Archive for the ‘fiber’ Category

How Do You Handle an Eating/Diet Slip or Binge?

Monday, September 8th, 2008

You had a slip on your diet/eating program; you went on a binge; you ate something off your eating plan.  What do you do?  The course you choose can make a big difference in the progress of your weight loss journey.

Let’s look possible reactions:

Quit the diet. Yes, you could do this.  Isn’t this the way you have reacted in the past?  If you have, then consider this.  Did you set yourself up to fail?  Were you looking for an excuse to quit?  What is going on in your life at the moment?  Are you depressed, disappointed. lonely, angry?  Are there a number of stressful situations in your life?  Is one or more of your hunger craving triggers present?  If so, you need to totally re-think why you started your weight loss journey and revisit your self-image.

Have your reasons for starting the diet been fulfilled?  Have they changed?  Are you now the healthiest you can be?  Will more weight loss make you feel healthier, fitter, increase your self-confidence?

Now is the time to start over – not on the diet, but on the thought process.  Analysis what is going on.  Realize what your normal reactions are, then choose to respondThe definition of crazy is continuing to do the same thing expecting different results. If quitting hasn’t worked in the past, why would you expect it to now?  Think about different ways to respond to the binge trigger.  Remember you are responding to the trigger, not the binge.  People can give you hints and advice on what to do, but only you know what will work best for you ; only you can do it.

Start again  tomorrow or next  week. On the surface this looks like a good idea.  Pick yourself up and start again, making a starting point.  I have just realized that this does not work for me.  If I decided to start again the next day, I continue to binge the rest of that day – eating this and that which I will deprive myself of tomorrow.  Do you see the two pitfalls here?  I give myself an excuse to continue binging plus I use the word deprive which sets the scene for the next binge.  I have to remember that I am not depriving myself, I am choosing not to eat certain types of foods to enable myself to progress towards the goal.  I need to remember that my progress is a series of choices, not a list of deprivations.

Start again immediately. Now we are on track.  What do you do if you trip on a crack in the sidewalk?  Do you sit there until the next day?  Do you pick yourself up and intentionally trip on every crack on the sidewalk until the next day?  No – you pick yourself up and continue down the sidewalk, being a little more careful not to trip on the cracks.

Stepping up your activity/exercise to offset the slip/binge, at least for a few days.  What a concept.  Stepping up your activity/exercise to offset the slip/binge?  Whoa.  You mean I can actually do something positive other than picking myself up?  Yes – this is the best recourse.

What should we do when we fall off the eating program wagon?  Start the eating program again, immediately and then step up our activity/exercise to offset the binge.    Sounds simple, doesn’t it?  Also, we need go through the questions in the quit the diet section to better understand why we slip/binge.  The better we understand ourselves and our eating triggers, the easier it is to respond to the trigger rather than to react.

So, what do you do when you slip or binge?

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Fiber in Your Diet

Sunday, May 11th, 2008
202px Wheat P1210892 Fiber in Your Diet
Image via Wikipedia

I just read an interesting article by – to my surprise – Vincent DelMonte, bodybuilding and personal trainer. The title is All About Fiber. I thought – Bodybuilding and Fiber?????

Vincent says that fiber is essential to a healthy diet – I agree. It promotes a healthy digestive system, and helps in lowering your bad cholesterol levels and therefore helps in the prevention of heart desease. He goes on to say that women who have a higher level of fiber in their diet tend to weigh less.

Further, you should have about 21-28 grams of fiber in your diet a day. If you are not getting enough fiber, increase your intake amount over several weeks to avoid any digestive discomfort.

Soluable fiber, such as that found in oat bran, oatmeal, beans, peas, rice bran, barley, and fruits, plays the role of helping to lower the bad cholesterol levels. Insoluable fiber, found in hole-wheat breads, whole-wheat pasta, brown rice, wheat bran, cabbage, beets, carrots, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, and the skin of apples, helps to slow down gastric emptying – thus making you feel fuller – helping you to cut down on your eating and keep the pounds down.

Notice, both types of fiber are needed in your diet. If you do not feel you are getting enough fiber, trying using a soluble fiber in your foods – sprinkled in or cooked in.

Vince’s article is at Weight Workouts are for Teens, Women, and Men.

I was looking around the net to find a good fiber product with both soluble and insoluble fiber. I found this to be a good all round fiber product: Fiber Smart

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