Are You Obesessed About Your Food?
Don't Obsess About Food!
One of the dangers of dieting is the
'diet mentality'. The constant need to weigh, measure, count
and account for food that most dieters feel can become an
obsession with food that comes close to that experienced by
someone with an eating disorder. Is it possible to lose weight
without becoming obsessed with food?
Dr. David Katz, author of "The Way to Eat", suggests a
better way. While it's important to balance the calories you
eat with the calories you burn, he says, it's not necessary to
obsess about food by counting every calorie. Instead, he
suggests, focus on eating well for your health and permanent
weight loss will follow.
Dr. Katz's suggestions include replacing highly processed
foods which contain added sugar, fat, starch and salt with more
wholesome foods with short ingredient lists. Avoid foods with
added 'flavor enhancers' like monosodium glutamate and high
fructose corn syrup which tend to stimulate the appetite and
make you want to eat even more.
Instead, focus on healthier alternatives within food groups.
That's far easier to do than you'd think. A simple change in
your diet like replacing the light cream in your coffee with
low-fat milk can save you 50 calories per cup. If you drink a
lot of coffee, that could add up to a substantial lowering in
your overall daily calorie intake - with the added bonus of
giving you all the calcium and vitamin D you usually get with
less than half the fat.
But, you say, you just can't drink your coffee with skim
milk? That's fine, too. We all have little luxuries that we
think we can't live without. Take a few minutes to
analyze your diet and figure out which things you just can't
give up - then make adjustments in other areas to account for
them. Can't live without cream in your coffee? Skip the muffin
you usually have with it, or replace the butter you use on it
with a low-fat margarine substitute. Eating healthy is about
choices - not obsession.
Here are some other suggestions to help you stop obsessing
about calories and start eating healthier:
1. Toss out sugared breakfast cereals in favor of a
whole-grain cereal that has little or no added sugar and drop a
few berries into your bowl instead.
2. Switch to an all natural, no additive pea
nut butter instead of a highly
processed one that contains added sugar and oils for
stabilization.
3. Keep a baggie of dried fruit in your desk drawer for a
high-potassium pick-me-up at mid-morning. You'll be far less
inclined to overeat at lunch - and you won't find yourself
yawning at 11 A.M.
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