| Move 'n' Improve Personal Training
10 Steps to Changing your Eating Habits
1. Stop Dieting: Creating a deficit of about 500 calories a day for one week
should result in a 1-pound weight loss. Most people can incur a large part of
this 500-calorie-a-day deficit by exercising and making moderate changes in
food intake. In choosing this approach you avoid the negative consequences of
rigid dieting.
2. Become Physically, Not Externally, Connected to Eating. Internal hunger cues--such
as a rumbling stomach, a slight headache, fatigue, irritability and decreased
concentration--are meant to remind you to meet your energy requirements and
maintain your natural set point weight. Reconnecting with your physical signals
of hunger and satiety can help you acquire the internal power to regulate your
food intake.
3. Use the Rating of Perceived Hunger (RPH) Scale. Using this scale can make
you more aware of your internal hunger and satiety cues. Think of 0 as indicating
extreme hunger and 10 as signaling extreme fullness. With the scale in mind,
begin to read your body's signals. Your target range should be between 3 and
8. If you go to 0, you may eat too much too fast, particularly since it takes
your brain 15 to 20 minutes to sense that your body is full. You should begin
to eat at 3 on the RPH scale and stop at 7 or 8, when you're comfortably full
and satisfied.
4. Distinguish Between Emotional and Physical Hunger. Physical hunger is a physiological
process that occurs every three to four hours. When you don't listen to hunger
cues, your hunger subsides and your body begins to slow down to conserve energy.
Emotional hunger involves eating when you're sad, happy, anxious or bored. Understanding
when you are trying to satisfy emotional needs with food can help you find more
appropriate ways to meet those needs.
5. Neutralize Food. There are no good or bad foods--all foods are okay when
eaten in moderation. Forbidding certain foods may simply make you want them
all the more. If portion control is a problem with particular foods, try specific
strategies with these items--for example, measure out one serving of potato
chips and put the bag back in the pantry.
6. Do Not Skip Meals. Eating frequently throughout the day (3 small meals and
2-3 snacks) will stimulate your metabolism. Skipping meals (including breakfast)
can decrease your metabolism.
7. Don’t create Myths. A safe weight loss is 1 or 2 pounds a week, not
20. Be wary of supplements and meal replacement products. Product testimonials
may or may not be true; spokespersons may or may not have any credentials. Remember,
a healthy body comes from healthy eating.
8. Be Supportive, Not Critical. People lose weight at different rates.
Weight may drop off quickly at first and then plateau, or vice versa. The important
thing is that long-term healthy behavior gets results. Reassure yourself that
you are working hard and remember that hard work pays off.
9. Watch Your Language. Do you find yourself thinking "I will never lose
weight" or "I feel fat"? Watch for thoughts that are negative
or irrational, rather than supportive of your goals. See if you can accurately
describe your mood. Are you angry, sad, afraid? Understand that "fat"
is not a feeling.
10. Change the Reward System. You are probably used to rewarding yourself and
being rewarded by others for losing pounds, rather than for altering your behavior.
Create a system of rewards for the positive changes you make, rather than the
numbers you see on the scale.
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