Not Ready for a Diet Program? Try These Simple Things

This article is adapted from Not Ready for A Diet Program?


Yes I agreed that the recommendations:-

Breakfast is Very Important.

Eat 3 Meals A day

Take out the Skin of Chicken Breast
.....

However, I would like to add that

01. Cut of Cheese

02. Eat Low Soldium Food

03. Low On Sugar

04. Use Olive Oil

05. Don't eat Deep Fried Food

06. Cut off BBQ

07. Boil or Steam Vege or Meat

08. Take High Fiber Cereal

09. Drink Filtered Water (Min. 8 Big Glasses A Day)

10. Drink Soup On each Meal


Remember You are What You Eat!!

Only Eat Food That For Great Health!!





Not Ready for a Diet Program? Try These Simple Things
By Susan Woodward Freelance

Name brand diet programs churn out thousands of weight loss success stories every year. But these regimens can be demanding. You have books to read, points to count, spcific food combinations to balance and recipes to follow.

If you're eager to lose weight but not ready to take on a rigorous program, making some simple adjustments to your eating habits can be enough to help you shed unwanted pounds.

Dr. Bill Gavin offers three easy-to-follow rules in his book "No White at Night" (Riverhead Books, $19.99). The Olympia, Washington cardiologist developed the rules after finding that both he and his overweight heart patients had trouble adhering to weight loss programs that required counting calories and weighing food portions.

Gavin's basic rules are that you:

Eat three meals a day. Eating regular meals keeps you from getting hungry and your body from experiencing "intermittent starvation," which in turn promotes storing rather than burning calories. Breakfast is the most important meal. "At any weight loss clinic, 70 percent of those who walk in the door don't eat breakfast," says Gavin. Eat protein at every meal. Unlike high carbohydrate foods that provide quick energy but leave you feeling hungry soon after, high protein foods help ward off hunger between meals—which can keep you from snacking. Lean protein sources Gavin likes to use include meat, fish, turkey, chicken, string cheese, non-fat yogurt, cottage cheese and natural peanut butter. "If you're hungry two hours after a meal you know you didn't get enough protein," he says. Eat "no white at night." "White" refers to rice, potatoes, bread, corn—and includes dessert. Eliminating these high-carb sources is where calorie cutting is achieved, says Gavin. "You have to take some calories out of your diet to lose weight. I take out these starch calories. They're high carbohydrates that are basically converted to sugar and have no real nutritional value."

The heart doctor says that numerous patients and friends have lost weight following the recommendations, including his mother, who dropped 35 pounds and was able to stop using insulin. The book has also received praise from nationally known nutrition expert Walter Willett, chair of the nutrition department at Harvard University.

Exercising portion control

Martha McKittrick says the simplest diet adjustment you can make is — eat less. The registered dietitian on staff at The New York Presbyterian Hospital says that exercising portion control is not easy for many dieters. "A lot of people take an all-or-nothing approach when it comes to putting food on their plate," says McKittrick.

She also says that dieters must have a realistic idea of what they eat. She suggests you keep a food record—writing down what you eat each day. Online dieting services such as fitday.com can make it easy to log what you eat and let you take advantage of the calorie calculating and other tracking features such sites offer. "People don't think they eat that much. But when you start tracking what they eat on a typical day it can be very eye-opening," McKittrick says.

Dieters also need to keep in mind the basic math behind losing weight, McKittrick says. Because a pound of fat contains 3,500 calories, you need to take away 500 calories every day to lose a pound of fat a week. (Or reduce your weight gain by a pound a week.)

McKittrick suggests adding these simple calorie-reducing steps to any diet:

Leave the cheese off your sandwich and lose 200 calories
Use mustard instead of mayonnaise and lose 100 calories
Use fat-free salad dressing instead of regular dressing and lose 100 calories
Drink water (plain, flavored or seltzer) instead of regular sodas and lose 150 calories
Eliminate that second glass of wine in the evening to lose 100 calories
Remove the skin from a cooked chicken breast to lose 100 calories
Switch from a bagel to an English muffin in the morning to lose 200 calories
Switch from a deli tuna salad sandwich to a turkey sandwich to lose 250 calories
Calorie cutters should also be wary of fancy coffee drinks, adds McKittrick. A large mocha frappuccino contains over 400 calories. Premium ice cream is another diet destroyer. Eat sorbet or low-fat frozen yogurt pops instead of a bowl of premium ice cream, she says.


Of course, the other way to take away calories is to burn them off with exercise. McKittrick says combining exercise with calorie-cutting is by far the most effective way to lose weight.



MSN Health & Fitness - Not Ready for a Diet Program? Try These Simple Things

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