Water, Nature’s Diet Pill.

We all know the basic benefits of water in our daily diet. For one, it has the basic function of keeping us alive. However, many people do not understand that water has a very useful purpose, other than keeping us alive, with basic body functions. By drinking approximately 64 ounces of water a day, you can look forward to the following: Toxins flushed from the body, fat flushed from the body, plumper lips, supple skin, and having happy insides. We hear this all the time, but so many of us forget this, water helps our bodies maintain good body functions for a healthy lifestyle.
So what is it about water that helps us diet? Simple, it flushes. Water goes through our systems, and while it does, it is picking up fat, or helping to regenerate good cell replacement, thus removing old material. Water is like a static energy, that when going through the body, attracts all kinds of weight causing debris. So while you may find you have to use the restroom more, you will also see your waistline slim, and the bloating disappear. You can also drink water in strategic ways to help make your diet more effective. For instance, after eating, drink a big glass of water. This makes everything in the stomach compete for space, and water always wins out. Before bed, drink a big glass of water, you may wake up in the middle of the night to use the restroom, simply drink another big glass of water. You will notice a big difference on the scale in the morning if you do. However, watch for the antithesis to water, salt. Anything high in sodium will make you hold all that water for a few days, having the opposite result, gaining water weight. So fellow dieters, drink up, it is the best drinking habit you will ever have.

Slow and Safe: Weight Loss

Reflections don’t lie and photographs tell no tales: the image they offer is one you don’t approve of. Your body is not what you wish it to be and your frustrations are higher than you ever imagined. A change is needed. So you toss out all your calorie-stuffed foods, force yourself to drink only vitamin-enhanced water and plunge into a strict regime of constant movement. You spend the week working hard, relishing the results you know will come. But seven days yield little more than hunger pains and you haven’t lost a pound. You give up.

This is an all too easy scenario to fall victim to. Your intentions are good but your expectations are skewed–and the result is a plan that can never succeed.

Weight loss is not an immediate process. It will not offer fast effects and easy days. It instead requires patience, time and an understanding that the human body is a fickle thing. It must be tamed through routine, not sheer will.

And this is why all attempts to diet (the word is offered only as a familiarity. Never follow the trends and supposed quick fixes) must be done sensibly. This is the only way to preserve your health.

1. Know what you want. Before seeking any type of weight loss plan, you must first understand your goals. Are you wishing to just lose those pesky five pounds? Or are you wanting instead make a radical change? Understand your needs and create a schedule that suits them.

2. Consult your doctor. Never attempt any major weight loss without informing your physician. He will explain all risks and precautions you must take. Know your health and what it requires.

3. Avoid the easy. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. Marketers prey on insecurities, crafting diet plans that simply don’t work. Rely on sensible eating habits, exercise and lifestyle changes to guide you. Do not succumb to fad-diets. They can be highly dangerous.

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Find Common Sense When You Merge With History’s Opinions

food sources of magnesium: bran muffins, pumpk...
Image via Wikipedia

Listening to modern trends is natural, but what about considering the different thoughts of the past? Is there any credence to combining what different forms of “common sense” were and are? Being a larger woman was considered beautiful by many cultures but as Europe evolved, possessing an hour glass figure was considered more and more attractive and desirable. From China to the Pacific Islands to Europe, “Rubenesque” (or full figured women) represented fertility and an abundance of resources. Women who were fuller figured were most often the wives or consorts of the most powerful and wealthy men, which meant that they were representations of never having to go without.

Today, being slender represents abundance and beauty throughout most of the modern world. In some parts of the world like Africa and with many different tribes of native islanders, being fuller figured is still what is considered physically desirable in a woman. As most health professionals prescribe, gaining a bit of weight is healthy for a woman who is pregnant or who is nursing.

Today’s standards and the extreme route that are taken to be or appear slim despite natural circumstances have a debilitating mental and emotional effect on women who are doing what is naturally healthy. With modern fads are aligning with being of a lesser weight, there have been many other methods that have sprung up in the last century and particularly the last few years in the quest of thinness. From no fat (totally lean proteins and free reign on carbs) to low carbs (fats being fine, just no sugars or starches no matter how natural), what’s a person to do with today’s advice? Common sense dictates that one should eat a diet with a good balance of healthy fats, proteins, and carbohydrates and include vegetables as a major dietary contributor. Having a plate full of food that is as unprocessed as possible is a good indicator of its health. Many colors in the contents (unprocessed of course) is also a good meter. Fads come and go but being balanced will keep you running happily for years.

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Instinctive Eating

Vegetarian except for chicken wings?
Image by daftgirly via Flickr

If you’ve been trying to shed a few pounds, you may feel like you’ve hit a brick wall. Everyone knows that what you eat and how active you are can have a huge impact, but there are other factors in play as well. One can feel very lost when trying to find a balance and type of diet that feels appropriate. Perhaps the knowledge of what is in your personal best interest, lies within you.

Some people eat chicken wings with bleu cheese dressing and celery sticks and drop loads of weight (as long as they avoid the carbs). But as soon as they find their ideal weight, they balloon back up to their original weight or even higher. Some people monitor every calorie and keep it under a certain number, regardless of the actual food they eat, and have the pounds shed themselves that way. Others seem to eat what they want when they want to, and the pounds either come off or they maintain their weight. Those are just a few of the current standards and it is not even accounting for vegetarian and vegan diets, organic diets, macrobiotic diets, and the like. Even researching a single, supposedly healthy ingredient online will pull up many different studies that completely contradict one another. Looking around at people you know who have successfully taken some weight off can be confusing as well, as their diet plans will seem contradictory too. What is a person do to?

More people are beginning to experiment with getting more in tune with their bodies. Many are finding great success in looking and feeling the way they want to while not experiencing such struggle and emotional turmoil. What if you body is craving an item because it contains chemicals, nutrients, minerals, or complexes that your body needs to run its best? It’s easy to assume that our scientific and medical community has reached its highest pinnacle possible, but when in centuries past when demons were held responsible for physical ailments, the same was thought then. Perhaps we can’t prove scientifically what our bodies innately understand.

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