losing weight

Entries tagged with: losing weight

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Minding Your Health

posted by Robert Davis, Ph.D. on August 6, 2009 5:35 PM

How mindful are you? Unless you're a Buddhist, it may sound like a strange question. But being more mindful could be an answer to two health issues high on many people's top-10 list: stress and weight.

Simply put, mindfulness means being aware of what you think and do in response to what's around you. It's the idea behind a technique known as mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR), which was developed by best-selling author Jon Kabat-Zinn, Ph.D. Research has shown that MBSR can help alleviate anxiety, depression, and pain.

MBSR, which is now offered by medical centers around the world, teaches people to live in the moment and become more aware of how they respond to their surroundings. As a result, they can change how they view whatever causes stress, pain, or other negative feelings and thereby achieve greater peace of mind. Typically, training is intensive, requiring eight weekly 2.5-hour classes plus 45 to 60 minutes a day of meditation. For some busy, stressed-out people, the time commitment is, well, too stressful.

A recent study, published in the journal Health Education & Behavior, has found that a scaled-down version of MBSR can be used successfully at workplaces. People who attended weekly one-hour MBSR meetings at lunch and practiced 20 minutes of yoga a day at their desks reported feeling less stress and sleeping better than those in a comparison group who did not participate.

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On the heels of that research comes another new study, published in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association, suggesting that mindfulness may also play a role in weight control. Participants (80% of them women) filled out questionnaires asking how often they had reactions such as:

• When a restaurant portion is too large, I stop eating when I'm full.
• I taste every bite of food that I eat.
• I recognize when I'm eating and not hungry.
• When I'm sad, I eat to feel better.

Those who were more mindful about food and eating tended to weigh less. They were also more likely to practice yoga, which the researchers hypothesize may have taught them greater self-awareness.

Food scientist Brian Wansink has written a terrific book, called Mindless Eating, about our lack of mindfulness regarding food and what we can do about it. I highly recommend it. And for more on how greater self-awareness can help control stress, sit back, relax, and watch this video segment.

Rethinking Diet Resolutions

posted by Robert Davis, Ph.D. on January 13, 2009 4:52 PM

Having trouble with that New Year's resolution to go on a diet? If so, don't beat yourself up. The problem may not be your willpower, but how you're thinking about weight and health.

Francie Berg, a nutritionist who runs an organization called the Healthy Weight Network, gives these 10 reasons not to go on a diet:

1. Diets don't work.

2. Dieting can cause lasting injury and death.

3. Dieting disrupts normal body processes.

4. Dieting causes weight cycling (yo-yoing up and down). BLOG PICTURE.jpg

5. Dieters often feel tired, lightheaded, and have difficulty concentrating.

6. Dieting leads to binge eating, disordered and chaotic eating.

7. Dieting is the primary precursor to eating disorders.

8. Dieting causes food preoccupation.

9. Dieting diminishes women, and increasingly men and children.

10. Dieters put their lives on hold, "waiting to be thin."

Instead of fixating on weight, Berg advises focusing on healthful living. That includes:

• Be active every day, your way. (Check these tips and guidelines.)

• Take time to care for yourself.

• Tailor your taste to foods that are moderate in fat, sugars, and salt.

• Listen to your body; tune in to inner signals of hunger and fullness.

• Make peace with your genetic blueprint.

Though this method won't melt away pounds immediately, it can reduce the harms associated with obesity. And you'll increase your sense of well-being.

So get off the couch and stay off the scale. And have a healthy, happy year.