How High-Carb Diet Plans Treat Carbohydrates

A number of popular diets are focused on carbohydrates. Some demonize them. Then warn you against eating any carbohydrates. Others in fact, emphasize a high carbohydrate intake. Here is how high-carbohydrate diet plans treat carbohydrates. (Such as Ornish, Pritikin, and Food for Life)

For years you’ve been hearing that eating a healthy diet. Means cutting back on the total amount of fat. While eating more complex carbohydrates. Thousands of “low-fat” alternatives now crowd your supermarket shelves.

But is simply cutting back on fat. Then loading up on carbohydrates a healthy way to eat or to lose weight? Current research suggests that it isn’t. Just like researchers have learned that not all types of fat are bad. They have also discovered that not all types of carbohydrates are good for you.

It’s easy for you to fall into a low-fat trap. Gram for gram. Fat has more than twice as many calories as either protein or carbohydrates. Then it seems logical that choosing low-fat products will help you with your weight loss. However, all too often the low-fat products on supermarket shelves are packed with sugar. And highly processed carbohydrates. Making up for the taste that’s lost when fat is removed.

These low-fat alternatives often contain just as many calories as the full-fat versions. Some may even have more! Another problem is that you mistakenly think that because a food is low in fat. You can eat as much of it as you want without gaining any weight.

As far as your body is concerned. Calories are calories. No matter where they come from. Eat too many calories (whether from fat, carbohydrates or protein) and you’ll gain weight period.

Aside from weight loss. The popularity of low-fat food has broader implications for your health. Commercially prepared low- fat foods tend to be rich in highly processed carbohydrates. Thus causing big spikes in your blood sugar level. Over time this can increase the chances of you developing heart disease and diabetes.

For example, in a study of 80,000 nurses. Harvard researchers calculated that replacing a given number of calories from polyunsaturated fat. With an equivalent number from easily digested carbohydrates. Increased the risk for heart disease by over 50 percent.

Some other studies have found that a low-fat, high-carbohydrate diet. Particularly one high in sugars. Can worsen your blood cholesterol and triglycerides levels. Both of which are risk factors for heart disease.

You can minimize or avoid any diet deficiencies associated with high-carbohydrates diets. When you approach your high- carbohydrate diet as an integrated part of your *-lifestyle-*, not solely an ingredient focus.

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Rick Trojan

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How to Gain More Pleasure While Losing Weight

It’s easy to lose sight of our goals, “Do I eat one of these delicious looking, fruit engorged, glossy, sugar coated lovelies or … that other thing. What was that? Something about losing weight? Ah, well, it’s just one little Danish.”

Then with the hint of white powder lingering on your lips you snap awake, “What have I done! Now I’ve blown it, and I was going to start my diet today. Might as well eat everything I can now and start my diet on Monday.”

Stop playing that game. It’s the common trap of thinking one lapse is the whole ball game. It’s not. It’s just food. Food tastes great, yes, and we’ve had lots of great times but a little less often does not take away from the pleasure of eating one single bit. In fact, being more selective with time and place can enhance the true pleasure of eating.

Thinking one overeating episode ruins the day is just an excuse. Every meal stands alone. You can overeat at lunch and be back on track for dinner. Take time to think about what you want and whether what you are doing is supporting you in your efforts to get what you want. You’re not going to be 100% perfect, no one is, which is why asking, “Does this support me in reaching my goals,” helps get you back on track.

Make One Small Effort Every Day to Reach Your Goals

Every morning think about what you’d like for that day, such as eating healthier foods. Do you have those foods available? Can you get them? Maybe you’d like to make time for exercise. Can that be arranged? If so, arrange it. Write what you want down so you have a handy reminder. Later when you think you want one of those cookies in the lunch room, pull out your note and ask first, “Is eating a cookie right now going to help in my goal to lose five pounds?”

If you really want a cookie, take one for later. Frankly, if it’s an ordinary cookie you could get any day, take a pass. It’s not worth it. When the opportunity to eat something special comes along, go ahead and enjoy it. Sometimes a treat is just what you need to support yourself in working toward your goals. You want balance, after all, and enjoying the delicious things in life is as important for good health as getting enough sleep and eating well.

Throughout the day continuously ask yourself, “Is what I am doing right now helping me to reach my goals? Is this supporting me in my efforts to lose two pounds?” (Two pounds was my weekly target when I lost 80 pounds, over 18 years ago).

Try this approach once an hour for one entire day to jump start your weight loss efforts. Use a reminder program, kitchen timer or my favorite the MotivAider (I love this gadget and have a review in my Tools section on my website, OneMoreBite.com). When your reminder plays, just ask, “Is what I’m doing right now supporting me in my goal to …” If it is, great, and if not as soon as you realize you’ve become distracted, you can get right back on track.

Ask yourself right now, “Is reading this helping me in reaching my goals?” I’d like to think so.

~~ Kathryn Martyn, Master NLP Practitioner, EFT counselor, Weight Loss Mentor and owner of OneMoreBite-WeightLoss.com is the author of “Changing Beliefs, Your First Step to Permanent Weight Loss,” and “5 Steps to Blast Through Weight Loss Plateaus.”

Get both E-books (no cost) and learn to use the One More Bite method with The Daily Bites: EFT for weight loss OneMoreBite-WeightLoss.com/getnews.html

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