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Eat Regularly and Less
as the Day Goes on
Most of us have been raised to eat three
meals a day, progressively increasing the amount of food as the day goes
on. The typical American has a small breakfast (if at all), a medium-sized
lunch, and a large dinner, which usually includes dessert. Many of us
still have the idea that snacking is bad--we were taught it would ruin
our appetite. Unfortunately, these eating patterns make it very difficult to
manage our weight.
The frequency of how often we eat per
day has been shown to greatly affect how fat we are. Many studies have concluded
that those who eat four to six smaller meals per day have less body fat than
those eating two or three meals a day, despite the fact that both groups
eat about the same amount of calories. In addition, eating patterns of three
or more meals a day may also have a positive effect on blood
cholesterol and triglyceride levels, which are usually lower than levels from one or
two meals a day. A calories not the same calorie at different times of
the day; calories consumed at dinner and later are more likely to be stored
than those consumed in the morning or mid-day, simply because we are less
active at night.
Eating only three times a day requires
us to go too long without eating. By the time lunch or dinner rolls around, we
are so famished we eat anything easily available. Eating small,
healthy snacks in between meals not only prevents you from gorging; it
increases your metabolism and helps you feel energized and satisfied throughout the
day.
It is also important not to eat too much
at each of these snacks and meals but rather just enough to feel satisfied and
energized. However, if you do eat too much (beyond being pleasantly full),
don't feel guilty; focus on the present moment rather than the past. And
certainly don't eat again just because it is dinner time--eat only when
you feel the need to eat. If you are not as hungry at dinner time, eat a
smaller portion than you are used to--eat according to your level of
hunger--not just because "it is time" or "that is how much I usually
eat at dinner." Likewise, it is important not to eat snacks if you are not
physically hungry. Always pay attention to your internal signals of hunger.
It is crucial that you experience comfortable hunger. If you are
constantly eating just to eat, you will never experience true hunger and not
learn to respond to your internal hunger signals. If you have been
dieting, you are probably out of touch with what true hunger is.
Food high in fat can mask physiological
hunger signals because the emptying of the stomach is delayed due to the high fat
content. Making small changes and decreasing the amount of fat you
eat in foods will help you attend to physiological hunger. In time, your
food choices will reflect new preferences that are lower in fat, allowing
you to acknowledge more accurate hunger signals.
Eating a large meal increases the
opportunity for fat cells to extract fat from the blood and, therefore, grow bigger. Fat
cells can actually adapt to a pattern of large, infrequent meals by
becoming more efficient at storing fat.
In addition, a two-to-three-meal a day
pattern causes the body to face long stretches without food. This eating pattern
actually tricks the body into thinking it's in a starvation state, initiating
physiological changes that actually slow down your body's resting
metabolic rate, the number of calories "burned" at rest. This
occurs because your body is trying to conserve energy for fear of starvation. A
reduction in metabolic rate slows fat loss. This is another reason why
diets do not work. Our body responds to the reduction in calories as if it
were starving and your metabolism slows down. Once again, if you are
trying to lose fat by decreasing your caloric intake, it is best to
eat small meals and snacks four to six times a day so your metabolic rate
will stay "revved" up throughout the day, making fat loss and/or
maintenance a much easier and healthier task. Of course, be sure that the
meals are nutritious, well-balanced, and low in fats and simple
sugars. If you eat four to six meals a day and don't eat healthy, low-fat
foods, you are missing the big picture.
In addition to eating smaller meals more
frequently, try to plan so that you don't eat your largest meal of the day late
at night. The body's metabolic rate has a natural cycle of highs and
lows, peaking late in the day and dropping to its lowest level during
sleep. It makes sense to avoid putting a large meal into your system after
8:00 at night when your metabolic rate is beginning to slow down. If
you do feel hungry after this time, you don't need to go to bed hungry, just
try to eat something especially healthy and in small portions. If it
is not possible to avoid a later dinner, eat a snack around 6:00 p.m. so
you won't be so hungry later.
I hope this helps and you have the opportunity
to enjoy all the wonderful benefits of a healthy, active lifestyle.
This article is copyrighted by Global Health and
Fitness. Visit them at
http://www.global-fitness.com |