Tag Archives: diet tips

Tips on eating out and staying trim

Having to say goodbye to a social life whilst we’re on a diet is a thought that resonates with plenty of people, but why exactly?

Just because we’re making small changes to our diet it doesn’t mean that we should have to sit in and wallow in our own thoughts, which I’m guessing would mainly be about food.

Here we have the top tips from Bodycraft, the experts of weightloss, about how you can dine out and maintain a healthy weight.

It’s not rocket science.
· Don’t starve yourself throughout the day, going to a restaurant when you are really hungry will only encourage your appetite for those calorie laden dishes.
· Avoid fried dishes and speak up to your waiter. Ask for your food to be steamed, baked, grilled or poached.
· Be careful of those sauces! There isn’t a point in ordering the poached fish or baked chicken if it is drowning in a creamy rich sauce. Try to order tomato-based sauces if you need to at all
· Don’t feel compelled to order a 3 course meal, but if you do, try to choose light options like fruit or sorbet and order extra vegetables with your main course to fill up on
· If you are going for a starter, try the soup. Make sure to avoid creamy soups and go for broth-based soups made of vegetables as they contain mostly water which is a great way to fill up without the extra calories.
· Substitute potatoes and french fries for a salad where possible but watch out for the dressings. Creamy dressings are full of unwanted calories/fat so make sure to ask for it on the side so you can limit how much you use.
· Don’t feel compelled to finish the whole meal, or have that extra helping. Take it home and enjoy it for your lunch the next day.
· Take your time with your meal. Eating slowly will help you to eat less as your body has a chance to start acknowledging that it is full.
· Alcohol is full of calories, try a white wine spritzer (with soda). It’s a great lower calorie drink that lasts longer throughout the meal.

Why do 90% of diets fail?

According to a health expert, it’s the Pressure Cooker effect. He advises you on how to be one of the 10% that succeed with their diet

Of the thousands of people that started a diet in January, or at any point of the year, 90 per cent will fail and within 12 months of quitting they’ve put additional weight on.

So, why are so many of us unsuccessful when it comes to dieting? Why, once you have failed on a diet, is so hard to try the same diet again? And why do we put on even more weight after each diet?

Andrew West, who runs Obsidian Retreat – a pioneering new health retreat that’s helping people to make long term change as well as lose more than 9 lbs in 7 days, explains how to avoid Flabby February and offers advice based on a number of new studies from across Europe and the US – including the best diet to keep you full and not craving different foods.

Why do most diets fail?

“Well it is not the diet that fails”, says Andrew. “If the diet follows the principal of you consuming less calories than you burn it will be successful.

“But it’s the way the human mind works that’s the problem. As humans we only do any activity for one of two reasons: to move towards pleasure or to move away from pain. Unfortunately to move away from pain is the main driving force for most diets.”

Dieting is often triggered by something – maybe clothes no longer fit, a photo or maybe the comments of others – and we got at it with gusto.
After some initial success, and thinking that you’ve cracked it, the pressure cooker syndrome kicks in.

The pressure cooker syndrome

We often start a diet because we’re under pressure to change. We put in great effort and see success – feel better about ourselves, maybe family and friends start to comment on how good we look, our clothes start to fit or we even drop down a size.

This reduces the pain we were under to achieve and ‘releases the pressure slightly’. It is usually at this point that we decide to modify the plan we have been following, maybe we reduce the exercise or start adding things to the diet.

The result of this is that we don’t lose weight at the same speed and we start to get frustrated. We keep on modifying but do not do the one sure fire way to success, repeat what we did to start with as that now seems really painful.

Why can’t we start the same diet again, it was successful before?

Once the brain knows that a diet is painful, as it means avoiding the so-called pleasures and treats, it won’t go towards pain. So we find going back on the same diet almost impossible. Even if we use will power to start it, if we carry on with the same mindset we will give it up even quicker than we did previously.

Why do we put even more weight on?

If we enter a diet with the wrong mindset, we set ourselves in a program of deprivation. The brain will do everything it can to avoid pain so our pain threshold for putting on weight will now be less than our pain threshold for being overweight. This means it will take even more pain before we are kicked into action; and this is why we put on even more weight each time following a diet program.

The recipe for success – in five simple steps

1. Move towards pleasure.

“This is the way to success in any aspect of your life”, says Andrew. “If we find a way to build something into our lives that is constantly leading us towards pleasure we will want to achieve more and more of it and it will keep driving us on. There is no limit to this approach.

“Rather than thinking that you must change you start thinking of what success would be like for you. You have to see and feel a really strong compelling reason. It might only be a slight change in mindset but it will make all the difference; something as simple as don’t see food as the enemy and eating ‘diet foods’ you don’t like. Learn to cook and enjoy healthy food.

2. Create the correct mindset

To create the right mindset, the first thing is to set a compelling view of what you want the result to be.
· Write down every single reason why this MUST happen
· Write down every single way you can achieve this
· Pick the 20% that will give you 80% of the results and start working a plan around them.
· Start taking massive action towards it. If you have large amounts of weight to lose break it down into small manageable sections with goals at each stage. This way you can celebrate every goal along the way.

3. Think nutrition not calories

Remember – The body doesn’t understand calories. What the body does understand is nutrition. If you feed the body food full of nutrition such as salads, juices and vegetables it fills the stomach quicker, makes you feel fuller for longer and is usually much lower in calories.

Any diet will work as long as you input less than you burn (but this doesn’t mean though that all diets are equal). Calories don’t necessarily fill you and stop you feeling hungry in the same way. Processed foods and other similar foods are often high in calories and low in nutrition. They only fill you in the short term.

Obsidian’s very successful approach is all about nutrition. If you feed the body food full of nutrition such as salads, juices, pulses, beans and vegetables it fills the stomach quicker, makes you feel fuller for longer and is usually much lower in calories, helping you to achieving your weight loss goals.
The more you can add fruit, vegetables, pulses and beans to your diet the less you will want and crave other foods.

Current research shows that diets that limit and eliminate things such as meat and dairy products and replace them with nutritious items like those listed above will help to cleanse the body and help it to control illnesses.

4. Make a plan

Write out a seven day eating plan, incorporating the above, which you believe you can stick to for the next week based on the following criteria:
· Design your eating around how you normally behave
· Identify the times you ate last week when you didn’t need or want to eat. Try to eliminate those completely this week (and more)
· Identify the times when you ate out of habit or because you were bored. Try to eliminate those completely this week (and more)
· Identify your snacking habits from last week either cut out those snacks OR choose something you can snack on which is healthier
· Look at the places you ate last week and see if avoiding those places this week reduces your habit of eating

5. Mindful Eating

You can develop strategies to take more control over food and eating. As above, focusing on when we eat, what we’re eating, why we eat and where we eat a longer term change can be achieved.

Andrew says, “Two of my favourite and most successful techniques include, thinking about a food that we absolutely love and one we detest – then think about the nice item smothered in the horrible one. Most of us then go, yuk, I really couldn’t eat that. This shows us that we CAN change judgement and our thoughts on food – a desire for food doesn’t control us. We decide what we like and we can re-educate ourselves, just by recognizing the tricks the mind can play on us and taking control.

“The second even easier approach is to ensure we’re concentrating on what and how we’re eating – not allowing our minds to be oblivious to it as we watch TV or simply scoff it down while doing something else. Slow down, really taste the food, chew properly, put your knife and fork down in between mouthfuls and really try and look out for the signal from your stomach that it’s full. Even, get into the habit of leaving something on your plate – just to show yourself that you don’t have to eat everything if you’re no longer full.”

The Obsidian Way

Attending a health retreat can really help to make a longer-term change. The approach at Obsidian Retreat is not to convert everyone to a vegetarian, vegan or nutritarian diet but to show people that there is another way.

The Obsidian Way uses successful methods of many of the world’s health and nutrition experts and teaches people how to modify them to their own needs and conditions, tackling the mind, diet and lifestyle – not just encouraging a new diet in isolation, without introducing mindset change.

For a free report on “Why 90% of diets are not successful and how to be one of the 10% that are” visit www.obsidianretreat.com

It’s not all about weight loss

With the New Year comes a national obsession with trying to get rid of those ‘extra pounds’, we all put on over the Festive Perios, as quickly as possible. It sees thousands of us signing up to gyms, weight loss groups and websites and sales of supplements, promising instant weight loss, soar. In the rush to drop weight however many of us forget that it’s not all about losing weight and let the rest of our health slide.
A new ‘healthy lifestyle’  website hopes to counter this trend by offering a member’s site with a difference…
MyVitality.com ‘can’ certainly help you lose weight, but it is so much more than that and is a must for those whose New Year’s resolution isn’t just to drop a few pounds, but to give their general health and wellbeing a boost.
MyVitality is effectively a nutritionist, life coach, beauty therapist and chef all in one. When you sign up to the site you fill in a health questionnaire that asks about your lifestyle and symptoms. It follows this up by asking what your health aims are over the coming months; it’s ok if you just want to lose weight, but what about wanting to get a better night’s sleep, clearing up your skin, beating that bloated belly or having more energy when you come home from work?
Deigned by health experts, the system then creates a 24 page profile created specifically for you. This is no common profile shared by hundreds of people, because the experts behind the site understand that someone who wants to lose fat, but also has issues with energy is going to need a totally different diet plan to someone who wants to get fitter for sport, but struggles with stress.
The profile that is created tells you what your nutritional priorities should be, which foods to eat and what supplements could help you achieve your goals. Alongside these dieting tips the site also helps with ‘lifestyle actions’, whether that’s getting more sleep, deep breathing exercises or getting a better sleeping regime.
Alongside this the site also has a huge resource database to help you achieve your goals and suggests recipes that can help, provides information on herbs, spices, supplements and herbal teas, has a ‘daily action log’ and a ‘hunger scale’ to print off, and even sends you emails to steer you in the right direction.
“There are a huge number of sites out there designed to help with weight loss, numerous other sites to give advice on specific health conditions, and yet more to help with food intolerances. What we wanted to create was something that pulled all of these together and took all the hard work and time out of spending hours sifting through conflicting books and websites to try and find advice and help you need. We believe we’ve done just that with MyVitality,” says Drew Fobbester, director of MyVitality.
To get a full My Vitality assessment and profile report costs just £19.95. You then have the option to become a member of the site for £3.95 a month, which allows you to change your health goals as you progress throughout the year.

An incentive to lose weight

Sometimes a little encouragement can go a long way when you want to lose weight.

It may a picture that makes you feel good or some pays you a compliment. But, what if you were paid for the pounds that you have shifted?

I think that’s just the sort of push we’d need, particularly in the New Year, when money’s tight.

Revolutionary new weight loss programme, Weight Wins, is the pioneer of a concept that will come to be known as diet rewards, where members are actually paid to lose weight.

All members have to do is weigh-in once every month at their convenience, in return for the motivation to achieve their weight loss goals and maintain their success.

Created to provide a solution for those that have tried everything to lose weight, from meal replacement diets to the latest weight loss fads, Weight Wins is a programme that runs alongside an individual’s fitness / health regime that encourages commitment through incentives.

It is also the first broad-based weight loss programme that appeals to men as well as women, with one in three members being male.

The Weight Wins programme launched in December 2012 following three years of extensive development work and rigorous trials, including trials by the NHS, resulting in a programme that supports members through encouragement, financial incentives, healthy advice and ease of participation.

How It Works
Members sign up to the programme via WeightWins.com, where they select a plan of their choice; based on their weight loss targets, current BMI and desired length of plan.  Soon after, the new member receives a Weight Wins Welcome Pack, which includes weight loss tips, support details, a Weigh-In Certificate and a detailed Weight Loss Incentive Plan of the programme they have selected.

Armed with their Welcome Pack and initial Weigh-In Certificate, the new member completes their first weigh-in and returns the certificate to Weight Wins…freepost of course!  The new member is then contacted to confirm receipt of the Weigh-In Certificate and congratulated on taking their first step to healthy and effective weight loss.

The Rewards
Each member’s Weight Loss Incentive Plan details the dates of when they should weigh-in and return their updated Weight Loss Certificate to Weight Wins.

It also details the advised weight loss they should be aiming for each month and cash reward they will receive for every month they successfully lose weight.  Even if a member doesn’t hit their target each month, they will still be rewarded for every pound they shed.

Very importantly, members are also rewarded for keeping weight off in the ‘Maintenance Period’, and earn large bonuses if they maintain their goal weight to the end of their plan.

Members can earn rewards totalling between £100 and £3000 – rewards increase with weight loss targets, length of plan, and fee level selected.

The Facts
In clinical trials of over 1000 members, 80 per cent of members lost weight, with 87 per cent maintaining some or all of their weight loss.  One year in to the Weight Wins programme, active members had lost an average of 26lbs (nearly two stone), the equivalent to 12 per cent of their initial body weight.  These long-term results are outstanding for a weight loss programme.

Weight Wins is available directly to the public and via organisations interested in their members’ health.    Insurance companies in particular are expected to offer Weight Wins to their populations in the course of 2012.

Weight Wins’ Medical Advisor is Dr. David Haslam, an obesity specialist GP and Chairman of the National Obesity Forum – ensuring a safe and ethical service supporting the core value of healthy weight loss.

Is There a Catch?
Isn’t there always?  Well…no.  Once signed up to the programme all members have to do is weigh-in once per month.  They are reminded to do so, don’t have to announce their weight loss in front of a group, can do it at their convenience, earn money for doing so and are provided with support and advice along the way.

Weight Wins is designed to help those struggling to achieve their weight loss goals, do so, by simply providing them with the motivation they have been lacking.  The programme wants its members to succeed and really wants to give them the cash for doing so.

The secret to successful weight-loss

Weight-loss – likelihood is, you’ve been trying to motivate yourself for this in the months leading up to Christmas. It’s December now, give in to temptation. And then, before we know it it’ll be January and the word will be magnified ten times.

We look forward to it…. I write with gritted teeth.

But thanks to a little study conducted in New York, they’ve found out just what it is we need to do to succeed in our goals and it’s a simple answer too – keeping schtum.

The research found that your diet is more likely to be effective if you don’t tell anyone about it.

The findings showed that those who shared details with their friends and family were less likely to meet their goals.

Professor of psychology Dr Peter Gollwitzer, who lead the study, explained: ‘The danger is that you feel that you have already reached the goal and because of that you don’t have to act on it any more.’

He told CNN that dieters can avoid this pitfall in a number of ways.

‘One is simple – you can keep your mouth shut,’ he said.

‘Another one is to form different kinds of intentions, not only say what you want to do but also when, where and how you want to do it.’

He said that by describing our intentions, we mentally map out our future, so are more likely to follow through.

The third solution, he continued, was to only share your weight-loss plan with a trusted few, who can help you keep on course.

It sounds easy enough to try out, much more easy than cutting carbs out of my life. Impossible.