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There's No Such Thing
as Cheating
By Chad Tackett, President of
Global Health and Fitness
There's no
right or wrong way to eat. Healthy eating is
all about motivation, balance, and
flexibility. There will be times when you
eat a high-fat meal or eat beyond fullness,
or when your schedule gets so busy that you
miss a work- out. This happens. It's normal.
But it's very important that you don't get
down on yourself and abandon your new
healthy lifestyle when this happens.
If you're like
most people, your reaction to these diet/
fitness obstacles is guilt. You feel as if
all your hard work has been for nothing. "I
blew it; I was doing so well. Oh well, I
might as well enjoy this weekend and start
over on Monday." Or even worse: "I just
don't have the motivation or will power to
start over and be successful. I quit."
Feeling defeated, many people discontinue
the healthy living and return to their old
routine until some mythical time in the
future: "Maybe this spring will be a better
time to start over again." This kind of
scenario is a perfect example of the diet
mentality at work.
An
all-or-nothing attitude is why so many
people have so little success; we choose
structured programs because they relieve us
from making choices for ourselves. A
properly designed program makes sense, but
expecting to stick to a structured eating
and exercise plan for an extended period of
time without ever deviating makes no sense
at all. In fact, this is so unrealistic as
to be a set-up for failure. If you begin to
change your habits with the assumption that
any deviation from your plan will ruin it,
you might as well not even begin. Life is
full of unplanned obstacles, distractions,
and temptations. Your best approach is to
prepare for them, keeping an open mind and
maintaining a positive attitude.
It's very
important that you begin your healthier
lifestyle with an understanding that there
will be days when you will stray from
healthy eating and exercising. Before you
begin, tell yourself that no matter what
happens, rather than abandoning your new
lifestyle, you'll resume your healthy habits
as soon as you can; it is equally important
that you feel confident, not guilty, about
doing so. What- ever the temptation or
obstacle is, keep in mind that it's not
wrong or bad to eat fattening foods once in
a while or to miss a workout. Just remember
to resume your healthy lifestyle. If you
keep moving forward and you don't let guilt
and discouragement stop your program all
together, you'll eventually have improved
eating and exercise habits.
With this
approach, there is no such thing as
cheating. When we feel we are cheating, we
often punish ourselves; we make ourselves
feel guilty, frustrated and defeated.
Replacing the negative concept of "cheating"
with the idea of "straying from healthy
habits" takes away the all-or- nothing
emphasis on right and wrong. If you treat
every deviation from your plan as a failure,
you won't get very far
Substituting
the idea of a brief straying away from your
plan instead of feeling guilty, and learning
to return more and more quickly to healthier
habits, is more realistic. It's also easier
and more enjoyable.
In the
non-diet approach, all foods are legal.
There are no "good" foods or "bad" foods.
You must believe this. Sudden changes and/or
drastic restrictions of high-fat foods when
you have a preference or craving for fat
will result in feelings of deprivation. No
one can or should go through life depriving
themselves of foods they really enjoy. You
must learn how to make gradual healthy
changes to the foods you love while
experimenting with and learning to
appreciate new flavors and textures.
A recent
survey showed that more than 75 percent of
people feel guilty about eating so-called
"bad" foods. The greatest obstacle to
adopting healthy eating habits is guilt.
Attaching a value to foods only makes you
feel bad for eating them. When you do decide
to eat a high-fat food, enjoy it. Don't beat
your- self up over it. Just make a special
effort to eat low-fat the rest of the day.
Remember, there is nothing wrong with
splurging now and then. It can even be good
for you if the satisfaction of a higher-fat
meal that you've been craving helps you
stick with a low-fat lifestyle the rest of
the time.
If you're
having a special diet meal that's different
from what the rest of your family or friends
are eating, you'll feel as though you're
being punished. In order to be successful in
changing your eating habits, you must look
forward to and enjoy each meal you eat. This
doesn't mean that you have to learn to like
rice cakes and celery. It means you must
learn how to make simple changes in the
foods you love.
Perhaps one of
your favorite meals is fried chicken, a
baked potato, and salad. Small changes in
how the food is prepared can turn this
traditionally high-fat meal into a low-fat
well- balanced one. Simply marinating a
skinless chicken breast in sweet and sour
sauce, rolling it in bread crumbs, and
baking it makes the chicken a lot less
fattening than if it's fried. Instead of
butter or regular sour cream on your potato,
try low-fat or nonfat sour cream or a
reduced fat ranch dressing. Try using a
non-fat or low-fat salad dressing rather
than a regular dressing and adding as many
vegetables to your salad as possible for
their additional flavor, texture and
nutrients. Any or all of these changes
drastically reduce the amount of fat in the
meal without sacrificing flavor or feelings
of satisfaction.
Healthy eating
patterns can only occur when you're enjoying
all the foods you eat. If you're eating
low-fat foods just to be healthy but without
enjoying the flavors and textures or how
they make you feel, this most likely won't
be a permanent change. However, if you begin
enjoying healthy foods, you're far more
likely to stick with healthy eating for
life.
Many people
also enjoy eating out but associate this
with being "bad" or eating "illegal" foods.
Fortunately, it is very possible to eat a
healthy, low-fat meal in a restaurant. You
don't need to forego your favorite foods or
eat before you go out with friends or
family. The same decision-making process
occurs whether you eat at home or go out to
a restaurant. Many people think that they
have two options when eating: eating for
taste and pleasure or eating for health. As
you learn and practice healthy eating
techniques, these two options will become
one and the same. Good luck and enjoy all
the wonderful benefits of a healthy, active
lifestyle.
Article kindly provided by Chad Tackett,
President of Global Health & Fitness.
Learn how you can have your own personal
online trainer, dietician and motivator at
http://www.global-fitness.com
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