T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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770.1 | Eating more of what? | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Fri Oct 02 1992 15:19 | 4 |
| Just what is this approach? I'm sure it isn't just eating more of
anything and everything, while lying on the couch. 8^)
-ellie
|
770.2 | Yes, does make sense. | EVMS::K_COLLINS | | Fri Oct 02 1992 17:20 | 15 |
| Hi,
I read it. I tried it for about a month. I didn't gain any
weight, but I didn't lose any either. I tended to have the limited
foods too often, I think. I found, though, that when I stopped
thinking about following the advice there, that I gained weight.
Can't say that I gave it a really good try. I didn't stick to it
for three months.
When I did stick to it, though, I liked it alot.
Sorry, that doesn't really help, does it.
Kath
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770.3 | Metabolism | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | It's all in the cue | Fri Oct 02 1992 18:21 | 6 |
| I think it has something to do with speeding up the metabolism. I
understand if one eats 4 to 5 small meals a day, your metabolism is
constantly going, therefor it tends to utilize the food faster and
beter. Of course there are experts in here that know the answers.
Virginia
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770.4 | Any more comments? | DPDMAI::HUDDLESTON | | Fri Oct 02 1992 19:16 | 10 |
| Well, I haven't read the whole book yet but it seems to be saying that
you should forget the dieting etc that you've learned over the years
and should not starve your body. Or semi starve your body either. You
should eat when ever your body is hungry---I have and have lost 3 more
pounds. Of course I'm not eating fatty foods either. Pretty healthy
stuff. I have to read some more, but so far its posing questions and
answers that are helpful to me.
Donna
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770.5 | what book | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | It's all in the cue | Fri Oct 02 1992 23:36 | 9 |
| Donna,\
What is the name of the book? I might have missed it. I understand
the concept of eating when your hungry. I have been doing it like that
for a while. I don't judge by weight, I go by inches and tightness of
muscle tone. There has been a difference and I notice I don't gorge
myself at dinner time because I have been eating like a bird all day.
Does that book have a listing of the foods to be eating?
Virginia
|
770.6 | Still reading | DPDMAI::HUDDLESTON | | Fri Oct 02 1992 23:57 | 12 |
| The name of the book is "Naturally thin by eating more" by Jean
Antonello, rn,bsn. This book doesn't list menu's or food lists.
She's very adiment (sp?) about not including things like that. I'm
going to try to finish the book over the weekend and perhaps can put
together an outline of the book that would explain it better. Its
almost time to go home, and I'm not famished. I really don't plan on
eating all that much tonight.
Anyway, let me read more of this book and I'll report in on Monday.
Donna
|
770.7 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Sun Oct 04 1992 21:35 | 9 |
| .3> I think it has something to do with speeding up the metabolism. I
.3> understand if one eats 4 to 5 small meals a day, your metabolism is
.3> constantly going, therefor it tends to utilize the food faster and
If the study I cited in 750.2 is correct, it's the other way around.
Or, it could be that the difference is so small that depending on
random luck, it could go either way. In any case, tactics like that
are a waste of time if all you're going to get is a 10 calorie benefit.
|
770.8 | IF | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Mon Oct 05 1992 15:44 | 12 |
| re .-1
I read the note you entered about this study, and all it says, really,
is that your process of digestion takes more calories if you eat one
large meal rather than several smaller meals totalling to the same amount.
While this may be true, the theory behind eating several small meals to
aid in weight control is that doing so will keep your metabolism from
slowing down, as has been demonstrated in people who are fasting or on
severely restricted diets; it is not simply concerned with how many
calories are spend in the process of digestion.
|
770.9 | the real benefit of many small meals | CFSCTC::CFSCTC::CARROLL | a woman full of fire | Mon Oct 05 1992 21:18 | 8 |
| Seems to me, the *real* benefit of eating more and smaller meals is to
keep from getting hungry, and therefore be able to keep your wits about
you more when you *do* eat, so that you can select healthy foods. If
you starve yourself all day, you are going to be VERY HUNGRY by the
time your one meal comes and you will want to gorge...you will not be
in a mental state to chose foods wisely.
D!
|
770.10 | Avoid Hunger | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Tue Oct 06 1992 14:29 | 15 |
| re .9
Yes, I agree! If you starve yourself all day and then eat a big meal
at night, by that time you're so hungry that you don't care WHAT you
eat! But, as you say, it helps to make sure that you don't let
yourself get *really* hungry because then you can more easily make bad
decisions about what to eat. "I'm starved! I'll just eat this big
chunk of cheese, since that's so much quicker than steaming some
vegetables...." I find, too, that "ruining my appetite" as my mother
would have called it before a meal can be a real help. For instance, I
found that as soon as I got home from work, I was famished, and I
headed right for the refrigerator. So I've been trying eating a slice
of plain bread at my desk before I leave work, and it seems to work.
Now I can go home and read the mail without even desiring womething to
eat.
|
770.11 | | DPDMAI::HUDDLESTON | | Tue Oct 06 1992 17:18 | 7 |
| Yes, . 9 and .10 are correct. Thats essentially what its saying. I
haven't had the time to analyse (SP?) the book yet, but thats the basic
principal.
Donna
|
770.12 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Wed Oct 07 1992 01:06 | 4 |
| Eating 1200 calories in one sitting or eeting 100 calories in 12 sittings
makes no difference, weight-wise, all other things being equal.
This is just the latest gimmick du jour...
|
770.13 | LIttle and Often works for me | ROCKS::DAVIDSON | | Wed Oct 07 1992 10:08 | 14 |
| My aerobics instructor says that you should eat 6 times a day. This
keeps your metabolic rate up so that you can actually eat more without
turning it to fat. If your body doesn't get food for many hours then it
starts to build up reserves because it doen't know when the next meal
is coming.
He also says you shouldn't eat more than 400 calories at a time 'cos
the body can't digest more than that and will turn it to fat which you
then have to burn off.
I love eating 6 times a day! And I'm losing weight doing it.
Mary
|
770.14 | | ASICS::LESLIE | There go the lights! | Wed Oct 07 1992 12:22 | 4 |
| Hang on, how can your body build up reserves if you're still consuming
the same amount?
I'm sorry, but I doubt your aerobic instructor.
|
770.15 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | The Son reigns! | Wed Oct 07 1992 14:09 | 6 |
|
Never, never doubt your aerobics instructor!!!
thousands of :-)
Karen
|
770.16 | What are the "negative" calorie foods? | VLNVAX::TSMITH | That rabbit's dynamite... | Wed Oct 07 1992 14:32 | 7 |
| Sort of on the same lines as this note. Does anyone know what the "negative"
foods are? (ie. I'm told celery takes more calories to burn than you get from
eating it) If we knew what they were and people snacked on these "negative"
foods once in a while instead of some heavier snacks or even added these to
recipies in which they're appropriate, it would help a bit too.
/T
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770.18 | As Simple as Possible, But NO Simpler | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Wed Oct 07 1992 16:00 | 22 |
| re .12
>Eating 1200 calories in one sitting or eeting 100 calories in 12 sittings
>makes no difference, weight-wise, all other things being equal.
The point being made is that all other things are not equal. The
calories in vs. calories out equation was a first approach to an
understanding of weight gain/loss, but research over the past ten years
or so has shown that the process is more complex than that. The rate
at which calories are matabolized is not constant, and is affected not
only by factors like age and heredity but also by the very factors
themselves. It has been shown by many researchers -- your beliefs
notwithstanding -- that severely restricted diets, and fasting causes
ones metabolic rate to slow down. It has also been shown that increase
in exercise causes ones metabolic rate to speed up. So what does this
mean? It means that fasting or going on say a 600-calorie a day diet
may decrease your caloric intake, but it also in and of itself changes
the overall rate at which these calories are used. And exercise, on the
other hand, not only burns calories while being done, but also in and of
itself increases the overall rate at which calories are burned.
-ellie
|
770.19 | Book does include a food list. | EVMS::K_COLLINS | | Wed Oct 07 1992 16:22 | 27 |
| No, no. Assumptions are being made about this "diet?" that are wrong.
I read the entire book. First, let me say, that there *is* a list of
foods that you are free to eat each and every day. Then there is a list
of foods to be eaten once or twice a week (one of them, not all of
them, that is) if ever. Then there is a list of foods you should only
eat once a month or so. Of course, the limited foods are the ones like
chocolate cake, etc.
Now, the idea is that you should not limit your intake of "real foods"
and that yo will be either in a feast or famine cycle. If you are in
the feast cycle (you diet, you get hungry, you lose weight, then you
start eating again and gain weight back - we all know how *that*
feels! - that's the feast cycle) you will gain weight. The trick is
that you will be telling your body "It's ok, you'll never starve
again." Once your body is convinced, your appetite normalizes and your
body gets rid of the "fat that it no longer REQUIRES" in order to
survive. Fat is unhealthy, but starving is unhealthy, too, so we need
to teach our bodies whether it is likely to starve, or likely to get
fat.
In a nutshell, that's what I got out of the book. The difficult
part is keeping real food around and saying no to the limited foods as
often as we need to. Oh, and being patient.
Hope this helps!
Kath
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