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by author Kathleen Barnes
If your healthy eating program slipped a bit during the holidays, it’s not a reason to beat yourself up. Instead, think about simple ways to get your weight under control and manage it for a lifetime. Weight management does not necessarily include a radical change in diet. All you need to do is decide to change your lifestyle. That, coupled with a little patience and good sense, will get you to your goal. You have probably tried the latest fad diet and maybe you had some short-term success. You cut your calorie and fat intake and you lost weight, but chances are good that it did not stay off. Gradually, the weight crept back on, and before you knew it, you were back where you started from–or perhaps even heavier. So say no to dieting and resolve to eat for health. Many studies show that the key to true long-term weight control is a diet based on a high intake of colourful fruits and vegetables, reasonable portion sizes, and healthy fats, along with a moderate exercise program and modest expectations. I call it the Real Life Diet. It may sound boring. You won’t lose 15 pounds in two days or drop a dress size in your sleep, but you can lose four to six pounds a month–painlessly. That’s the miracle part of the Real Life Diet: You begin to take more care with what you eat, occasionally you indulge, and then you get back on track, taking care to eat well. The point is to create a lifetime of healthy eating habits. Here are four tips for lifetime weight maintenance. Tip 1: High five Nutritionists once told us that we need to eat at least five servings of fruits and vegetables a day. Now they say five should be the minimum and they’ve upped the ante to nine servings a day. Yet a 2005 A.C. Neilson survey showed that only 18 percent of us get the minimal five a day. The truth is that lots and lots of fruits and vegetables will make you feel full and help you lose weight by replacing high-calorie foods. Easy Ways to Get Your Five a Day
Tip 2: Eat the Rainbow While you’re savouring those fruits and vegetables, pay attention to their colour. The ripest, most vitamin- and antioxidant-rich foods are also the most colourful, explains David Heber, MD, in his book What Color Is Your Diet? (Regan Books, 2001). Red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple, and white: Think about eating at least one serving from each colour group every day for optimum health and weight stabilization. Easy Ways to Eat the Rainbow
Tip 3: Look at Your Plate Someone once told me that you should divide your plate into quadrants. Your protein should take up one quadrant, your starch, another quadrant, and your vegetables, the other two quadrants. I can’t remember where that came from, but it’s great advice: half of the volume of food you eat should be vegetables. Easy Ways to Determine Portion Sizes
Kathleen Barnes is author of several natural health books, including 8 Weeks to Vibrant Health, written with Dr. Hyla Cass (McGraw-Hill, 2005). Source: alive #291, January 2007 |
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