Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Health and Fitness 08 ~ Update and Information

Hello all.  Just a quick update from the health and fitness desk of thefamilyroom!!!!
I am continuing on my journey and will hopefully do a Youtube video soon to talk about some of the things I've been doing. However today I wanted to quickly highlight our caloric intake.  I've been forcing myself to take a good look at my daily intake and I've been shocked.  I've discovered that I'm basically still eating like I'm a breast-feeding mother......that ended over 2 years ago!!!!! Yikes.

Below I've included a few points for you to ponder and in the days and weeks to come I will be sharing a few extremely shocking information about some of our daily intakes and 'treats' that will (if you're anything like me) leave your chin on the ground.

Here we go.  A few tips to help you shave a little weight off and continue on your own journey to health and wellness. (Note: this information is based on someone wanting to shed some unwanted 'extras' in a certain time period).

1. Stick to one serving of cereal. For most people, a typical pour of breakfast cereal is equal to two servings. If you're trying to lose weight, trim calories by accurately measuring one serving into your bowl (usually that means ¾ - 1 cup, however, cereal serving sizes vary so you must regularly check the package labeling on your favorite brands and varieties).

For those who eat a daily bowl of breakfast cereal, follow my lead, and you'll save about 150 calories by cutting back on cereal and at least 50 calories in extra milk every morning. That's 8,400 calories saved and 2.5 pounds lost at the end of six weeks!

2. Skip your late night snack. We all feel the need to munch in the evening, and although a p.m. snack can be perfectly appropriate (diet-friendly p.m. snacks should not exceed 150 calories), for many people, the evening tends to be the time of day we blow it on calorie overload - comfort food central; ice cream, cookies, potato chips, popcorn and more!

On average, people gobble down way more than 250 calories after 8 p.m. Exercise some willpower and skip your nighttime snack altogether. Sip an herbal tea, floss/brush your teeth and close down the kitchen for the evening. You'll save at least 250 calories each day and after six weeks, you'll have cut 10,500 calories and dropped three whole pounds!

3. Scratch the butter/margarine. Cut out a total of one tablespoon of regular butter or margarine from your toast, veggies, potatoes, dinner rolls, etc. each day. At 100 calories per tablespoon, you'll save 4,200 calories and drop over one pound in six weeks. What if you can't give up the butter or margarine? At least switch to a soft tub spread that says "reduced fat" and "trans-fat free" on the label - it's half the calories of the full fat versions, so you'll still drop over ½ pound.

4. Lose the mayo and cheese on your sandwich Omit the slice of cheese and mayonnaise on your sandwich (use mustard instead - only five calories per teaspoon) and you'll save about 200 calories per sandwich. If you eat a sandwich a day, you'll end up saving 8,400 calories and find yourself 2.5 pounds lighter after just six weeks.

5. Delete the extras: It's amazing how much extra food we can munch on without realizing it - a grab of this/that off our kid's plate, an extra packet of ketchup or salad dressing, a bite of your co-worker's dessert... before you know it, you've consumed an extra 800 calories!

Be super mindful and delete the "extras" and you'll be able to trim a significant amount of calories off your weekly total. Also, pay attention to your beverages (alcohol included) - as well as what's going into your coffee and tea. By trimming 1000 extra calories off each week (about 150 per day), you'll save a total of 6000 calories and drop 1.75 pounds at the end of six weeks!

Interesting stuff I have to say.....makes you think about that late night treat or the extra shake of the cereal box doesn't it....

Take care and stay well.

Susan

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Susan,
This Blog is so true. Alot of us over eat. Since my friend Jenny showed me last year this is the amount of food you should be eating each meal etc I was shocked, i still slip up but it is about changing habits and the fact that we really don't need all the extra food we put into our mouths.
Great Great Stuff.
Thanks for the Stats.
Belinda

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