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3 Reasons to Pack Your Diet with Color; Stay Thin, Get Healthy, Stay Youthful

Friday, November 11th, 2011

Eat a variety of colors!

Eat your way through a rainbow of fruits and vegetables every day; not only will it help keep you thin for life, since they are lower in calories, but these foods are chock full of antioxidants to keep you healthy and youthful.

Red:

Red foods are full of lycopene, which reduce risk of several types of cancers.  Foods in this group include: Red apples, beets, red cabbage, cherries, cranberries, pink grapefruit, red grapes, red peppers, pomegranates, radishes, raspberries, strawberries, tomatoes and watermelon.

Orange/Yellow:
These carotenoid-rich foods help reduce risk of cancer, heart disease, and improve immune system function; people who eat these types of foods are less likely to have eye disorders and blindness associated with age.  Foods in this group include: Yellow apples, apricots, butternut squash, cantaloupe, carrots, grapefruit, lemons, mangoes, nectarines, oranges, papayas, peaches, pears, yellow peppers, persimmons, pineapple, pumpkin, rutabagas, yellow summer or winter squash, sweet corn, sweet potatoes, tangerines and yellow tomatoes.

A never-ending selection of colors to choose from!

  
Green:
Green fruits and vegetables are colored by natural plant pigment called chlorophyll, and some contain lutein, which contributes to eye health.  Green foods include:  Green peppers, peas, cucumbers, celery, artichokes, asparagus, avacados, green beans, broccoli, brussels sprouts, green cabbage, green grapes, honeydew melon, kiwi, lettuce, limes, green onions, green onions, spinach and zucchini. Read about these fantastic green veggies:  “Thermic Vegetables: Burn Calories While You Eat; Check Out This List!:
 
Blue/purple:
These are colored by natural plant pigments called anthocyanins, which protect cells from damage.  Foods in this category include: Blueberries, blackberries, eggplant, figs, plums, prunes, purple grapes and raisins.
 
White:
These foods may  help lower cholesterol and blood pressure, and may help reduce risk of stomach cancer and heart disease.  Included in this group are: Potatoes, bananas, cauliflower, garlic, ginger, jicama, mushrooms, onions, parsnips and turnips.

Paul and Sonja on Waikiki Beach, August 2011

Researchers at SUNY Upstate Medical Center say if we triple our intake of these age-defying antioxidants, we can add at least four healthy years to our lives.  I think it’s amazing that there are so many different colors of fruits and vegetables to choose from.  How entertaining to color-code our food!  It keeps things simple.  Just eat a variety of colors, and you don’t  have to know the names of everything inside, plus, fruits and vegetables will help keep you healthy, young — and thin.

Is There a “Fat Conspiracy” Going on? Dieters Beware…

Friday, October 7th, 2011

Are "they" trying to keep people fat?

The diet industry rakes in $59.7 billion dollars a year.  Keeping one-third of Americans overweight is a very lucrative business.   Dieters need to beware of ways the diet industry may want to pull — and keep, the wool over our eyes, such as:

1) Using words like “Fat Free” on packaging, tricking dieters into thinking they are eating less calories.  For example, Yoplait advertises their yogurt as ”99% fat free;” however, one container has 170 calories.  Dannon Fit ’N Light Yogurt only has 60 calories per container; it’s what I eat every morning for breakfast.  Did you know that if you eat 100 more calories than you burn in a day, you will gain one pound in a month, or 12 pounds in a year — or 120 pounds in 10 years?  It adds up.

2) Watch out for clothing retailers that trick people into feeling thinner than they really are, by

Sonja in Haleiwa, Hawaii, August 2011

making them fit into “smaller” sized clothes — or so it says so on the tags.  Old Navy is mentioned on MetaFilter as one of these, with women saying they fit into a size 4 or 6, when they are 8s and 10s anywhere else.  Men are quoted as saying the clothing there is “wildy big,” and while they are a large or XL at all other stores, at Old Navy they are a medium.  I think this sets people up to think they can now eat more because they feel thinner — and, of course, they will want to shop at the store with the “smaller” size.

3) The very lucrative $59.7 billion-dollar weight loss industry, and all the diet programs that go along with it (I know, I have probably been on every diet out there).  They all work.  I even lost my final 50 pounds on a nationally known diet, and bought food, products and supplements from them.  It’s not the diet, I have found, it’s living thin and keeping it off afterwards that is tricky.  Eighty to ninety percent of dieters gain their weight back after they quit dieting.  The diet industry keeps dangling new diets in front of our noses, telling us what was wrong with the last diet, and telling us why the new diet is going to work.  Aren’t we smarter than that?  Quit financing the diet industry, and live thin, my friends!

 

Get Rid of the Fat Clothes; A Must for Post Dieters

Friday, August 19th, 2011

Sonja, summer of 2011, Utah mountains

One thing I did after losing fifty pounds ten years ago was give away all my fat clothes.  My closet used to range in clothing sizes 8-18, perfect for a person used to yo-yo dieting for most of her life.  Getting rid of the larger-sized clothing was a huge commitment – it said, “this time, I’m going to stay thin.”

After reaching your “happy weight,” just go ahead and do it.  Get some new clothes to show off that new figure, and dispose of those larger-sized clothes.  Here are some ideas:

1)  Bag them up and take them to a donation site like Goodwill, Deseret Industries, the Veterans Association, your local church or any place looking for clothing.  Many will come and pick them up at your house.

2)  Take the clothes to a consignment store, where you can receive some money, nice when you are going to be spending a bit on a new wardrobe for your new figure! (but oh so worth it!).

Buffalo Exchange consignment & thrift clothing store

3)  Invite a friend to go through your bags before they go to the donation site, if it would make you feel better if your clothes went to a good home.

4)  Alter something only if it’s worth it to you.

When you go through your closet and drawers, be ruthless.  Get rid of everything that is too big now.  Baggy clothes do not look good!  Besides, you worked hard to lose weight, and it’s time to show off. 

Only having thin clothes in your closet is a huge commitment, and can be a bit scary.  But it shows that you are now living the thin lifestyle, and that is who you are now — a thin person, now and for the rest of your life!

Read:  “Act Like a Thin Person,” and “Think Like a Thin Person.” 

For other ideas:  “Yo-Yo Dieting: Stop the Insanity!” and “Life After Dieting; What Now, That the Pounds Are Gone?”

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