3rd August 2011
Feedback is
the breakfast of champions. Ken Blanchard
What a glorious evening it was last night, took Alfie for a walk about
8pm and watched the farmer ploughing his field whilst the sunset behind him,
absolutely beautiful.
Addiction! Mmm red hot subject
at the moment, whether it be Amy Winehouse with her troubles or the Panorama
show the other night on binge drinking, everyone’s got an opinion haven’t
they! So what about food, can you become
addicted to that? Apparently yes you
can, I’ve googled it, unfortunately unlike drugs, cigarettes or alcohol you can’t
go cold turkey – everyone’s got to eat!
Manufacturers don’t help, they actually excel
at hitting the sweet spot — making us crave more and more of a food. In supermarkets
you can actually found a pasta sauce that, serving for serving, contains more
sugar than a chocolate fudge sauce, though the sweetness is hidden because the
pasta sauce is so salty. The question
is, why would anybody pour a packet of sugar over their pasta? And the answer
is that if you get used to that much sugar, another pasta sauce will taste too
bland. The food industry wants us to need more and more of the substance to
feel satisfied, so we'll go out and buy more and more of it. In America this problem is much worse.
How about this for interesting
- Animal research at Princeton University has shown that the way you indulge
may have consequences. Bart Hoebel, PhD, a professor of psychology, placed rats
on an alternating schedule of 12 hours with no food, followed by 12 hours of
access to both rat chow and a solution of 10% sugar (about as sweet as a soft
drink) — a pattern that results in binge eating. As the days went by, the rats
began upping their intake of the sugar solution, drinking more and more at a
time. Hoebel found that after about a month, the rats' brains were producing
surges of dopamine during their binges. “In rats, binge eating promotes
addiction just like binge drinking promotes alcohol addiction,” says Hoebel.
“It's possible that repeatedly bingeing on sweets could actually change the
circuitry of your brain” — and make you want ever-increasing amounts.
So
if you are a little addicted to food, or just know you’ve got into bad habits
and want to change what can you do? Well
we already know you can’t go cold turkey – you got to eat, plus cutting everything nice out,
having such rigid thinking can make you crave certains food even more. Everything
in moderation is the best option unless you know that you have a certain food
you can’t do in moderation then maybe abstinence is necessary. Change your environment, if you had a drink problem you wouldn’t have a cupboard full of lager if you were trying to get clean, so if you have a thing for chocolate don’t have cupboards full.
Resisting temptation is easier
when you’re not put in certain situations, I try not to go to ‘all you can eat’
places because I know I will eat all I can, instead I opt for portion control
in other restaurants. The sight
of Greggs where you used to buy your steak bakes might melt your resolve at
lunchtimes, so don’t walk past Greggs. Change your routine, if you always have
a biscuit or two while watching TV, read a book instead or knit to keep your
hands busy as you watch Eastenders.
Retrain
your brain - switch to
smaller plates and bowls to automatically reduce portion sizes or leave more
space on the plate by reducing the amount of food you serve yourself. Never eat
directly from the packet, always use a plate this reminds you that you are
eating, rather than casually scoffing and not realising the quantity until the
packets gone.
Your tastebuds can change what
they enjoy over time. Think about it you
probably didn’t enjoy your first taste of alcohol, but you managed to get used
to it, that can work with other foods too.
Start looking at labels and don’t buy savoury food that have added
sugar! Tastebuds are very adaptive, If
you let extra sugar and fat into your diet, you could be lured back into your
old patterns.
Chocolate bars and Big Macs
aren't the only things that satisfy the pleasure centres of your brain, exercise
does too. In animals, at least, research has found that it increases dopamine
levels and raises the number of dopamine receptors in the brain. Making a
commitment to work out can help.
One of the best tips is to
only eat when you're hungry, this is something
you’ll need to learn. Use the
hunger scale. The scale ranges from 0 to 10, with 0 being ravenously hungry and
10 being overstuffed, stay away from
either of these extremes,” Eat when you begin to feel hungry (2 or 3 on the
scale) and stop when you feel comfortably satisfied (5 or 6). Though it's
obvious that you don't want to eat to an overstuffed 10, using the scale to
gauge when you should start munching is important, too: If you wait until
you're at 0, you may eat all the way up to 10.
And always eat foods you enjoy – just don’t overeat.
Last but not least – FEEL –
don’t try to eat your emotions, deal with them, tolerating sensations of
sadness, anger, or boredom, rather than rushing to soothe them with food can be
done. Sometimes it just means asking what you really need rather than
food.
I’m off to get ready for work
and I’ve just really enjoyed my punnet of strawberries and glass of water – a great
way to start a sunny day. xx
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