FSB Author Article
Nutrition
By Gerald Imber, M.D.,
Author of The Youth Corridor: Your Guide to Timeless Beauty
Over the years, I have often been called upon to give diet advice, and have learned as much as I have taught. If one is to have any lasting success with dietary changes, several rules must apply.
a. The plan must be easy.
b. There must be a sizable initial change to fire enthusiasm.
c. The goals must be clearly defined and within reach.
The plans I suggest may be no more effective, and certainly less radical, than those you have already tried -- which speaks to the real problem. You shouldn't have needed more than one diet. Over the short haul, they all work. Even four grapefruits and a prune a day will do the job for a week or two. The real issue is stabilizing your weight. That means forever. A fluctuation of three or four pounds is often seasonal or psychological and perfectly acceptable. Such a small amount, 2-3 percent of body weight, is easily shed without consequence. Maintenance requires a whole new mind-set. In order to be effective, it should require no thought at all once the changes have been learned. The following points have repeatedly proven their value. They are simple, painless, and in no way interfere with the enjoyment of food or the social aspects of meals.
a. Begin every meal by drinking a full glass of water. It occupies volume and will slake some of the immediate hunger. Water takes up space, it has no calories, and it's good for you.
b. Eat salads as the first course -- not, as in the European tradition, after the main course. The purpose is obvious. Salad is filling and, bite for bite, far lower in calories than anything that will follow. Salad dressings are fine, and the health benefits of olive oil cannot be overstated. Use it.
c. Eat half of what is on your plate, then stop and think. You are no longer hungry, so why keep shoveling the calories in? Always leave food over. The portions we are served or serve ourselves are unnecessarily large.
d. No second portions. Period.
e. No desserts.
f. Between-meal snacks should be limited to low-calorie drinks, preferably water, and fresh fruit. An apple, in addition to tasting great, provides complex carbohydrates, which are digested slowly and, through feedback mechanisms, repress hunger far longer than prepared snacks made with refined sugar. Fresh fruit contains far fewer calories than snack food and is rich in vitamins, nutrients and naturally occurring antioxidants.
Obviously, one should be concerned with the quality of food consumed. Fruits and vegetables are critically important, and anyone bothering to read this book already knows that. Fat and cholesterol in all forms should be controlled, and trans fats banished. Most of all, calories do count. Yes, exercise burns calories and even raises your basal metabolic rate a bit for a couple of hours afterward, but is not an excuse for overeating. Don't overestimate how many calories you are burning. An hour of tennis singles burns off barely 250 calories. Less than a Snickers and a Coke. Running a ten-minute mile consumes only 145 calories. Weight is controlled by taking in (eating) only enough calories to support baseline body requirements plus physical work. This means far fewer calories than one would imagine. Happily, it can all be managed with ease, if one is devoted to the task. A forty-five-year-old woman, five-feet-five-inches tall, weighing 110 pounds, needs about 1,600 calories daily for weight maintenance. Find a food calorie chart on the Internet and learn the basics. It will confirm what you already know about most foods.
The body mass index (BMI) is a good indicator of total body fat
and
is calculated based on height, weight and age. Federal guidelines
suggest a BMI of 24 or less as an appropriate and healthy goal.
There
are BMI calculating services on the Internet. Plug in your
statistics
and see the truth. The rest is common sense. Find the right level
for
you and stick to it. The few tricks offered above will help, but
remember: This is a maintenance aid, not a quick weight-loss diet.
Copyright © 2013 Gerald Imber, M.D., author of The Youth Corridor: Your Guide to Timeless Beauty from which this piece was excerpted.
Author Bio
Gerald Imber, M.D., author of The Youth Corridor: Your
Guide to
Timeless Beauty (now available as a video
enhanced
eBook edition), is an internationally renowned plastic
surgeon. He heads a private clinic in Manhattan and is the
Assistant
Professor of Surgery (Plastic) at the Weill-Cornell Medical
Center. In
addition to popularizing surgical innovation, Dr. Imber is the
author
of scientific papers and several books, including The Youth
Corridor.
His interest in anti-aging surgery has led him to understand that
surgery alone is not the answer to staying young. The Youth
Corridor
strategy of Prevention -- Maintenance-Correction, outlined in
detail in
this book, will help you look your youthful best through adult
life.
For more information please visit http://www.youthcorridor.com
and follow him on Facebook
and
Twitter.