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Ruth's Food & Nutrition Corner

Eating is one of the best things life has to offer. Food helps you celebrate with your family and friends. It nourishes your body. It gives you energy to get through each day. The right balance of food and activity helps you stay at a healthy body weight.

You don't have to give up foods you love for the sake of your health. But you do need to aim for variety and moderation.

The Body Mass Index (BMI) is a tool to relate body weight to health.

Are You an Apple or a Pear?

Most people believe that excess weight is bad for your health. But now research has shown that it is where excess fat is stored on the body that is the key link to the risk of future health problems.

Apple-shaped people store body fat around the abdomen and chest, surrounding internal organs, such as the heart. Pear-shaped people store fat on the hips and thighs, just below the surface of the skin.

What's Your Waist-Hip Ratio (WHR)?

Guidelines for Healthy Eating

Enjoy a VARIETY of foods.

Emphasize cereals, breads, other grain products, vegetables and fruit.

Choose lower-fat dairy products, leaner meats and food prepared with little or no fat.

Achieve and maintain a healthy body weight by enjoying regular physical activity and healthy eating.

Limit salt, alcohol and caffeine.

Chronic Dieting

If you are a chronic dieter, you may be at risk of developing the same psychological characteristics of people who are starving: a tendency to eat excessively once you are "allowed" to eat, to become overly emotional, to have trouble concentrating, and to obsess about food and eating. How you answer the following question is a good indication of whether you're dieting too much: What would you do if the scale showed an extra 5 pounds?

If you're a dieter, you'd probably overeat. That's what researchers at the University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada found when they weighed dieters and non-dieters and told them that they weighed 5 pounds heavier or 5 pounds lighter than their actual weights (see the Journal of Abnormal Psychology 107, 1998). Dieters who believed that they were heavier experienced lowered self-worth and a worsening of mood that led them to relinquish their dietary restraint and overindulge in available food. Non-dieters and dieters who were told that they weighed 5 pounds less were not affected by the false weight feedback.

The bottom line:

To get over overeating, you need to start listening to your body. As simple as it sounds, it's the only way to change your habits once and for all. If you're hungry, eat. When you're full, stop. Remembering these two simple rules puts you on the road to healthy eating for the rest of your life.

Ten Red Flags that Signal Bad Nutrition Advice

How do you know whether the nutrition advice you receive or the weight loss materials provided to you are reliable? Consider any combination of these ten red flags a signal of questionable nutrition advice:

1. Recommendations that promise a quick fix
2. Dire warnings of dangers from a single product or regimen
3. Claims that sound too good to be true
4. Simplistic conclusions drawn from a complex study
5. Recommendations based on a single study
6. Dramatic statements that are refuted by reputable scientific organizations
7. Lists of "good" and "bad" foods
8. Recommendations made to help sell a product
9. Recommendations based on studies published without peer review
10. Recommendations from studies that ignore differences among individuals or groups

Source: Food and Nutrition Science Alliance (FANSA), of which the ADA is a member.

Ten Myths about Dieting

Eating Late at Night Is Sure to Pack on the Pounds Your body doesn't process calories differently after dark. However, the foods that people tend to go for in front of the TV after dinner--chips, ice cream, chocolate treats, and the like--are usually high in fat and calories. The kinds of foods you're eating are the concern, not the clock.

You Can Break Through a Weight-Loss Plateau by Eating Fewer Calories

Eat fewer than 800 to 1,000 calories a day, and your body will turn down its thermostat to conserve every calorie it can get. It doesn't know whether you're a prisoner of war suffering from starvation or a prisoner in your head. The only way to keep your metabolism purring is to exercise.

When weight loss slows, walk a little longer or work out more frequently or intensely--and don't forget to eat.

Never Have Seconds

Instead of using a plate of food or a predetermined serving size as a yardstick for how much you should eat, try taking hunger and fullness clues from your body. Eating according to your appetite is much healthier. And when you eat slowly, recognizing when you've had enough is much easier.

Keep in mind that there's a difference between appetite and hunger. Appetite has more to do with flavor preferences and craving; hunger is a biological manifestation of the body's real need for food. If it's been a while since you and your appetite have seen eye to eye on how much to eat, try this: Serve yourself only half of what you think you want to eat. If you're still hungry after eating at a leisurely pace, go for it--in moderation, of course.

Also recognize that you're hungrier on some days than on others. So when you're really, truly hungry, it's fine to eat more. Remember that one meal does not define healthy eating. What you eat over the course of a day, or actually over several days, does.

Deny Your Cravings; They're All in Your Head

Sometimes, the faster you give in and have a small portion of the food you're craving, the better off you are. You can pack on lots of calories by trying to eat around the one thing you truly want. Have a small serving of the food you crave and get over it.

Don't Eat Between Meals

Most people need to eat every 3 to 4 hours to avoid a feast-or-famine mentality and risk overeating because you're overhungry. Dividing your calories into three meals and two or three snacks, instead of only three meals, can keep you well fueled for the day. Try planning two or three snack-sized portions (for example, a piece of fruit or a couple of Fig Newtons plus low-fat or fat-free milk or yogurt) into your day's food choices. Doing so may help lessen your hunger pangs so that you're less likely to overeat at the next meal.

Eating Breakfast Makes You Hungry All Day

Many typical breakfast foods--Danish, toast with jelly, and bagels, for example--are mainly carbohydrates in their simplest form. These foods, while initially satisfying, are out of your system in about 30 minutes, and you need (and want) to eat again. That's why many people say that breakfast kicks off nonstop eating throughout the day.

Breakfast foods that have some protein and a little fat, in addition to complex carbohydrates and sugars, stay with you longer and give you the energy you need to make it through the morning. Whole-grain cereal with low-fat or fat-free milk, an egg on toast, and even a fruity breakfast shake made with low-fat or fat-free milk are good choices.

To Lose Weight, Become a Vegetarian

Being vegetarian doesn't ensure that you'll lose weight. Like any way of eating, a vegetarian diet can be high in fat and cholesterol, low in fiber, or both. Many vegetarian foods, including cheese and nuts, are high in fat and calories. So cutting out meat and replacing it with other equally fatty (or even more fatty) vegetarian foods is not only a bad diet move, but it may also increase your chances for nutritional deficiencies--especially if you don't plan your diet well.

Fasting for a Few Days Drops the Pounds Quickly and Shrinks Your Stomach

If you fast, you may drop pounds, but some of that weight will be muscle, and most of it will be water. You need to eat protein foods such as lean meat, eggs, low-fat or fat-free milk, or legumes (beans and peas), or you'll be thin and flabby, not thin and shapely.

There's a misconception that fasting cleans out your system. But actually, the opposite is true. When the body doesn't get food, body chemicals called ketones build up over time. That process puts a burden on the kidneys, which can be harmful to your health. Not to mention that it gives you really bad breath, too!

You Can Eat Anything You Want as Long as It's Fat-Free Fat-free foods are not calorie-free foods; check the Nutrition Facts panel on the food label. Many have just as many calories as the original versions, and a few have even more, because lots of sugar (among other ingredients) is needed to replace the way fat tastes and feels in your mouth. In the end, the total number of calories in a food is what's important.

A little fat is a good thing because it can help you eat less by giving a meal staying power, which keeps you from feeling hungry too quickly. Instead of a sandwich made with fat-free mayonnaise and fat-free cold cuts, make one with a teaspoon of real mayonnaise and low-fat meat; it will stay with you longer than a fat-free meal.

"From Dieting For DummiesŪ by Jane Kirby For The American Dietetic Association.

Resources:
Canada's Food Guide to healthy living
Healthy Eating Based on the Food Guide Pyramid by: Renee Cloe, ACE Certified Personal Trainer
Food & Nutrition Information Center
Diet & Weight Loss
What We Eat

Now for a little fun.
This should put an end to any misinformation you may have had about these important health questions.

=====================================

Q: I've heard that cardiovascular exercise can prolong life. Is this true?

A: Your heart is only good for so many beats, and that's it... don't waste them on exercise. Everything wears out eventually. Speeding up your heart will not make you live longer; that's like saying you can extend the life of your car by driving it faster. Want to live longer? Take a nap.

Q: Should I cut down on meat and eat more fruits and vegetables?

A: You must grasp logistical efficiencies. What does a cow eat? Hay and corn. And what are these? Vegetables. So a steak is nothing more than an efficient mechanism of delivering vegetables to your system. Need grain? Eat chicken. Beef is also a good source of field grass (green leafy vegetable). And a pork chop can give you 100% of your recommended daily allowance of vegetable slop.

Q: Is beer or wine bad for me?

A: Look, it goes to the earlier point about fruits and vegetables. As we all know, scientists divide everything in the world into three categories: animal, mineral, and vegetable. We all know that beer and wine are not animal, and they are not on the periodic table of elements, so that only leaves one thing, right? My advice: Have a burger and a beer and enjoy your liquid vegetables.

Q: How can I calculate my body/fat ratio?

A: Well, if you have a body, and you have body fat, your ratio is one to one. If you have two bodies, your ratio is two to one, etc.

Q: What are some of the advantages of participating in a regular exercise program?

A: Can't think of a single one, sorry. My philosophy is: No Pain - Good.

Q: If I stop smoking, will I live longer?

A: Nope. Smoking is a sign of individual statement and peace of mind. If you stop, you'll probably stress yourself to death in record time.

Q: Aren't fried foods bad for you?

A: You're not listening. Foods are fried these days in vegetable oil. In fact, they're permeated in it. How could getting more vegetables be bad for you?

Q: What's the secret to healthy eating?

A: Thicker gravy.

Q: Will sit-ups help prevent me from getting a little soft around the middle?

A: Definitely not! When you exercise a muscle, it gets bigger. You should only be doing sit-ups if you want a bigger stomach.

Q: Is chocolate bad for me?

A: Are you crazy? Cocoa beans... Another vegetable. It's the best feel good food around!

I hope this has cleared up any misconceptions you may have had about food and diets. Have a cookie... flour is a veggie!

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