Results tagged “Diet”

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Over the last few months I'd pretty much given up making any concerted effort to lose weight.

Why?

Apathy.

When recently I met up with a few people I hadn't seen for quite some time they mentioned they were concerned about my weight, so I guess guilt may be working.

So what to do?

A friend who I only meet once or twice a year claims to have lost over 30 kgs quite easily by simply tracking his calorie intake and doing a bit of exercise.

Since I've now got an iPhone I've decided I'll try out a few of the apps that are available for tracking weight and calories. Why? I always have my iPhone with me, so all I should need to do is enter the data as I take in the calories

Will it work?

Who knows?

Even if I don't actively change my diet tracking how many calories I'm consuming should be a useful exercise.
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OK, we've established that losing weight isn't easy for many reasons.  What can we do to make it a bit easier -- to give ourselves a head start?  Making one change in your life won't get you to lose weight (unless you are very lucky), but one right thing may just get you moving in the right direction.  So what's one thing that you can do that may make a difference in your life.

Here's a list of things I have read or thought of myself.  Please let us know your ideas.
  • Get up early and go for a walk in the morning.
  • Turn off the TV and put on an exercise video/go for a walk.
  • Take the stairs instead of the lift.
  • Don't eat after 7pm.
  • Cut out chocolate (or chips, ice cream - whatever your 'addiction' is)
  • Walk/cycle to work - or park on the other side of town and walk across.
  • Buy smaller plates.
  • Take up a sport that you've been wanting to try for awhile.
  • Keep a bit bottle of water next to you at all times and drink, drink, drink.
  • Develop a taste for dark chocolate.
  • Go out dancing one night a week.
  • Change your regular route to avoid passing McDonalds (or whatever is your weakness)
  • Go to bed earlier, before you get a chance to snack (or at least brush your teeth straight after dinner)
  • Make a new friend that will support your new lifestyle (or at least avoid the people that make you feel bad about yourself)
  • Meditate/prayer/sit and think quietly at least once a day to reflect on how you are doing and where you are going.
  • Stop eating food that's left on your children's plates.
  • Keep a food diary and note: 1) when your bad eating times are and do something else interesting then and 2) what foods (or food combinations) make you feel heavy and bloated that perhaps you should avoid or eat only limited amounts of (for me it's carbs) or 3) what foods really make your body feel good (in a healthy way) and eat more of that.
  • Take part in the kids sports and games whenever possible. (I get a good workout helping with the Under10s soccer training)
  • Get a hypnosis tape.  I find it helpful when I listen to the CD that came with Paul McKenna's I Can Make You Thin.
I'm sure I've heard a lot more and will add more as I think of them.  In the meantime I look forward to hearing your suggestions!
I've had a weight problem since I was about 10 years old.  I had put it down to bad eating habits, genetics, not exercising enough; pretty all down to everything that was my fault.  I wasn't strong enough, I wasn't dedicated enough and I would never be thin enough.  This hit hardest a year ago.  I had been on Neris & India's Idiot Proof Diet for 8 months and had great success.  I had lost nearly three stone, felt fantastic and was getting compliments from everyone about how I looked. I was afraid to think it, but I had finally conquered the weight problem I had lived with for over 30 years. 

Then we went on holiday visiting my family in the US.  It was so nice to show my family the new me.  So I relaxed on the diet, which was nearly carb free.  We had pizza, pasta, sandwiches -- you name it. Didn't bloat up straight away, but when I got back from holiday, I just couldn't get back into the diet, so quicker than the weight came off it piled on again.  I've tried a couple of times to get back onto that plan, but haven't even kept on for a week.

Last September, returning from another indulgent holiday eating and drinking up the delights of Provence, I decided to hire a personal trainer. For nearly three months I worked out in the gym three times a week, in addition to 2 tae kwon do training sessions; and had my weight and body fat checked weekly.  This time I was losing weight more slowly but steadily.  Just before Christmas I got very sick, perhaps from pushing myself too hard for tkd competitions, and stopped the training -- and haven't got back to it yet!

I'd say that nearly all of us know what it takes to lose weight: take in less calories and burn more calories. We've read up on various diets and exercise routines, yet after years and years and various attempts, here we are still looking for some secret that will make it all click for us.

The truth is that inside each one of us, buried deeply, we have some need, some empty spot that needs feeding. There may be a diet that suits your lifestyle more and will help with eating right. You may find a buddy to exercise with and that will help keep you going and burning the fat. In the end, unless you deal with the issues that are causing the weight problem, it will come back again and again.

In my 20's I read a book that helped give me a little insight into what it was inside me that kept me from losing weight: Fat is a Feminist Issue by Susie Orbach. At the time I started to feel that the weight was giving me some power I wouldn't have as a petite young woman; and also protected me from men that would see me only as a sexual object.  Unfortunately that weight was also keeping me from a lot of good things, mainly feeling good about myself! 

This thinking went a bit further about ten years later.  I was watching an episode of Oprah, yet another about weight loss, and the guests had all lost serious amounts of  weight.  One woman told about how her problems went back to childhood when she had been sexually abused by a relative.  Once she realised that and started to deal with it, she started to lose weight.  It hit me then that my weight gain started when I was 10 and at that time I had a terrifying encounter with a pedaphile. Though I escaped from actual physical abuse, the experience frightened me so much that I never told another person until I had grown up. I had pushed that experience so far back in my consciousness that it was a dim memory. It then made sense to me that the extra weight was a kind of protection and the eating was also feeding the child inside that was still afraid of whatever preditors were out there in the World.

So after 35 years of using food as a comfort and shield, I have to learn a new relationship with food and it's a real struggle. All of my food decisions are emotionally charged and I have a great fear of passing this on to my children, especially my daughter. It's hard to work on it without giving it too much power and let it keep hold over your life.

I'm working on building some inner strength and serenity and have found some help in the works of Eckhart Tolle and Byron Katie. I don't fancy going into psychotherapy, so am hoping that writing about the experiences I am having will be a good therapy in itself. Networking with others who share the problem should be very helpful as well.

Do you have any of this kind of deep issues about weight? What have you tried to do to deal with it, and how has it worked? Please share your experiences with us.
I knew Christmas was going to have a negative impact.

I just wasn't too sure how much of an impact it would turn out to be.

So, after weighing myself just now, Christmas indulgence has led to an increase in my weight of just over 1 kilo (or two pounds)

It could have been a lot worse, so I should be thankful for that.

Tomorrow is a "normal" day, so it's back to eating salads and avoiding "goodies" again.

I'm fairly confident that I'll be able to get rid of the excess weight quite quickly, as a kilo isn't exactly a HUGE amount of weight to gain or lose.

Christmas Is Bad

Christmas is proving to be an absolute nightmare for multiple reasons.

To start with there is an abundance of tasty treats readily available - Christmas cake, Christmas pudding, chocolates etc., etc.

The other problem is that there is very little else to do over the few days of Christmas except eat and drink. Sure, you could go to visit friends, but if you do, they're only going to offer you more food and drink!

So I guess my diet has taken a bit of a nose dive for the week.

Hopefully I'll be able to make up the losses when things get back to normal in the New Year ...
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Hello porridge

Image by Drift Words via Flickr

I've taken to having a bowl of porridge every morning for breakfast.

Since I'm not going to find the time to organise soaking porridge oats at night etc., I opted for the microwave friendly option (judging from the packet there's nothing different about the oats!)

Preparation is dead simple, as there's a dosing spoon thing in the packet. You simply add two scoops of oats to a bowl. Add four scoops of milk or water or a mixture of both and then pop it in the microwave for two minutes.

Admittedly I have been a bit weaker on the sugar front and have been sprinkling a couple of spoons of sugar over it.

In any case the porridge is definitely giving me a good start to the morning, so I'm not feeling hungry mid-morning and can quite happily last through until lunch

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detox tabletsOver the last few years I've read quite a bit about how our bodies build up junk. Whether you have a good diet or not you still seem to end up with undigested leftovers and other undesirable stuff floating around your stomach and intestine.
Some friends of mine, who were into archaeology, used to purify themselves using quite an extreme method which involved drinking water and very little else for several days!

Fortunately there are other options open to us these days.

One of them, that I was interested in trying, is a series of detox tablets. Supposedly this helps reduce the amount of toxins in your bowel areas etc., which should help with weight loss and digestion. I know that it would probably do me good, as I've been treating my body like a playground for as long as I can remember!

Find out more about the detox tablets (and other solutions) here (the free shipping to Ireland really caught my eye!)

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Mince Pie

Image via Wikipedia

You don't need to be a genius to realise that Christmas is a really bad time of the year if you're on a diet. That probably explains why so many people decide to go on diets in the New Year ...

So what to do?

Christmas is a wonderful time of the year to see friends and family, but what on earth do you do about the food?

Christmas dinner itself is usually a calorie-laden feast - if not then there's probably something wrong!

And in the weeks leading up to Christmas there are so many temptations put in your way... Think of mince pies, cakes, panettone, pan d'oro and of course office parties.

I don't think there is an easy solution. The only thing I can try to do is eat in moderation and try to avoid as much of the junk as possible - even if it pains me!
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weight watchersWeight Watchers seems to be a very popular way of losing weight amongst my female friends.

I've been looking into joining weight watchers, as I like to keep my options open, but I have a few reservations.

To start with, while I may be happy to write about my battle to lose weight or to tell anyone I know, I'm not 100% sure if I would like to get involved in a group of complete strangers. I've never been particularly good with groups or anything that involves regularly scheduled meetings, so I don't think I'd feel particularly comfortable going to a meeting by myself. If a friend or colleague was attending as well then I probably would.

The other thing is that while weight watchers has "men only" meetings in some parts of the country, they don't have any in my area.

Of course if I really wanted to I could always opt for the "Weight Watchers at Home" system, which gives you all the booklets that you'd get normally plus you have access to their consultants. 


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Not Eating Is Bad

If you're trying to lose weight it's tempting to think that not eating is a solution.

It's not.

Changing what you eat, how you eat, how much you eat etc., can all be positive moves in your battle with your waistline, but starving yourself is not a good idea.

Skipping a meal will only make you want to snack or drive the urge to gorge yourself on convenience foods.

Don't do it.

Starving yourself is not a diet - it's just a bad idea!

An Apple A Day

Fruit & Vegetable Market 1

Image by SqueakyMarmot via Flickr

As you can gather I have a fondness for old sayings:

An apple a day keeps the doctor away

Fruit and fresh vegetables are a wonderful source of vitamins and other things that help your body.

Unfortunately my Irish diet of the last couple of years probably wasn't as rich in fresh fruit and vegetables as it could have been.

Over the past few weeks I've replaced any and all snacks with fruit. The easiest fruits to eat are of course tangerines and apples.
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Feet on a scale

Image via Wikipedia

Dieting, weight loss and everything to do with the entire subject has been a hot topic and a massive industry for years.

There are probably as many "wonderful" diet systems out there as there are days in the year and for every success story you can probably find several "failures".

The bottom line is that there is no "magic solution".

You can read all the books and watch the dvds, documentaries etc., etc., but if you're looking for a quick and "easy" answer you're probably going to be disappointed.
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