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Intuitive Eating: An 'Anti-Diet' That Works |
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Copyright 2005 Daily News Central
Stop hating your body, stop counting calories and stop using
food for purposes other than to satisfy hunger, and you'll be
healthier and slimmer. That, in a nutshell, is the argument in
favor of "intuitive eating," or letting your body tell you when,
what and how much to eat.
"The basic premise of intuitive eating is, rather than
manipulate what we eat in terms of prescribed diets -- how many
calories a food has, how many grams of fat, specific food
combinations or anything like that -- we should take internal
cues, try to recognize what our body wants and then regulate how
much we eat based on hunger and satiety," says professor of
health science Steven Hawks, lead researcher of an
intuitive-eating study at Brigham Young University.
The findings are reported in the American Journal of Health
Education.
Hawks, who adopted an intuitive-eating lifestyle himself several
years ago and lost 50 pounds as a result, says that "normal"
dieting in the United States doesn't result in long-term weight
loss and contributes to food anxiety and unhealthy eating
practices, and can even lead to eating disorders.
All Diets Work Against Human Biology
Hawks and colleagues Hala Madanat, Jaylyn Hawks and Ashley
Harris identified a handful of college students who were
naturally intuitive eaters and compared them with other students
who were not. Participants then were tested to evaluate their
health.
As measured by the Intuitive Eating Scale, developed by Hawks
and others to measure the degree to which a person is an
intuitive eater, the researchers found that intuitive eating
correlated significantly with lower body mass index (BMI), lower
triglyceride levels, higher levels of high density lipoproteins
and decreased risk of cardiovascular disease.
Approximately one-third of the variance in body mass index was
accounted for by intuitive eating scores, while 17 to 19 percent
of the variance in blood lipid profiles and cardiovascular risk
was accounted for by intuitive eating.
"The findings provide support for intuitive eating as a positive
approach to healthy weight management," says Hawks, who plans to
do a large-scale study of intuitive eating across several
cultures.
"In less developed countries in Asia, people are primarily
intuitive eaters," notes Hawks.
"They haven't been conditioned to artificially structure their
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with food like we have in the United States.
They've been conditioned to believe that the purpose of food is
to enjoy, to nurture. You eat when you're hungry, you stop when
you're not hungry any more. They have a much healthier
relationship with food, far fewer eating disorders, and
interestingly, far less obesity," he points out.
"What makes intuitive eating different from a diet, is that all
diets work against human biology, whereas intuitive eating
teaches people to work with their own biology, to work with
their bodies, to understand their bodies," Hawks explains.
"Rather than a prescriptive diet, it's really about increasing
awareness and understanding of your body. It's a nurturing
approach to nutrition, health and fitness as opposed to a
regulated, coercive, restrictive approach. That's why diets
fail, and that's why intuitive eating has a better chance of
being successful in the long term," he maintains.
Two Attitudes, Two Behaviors
To become an intuitive eater, a person has to adopt two
attitudes and two behaviors. The first attitude is body
acceptance.
"It's an extremely difficult attitude adjustment for many people
to make, but they have to come to a conscious decision that
personal worth is not a function of body size," says Hawks.
"Rather than having an adversarial relationship with my body,
where I have to control it, and force it to submit to my will so
that I can make it thin, I'm going to value my body because it
allows me to accomplish some higher good with my life."
The second attitude is that dieting is harmful.
"Dieting does not lead to the results that people think it will
lead to, and so I try to help people foster an anti-dieting
attitude," says Hawks. "You have to say to yourself, 'I will not
base my food intake on diet plans, food-based rules, good and
bad foods, all of that kind of thing.' For people who are deep
into dietary restraint and dietary rules, again, that's a very
difficult attitude adjustment to make, to give up all those
rules."
The first behavior is learning how to not eat for emotional,
environmental or social reasons.
"Socially we eat all the time in our culture. We go out to eat
ice cream if we break up with our boyfriend, we eat to
celebrate, we eat when we're lonely, we eat when we're sad, we
eat when we're stressed out," says Hawks. "Being able to
recognize all the emotional, environmental and cultural
relationships we |
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Untitled Document
Victoria Beckham is reportedly gearing up to sue the U.K. magazine Now over an article that claimed she was "hooked on sex and diet pills."
Dr. Siegal's COOKIE DIET® begins licensing third-party food and beverage manufacturers to display special logo identifying their products as compatible with Cookie Doctor™ Sanford Siegal's hunger-controlling foods and weight loss system (PRWeb Aug 21, 2008) Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/cookie-diet/cookie-doctor/prweb1234344.htm
Dr. Siegal's COOKIE DIET® begins licensing third-party food and beverage manufacturers to display special logo identifying their products as compatible with Cookie Doctor™ Sanford Siegal's hunger-controlling foods and weight loss system
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