Changing Your Eating Habits
By Bill Herren
We are bombarded with
advertisements pushing delicious looking, fat filled, and obesity
producing food in our faces every single day. We hear it on the radio;
see it on TV and on billboards and even in newspapers.We are bombarded with advertisements
pushing delicious looking, fat filled, and obesity producing food in our
faces every single day. We hear it on the radio; see it on TV and on
billboards and even in newspapers. We go on a diet and try to totally
turn our eating habits around. We go from eating hamburgers, French
fries, pizza, hot dogs, and other junk to eating lettuce and drinking
water. If we are really disciplined we make it a week or so. But like
most people, we are back to our old habits within days. The change is
just too drastic and makes it next to impossible for us to stick to our
diets.
I have slowly improved my eating habits over the years. I
have done this in a way that has been painless to me and has replaced
bad diet choices with good eating habits. Of course, before any diet
changes you should consult your physician. I was not in any immediate
health danger and therefore did not need to immediately change my
habits. What follows is not a “how to” article but more of an article on
how I changed my eating habits over time.
There was a time in my
life when I received my daily intake from fast food restaurants. I was
in a sales position and on the road most of the time. I would have the
burger, fries and coke combo from a different fast food joint every day.
I was much younger then and blessed with a decent metabolism so I did
not see much negative effect from all of the unhealthy eating. It was
upon my taking a physical for another job that I discovered my
cholesterol was not in a good range. I was way too young for something
like this to happen and I knew that I must change my ways. I attempted
to totally overhaul my eating habits in one day. I would do well for
awhile and then go back to my old ways. I had made improvements but they
were not ingrained good habits like I was hoping for.
Upon
much reflection I decided to go a little easier on myself. I decided to
start substituting food choices one by one until they became habit. My
first substitution was with my beverage choice. Instead of having the
cola I would order water. It was kind of a mental reward system for me. I
would eat the burger and fries guilt free as long as I drank water
instead of cola. I know that you are probably thinking “how can you eat a
burger and fries guilt free?”. I could do this guilt free because I
knew that it was just a stage in my long term diet plan. I chose water
as my first diet choice because it came easy for me. It required very
little discipline on my part. After a month or so drinking water with a
meal became second nature to me. It was no longer a sacrifice; it was a
habit.
After that came the French fries. I substituted the French
fries with a plain baked potato. Burger diet now consisted of a burger,
plain baked potato and water. I actually started enjoying the baked
potato rather quickly. They are much tastier than grease drowned fries.
You can see where I am going with this. If you have been trying to lose
weight for any time now, you know what a good food is and what a bad
food is. You will know where and what to substitute. I continued these
substitutions and still do to this day.
Now I am more aware of an
unhealthy habit starting. I am very conscious of what I eat. Some of
the great things about these diet choices are that they became habits;
the desire for the unhealthy foods was replaced with a desire for
healthy foods. Nowadays I rarely eat out. I have lost my taste for such
foods.
Some of my substitutions:
Water
for Cola, Baked potato for Fries, Whole Wheat for white bread, Soy Milk
for cow’s milk, pretzels for chips, salads for desserts, Meal
replacement shake for cereal, and the list goes on and on.
Habits
are built by doing something over and over. I have read it takes around
30 days to establish a habit. Do not stop your substitutions with the
foods you eat….carry it over to other parts of your life. For example,
substitute the elevator with the stairs, substitute the car with a
bicycle, give up the evening news and replace it with a walk.