Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Small Changes That Make A Big Difference


I believe that my body has started to reject dairy products for my own good. I'm probably at my highest weight right now and my body, as long as I'm actually listening to it, is telling me it's hit its max. The current culprit that I've overindulging in might be dairy and my body is not having it. I probably shouldn't have bought that Sam's Club block of Manchego huh?


I actually thought it was alcohol because I have been drinking deeply while entertaining people at our house. Mainly wines, which are fine, as long as we're not downing 5 bottles between 4 people. Oh, the world of lushes.


But I stopped drinking this weekend and the stomach pains continued. So I'm taking dairy out of my diet to see if that's what's causing my digestive issues. If not dairy then I'm going to juice fast for a day or so and slowly start introducing foods starting with vegetables and fruit, then whole grains, then lean meats, then dairy. I'll see if that fixes this pain when I eat.


It got me thinking about how if we really listened to our bodies we would probably get to our ideal weight faster. Making small changes to our eating habits is likely to get ourselves more in tune with what we should and shouldn't do.


1. Eat small thumb sized bites of food. Shoveling big bites into your mouth just makes it harder for your stomach to catch on that it's full and then it's too late: You've already over eaten.


2. Thoroughly chew eat bite and savor the flavor of the food. A lot of time, when something is so delicious, we eat more because we want to keep tasting the flavor that is so pleasant. Eating each bite slowly will allow you to experience the flavors longer without taking more bites.
3. Use utensils. If you make eating something conscious, something civilized and enjoyed, instead of something you shovel in your face between things you're trying to get to, you'll likely eat less and only when your body really needs you to.
4. Put your fork down between bites. Yes, this seems really ... inefficient but so is eating more than you need and then carrying the extra weight on your butt slowing you down. Putting your fork down between bites allows your brain to register that you could possibly be done with this bite and stopping before you eat that bite that puts you over the edge of fullness is something that would help any waistline.
5. Take a sip of water between bites. This serves as a palate cleanser and a way to get that oh so neccessary 8 glasses of daily water supply. Each bite we take actually results in a little less pleasure based on the repetition and the familiarity of the flavors. Taking a sip of water increases repetition of eating, cleanses the palate to get a clear taste of the food and as a result, allows your mind to tell you when the food isn't tasting so good anymore because you're full.

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