vitamins, and minerals but also bioflavonoids, which protect our blood vessels, as well as provide well-documented antioxidant benefits. Fruit has gotten a bit of a bad rap lately because of its high sugar content, but even people with diabetes may eat three to five servings of fruit a day. The sugar contents of plain sugar, honey, candy, sweets, sodas, etc., are basically empty calories. Replacing your standard sweets with fruit is probably the best dietary swap you can make. Fruits sugar content is often exaggerated. For example, lets look at the sugar content of some raw fruits. Fruit (100 grams) Percent Sugar Banana 19.6 Raisin 14.2 Apple 11.0 Pineapple 10.6 Grapes 9.3 Peach 7.5 Cantaloupe 6.5 Grapefruit 5.2 Strawberry 4.5 Watermelon 3.2 Furthermore, natural raw fruit fructose sugar is sparse, not dense, making its calorie impact limited. It is metabolized through the liver, and there, it is generally converted into liver glycogen stores. Since raw fruits offer fiber, fluids, vitamins, and minerals that start on the acidic side but degenerate within digestive straits toward alkaline-ash metabolites, they are regarded as the healthiest appetite-suppressing whole-food snacks you can choose. Hip Hop Abs®Change your focus. Instead of focusing on the junky foods you shouldnt eat, try focusing on the foods you should eat. The easiest way to do this is to focus on what these foods can do for you and how they will make you feel. This can take a little practice because our natural tendency is to let our mind slide into craving mode. But by learning to crave performance from your body, your mind will naturally begin to crave foods that make this happen. The easiest way to begin this change is by focusing on how your workout feels when youve eaten well and how it feels when youve eaten poorly—can you Tilt, Tuck & Tighten with Shaun T or Turbo Jam® with Chalene Johnson without getting exhausted? At no time will your mindset desire to create good habits than when being put under the duress of exercise. This is the time to reference those chili-cheese fries you had at lunch or the cake you ate at a coworkers going-away party. Nothing creates cravings for plain whole foods like referencing how your body is feeling during the 45th minute of P90X® Plyo.
Posted on: Wed, 30 Oct 2013 19:30:00 +0000

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