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Showing posts with label Diet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Diet. Show all posts

Eat Less Now To Pig Out Later?

Eat Less Now To Pig Out Later?
Assume you're on an eating routine and you host a meal or an occasion gathering coming up. You're anticipating that a major supper should be served for supper, and there will be free drinks with parcels and loads of "gathering snacks." You're not certain if there will be any sound sustenance there, however you are certain that will be in a happy, celebrating disposition! What would it be a good idea for you to do? Should you decrease your sustenance prior in the day to make space for the huge banquet?

What I’ve just described is commonly known as "banking calories," which is analogous to saving calories like money because you're going to consume more later, and it’s a very common practice among dieters. If you’re really serious about your diet and fitness goals however, then the answer is no, you should NOT “bank calories! Here's why and here's what you should do instead:

First of all, if you're being really honest with yourself, you have to agree that there's almost always something healthy to eat at any gathering. You know those tables you see at holiday parties that are covered with yards of chips, dips, pretzels, cookies, salami, candies, cheese, punch, liquor, and a seemingly endless assortment of other goodies? Well, did you also notice that there's usually a tray full of carrot sticks, cauliflower, celery, fruit, turkey breast and other healthy snacks too?


No matter where you are, you always have options, so make the best choice you can based on whatever your options are. If nothing else, you can choose to eat a small portion of "party foods" rather than a huge portion.

If you skip meals or eat less earlier in the day to bank calories for a big feast at night, you are thinking only in terms of calories, but yo’re depriving yourself of the valuable nutrition you need all day long in terms of protein (amino acids), carbohydrates, essential fats, vitamins, minerals and other nutrients that come from healthy food, as well as the small frequent meals required to stoke the furnace of your metabolism.

Not only that, but eating less early in the day in anticipation for overeating later is more likely to increase your appetite, causing you to binge or eat much more than you thought you would at night when the banquet does arrive.

Eating healthy food earlier in the day is likely to fill you up and you'll be less likely to overeat in the evening. High fiber foods, healthy fats and especially lean protein, tend to suppress your appetite the most.
I don’t like the concept of "banking calories." Your body just doesn't work that way - it tends to seek equilibrium by adjusting your appetite to the point where you consume the same total amount of calories in the end anyway.

Even if it worked the way you wanted it to, why would you eat less (starve) in an attempt to burn more fat, then overeat (binge) and put the fat right back on? Why allow yourself to put on fat in the first place?
A starving and bingeing pattern will almost certainly cause more damage than an occasional oversize meal. Some dieticians might even say that this kind of behavior borders on disordered eating.
A better approach is to stay on your regular menu of healthy foods and small meals through the entire day - business as usual - and then go ahead and treat yourself to a "cheat meal," but sure to keep your portions small.

It should be a big relief to know that on special occasions, whether it's a party, restaurant meal, banquet or holiday dinner, you can eat whatever you want with little or no ill effect on body composition, as long as you respect the law of calorie balance. However, you CANNOT starve and binge and expect not to reap negative consequences.

To burn fat and be healthy, you don't have to be a "party pooper" or completely deny yourself of foods you enjoy, but you do need to have the discipline to stick with your regular meal plan most of the time and control your portion sizes all of the time.

7 Simple Tips to Help Fulfill Your Weight Loss Resolutions

7 Simple Tips to Help Fulfill Your Weight Loss Resolutions
Yes, it's that time once more.

How can it be that each time Jan first comes around, everybody begins to consider their new resolutions for the year? On the other hand maybe "new" isn't the right word - maybe "reused" is more well-suited? All things considered, would it say it isn't genuine that for a great many people, "resolutions are made to be broken?"

Objectives are a magnificent approach to rouse us towards getting the things in life that we need, however usually, they just wind up unattained and we get disappointed (once more) toward the end of the year.

In any case, it doesn't need to be so.

Truly.


You can accomplish your objectives or resolutions, yet just IF you know how to set them up accurately in any case. Also, I'll give you a couple of valuable pointers to help you begin progressing nicely...

- Begin considering the end. What's the final result you need to accomplish? Would you like to get in shape? Then again would you like to drop 1 dress size?

- Get particular and be reasonable. It's insufficient to simply say "I need to get thinner." How much would you like to lose _exactly_? By when? A superior objective is to say "I need to lose 11 pounds in 3 months." And ensure your objective is sensible. On the off chance that you need to drop 27 pounds, it's not reasonable to say you need to do that inside the following 7 days, also that it's not beneficial! Then again on the off chance that you've been putting on the weight gradually in the course of the most recent 10 years, it's not exactly sensible to say you need to do a reversal to your weight 10 years back inside a month.

- Break it down into littler and less demanding "small steps." Let's say you need to lose 20 pounds. That appears like an outlandish errand, however it gets to be simpler to oversee on the off chance that you take a gander at it as losing a normal of 1 pound for each week, over a course of 20 weeks. Since's reasonable! For you to lose a pound a week, you just need to make a calorie shortfall of around 500 calories for each day by controlling your eating regimen and expanding your measure of activities.

- Okay, now for the huge "mystery" - the missing key to accomplishing your objectives: Write down your "Why" i.e. what are you doing this for? The vast majority avoid this progression, and it's an essential motivation behind why they never appear to accomplish their objectives. It's totally basic for you to record the reasons why you need to accomplish every particular objective. For instance, if the objective is to "lose 20 pounds in 6 months," record why you need to lose that weight. What's more, here's another tip: Make it "individual and passionate." The more "enthusiastic" the reason, the more probable you'll be driven towards the objective. Along these lines, suppose you have children. A case of a decent "motivation behind why" is "I know being overweight is a main source of numerous wellbeing issues - I will lose the 20 pounds and get more beneficial with the goal that I won't be a weight to my kids, and have the capacity to stay solid sufficiently long to go to my little girl's wedding and be there to convey my grandchildren." A ssuming every one of these things are imperative to you, obviously. :- ) But I'm certain you get the photo.

- "Record it and put it up!" It's typically not adequate to simply think about the objectives in your mind. You have to record all your particular objectives and the "reasons why," and after that glue it up where you will take a gander at it consistently. Try not to record it on a note pad and throw that inside the drawer. Rather, glue it up on your dressing table mirror, or anyplace else that is on display. Keep in mind, "out of the picture, therefore irrelevant!"

- Do not be excessively goal-oriented. Go for lost 1-2 pounds for each week, at the maximum! Losing more than that sum is awful for you. What's more, it'll most presumably be brought about by lost water and/or muscle, instead of your undesirable abundance muscle to fat quotients.

- Be sensible and "accept circumstances for what they are." The pounds didn't go ahead overnight, so don't anticipate that them will vanish in a jiffy as well. Furthermore, now and then the weight reduction isn't as quick (or as much) as arranged. Be that as it may, don't get worried, in light of the fact that stretch will just extra the pounds. It's imperative that you don't think about the weight reduction process as "win or bust." Instead, consider it "gradually yet unquestionably." The weight may go up a little now and then, yet in the event that you adhere to your arrangement, despite everything you'll be enchanted toward the end of the year!

Utilize these basic strides and have a constructive outcome to your life this year! Good luck!

"Cookie Cutter" Low Carb Diet Plans Explaine

"Cookie Cutter" Low Carb Diet Plans Explaine
Most diet plans, including low carb diet plans are best taken with a grain of salt, because although one may work for your best friend, it may not work for you. For those with serious weight problems and have co-existing issues such as hyperglycaemia (high blood sugar levels) or like some of us hypoglycaemia (low blood sugar levels) etc., the popular diet plans usually will not be able to cater to individual needs. We are all individuals and as such we need to feed ourselves as individuals, having said this some diet plans will be more beneficial for the general population that others. 

To assess which particular diet plan will be beneficial, you can follow these guidelines. They are very much common sense points, and provide a good framework which many nutrition professionals would broadly follow, and within which you can divide the scammy diet plans from those that can offer you safe and healthy diet ideas.

Diet offers sufficient balance and a variety of carbohydrates, protein and fats.
Diet does not exclude one particular food group, and encourage excessive consumption of another.
Diet encourages exercise to complement sensible eating habits.
Diet encourages awareness of portion sizes.
Diet does not encourage unrealistic quick weight loss.
Diet is backed up with medical research data.
In addition to these points, I've broadly outlined the low carb diet plans, which seem to be occupying the minds of dieters and researchers alike, as well as the research for and against pertinent to the low carb diet plans.


A lot of the diet plans these days center around the low carb diet plans. These low carb diet plans are considered by some diet fads, others consider it the new wave in healthy eating. Diets such as The New Atkins Diet Revolution maintain that obese people are insulin sensitive and carbohydrates make them gain weight. Low carb diet plans such as The Zone lay down specific proportion of carbohydrates, protein and fats that should be consumed in order to lose weight and while fats are reduced, the main source of energy comes from the consumption of protein. 

Low carb diet plans such as Sugar Busters, believe that sugar is your body’s most heinous weight loss enemy and since carbohydrates are the foods that are processed into sugars – carbohydrates should be limited. The Scarsdale Diet also is a low carb, high protein diet and offers a 2 week crash dieting plan. 

Popular diets such as the South Beach Diet and the Carbohydrate Addicts Diet are also low carb diet plans that have become popular with dieters who have tried and failed at the Atkins diet. All these diets see themselves as the worlds answer to the obesity problem. 

To be fair, there are significant and many research papers that support and argue against the low carb revolution, as yet the wider medical community has not fully made it’s mind up as to whether the diets are something that is favourable in the long term.

Recent research by Layman et. al., and Saris have found that the low carb and high protein diets provide little benefit to dieters.  Researchers found that when protein was moderately increased and carbohydrates proportionately decreased, insulin levels stabilised but no significant weight was lost.  Saris in his review concluded that it is probable that a low carb, high fat diet will increase the likelihood of weight gain.

While there is a lot of evidence against the low carb philosophy, there is also a lot of evidence to support it.  Research published in May, 2004, found that when patients on a low carb diet were compared with patients on a low fat diet, those patients who had consumed a low carb diet had a greater weight loss, decreased triglyceride levels and increased levels of HDL's - in other words their cholesterol levels had improved.  To put the icing on the cake research has just been published to support the long term efficacy of eating a low carb diet.Despite the evidence to support low carb diet plans, mainstream medicine still does not recommend them.  

The main points of contention with the low carb, high protein diets is that they don’t offer balance and variety and could prove dangerous for people at risk of heart disease. Particularly with low carb diet plans such as the scarsdale diet, they are not realistic and cannot be maintained in the long term causing yo-yo dieting and no one wants that !
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