Friday, August 31, 2012

Make #WeightLoss Last #Meditation Can Help @skyyogastudio .com

I was sent a copy of this book to review, I was not compensated in any way and the opinions expressed are my own.

With a plethora of research and studies to quote about why we can not retain weight loss, what is making us overweight, how stress effects weight loss and more this book definitely came at the reader with the science behind it but it wasn?t all facts and figures (no pun intended).? Chapters did start at times with personal anecdotes regarding weight loss or healthy eating habits. The book alone started with the reader figuring out ?Your Overeating Style? which again reminds me of a weight loss maintenance book I reviewed a few months ago whose premise was that overeating is at the heart of an individual?s struggle with food.? Again, several ?types? are outlined and then discussed in the book, however; Make Weight Loss Last? goes further by providing extrapolating data from research studies and making relevant to how weight loss can or can not be successful.

I found the book to be very thought provoking, on an ?ah-ha!? level.? Take for example the idea that the amount of body fat you have is linked to- or even controlled by ? the flavor of your food. Suggestions are given to make weight loss last, along with a long bibliography, and a recipe or two.? This book definitely challenges all that we think we know about weight loss and proves that more research is needed. There is a whole section dedicated to how meditation can help with weight loss and food enjoyment- definitely up this yogini?s alley!

Think Outside the Diet to Make Weight Loss Last

Have you ever lost weight and gained it back? You?re not alone: that?s what happens to most dieters. Obesity researchers Deborah Kesten?s and Larry Scherwitz? new book Make Weight Loss Last reveals there?s more to being a successful loser than eating less and exercising more.

The real secrets to being a successful weight loser involve addressing the underlying?and often remarkable?reasons we pack on pounds. The weight-loss success you achieve and maintain is based on the crucial eating and lifestyle choices you make each day. Here they are:

Eat Fresh Food

Tasty or not, fast food full of added fat, sugar, and salt; and greasy, fried fare, are two of the key causes of weight gain. To turn the tide, you have to choose fresh whole food in its natural state as often as possible. Make lots of fruits, veggies, whole grains, beans and nuts and seeds your most-of-the time way of eating, with lesser amounts of lean fish, poultry, meat and dairy.

Create a Positive Relationship to Food

Although dieting, judging food as ?good? or ?bad,? anxiety about food, and thinking a lot about the ?best? way to eat may not seem to have much in common, they are all characteristics of a ?food fretter,? and increased odds of overeating and weight gain. To get off the food-fretting treadmill, perceive food and eating as one of life?s greatest pleasures. Choose wisely and enjoy it.

Focus on Your Food

Give up eating while doing other activities?such as working, driving, or watching TV. Stay mindful, keep focused, and do one thing at a time. Stop working and don?t eat at your desk. Don?t read while you eat, don?t watch TV while you eat, and don?t drive while you eat. Instead, eat when you eat.

Pay Attention to How You Feel

Stop yourself from eating to soothe negative emotions or out-of-control food cravings. ?Emotional eating? is the #1 predictor of overeating and weight gain. To get control, pause and pay attention to your feelings. Get in touch with your feelings before, during, and after eating. Make a conscious choice to eat for the pleasure. Eat when you have a healthy appetite and don?t allow yourself to get too hungry. Experience feel-good emotions when you eat and enjoy yourself.

Eat with Other People

Eat alone less, eat with people more often. Eating alone can promote overeating. Snacking secretly is one obvious source of needless calories. When it?s time to eat a meal, invite others to join you at your table. Sharing mealtimes with friends, family, or coworkers will help keep you from overeating.

Dine by Design

Think about the atmosphere in which you?ll be eating ahead of time. Both the psychological and the aesthetic surroundings when you dine can influence overeating and your weight. To reap the rewards, each time you eat, design your own dining experience by creating an emotional and physical atmosphere that?s as pleasant as possible.

Feed Your Senses

Your senses have an amazing impact on your appetite and weight. Slow down and pay attention to the food before you through your eyes, ears, nose, and taste buds. Look at and notice the colors, the smells, the aromas. Pay attention to the look, the feel and the texture of the food. Appreciating food through your senses wards off overeating. Think about the food, where it comes from, and how it got to your table. Develop more appreciation in your heart for the food before you.

Quit Chemical Cuisine

Obesogens are the manmade chemicals?plastics and pesticides?which have found their way into our food supply and beverages. They wreak their havoc on weight by mimicking estrogen, a hormone that can make you fat. The solution? Just say no. A key way to avoid consuming ?chemical cuisine? is by staying away from bisphenol A (BPA) found in canned foods, bottled beverages, meat packed in plastic, and more.

Sleep More, Weigh Less

Getting enough sleep is a key ingredient in managing weight. If you sleep less than five hours a night, the odds of your becoming obese is upped by 73 percent! Just an hour more decreases the amount of ghrelin, a hormone your body produces that can cause weight gain. Better yet, get 7 hours of sleep every night to protect yourself from the sleep less-weigh more cycle.

Get moving

Burning calories and speeding up your metabolism with physical activity helps you stay slim. Exercise also nourishes your body, mind, and soul with a flood of feel-good feelings produced by naturally occurring hormones. To optimize weight loss, exercise in the morning when your body is more likely to burn fat for energy. Keep workouts to 45 minutes or less to lower the odds of producing cortisol, a stress hormone that can activate body fat.

You can change the way you think about dieting, losing weight, and keeping it off. It works because you focus on the underlying reasons you overeat and gain weight, as well as the solutions you need to turn overeating into optimal eating.

The end result: attain and maintain optimal weight?for life.

Making Weight Loss Last

Deborah Kesten and Larry Scherwitz

List $20

Trade softcover

ISBN: 978-1-935052-61-6

eBook ISBN: 978-1-887043-05-2

White River Press, Amherst

www.whiteriverpress.com

For more information visit www.MakeWeightLossLast.com and www.EnlightenedDiet.com

About the Authors

?

Deborah Kesten, MPH, is an international nutrition researcher and educator, with a specialty in preventing and reversing obesity and heart disease. She was the nutritionist on Dr. Dean Ornish?s first clinical trial for reversing heart disease through lifestyle changes, and co-principal investigator on innovative research about eating styles that lead to overeating, overweight, and obesity, the results of which were published in Explore: The Journal of Science and Healing. With more than three hundred published nutrition and health articles, she is also the award-winning author of Feeding the Body, Nourishing the Soul.

Larry Scherwitz, PhD, is an international research scientist who has specialized in mind-body research and lifestyle medicine and their link to preventing and reversing heart disease and obesity. He has extensive experience initiating and directing comprehensive, sustainable, lifestyle-change programs with heart patients and their families includes directing seven Lifestyle programs (four in the United States, three in Europe). Dr. Scherwitz?s research?including his ground-breaking discovery linking self-involvement to risk of heart attack and death from heart attack?has been published in a numerous medical journals, including the Journal of the American Medical Association, The Lancet, and Psychosomatic Medicine. He has also been director of research and co-principal investigator with Dean Ornish, MD, on his heart disease reversal research.

Source: http://skyyogastudio.com/2012/08/30/make-weightloss-last-meditation-can-help-skyyogastudio-com/

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