The Encore Fitness Blog Resources and information from top Las Vegas personal trainers, fitness and dietary experts. Carol Strom.

March 21, 2012

How to Stop Yourself Eating from Boredom

<i>Don't eat just for the sake of eating!</i>People who struggle with their weight are often prone to “emotional eating”, consuming food as a response to mental triggers rather than physical hunger. Often, dieters fail to lose weight not because their diet plan itself is flawed, but because they are knocked off course by feeling stressed, tired, upset or bored.

The last of these is an especially common cue for many people to eat. For some, it’s a habit learned in childhood (“I’m bored, mum!” – “Run down to the shop and buy yourself a candy bar, then.”) For others, it’s a reaction to the dull parts of adult life: munching on biscuits while rocking the baby to sleep, or getting yet another handful of chocolates because the afternoon is really dragging at work.

Avoid Snacking When You’re Bored

When you find yourself thinking, “I’m bored, maybe I’ll have a cookie,” then get straight out of that mindset:

  • If you’re genuinely hungry, have some fruit or a small sandwich.
  • Cravings can be beaten, just by sitting them out. Force yourself to wait 20 minutes before getting that snack, and nine times out of ten, you’ll no longer want it.
  • Find something to do – ideally, an activity that makes it hard to eat at the same time.

Understanding Your Danger Points

Keep a food diary for a couple of weeks, and write down not only what you ate and when, but why you ate. (Hunger, because friends were eating, because it was lunch-time, boredom, stress..?)

When are you most likely to eat from boredom? Maybe it’s when you have to hang around at home, waiting for a delivery. Or perhaps it’s when you get in from work and you’re waiting for your partner to come home. Once you’ve figured out the pattern, work out how to change it!

  • Find a hobby or interest to occupy you, if you’ve got too much time on your hands
  • Use those “hanging around” moments, to blitz through all the little jobs you keep putting off (cleaning the oven, anyone?)
  • If you’re regularly twiddling your thumbs at work, see if there’s a stressed colleague who could use your help.

What are your tips for avoiding boredom-induced snacking?

Article courtesy of: diet-blog
Image courtesy from: Tony Jalicea

February 2, 2011

Envisioning Single-Serving Sizes

Consumers are starting to realize that healthy eating is all about moderation. They have been bombarded with advice about portion control and encouraged to stick to single servings. But studies show that many people remain confused about what these terms mean.

According to the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI), a portion refers to the amount of food you choose to eat, whereas a serving is used to describe the recommended amount of food you should eat at a given meal.

Still confused? Well, so are many of your clients. Since a picture is worth a thousand words, imagery may be the best way to teach them the difference. Use these visual examples provided by the NHLBI to show your clients what a serving really looks like.


source: IDEA Fitness

January 19, 2011

Can That Cola To Strengthen Bones

Tasty, but no lacking nutritional value

Soft drinks are high in calories and low in nutritional value. While that doesn’t stop most of us from hoisting a soda occasionally, maybe a report in the October 2006 issue of the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition will give cola drinkers pause.

In addition to having no nutritional value, soft drinks like colas contain caffeine and phosphoric acid, the latter of which may adversely affect bone mineral density (BMD). Researchers who recently studied the association between these beverages and BMD found that women were especially vulnerable in this regard, compared with men.
In observing 1,413 women and 1,125 men enrolled in the Framingham Osteoporosis Study, the researchers found that cola intake was associated with significantly lower BMD at the hip site in women—but not in men, despite their having reported a slightly higher weekly cola intake. Similar results were noted for diet cola consumption, although no such association was observed among those who drank noncola carbonated beverages. The researchers theorized that the phosphoric acid present in cola (but not in other carbonated beverages) may be responsible for promoting the BMD loss.
This led the researchers to conclude that “intake of cola, but not of other carbonated soft drinks, is associated with low BMD in women. Additional research is needed to confirm these findings.”

September 30, 2010

Outlast Your Cravings

photo & post courtesy of Men's Health blog

Turns out, talking to yourself isn’t so crazy after all…

That voice in your head can help you control your cravings, say researchers at the University of Toronto.

“We give ourselves messages all the time with the intent of controlling ourselves–whether that’s telling ourselves to keep running when we’re tired, to stop eating even though we want one more slice of cake, or to refrain from blowing up on someone in an argument,” Alexa Tullett, Ph.D., candidate and lead author on the study, said in a press release.

With that in mind, Tullett and her colleagues put her theory to the test. She discovered that when people who weren’t able to talk to themselves acted more impulsively and made more errors.

The likely reason: The study participants weren’t allowed to talk to themselves, which hindered their focus.

Talking to yourself can subconsciously cause you to think of other reasons why you should resist the impulse, say the study authors. Take, for example, the person who’s trying to resist a piece of cake. Telling themselves not to eat it can trigger their minds to think of the reasons why they shouldn’t eat it—like the fact that they’re on a diet.

Just remember this when you’re dining out with friends:

“Situations where we are constantly talking make it difficult or impossible to use the inner voice,” says Tullett. “[This] may have consequences for our self-control as a result. Being at a dinner party, for example, might result in us eating much more food (or drinking much more alcohol) than we would have if we were monitoring our actions.”

And this advice isn’t just for dieters: “Similarly, if you’re talking on the phone and your girlfriend is doing something annoying, you might not take the time to count to 10 and instead blow up at her,” she adds.

Next time you have to make a choice, let yourself do the talking.

By Quinn Thacker

Original Article: http://blogs.menshealth.com/health-headlines/outlast-your-cravings/2010/09/24

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