Healthy
Eating For A Healthy Body
Healthy
eating means many things to many people, and everyone has different
goals for the perfect diet. The key to following a healthy diet is
to find a diet you can stick with for the rest of your life. A diet
should not be simply a temporary change in the way you life, eat and
exercise. Rather, it should be a permanent change that you can live
with day in and day out, year in and year out.
For
some people, a healthy diet can be as simple as increasing the amount
of fruits and vegetables in the daily diet. For others, a radical
change, involving strict control of fat and cholesterol, may be
required.
Of
course what is needed will depend on the goal of each individual.
The serious runner in search of greater conditioning will of course
have different goals than the couch potato who is concerned about the
possibility of heart disease.
Even
though every person will different goals when it comes to healthy
eating, the basic tenets of healthy eating are the same. The most
important thing is to eat a good variety of foods, while eating less
of the bad stuff and more of the good.
That
may sound like an oversimplification, but it really is that easy.
Putting that simple concept into proactive, however, is the hard
part. Everyone wants to eat healthier, but there are so many
temptations in today’s world that healthy eating can be very
difficult. The key is to make healthy choices as appealing as
unhealthy ones.
One
way to make healthy foods appealing is buying a wide variety of
exotic fruits at the local supermarket. There are probably varieties
of fruits and vegetables at your local grocery store that you never
even heard of before. Why not make your next trip to the grocery
store an adventure by sampling these exotic offerings?
Experimenting
with new recipes is another great way to bring excitement and
adventure to healthy eating. A quick perusal of your favorite low
fat or healthy eating cookbook will likely present you with many fun
and exciting recipes to try. Often a new cookbook, or a couple of
new recipes are all it takes to spur a healthier lifestyle.
It
is also important to know that eating healthier does not necessarily
mean making a radical change. There are very simple things you can
do, such as cutting the skin off your chicken breast, or trimming the
fat from your favorite steak, that can result in significant fat
reductions and health improvements. Dieters should not overlook the
importance of these small changes when seeking a healthier diet.
Other
examples of small changes resulting in healthier eating include:
- Replacing whole milk with skim or 2%, both in recipes and for drinking
- Snacking on sorbet or low fat frozen yogurt instead of premium ice cream
- Spraying pans with nonfat cooking spray instead of using butter or margarine
- Replacing high fat cuts of meat with leaner ones
- Eating more low fat fish and less red meat
- Using egg substitutes, the kind made from egg whites, in recipes, meals and baking
There
are probably hundreds of other such tips, and they can add up to
significant health improvements, whether your goal is to get fit,
lose weight or improve your level of health. No matter who you are
or what your current level of fitness, eating a healthier diet and
losing weight may be easier than you think.
In
the end, eating a healthy diet, improving your level of fitness, and
managing your consumption of fat and cholesterol boils down to common
sense. Depriving yourself of your favorite foods can be
counterproductive to a long term dietary change. Deprivation leads
inevitably to cravings, and that can start a vicious cycle of dieting
and splurging.
It
is best to think of healthy eating as a marathon rather than a
sprint. The goal of any healthy eating program should be to make
easy, lifelong changes in the way you shop, cook and dine. Only by
making changes that you can follow for a lifetime will you truly be
able to enjoy a healthy diet.