Simplicity - POSTED ON: Aug 29, 2011
With regard to weight management, simplicity is a virtue. Research exists indicating that those who are successful at weight-loss tend to focus on fewer rules than those who fail in their weight-loss efforts. It wouldn’t matter how simple or complicated the rules were, if there were truly only one right way to eat for weight-management. You would just have to do it.
But in fact, there are many different kinds of healthy diets. Vegetarian, Mediterranean, low-calorie, low-fat, “primitive”, low-carb, and various other diets have been validated by scientific research.
However, it’s not only the food that matters. How we perceive the dietary rules we live by is also important. So, we need to just choose one and start. It doesn’t even have to be an official “diet”. Some of the most successful dieters…meaning those who have maintained a weight loss of at least 30 pounds for at least one year… don’t follow a formal diet plan. Instead they establish a handful of their own rules, and work to follow them consistently. Weight management is difficult for most of us, no matter what. It requires resisting some “fattening” foods we like, while also resisting the urge to overeat “healthy” foods. Nothing can be done about these requirements.
However, it isn’t necessary to make weight management any more difficult than it has to be, by forcing oneself into a complicated diet. We can choose to keep it simple.
My latest recipe video, Chinese Chicken Salad, is located here at DietHobby in RECIPES, Mealtime.
Snack Foods - POSTED ON: Aug 26, 2011
Recently I discovered the Paleo writings of J Stantion, and am in the process of reading some of his articles. His position on snack foods is interesting, and very on point. He says:
The Magic Of Snacks: Taste Without Nutrition "Just as a movie set’s only constraint is to look good for a few seconds from a limited set of camera angles, a snack food’s only constraint is to taste good until it slides down your throat. And that’s what technology allows us to do: create products (“snacks”) that tickle our taste receptors far more than real food can ever hope to—but that don’t come with the nutrition that selected us to crave those tastes in the first place. This is the reason that the concept “eat whole foods, minimally processed” is generally sound: if whole foods taste good to us, it’s most likely because they contain nutrients we need, not because they’ve been engineered to tickle our taste buds. (Note that all modern fruits are heavily engineered products of thousands of years of careful breeding: read Dan Koeppel’s fascinating book “Banana” for a look at one typical example.)"
This seems to hit the nail on the head.
Not a Bed of Roses - POSTED ON: Aug 25, 2011
Busy day, not much to say, except sometimes Life is not a Bed of Roses. But ... I'll bet you already knew that.
Binge Eating - POSTED ON: Aug 24, 2011
In my opinion, while the action of binge eating does cause physiological stress (body pain), The psychological stress (mental pain) involved with binge eating comes from the self-berating that many people abuse themselves with.
Some people think that ‘self-sabotage” and self-punishment is the cause of binge eating. Some blame the nagging and berating voice in their head as the “saboteur” that causes them to binge.
However, perhaps it is the food itself; an excess love of food… a personal desire for the taste and for the feeling of full-ness that is sometimes the true culprit.
I've had a lifetime of binge eating. 20 years of professional Therapy didn't resolve the activity, however, it DID get rid of the "nagging and berating voice in the head".
I’ve come to a personal conclusion that it doesn’t much matter what each individual CAUSE of binge eating is because most of the circumstances around me aren’t under my control. Good things happen. Bad things happen. Strong feelings make me want to eat. Period.
I am aware of this, and I work not to follow those desires. Sometimes I still Binge. . in that I engage in emotional eating to excess.. However, it not a form of "self-punishment", and I don't hate myself for it.
My bingeing behavior is always going to part of me, lurking in the background. I have learned to Accept
* that, to date, I have done all I can to fix the problem; * that I'll continue to work to resolve it as much as I can; * that this behavior is sometimes part of who I am; and * that I'm still okay even when I make that behavior choice.
What Do you Say To Yourself? - POSTED ON: Aug 20, 2011
Sometimes we are own worst enemy. We can choose to build ourselves up with encouragement and motivational thoughts, or tear ourselves apart for a perceived failure or mistake which limits our ability to move forward.
Do you say things about yourself that you wouldn’t say out loud to a friend?
I am choosing to consider myself worthy and capable, and working to build hope and courage in my life which helps me to pursue my goals.
We can use our words to help encourage and motivate ourselves. If you want to start a daily practice of working to fill your mind with positive thoughts, perhaps it will help you to frequently run the following playlist which automatically plays my positive sayings back-to-back. It contains about 10 minutes of short videos but, if you choose, you can watch only a little bit of it. To run the Playlist of positive sayings, click HERE.
For those who are following my “Ask Grandma” videos click to see my latest one: “How Much Is Enough” which is located in DietHobby under RESOURCES, Videos, Ask Grandma.
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