Mindful eating and keeping weight off
Reason Magazine - Secrets of Weight Loss Revealed!
This review of two recent diet books underscores what most of us already know all too well: while it’s easy enough to drop a few pounds for a short while, it’s nearly impossible to lose a lot of weight for a long time.
What caught my attention for anyone wishing to apply some fancy book-learning directly to the affected area was this chunk of insight on eating mindfully – alongside a smart bit of life-hacky weight loss advice:
Wansink’s overarching point is that, when it comes to food, we’re not paying attention. “It takes up to 20 minutes for our body and brain to signal satiation,” he notes, and Americans often finish their meals in less time than that. Instead of internal signals we rely on external cues to tell us when we’re done: Is the plate clean? Is everyone else done? Is there more in the serving dish?
To counteract such cues, Wansink recommends such tactics as using smaller plates (which make portions seem larger), keeping serving dishes in the kitchen (which discourages second helpings), replacing short, wide glasses with tall, thin ones (which make drinks seem bigger), keeping food scraps and bones on your plate (which reminds you how much you’ve eaten), and dividing snacks from big packages into smaller bags or plastic containers (which discourages you from devouring the entire package).
I’m also a big-fan of guesstimating portion with real-world objects. Although, candidly, the last time I ate beef, it was less like a deck of cards and more like the whole blackjack shoe.
[via: Arts & Letters Daily]
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Not only how much, but what
As important as how much you eat is what you eat. Many people turn to salads and other “healthy” foods. But the dressings they use are mostly water and high fructose corn syrup (HFC). HFC does weird things in a person’s body. Horrible things and contributes greatly to obesity in America. I made some easy dressing recipes for Winepairings, my food blog, last year, which are great and don’t contain anything weird.
Also, cut the soda. Even diet sodas, studies now suggest, can contribute to overeating.