Top ten diet tips

Feeling today like I need a little inspiration and to find 'the zone' again, I stumbled across these top ten tips......

1.Don’t even try to change your eating until you have learned important skills, such as how to motivate yourself every day, how to get yourself to use good eating habits, how to withstand hunger and craving, and how to get yourself back on track immediately when you make a mistake.

2.Motivate yourself every day by reading a long list of reasons that you want to lose weight every morning. Pull out this list at vulnerable times of the day, as well.

3.Eat everything sitting down, slowly, and enjoy every bite–whether or not you feel like it. It’s much more difficult to allow yourself to eat off plan, eat mindlessly, or binge if you are doing this.

4.Stay accountable. Report (whether or not you have used good eating habits and followed your eating plan) to another person–daily–through email, texting, or voice messages. Stay accountable to yourself by weighing yourself every day.

5.Stop looking for the perfect diet or the perfect combination of foods. Eat in a very healthy way but allow yourself to have one favorite food, in moderation, every single day. If you’re tempted to eat more of this food or go on to other foods you hadn’t planned to eat, then consume it shortly before bedtime, brush your teeth, and get in bed.

6.Change your mindset about food and eating. Recognize that you can eat whatever you want whenever you want OR you can be thinner. You can’t have it both ways.

7.Prove to yourself that hunger is never an emergency (if you don’t have a serious medical condition). Skip lunch and snacks one day. You’ll find that hunger is only mildly uncomfortable, compared to real discomfort such as you might have experienced after surgery or after breaking a bone; that hunger comes and goes, lasting no more than 5-10 minutes at a time, usually; that hunger is certainly tolerable.

8.Teach yourself the difference between hunger (that empty feeling in your stomach when you haven’t eaten for a few hours) and craving or the desire to eat (which you will feel in your mouth or throat). Ultimately, you want to just label what you’re feeling (hunger, craving, tiredness, boredom, or a negative emotion) and tolerate it without eating. In the short-run, have a list of powerful distractions to turn your attention away from food.

9.Regularize your eating with a set plan of meals and snacks. Some people do well with no snacks, some with a snack after each meal, some with two snacks after dinner. Eat only when it’s time to eat; not when you feel like eating.

10.Tell yourself that every time matters. It’s not necessarily the calories (after all, cookie crumbs are not very fattening); it’s the HABIT. Every time you eat something you weren’t supposed to, you strengthen your giving in muscle, which makes it more likely that the next time you’ll give in and the time after that and the time after that. Every time you stick to your plan when you’re tempted to eat something else, you strengthen your resistance muscle, which makes it more likely that the next time you’ll resist, and the time after that and the time after that.

Replies

  • piezoeyjune
    piezoeyjune Posts: 186 Member
    Wow! Ive actually accomplished some (okay #1) of these!

    Its a great list and Ive saved it for later

    but the best one is the last one!

    Its the HABIT! Break that Habit!

    (I wrote it on my wrist so I can look at it this afternoon when I need to.)

    Thanks! Cya
  • Alatariel75
    Alatariel75 Posts: 18,230 Member
    #1 makes no sense to me. That's like saying "don't even think about picking up a guitar until you have learned all the fingering and all of the chords and have memorised all the songs". No one gets this right first time. Telling people not to try until they can get it perfect is totally counter-intuitive.
  • LifeWithPie
    LifeWithPie Posts: 552 Member
    Totally do NOT agree with #4 or #7. Skip a meal to prove what hunger feels like to get used to it? Asinine.

    I also think weighing everyday and reporting what you eat to someone else is not necessary and detrimental. It fosters obsessive behaviors.
  • Alatariel75
    Alatariel75 Posts: 18,230 Member
    Totally do NOT agree with #4 or #7. Skip a meal to prove what hunger feels like to get used to it? Asinine.

    I also think weighing everyday and reporting what you eat to someone else is not necessary and detrimental. It fosters obsessive behaviors.

    Agreed, I was going to say - I don't believe that being hungry is unnecessary for weight loss. I eat BETTER not LESS.

    Weighing every day can be very detrimental for some, its a very personal choice and you need to do what works for you. Reporting, well, if I want someone to comment on what I eat, I'll ask. My diary is open to friends but I don't really look for comments (or appreciate them, sometimes). Mandatory reporting is a little patronising.
  • bump!
  • amy1612
    amy1612 Posts: 1,356 Member
    Read this.....Eat the foods, move more. Be happy and healthy. http://gokaleo.com/