Wednesday, November 24, 2021

23 Tips for a Healthier Thanksgiving

Ready or not, here they come…

In case you’ve missed the glaring lights and blaring commercials, it’s official… the holidays are upon us. And Thanksgiving, with all of its food-based traditions, promises to put your weight loss willpower to the test.

According to research from the Calorie Control Council, a typical traditional Thanksgiving dinner can clock in at 3,000 calories. Add some apps and drinks, and you’ve got yourself a 4,500 calorie meal—that’s more than two times the average daily intake. This same source reports that the average Thanksgiving enthusiast may fill up on close to 230 grams of fat—the fat equivalent of three sticks of butter.

But with a little planning, you can make it through Thanksgiving without putting on more stuffing. Check out these 23 simple strategies that are sure to help keep the “trim” in your turkey day:

1. Don’t skip breakfast
Don’t “save space” for dinner. We all know what happens when we don’t eat all day—we become ravenous and are more likely to gobble up everything in sight. Plus, when it comes to weight loss, the old adage that breakfast is the most important meal of the day may very well hold true. In a study in the journal Obesity, overweight people who were dieting and ate more calories for breakfast than dinner lost more weight compared with subjects who ate larger evening meals. Make sure to opt for a morning meal that’s high in protein like an egg white veggie omelet or non-fat Greek yogurt with fresh fruit—this will help keep you feeling fuller as you head into the potential diet dark hole that is Thanksgiving dinner.

2. Work in a workout
Be sure to get a good sweat session in before you dive in to dinner. A study published in 2009 in the American Journal of Physiology revealed that vigorous exercise may suppress a key hunger hormone for up to 30 minutes after workouts and can increase the levels of an appetite-suppressing hormone for as long as three hours after exercise. Not convinced? Get this: A 2013 study published in the journal Neuroreport revealed that participants who exercised craved healthier foods, like fiber-rich beans and veggies rather than those packed with refined sugar (think cookies and cakes). The researchers discovered that physical exercise may be linked to reduced activity in the food-responsive reward regions in the brain which, in turn, are linked to a reduced preference for unhealthy high-calorie foods.

3. Don’t pick as you prep
A tiny taste here, a tiny taste there. Before you know it, you’ve consumed a meal’s worth of calories. You don’t normally pick all day long, right? So don’t start now. Eat your regular meals at your regularly scheduled times and limit your splurges to small selections at dinner time. Your waistline will thank you.

4. Bring a helping of healthy
Volunteer to bring a side of roasted veggies, fresh salad or fruit tray, so that if all else fails, you’ve got one healthy option to pile on your plate! Try these delicious Brussels Sprouts with Apple—they’re simple to make and totally guilt-free.

5. Drink water before and during your meal
In a study published in 2015 in the journal Obesity (Silver Springs), participants who drank 500 milliliters of water 30 minutes before a meal lost more weight than those who did not drink up prior to chowing down. But don’t limit your liquids to the time before your meal. Sip water throughout your Thanksgiving meals to keep you feeling fuller and slow down your gobbling.

6. Nix the rolls
Pass on the bread bowl and you could save yourself anywhere from 100 to 200 calories, plus the 100 calories in the butter you would have slathered all over it. With so much food at your disposal, we doubt you’ll even miss it.

7. Use a smaller plate
A study published in 2015 in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews revealed that when people—even the health conscious—were given larger plates, they consistently consumed more food than those using smaller plates. The same held true for non-alcoholic beverages consumption—the larger the glass, the bigger the gulps. Opt for a smaller plate at dinner and chances are good you’ll stick to smaller portions.

8. Veg out

Time and again research confirms that high-fiber foods, which provide volume in the body and take longer to digest, help you feel full longer—on fewer calories. Help yourself to high-fiber foods like fruits and veggies, whole grains and bean dishes. Just don’t fall for dishes drenched in butter or creamy sauces, which can be loaded with calories and fat.

9. Fine-tune your turkey selection
For many, it just wouldn’t be Thanksgiving without the taste of turkey. Just make sure to opt for white meat, and don’t eat the skin. With this simple swap, you could save 7 grams of fat and over 50 calories (for a serving size that’s roughly equivalent to a deck of cards). Might not sound like a lot, but tiny trimmings like these can pile up quickly.

10. Put your fork down between bites
Based on a study published in 2014 in the Journal of Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, increasing the number of chews during meals can extend the duration of those meals, reduce the speed at which people eat, and lead to less food consumed. Make an effort to put down your fork and chew your food several times before diving in to your next bite. Bonus: You’ll actually taste all of those fabulous flavors when you slow down!

11. Be a ‘Chatty Cathy’
The more you talk, the slower you’ll eat. The slower you eat, the better the chances of your body signaling it is full before you overeat. See #10.

12. Be mindful of extras
Between the gravy, butter and creamy dressings, Thanksgiving add-ons can be total fat traps. Try seasoning your food with spices and herbs, and opt for vinegar-based dressings.

13. Don’t drink your calories
A 12-ounce bottle of pumpkin beer is somewhere in the 200 calorie range. A five ounce glass of spiced apple wine can clock in at 271 calories. Think you’ll save tons of calories avoiding alcohol? Not exactly. A 16-ounce glass of apple cider can cost you almost 230 calories. Wash down your meal with water (see #5), sparkling water, tea or coffee instead and your waistline will thank you.

14. Step away from the table
Once you’ve eaten a normal-sized dinner, kindly remove yourself from the table so you don’t start mindlessly munching. Head to another room in the house or better yet, engage in some good old fashioned family fun (see #15 and #16!).

15. Start an active tradition
Holidays are all about traditions, right? Start a new ritual, like a family football game or a group stroll around the neighborhood. Studies have shown that going for a walk instead of hitting the couch, about 15 minutes after a meal may improve digestion and blood sugar control, and will burn some extra calories. Plus, stepping away from the table for a bit may save you from diving into another pile of potatoes.

16. Focus on the fun
Take the focus off of food and put it back where it belongs—on spending quality time with your loved ones. Bring board games or DVDs. Share in a few rounds of post-dinner charades. Or gather up the troops and hit the local soup kitchen to help serve dinner to the less fortunate. Forget the food—there’s fun to be had!

17. Wait 20 minutes before even considering seconds
Stick to this rule of thumb: If you’re still hungry after 20 minutes (the commonly accepted amount of time it takes for your stomach to send your brain the “I’m stuffed” signal), you can go back for seconds.

18. Ask the hard questions before heading back for more
Before hitting the buffet for a second round, ask yourself if you’re really hungry. Sometimes just seeing a large spread can make us eat more. In fact, in a study published in 2005 in the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior, when moviegoers were provided stale popcorn in big buckets, they ate 34 percent more than those given the same stale popcorn in smaller tubs. In the case of fresh popcorn, those given large tubs ate almost 50 percent more than those given medium-sized buckets. If you aren’t just being thrown off by a sizable spread, ask yourself: If I could have seconds of just one dish, which would it be? Then opt for that option only.

19. Skip seconds if you plan on doing dessert
Survey the food scene before you dive in for seconds, and map out a strategy. If grandma’s rhubarb pie is on your radar, don’t stuff your face with more stuffing. If you yearn for candy yams year-round, don’t get chummy with the crumb cake. Decide on one or two indulgences you’d like to try ahead of time, and don’t eat everything in sight before you get to them.

20. Don’t be guilted into gobbling
While it’s nice that aunt so-and-so brought her world-famous pie, that doesn’t mean you have to eat it. If you’re going to enjoy foods you might normally avoid, make sure you do the picking. Feel uncomfortable refusing? Tell your aunt you’re too stuffed but you’ll take it to-go. If you’re lucky, she’ll forget, if you’re not so lucky and she piles on the pie, give a loved one your leftovers.

21. Fill up on fruit for dessert
Remember how we told you to bring healthier dishes (see #4)? A fruit tray is a great option. That way, when everyone else is pigging out on apple pie, you can enjoy some fresh apple slices with a sprinkle of cinnamon.

22. Leave the leftovers
If you can get away with it, leave the doggy bag for the other diners. While one day of indulging won’t destroy your diet, several in a row certainly can. Pass on the extra potatoes and remove all temptation tomorrow.

23. Don’t miss the point–family!
We bet that this time next year you won’t even be able to recall what exactly you ate at Thanksgiving this year. The taste of dessert is fleeting; memories with your family are forever. Take this time, when there is no work or school or real life to worry about, and enjoy the time you have with your loved ones. Cherish the company, not the food.

The post 23 Tips for a Healthier Thanksgiving appeared first on The Leaf.



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Diet breaks

I'm looking for advice and perhaps reassurance from anyone that's been on a diet break. I'm hitting a wall after nearly 6 successful months of weight loss - 49lbs, from a start weight of 205 - CW 156, 5ft2f. I'm still losing, but much slower which is to be expected. I still have 20lbs to go to reach my initial GW. I'm suffering mental and physical fatigue, which isn't helped by the time of year. It's just a few degrees above freezing here and the daylight hours are getting shorter and shorter. I suffer from SAD which has hit me big time all of a sudden and the resulting apathy is extending to more than just weight loss, including work, hobbies and socialising.

I have no fears of being able to return to a deficit, but I join the many others that worry about putting weight back on or becoming lazy. I initially wanted to take just a week off exercise. Day 3 (today) I went against that and tried to go on the rowing machine but due to lack of energy, gave up after 15 mins. Now I'm wondering if I just need a break entirely. Any advice and experience, good or bad from people who've been on a diet break would really help me right now.

So my questions....How long were you losing weight before you decided to take a break? Why did you decide to do so? How long did you take a break for? Did you count calories to stay in a smaller deficit, maintenance or not count at all? Did you continue to exercise as normal or did you take a break from that as well? How did it help you (or not) physically and mentally?

Thank you in advance

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has anyone else experienced this

I (f) have a B shaped belly even though I have never been pregnant. It is frustrating having one cause I feel like it makes weight loss less noticeable to me.

My body loses weight in proportion so it’s even less noticeable then so I am thankful for measurements cause that keeps me motivated cause you can’t fake measurements.

So I was wondering if anyone else’s top belly developed a slope from the under breast part and then went into the B as they lost a bit more weight and what to expect going forward. I hope this makes sense.

Thank you!

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Around September 26th, I weighed 270ish. I'm scared to see what I weigh today. Some questions below

Hi all, I've started my weight loss journey up (again) and I'm scared to fail. Around the end of September, I went to the hospital and this is what I weighed. I have been unable to get a scale recently, so I'm anxious to finally have access to one.

Wish me luck. I also wish to take body measurements (hip, bust, thighs, waist) with a tape measure too. Are there any other methods of tracking weight and/or body fat that doesn't involve a scale?

5'5" 21 yrs old F, let's go

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Some time of weeks in. Lessons I learned. Progress I made

This will be my "final" post in this journal style. I have posted a couple times to keep track, to formalize for myself what works and just to interact with likeminded people.

You can find Progress Pics here: https://imgur.com/a/euNkCpl

I started on June 1st and have lost 16kg, I went from 96kg at 186cm to 80kg, this took my pretty much exactly 16 weeks, so I lost about 1kg a week. I understand that this is quite fast and I am pretty excited that I managed to do so. This has also been the first time I ever took weight loss really seriously; I was active throughout my youth until I was roughly 17 when injury and a health situation made it impossible to continue with my sporty lifestyle. So, I went from very active (Tennis 4 Trainings and 1 Game a week) and growing to sedentary and not growing while maintaining a questionable diet. I never had problems with my weight until I turned 18 and even then, it was a slow progress over about 4 years I would say. At the beginning of the pandemic I would estimate, that I was maybe around 92kg, my heaviest but not obese, I was however slowly becoming the fat one in my friend group, this is partly because my group of friends is quite fit in general. I didn’t really make anything of it, I never was bullied growing up and banter is normal between us so I didn’t take it in a very negative way. During the pandemic I became even more sedentary, my diet was still not great, loads of sugar and snacks. This summer my weight really began to bother me, I felt bad, low energy and didn’t looking in the mirror, so I implemented changes, here is what I tried, what worked and what didn’t work in no particular order.

I didn’t really know a huge amount about diets or nutrition beyond the basic things, I am a good cook and I enjoy cooking, but I only ever went by taste and not really by nutritional value.

I also didn’t know much about properly exercising or energy consumption, if you had asked me 6 months ago how many calories you burn for … well anything I would not have been able to give a good answer.

BUT and here is lesson number one, I do have a good support system, as I mentioned I have quite sporty friends and that is probably and understatement. My mom is also quite knowledgeable about nutrition and diets. I got to sponge up a lot of knowledge by asking them for advice, I also obviously used YouTube and other resources I found online, like most of us do.

I know this is a very privileged position, I know not everyone has a network like I do, but try to find help, from whomever, find people here, over Discord wherever, it is important to realize that ultimately the change can only come from within, but that does not mean you have to do everything by yourself. Without this network I would not have succeeded.

Lesson 2: Find internal motivation that goes beyond the number on the scale. To put this point into perspective I want to give context by explaining my system for the first 16 Weeks. I started by using the MyFitnessPal App, I calculated my TDEE, subtracted 200 to be on the safe side and then went for a deficit, I believe I started with roughly 1800 calories a day, I also used a spreadsheet, that calculated a more accurate TDEE over time by taking my daily intake and weight loss into account over the first 3 weeks, if you can get your hands on one of those, than I can highly recommend that! With this I saw great and constant results, but I knew getting onto the scale every day and measuring my success by the shown number was not going to motivate me for a very long time. I now feel strongly about trying to disconnect you feeling of success from the number on the scale, it’s an important part, but it should not be the only and final measurement.

Lesson 3 "Its simple, but that doesn’t mean it’s easy", I touched on this in a comment I wrote a couple of days ago. I don’t think there is a more accurate phrase for weight loss out there. The things you need to do and the steps you need to take to lose weight could not be simpler in theory. Once you get through all the juice cleanse, OMAD Diets, 5 hour cardio stuff you can find online its one simple question: Do you burn more calories than you take in over a significant period of time? If your answer is yes, you will lose weight, it’s that simple. But this truth does not make weight loss easy, there is a reason why OMAD, CICO, IF and all the other things exist, they give a framework to stick to that simple concept, so try to figure out what your system is, if you find one stick to that system, there is no reason to make this complicated.

Lesson 4: Don’t lie to yourself, very simple, if you are not honest about what you eat, about you will not see the results you might expected, I know it seems obvious but its very important.

Lesson 5: Movement is important but does not counter bad eating. Go to the gym, go jogging, go swimming or go on a walk, but don’t view exercise as a way to get away with worse eating habits. You get fit through sport, but you get thin through eating.

There is still a long way to go for me, but I have set new goals for myself. Going forward I will try to maintain my weight, I have become an avid gym goer, going 6/7 times a week and started running a lot, right now I am actually trying to gain weight to gain muscle mass before cutting again, I hope some of you read this far and maybe I could help at least 1 person with their journey.

Thanks for coming to my TED Talk.

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Tuesday, November 23, 2021

Antidepressant is changing my body 23/F

Hello Reddit community,

I'm feeling very frustrated. I've always maintained a healthy weight and lifestyle but I was diagnosed with anxiety and depression and started taking antidepressants 3 years ago. Since then, I've been steadily gaining weight no matter how much I exercise or eat healthy.

I will admit that the pandemic has not helped but it has been very depressing realizing that my favorite pants don't fit anymore.

I'm on 20mg of Lexapro, of which weight gain is a side effect, and my mentally ill brain is trying to convince me to wean off of it. I went to the doctor to lower my prescription to 10mg but I'm starting to have my old symptoms of depression and anxiety again which worries me.

I walk 30-60 min on the treadmill and walking my dog(usually a 2-3mph depending on my mood) and 8-10k steps every day.

I eat very little processed foods, I watch my portions, and I cook a lot of healthy meals with veggies, complex carbs, and lean meats. I have learned a lot about nutrition and health but I have had disordered eating in the past.

What is your experience with weight loss on antidepressants and how do you stay motivated when youre mentally ill?

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What are some good things to think about whilst on the weight loss journey?

I am 2 full months into a calorie defecit + cardio + IM + some callisthenics. I'm already 7kg down which puts me at about 25-30% done with my weight loss. Its not really that I am losing interest into it, its just more that I would sit down and I look down and I still have a belly and am still overweight. It just makes me think that I still have quite a long way to go (6-7 months most likely) and sort of makes me impatient and kind of worried about how long it would take.

Is there a more positive way I can start looking at the situation? I have a feeling if I keep this mindset I might start breaking my diet or exercise routine. Sorry if its a weird question, its just been bothering me for the past few weeks.

If anyone cares what I am doing I'm running on 1300 calories with daily either jog or bike. High protein diet with oats, chicken, fish veg and fruit. I also drink a protein shake alongside multivitamins. Light callisthenics(pushups, pullups, dips, crunches, etc etc and some bicep curls) too.

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