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Lose Weight With These Simple, Effective Strategies
One of the greatest challenges facing us here in
the US continues to be obesity and general health issues
that are associated with being overweight, which it
seems more and more of our population is these days.
Recent studies confirm that one of the reasons the American
culture has such serious struggles with obesity and
weight control is our inability to figure out when to
stop eating.
In fact, when Americans were contrasted with another
culture that is often touted for having one of the lowest
obesity rates as well as less health issues associated
with being overweight, the French, it was found that
the French respond to different cues that tell them
when to stop eating than Americans do.
Americans cited outside factors many times to determine
when they were finished eating, whereas the French who
were questioned cited internal cues, from their bodies,
to determine when to stop eating.
Americans cited things like when their television show
was over, or when their plate was empty, or everyone
else was done eating, while the French commonly cited
their cue as their level of satiety, whether they were
full or not, and also whether they felt they needed
to continue eating.
It is clear that listening to internal rather than
external cues dramatically increases the likelihood
that one will stop eating when their body has signaled
it has had adequate "fuel" for the time being.
As you can see, those who felt more influenced by
their external environments were more likely to keep
chomping away, even if their bodies felt totally satisfied.
It may also be that the different groups pace their
eating differently. I, as an American, notice quite
a few people who seem to eat very quickly, and this
can really sabotage anyone's attempts at weight control
or weight loss.
Why? Well, because if you are eating at a pace faster
than your body can signal the brain that it is full,
you've passed your window of opportunity to stop eating
while you're actually satiated, and you will continue
to eat past that point.
Yep, that's the all too common occurrence we get
where you feel like you're busting at the seams from
overeating. You've most likely either taken too little
time to eat and not given your brain enough time to
catch up, or you've ignored your "full" cues
and kept on going.
I've done it many times myself, and often wonder
what possessed me to keep eating beyond the point at
which I felt "full". Perhaps it was because
the food just tasted too good, or, if I dug down even
further, there is usually some external cues that are
going on that influenced me.
Take for example Thanksgiving dinners and other settings
where the American culture has made it almost "expected"
that you stuff yourself silly. You may actually feel
that it is abnormal to stop eating when satisfied in
certain social situations, and those thought processes
are precisely why our nation has a very hard time with
controlling our weight.
Some of the best advice I ever got was to chew my
food completely, and to make sure I savor and enjoy
every bite. I was taught by example, thankfully,
by my mother, who always ate very slowly, and who also
incidentally happens to still be very trim in her mid
fifties thanks to her common sense approach to eating.
I learned to eat slowly and enjoy the food, instead
of "inhaling" it as some people would say.
I feel this has greatly improved my weight control abilities
because I notice that I'm much more attuned to when
my body tells me it has had enough. I may not have cleaned
my plate, but who cares if they are just excess calories
my body will store as fat anyways?
Another good piece of advice is to use smaller plates,
this way we are not filling up a larger plate, and
that subconscious thought that we should clean our plates
won't sabotage our diets and make us eat larger amounts
due to larger plates and servings.
If you're really watching what you eat and want
to control your portions, I have heard the suggestion
that taking a teaspoon full of fiber may help you to
eat less when taken about a half hour before a meal.
The fiber will expand in the stomach, leaving less
room for food, and making you feel full faster, and
consequently lowering your caloric intake. Many people
say this is their favorite diet trick because it fools
them into eating less.
You may want to avoid sugar substitutes in your
diet. While this may seem counterintuitive, there is
a lot of emerging evidence that sugar substitutes actually
make us eat more in the long run because they do not
satisfy our natural sugar cravings, they in fact increase
our cravings for sugars and carbs.
Last but not least, try very hard not to watch your
television while eating. There are numerous studies
that show that people eat a lot more while sitting in
front of their television than if they are sitting at
the dinner table, because they are more likely to ignore
their internal cues that they are full or satisfied.
So, sit at the table and have some good conversation
at your next meal time. This creates a definite, set
aside time for eating, which will help train you to
listen to your internal cues better. Because it most
likely will include conversation, it will also increase
the time you have you mouth full, and give your brain
more time to catch up with the cues being sent from
the stomach.
Author: Danna Schneider
Danna Schneider is the founder of a popular online
source for dieting and weight loss, including this which
is a review of a 12 hour hunger suppressing diet patch
http://www.dietingmagazine.com/transdermal-diet-patches.html
. She also founded http://www.fitnessnewsmagazine.com
, an online help site dedicated to reviews of exercise
equipment, the latest offerings and breakthroughs in
physical fitness, and workouts and more.
Keywords : lose, weight, over, eating, eat, stop,
full, appetite, tips, tricks, loss, portion, control
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