Archive for the ‘Newsletters’ Category
Free Food Is Everywhere
You arrive for an early morning meeting. Front and center is a platter loaded with bagels, danish, and doughnuts just waiting to be eaten –and to be washed down by copious amounts of coffee. For so many this is the early morning pick-me up – and the beginning of a blood sugar roller coaster ride.
If you didn’t have time to grab some, have no fear – if all the platters aren’t picked clean the remnants will surely end up in the snack room next to the birthday cake (it’s always somebody’s birthday) or the leftover cookies from someone’s party the night before.
Perhaps you shop at Costco on the weekend. At least three tables will be manned by someone offering you samples of hot pizza, luscious cheesecake, or tooth-picked pigs ‘n blankets just waiting to be quickly and neatly popped into your mouth.
Maybe you then make a stop at the cleaners, the tailors, the veterinarians, or the hair salon. There it is – the giant bowl piled high with freebie candy. You can dig deep for the kind you like – Reese’s Peanut Butter cups, mini Snickers, or Tootsie Roll pops. You name it — it’s usually there for the taking.
Going to a wedding that night? How do you escape the platters of salami, cheese, mini quiches, and then the desserts covered with icing, whipped cream, and powdered sugar?
What’s The Problem With Free Food?
Nothing if you don’t care about calories, how nutritious your food is, and how you are going to feel after indulging on an overload of sugar, fat, and salt. I do know many “starving” students who have fed themselves on free food. The question is: did they ultimately benefit from the hit to their bellies with no impact on their wallets?
Occasional dips into free food are probably not going to really hurt anyone in reasonable health. But, on a consistent basis there is certainly a downside to your health. There could me a more immediate concern, too. A whole bunch of non-nutritious (junk, processed, and high calorie) food eaten right before a time when intense concentration and focus is necessary (translation: exams and presentations) could certainly have a negative impact.
Most of us find it pretty darn hard to ignore “free food,” the food that’s just there for the taking. It’s everywhere – and we have become accustomed to valuing cheap calories. Think about it: when was the last time that you resisted the peanuts, pretzels, or popcorn sitting on the bar counter? What about the breadbasket – that’s usually free, too.
We don’t have to eat any of this stuff. But we do. Why? Some of us have trouble passing up a giveaway – even if it might be cheap, processed food. Some of us see it as a way to save money – even with possible negative health consequences. And a lot of us use “free” as an excuse to eat or overeat junk food or the sweet, salty, fatty foods that some call addicting.
And what about those calories? Just because it’s free doesn’t mean the calories are, too. It’s all too easy to forget about those calories you popped in your mouth as you snagged a candy here and tasted a cookie there. Yikes. You could eat a day’s worth of calories cruising through a couple of markets and food stores.
Things To Think About Before The Freebies Land In Your Mouth
You might want to come up with your own mental checklist that, with practice, will help you evaluate whether or not it’s worth it to you to indulge. If you decide to taste the salami and have a cookie and a piece of cake, at least you will have made a mindful decision with consideration of the consequences rather than mindlessly indulging. Ask yourself:
- Is it fresh, tasty, healthy food? It might be if you’re at a wedding or an event, it’s probably not it it’s being handed out at the supermarket or sitting in a large bowl at the cleaners.
- Is it clean? Think about this – how many fingers have been in the bowl of peanuts or have grabbed pieces of cheese or bunches of cookies off of an open platter?
- Do you really want it – or are you eating it just because it’s there?
- Is it loaded with fat, sugar, and salt adding up to mega calories that significantly impact your daily caloric allowance? Every calorie counts whether it’s popped in your mouth and gone in the blink of an eye or savored more slowly and eaten with utensils off of a plate.
- If you fill up with the non-nutritious free food, are you skimping on the good nutritious stuff later on because you are simply too full to eat it?
- If you eat some free food, does it open the flood gates so that you continue to indulge? Loading up on simple sugars – the kind found in candy, cookies, cake, and many processed foods – causes your blood sugar level to spike and then to drop – soon leaving you hungry once again, and pretty darn cranky, too.
You Do Have Choices
You don’t have to eat food because it’s free. No one is forcing you to make some more room on the platter. Beware of the cascading effect. If you allow yourself to sample the candy, pizza, cheesecake, popcorn, or pieces of cookie, are you giving yourself permission (perhaps in disguise) to overindulge in food you might not ordinarily eat? If cost is an issue, there are many ways to find and cook nutritious food at a lower cost. If you plan to indulge make sure you do it mindfully, not mindlessly: build it in. Eat a lighter lunch and don’t go shopping or to an event when you’re starving. That’s almost a certain ticket to chowing down on almost everything in sight.
Eater Alert: Beware End Of Summer Gluttony
It’s the week leading up to Labor Day weekend. Not technically the end of summer, but it sure feels that way.
I don’t know about you, but for me the thought process seems to be: “Oh heck, it’s the last week of summer, the holiday weekend is coming up, all of my family is going to be home, a lot of burgers, ice cream, picnic food – and then it’s nose to the grindstone” (even if it has been nose to the grindstone, as it has been for me, most of the summer).
Holidays And Vacations Often Mean Overeating
It’s the kind of holiday season mentality that starts around Thanksgiving and continues right through New Year’s Day when you swear you’ll never eat another carb again!
Or, it’s the “vacation” mentality, when all of your healthy eating promises become submerged in the deepest recesses of your brain.
Or, it’s the mentality that adds the “freshman 15 . . . or 5 . . . or 10,” the freedom at last, away from home mentality where no food is off limits.
Four Weeks Of Overeating: Changes That Last For Years
Some new research may make you think twice. Amazingly, overeating for just four weeks can cause changes in body fat and weight that last for years. For four weeks people in a study limited their activity to 5,000 steps a day or less (considered a sedentary lifestyle) and increased their caloric intake by 70% (5000+ calories a day). For two years researchers periodically monitored body weight and composition in this group and compared it to another group that did not change its diet or physical activity.
How Much Weight Gain?
The overeater/under-exerciser group gained, on average, 14 pounds. Six months after they were allowed to go back to eating and exercising normally they lost, on average, 71 percent of the gained weight but only one-third of the group members had returned to within one pound of their initial weight.
After one year the overeaters were, on average, 3.3 pounds heavier than before their four week food fest. The normal eaters had no change in body weight.
The overeaters had more body fat and higher LDL (lousy) cholesterol levels one year after their four week binge. After two and a half years, the overeaters averaged a gain of 6.8 pounds from when the study first started, but the normal eaters didn’t show any significant weight gain.
SocialDieter Tip:
Boy oh boy, the effects of gluttony are really hard to get rid of – even when those overeating habits are ditched for a healthy lifestyle. Even short periods of overeating and under-exercising can have lasting effects and make it more difficult to lose weight and keep it off. Keep that in mind around holiday time, vacations, and “let-down-your-hair” times leading up to holidays and vacations. It’ll serve you well for years to come.
Do You Eat Because You Are Hungry?
Are You Really Hungry?
It’s summertime and the living is easy. Picnics, barbecues, a sandwich at the beach are often the order of the day. And what about the ice cream cone, the beer with the burger, the peach pie, and the toasted almond from the Good Humor truck? Vacation often means sun, sand, and eating – whenever. Living is easy, unstructured, and calorically dangerous.
Vacations and free and easy summer days spawn classic scenarios for mindless versus mindful eating. Mindless eating often happens when there is no “structure” and a lack planning – when you give into “head hunger” as opposed to actual physical hunger. When you’re faced with groaning buffet tables, holiday spreads with food on every flat surface, and endless passed hors d’oeuvres at an outdoor wedding, do you have a clue about how much – or even what — you have popped in your mouth?
Why Do You Mindlessly Eat?
Hunger doesn’t prompt most people to overeat. Instead, overeating situations are usually created by family, friends, plate size, packaging, lighting, candles, smells, distractions, environments, and feelings. According to the Mindless Eating website, two studies show that the average person makes about 250 food decisions every day – like deciding between white or whole wheat; sandwich or salad; grilled chicken or tuna; half or whole; kitchen table or chair in front of the TV. That’s about 250 daily opportunities to be mindful or mindless.
What’s Different About Mindful Eating?
Mindful eating means avoiding the shove it in your mouth, non-thinking kind of eating and encourages slower, more fully focused eating based on hunger and your body’s need for food. Armed with a plan rather than attacking whatever is edible, you choose carefully, eat more slowly, and savor your food — not gobbling it as part of multi-tasking, grab and go, or a race to the finish line.
Mindful eating doesn’t mean eating with your back straight, elbows off the table, using the correct fork. It means being mindful: conscious and aware of your choices and your food. You can eat anywhere and be mindful – mindfulness and a plan for what and how much you eat are not dependent on your kitchen table or a restaurant menu. You can be mindful at the beach, at a street fair, and at the office, too.
Stomach Versus Head Hunger
Mindless eating is often prompted by head hunger while mindful eating is largely associated with stomach hunger.
Head hunger is the compulsion to eat when your body isn’t physically hungry — often in response to a learned behavior: i.e., it’s noontime so I have to eat, doesn’t matter how I feel or if I’m hungry. Head hunger comes on suddenly and often takes the form of cravings, eating when you’re not hungry, eating when you think you should be eating, and mindless snacking. It happens at any time, with no physical symptoms, and includes time cues and sensory triggers, like smell, taste, or texture. Obsessing about food, habits (like watching TV, working on the computer, or driving), emotional or personal triggers, and cravings can make you think that you’re hungry when you’re really not.
Physical hunger, or stomach hunger, comes on slowly and usually happens two to four hours after you’ve last eaten. With true stomach hunger you may have an empty or grumbling stomach, lightheadedness, hand tremors, fatigue, or a headache. It’s your body’s way of telling you that it needs fuel and that it’s time to eat. You’re usually satisfied with almost anything – unlike the frequent cravings for sugar, salt, fat that occur with head hunger.
SocialDieter Tip:
Head hunger will eventually go away if you ignore it. Your body is not telling you it needs food for sustenance, rather, your head is talking to you, sometimes quite loudly. With head hunger, try to put off grabbing some food by distracting yourself and ignore it until it goes away. Often a cup of tea or coffee or a glass of water will do the trick as well as some distracting behavior. If your head hunger is screaming at you it may be tough to ignore. If you need to eat something ask yourself when you last ate. If it’s approaching three hours you might be physically hungry in which case you can’t ignore it and it won’t lessen with time. When you eat mindfully you are aware of stomach (physical) hunger versus head (emotional) hunger. You tune into your body’s signals about what, when, and how much to eat, and when to stop eating because you are approaching full and not because your plate its empty.








