Get started today with these easy science-backed calorie-cutting ways that’ll surely help you maintain healthy curves all year long.
1. Dim your lights
Scientists believe that because of the bright lights commonly found
in your favourite restaurants really create psychological need to rush
through meals and possibly eat more, so better light a candle at dinnertime, and you may be less stimulated to add more on your plate. There’s a study from Cornell University
says the secret to eating less and feeling more satisfies about what
you eat – could be as simple as dimming the lights in your dinner table.
Those who tried eating in this set up consumed 175 fewer calories than
those who noshed in bright lit places.
2. Change your glassware
I know it’s nice and stylish to drink using fancy shaped, curved
glasses on your table- but this usually leads to saddlebags either in
your thighs or around your middle. A British study found that people
consumed 60 percent more alcohol, sugary sodas, and juices if the glass
they drank from was curvy, rather than a straight tumbler. The
researchers speculate that people drink faster from the curvy glasses
because it’s harder to tell when you’re at the halfway point, so you
reach for another drink sooner and end up consuming more.
To space out your sips and feel satisfied sooner, pour yourself any drink in a straight-shaped glass. If you end up drinking 60 percent less than you normally would, that’s about 67 calories saved at breakfast if an 8 oz glass of orange juice is a morning staple; 48 calories saved at lunch if you’re sipping a sweetened iced tea; or about 40 fewer Chardonnay calories consumed at dinner or happy hour.
It’s the overtime at work you’re blaming with those sleepless nights. Several studies say you could wind up hungrier than if you were bright-eyed and bushy-tailed. One study from the Mayo Clinic shows getting less than 6 ½ hours of sleep a night can lead to consuming as many as 500 excess calories in a day. “Sleep deprivation can raise levels of appetite hormones like ghrelin,” he says. Surging levels of ghrerlin, the hormone that revs up your appetite, can lead to eating hundreds of extra calories than when you’re well-rested, according to Dr. Hallschmid. Being sleep deprived can increase how hungry you feel and lead to downing more calories than you’d eat if you weren’t exhausted, says Manfred Hallschmid, PhD, department of medical psychology and behavioural neurobiology, University of Tübingen and lead researcher of a separate study on sleep and calorie consumption.
To space out your sips and feel satisfied sooner, pour yourself any drink in a straight-shaped glass. If you end up drinking 60 percent less than you normally would, that’s about 67 calories saved at breakfast if an 8 oz glass of orange juice is a morning staple; 48 calories saved at lunch if you’re sipping a sweetened iced tea; or about 40 fewer Chardonnay calories consumed at dinner or happy hour.
3. Grab a few naps
It’s the overtime at work you’re blaming with those sleepless nights. Several studies say you could wind up hungrier than if you were bright-eyed and bushy-tailed. One study from the Mayo Clinic shows getting less than 6 ½ hours of sleep a night can lead to consuming as many as 500 excess calories in a day. “Sleep deprivation can raise levels of appetite hormones like ghrelin,” he says. Surging levels of ghrerlin, the hormone that revs up your appetite, can lead to eating hundreds of extra calories than when you’re well-rested, according to Dr. Hallschmid. Being sleep deprived can increase how hungry you feel and lead to downing more calories than you’d eat if you weren’t exhausted, says Manfred Hallschmid, PhD, department of medical psychology and behavioural neurobiology, University of Tübingen and lead researcher of a separate study on sleep and calorie consumption.
4. Don’t say, “I can’t”, say “I don’t”
Change your mind set. Whether you’re trying to sidestep a fast food drive thru, leftover Halloween candy, or heaping plates of food at Thanksgiving, don’t tell yourself what you can’t eat. New research says you’ll get better results if you frame it a little differently and focus on what you don’t eat.
“Can’t” sounds more like punishment than being healthy, researchers
say, and it creates a sense of self-deprivation that can tank your
motivation. On the other hand, reminding yourself you “don’t” eat
certain foods helps steel your willpower towards a healthier lifestyle.
Case in point: When researchers divided a group of people into “can’t eats” and “don’t eats”, 64 percent of those in the “don’t” group passed up a candy bar in favor of a healthier granola bar—but only 30 percent of the “can’t” group chose the healthier snack. So cut the “can’ts”, and will yourself towards smaller portions of healthier food. Here are some easy ways to Pump Up Your Willpower.
Case in point: When researchers divided a group of people into “can’t eats” and “don’t eats”, 64 percent of those in the “don’t” group passed up a candy bar in favor of a healthier granola bar—but only 30 percent of the “can’t” group chose the healthier snack. So cut the “can’ts”, and will yourself towards smaller portions of healthier food. Here are some easy ways to Pump Up Your Willpower.
5. Think Sexy
New research says the way you think about food and your waistline can determine your success at sticking to a healthy diet. Turns out telling yourself you’re “chubby” or “very fat” decreases the odds of hitting your target goal weight, even if you’re physically active.
Over a 10-year span, 59 percent of women who started out with an average body mass index of 20 but thought they were overweight, wound up packing on weight and watching their BMI swell to more than 25. That weight gain likely happened because of a self-fulfilling prophecy, says Susan Albers, psychologist at The Cleveland Clinic and the author of Eating Mindfully and 50 Ways to Soothe Yourself Without Food. “Your mindset is incredibly important in giving up or getting on track with your weight,” she says. “So if you think you are not overweight, regardless of your actual weight, you will act in ways that lead you to what you already believe.” And that translates to eating fewer fats and calories.
Over a 10-year span, 59 percent of women who started out with an average body mass index of 20 but thought they were overweight, wound up packing on weight and watching their BMI swell to more than 25. That weight gain likely happened because of a self-fulfilling prophecy, says Susan Albers, psychologist at The Cleveland Clinic and the author of Eating Mindfully and 50 Ways to Soothe Yourself Without Food. “Your mindset is incredibly important in giving up or getting on track with your weight,” she says. “So if you think you are not overweight, regardless of your actual weight, you will act in ways that lead you to what you already believe.” And that translates to eating fewer fats and calories.
6. Stop staring at sugar
Avoid all those temptation because you know you will be stimulated to
try – just a bite, or a pinch- then you end up eating a lot and just
promise not to munch on it the next day. Then you’re guilty. Don’t you
hate when you’re minding your own business, sticking to a healthy diet,
and all of a sudden a craving for junk food comes along and ruins your
good intentions? To help you keep those cravings in check, a new study
says you should look the other way when you see pictures of high-fat,
high-calorie, or sugary foods. That’s because brain scans have shown
that ogling pictures of high-calorie treats stimulates parts of the
brain that control hunger and the reward center, says Kathleen Page, MD, assistant professor of medicine at USC and the study’s lead author.
What should you do when TV commercials flash images of high-calorie foods? Head to the kitchen and take a peek at some healthy foods to shut down the reward center of your brain.
What should you do when TV commercials flash images of high-calorie foods? Head to the kitchen and take a peek at some healthy foods to shut down the reward center of your brain.
7. Replace your BFF
Make it your best buddy- water. Try this secret- Pour yourself a
tall glass of water, not soda, before your meals, and your appetite may
follow suit. You’re more likely to crave veggies than greasy French
fries, chips or other foods high in fat and calories if you pair a meal
with water instead of caloric beverages. Researchers at the University
of Oregon say that food-drink pairings can influence the type of food
choices we make and the amount of calories we eat. In the study, adults
who paired a meal with water were more likely to eat their vegetables
and make other healthy food choices than if they sipped on soda. Additionally, more participants named
water as the best drink to pair with healthy, low-calorie foods, while
soda scored high as the best drink to accompany pizza or fries.
8. Look forward to eating
Are you jonesing for lunch? Got Thanksgiving dinner or other meals on
your mind? Go ahead, keep fantasizing! Dr. Hallschmid says anticipating
a meal can actually lower your body’s levels of ghrelin, the appetite
hormone. In a study he conducted, he found that looking forward to and
thinking about a meal before you sidle up to the table helps reign in
ghrelin levels, so people consumed less calories during the meal.
“Looking forward to eating could have a positive effect on food intake
control because it leads to feeling full sooner, and sustaining that
feeling of full so you don’t seek out high-calorie snacks,” says Dr.
Hallschmid.
Source:health.com
Photo Credit:d1435t697bgi2o.cloudfront.net/berkeleywellness.com/cdn.sheknows.com/redbookmag.com/odytrim.com.au
Source:health.com
Photo Credit:d1435t697bgi2o.cloudfront.net/berkeleywellness.com/cdn.sheknows.com/redbookmag.com/odytrim.com.au
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