Follow These 10 Steps Lose Weight
If you're serious about changing your lifestyle, these steps help get you
there. The key is to dedicate yourself to these changes and do them consistently.
Follow These 11 STEPS
ELIMINATE OR SIGNIFICANTLY REDUCE RED MEAT
If foods like burgers are basic to your current diet, cutting out red meat can
go a long way in helping you make healthier meal choices and losing weight.
By building your meals around fish and poultry, you can more easily keep
temptation at bay by eliminating many poor fast food and restaurant choices,
which are over-sized and high in fat.
To keep your shellfish, fish, chicken, and turkey diet-friendly, be sure to
choose the right preparation method (see #2). Be wary of creamy, high-cal
condiments that come with entrees, like tartar sauce or special sauce on grilled
chicken sandwiches.
CUT OUT FRIED FOODS
Keep your healthier choices truly healthy by grilling, baking, roasting,
broiling or boiling them.
Keep things interesting by adding low-cal condiments to your usual fare. A tangy
barbecue sauce will give boiled chicken a kick. Lemon-herb dressing will
complement broiled fish deliciously.
Make sure your spice rack is always stocked with plenty of herbs and spices so
you can doctor up your favorite dishes to your own taste without adding any
additional fat or calories. Plant an herb garden and you'll never run out!
If you often eat fast food, forget that "value meals" and "combos" even exist;
they seem like a better deal, but they're just not worth the extra calories!
Stick to a grilled chicken sandwich or a child's hamburger and a side salad
(watch the dressing!) when you're on the run.
START WITH SOUP OR SALAD.
Having a salad or cup of soup for starters can be an at-home habit that pays off
in pounds-lost. They can curb your hunger, prevent over-eating, and help you
stay in control of portions, all of which are crucial to losing weight.
Choose a broth- or tomato-based soup like minestrone (rather than a cream- or
milk-based choice). Vegetable soup made with broth, stock, or tomato soup is
ideal, because the veggies will help fill you up and give you a fiber and
nutrition boost.
Top your salad with low-cal dressing or balsamic vinegar. An added plus of
having a salad before every meal is getting more fiber, something many of our
diets are short on, which will also help you feel fuller sooner. Be sure to
include lots of veggies and dark mixed greens like spinach in your salads.
FINISH WITH FRUIT.
Instead of reaching for the cookie jar or helping yourself to dessert after
meals, make a point to finish off with naturally-sweet fruit instead of
sinfully-sweet treats.
Not only will you save fat and calories, you will also have the added benefit of
extra vitamins, minerals and fiber. Few of us eat as much fruit as recommended.
In time, you will become accustomed to foregoing sweets and you'll look forward
to your healthier treat just as much.
Sometimes it's easy to focus so much on what we eat that we forget to include
what we drink in our diet analysis. That can be a big problem, because the
number of liquid calories you can consume without even realizing is quite
astounding.
PUT THE KIBOSH ON COLA CONSUMPTION.
If you drink regular soda, you may be surprised at just how many additional
calories you're taking in.
For example, for every 20 ounces of Coca-Cola you drink, you're consuming 250
calories. Drink several glasses a day and you can easily down 1,000 liquid
calories.
If you're attempting to consume around 1,500 to 1,600 calories a day in order to
lose weight, you've almost blown your entire calorie budget on soda!
When you think about how many calories you eat on average and then add in those
empty calories, you'll realize what a waste drinking these sugary drinks is --
literally -- they go straight to your waist!
If you drink a lot of soda, think of how many calories you'll be saving if you
trade it in for diet soda or water. Hundreds? Even thousands? Remember, every
3,500 calories saved equals one pound lost!
DRINK UP THAT H20!
I know it sounds like a broken record, but it really is important to drink
enough water every day. Reach for the rule-of-thumb goal of eight glasses per
day.
Plus, drinking water more often will help you with tip #1 . You won't have time
to drink soda! You may even find you crave water instead of soda once you begin
drinking it more often.
Try going a day or two with no soda and then sit down to a glass; you'll
probably be shocked at how overly-sweet it tastes.
DIET DRINK DILEMMA
Switching to diet sodas may sound like a sure-fire way to lose weight since
they're virtually calorie-free. However, there is a controversial issue about
artificial sweeteners' indirect effect on weight loss that might surprise you.
In the mid-1980's -- when the safety of artificial sweeteners was often headline
news -- a study was published in a medical journal that suggested artificial
sweeteners cause one's appetite to increase.
More recently, some health experts have suggested that artificial sweeteners
actually cause cravings for sweet foods to increase. If so, this reaction
definitely sets you up for making poor food choices. This can lead to a big
problem, particularly if you tend to binge when you eat high-carb and sugar-rich
foods.
STICK TO MINERAL WATER
This may go without saying, but they don't call it a beer belly for nothing.
Alcoholic beverages are high-calorie and can lead to out-of-control eating. Try
to cut down -- or better still, eliminate -- alcohol.
KEEP A FOOD DIARY.
There is no better tool for weight management. Keeping a food journal
consistently will show you your trouble areas, the foods that get you started on
a binge, the worst times of day, etc.
I'd suggest you keep a detailed food diary for at least two weeks to accurately
reflect your habits.
LEARN ABOUT NUTRITION.
Learn all you can about nutrition online, through books, or by taking a
nutrition class at your local community college.
GET A HANDLE ON EMOTIONAL EATING.
If you feel you have issues with emotional eating, you may want to track your
feelings in your food diary, too.
You should record how you feel before, during, and after eating. Periodically
check over your entries to see what cues set you off to binge most often.
If you discover frequent binges or you can't seem to cope with stress or sadness
without eating, you're an emotional eater. Don't hesitate to make an appointment
with a qualified therapist or clinical social worker. Cognitive behavior therapy
is extremely effective in treating over-eating due to emotions.
GET MOVING!
We're not talking chugging your way through a one hour aerobics class right
away, here. Simply get outside and take a brisk walk for 10 minute every other
day. That's all you have to do right now.
Remember, any activity is better than no activity. When you feel more
comfortable, add 10 minute increments and/or walk more often

Save 10% Off Gourmet Diet Home-Delivery Plans from
BistroMD.com - Coupon code: Summer10



|