Showing posts with label food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Five diet modifications I made to lose weight

Here are just some of the changes I made in what I eat, how I eat, how often, and how much I eat in order to get a wee bit slimmer.

These are not very dramatic things. But these are the first few things about your eating patterns that you CAN easily change.

 I love my food and am not willing to give it all up entirely...I still eat chocolates and chips. And I have my bad days when, well, plans just derail, and I end up straying off the path.

But once you know that these small little itsy bitsy changes are making you feel better, that's incentive enough to keep going and coming back to THE PLAN if you stray.

Again, these are not strategies I devised all by myself, but this is what I FOLLOW (and it's largely from Rujuta Diwekar's book):
1. Eat fruit first thing in the morning. My favourite is plantain/banana. Very rarely apple or mango. Sometimes papaya. It revvs you up for the day, it's healthy food, and it makes you feel good about yourself. I believe in the philosophy that you must eat fruit before other food, not after, else it turns useless for the body. In case there's no fresh fruit, eat dry fruit -- my fav is almonds and raisins. Don't start the day with biscuits or tea/coffee.

2. Eat every two hours. It makes sure you eat less. It really works. It makes sure you don't get so hungry that you binge when you finally get your hands on food. Just munch and graze along.

3. Make food afresh. It has helped me a lot. I've always been a refrigerate-and-eat, ok-with-leftovers person. But now I'm changing that. It just FEELS so healthy to eat food afresh. I cook breakfast and lunch in the morning, and part of the dinner too. But there is something freshly made at dinner time. Yes, it takes time and effort, but it's worth it. It makes me feel good.

4. Smaller portion size. Smaller plates and bowls. Yes, they make a difference. Once you get used to smaller portion size (the most difficult part of a diet I feel) your stomach seems to shrink and get used to this new quantity. My example: I used to eat 4 idlis or 5 dosas. It's very difficult to stop at the ideal 2. Now I've come down to 2.5 or 3. And now, I can't eat more than that. It does take will power, though, to resist a second helping.

5. Eat all sorts of food for dinner, but eat less, and early. No sweets and fried food in this meal. Too early is not possible for me. That takes HUMONGOUS effort. But less and no sweets is a rule I can follow. Avoiding carbs at night doesn't work for me...I was raised on a high-carb diet since childhood. But I eat less rice at dinnertime. That works, I suppose. Also, since I eat late, eating less quantities eases digestion, so I sleep without heartburn -- a problem i had to face every night earlier.





Wednesday, May 4, 2011

My grandma should be my ideal

I really think my grandma's one smart cookie. We recently celebrated her 90th birthday, TOUCH WOOD, and at that age she's far more health than her daughter (my mom) -- BIG TIME TOUCH WOOD.

My point is, I need to learn from her this thing called "how to look after yourself, respect your body, and have fun". She's had a good pampered childhood, but loaded with activity for the kind of conservative era she lived in -- she cycled, climbed trees, an swam too, among other things. She ate calorie rich food and lots of daiy.
Post marriage, life was tough at the in-laws where she slogged in the kitchen, slaved for hours at the grinding stone, preparing food for a large joint family. Life was good in the later years when, for the first time, perhaps in her late 30s or early 40s she bloated into a barrel.

Now she's back to her dancer look -- she's got the narrowest prettiest waist in the family, stands quite tall, hasn't bent over. She never misses her morning walk, unless she's unwell or its raining. She loves her pastries and chocolates and will never say no to one. But if she eats even a morsel more than her normal meal -- which is mainly cooked vegetables, rice, rasam and curd -- she'll simply skip the next meal. Once a week, she skips dinner -- her upavasa on Saturday night. She gives in to temptation easily, enjoys and savours her food. But knows when to stop and say no.

I wish I could follow her principles....

Diary Day 3
7.45 am - warming up exercises and yoga again today but couldn't exercise continuoysly thanks to Sonny who wanted some attention in between.
9. 30 am - one yelakki banana
10 am -- breakfast -- one bowl avalakki upma (poha) and one slice brown bread, one glass tea.
1.30 pm - lunch - two chapatis, gorikai palya (clusterbeans curry with tomatoes and onions), five spoons of curd rice (its one-fourth of what i would normallly eat-- the curd rice quantity)

My aim so far has been to cut down portion sizes. Where I would earlier eat breakfast in a large plate, I'm trying to eat out of a bowl in an attempt to cut down the size of its contents. So in that sense I'm not eactly making any dramatic changes. I have reduced the quantity of oil with which i cook -- while earlier i would pour oil into the pan/kadai from a nozzled-bottle to make subjee, i now measure out the oil in spoons -- two for rasam/sambar, three or four for subjee (for two meals for hubby and me -- both of us carry our lunch to work and eat dinner at home usually).
What I'm also deperately trying to do is cut down the quantity of rice i eat and increase the helping size of  vegetable and dal/rasam -- this is so difficult, because rice is my comfort food.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Starting on a new weight loss (hopefully) journey

The blog's title is self-explanatory.
The blog's URL explains my problem most vividly -- I'm always WAITING to lose weight and almost always doing nothing much to help it.

The last one week I have spent very seriously mulling over my life, how I want to be as I grow older, and realised my health has always been a sore point.
A lot of my problems stem from my rather sedentary life, absolute lack of exercise, sheer laziness, and a weakness for fried food and sweets. That, everyone will agree, is a deadly cocktail of a problem.

It has left me overweight most of my life -- I've moved from wanting to shed just 5 kilos to now about 8 to 10. This is after all the BMI calculation, visits to doctors for all sorts of problems. All the arrows pointed to the same thing -- exercise, lose some weight, maintain it and get healthy.

Easier said than done.

There are a whole lot of thoughts I need to put down on this, but I'm going to start off today with my "food/activity diary" for today. I don't know if I'll post it everyday. I'll try. Just as I will try to seriously get into an exercise regimen, just as I will hopefully eat sensibly and healthily.

I'm going to be 33 in a few months. I weigh 62.9 kilos (as of yesterday) and I'm 5 feet and a little less than two inches tall. That makes me, on an average, overweight by about 12 kilos technically. I'll be lenient and say 10. I've had a child three years ago and I have the most jiggly wiggly lower belly fat that disgusts me. Other gory descriptions in the following posts.

The last three days I've been reading Rujuta Diwekar's book "Women and the weight loss tamasha", highly recommended by the best friend. I've just made it up to page 75, so I'm not going to make too many comments on that right now, except to say that most of what she says sounds senseible. I'm first of all trying to follow her reccomendation of trying to eat smaller amounts of food every two hours.

Let me make some things clear
1. I am not embarking on any fad diet
2. I'm NOT going to simply change my food and sit waiting to lose weight
3. It does not mean I'm enrolling in a gym today. But I will slowly begin to build up some exercise regimen for myself.
4. I'm no expert and I'm going to try and find my way around this, like most people do.
5. I will not harm myself in any way in this process and will consult a doctor/dietician if things begin to go wrong.

Diary May 2, 2011
7.15 a.m. -- started with basic stretch and warming up exercises for 30 minutes.
8.45 a.m.-- ate a yelakki banana
9.40 a.m-- breakfast -- two onion dosas (rice/urad/maida/besan-mix) with half-spoon ghee and groundnut chutney powder. Half a glass of milk tea with Sugarfree. (I would earlier easily eat 3 or 4 dosas)
12.30 pm-- mid-morn snack -- 3/4 th of a methi khakra
2 p.m. - lunch -- two wheat chapatis with a cup of bhindi (okra/ladies finger) curry (homemade), quarter cup raw banana (balekai) subji (from our office canteen), a small bowl of salad (cherry tomatoes/yellow capsicum/cabbage/cucumber). (I would earlier also have curd rice with all this for lunch).
It's now 3.30 p.m. and I have to go down for my glass of tea. It's an addiction. I don't know how I'll hold up till tonight. Will edit this entry and complete the diary tomorrow.

Yeah, so completing it:

3.30 p.m. - one mug of tea
5.30 p.m. -- a few almonds and black currants
7 p.m -- one cup poha and a few spoons of salad (corn/cucumber/pomegranate) and a square of dark chocolate (ummm i'm not really dieting, am i!?)
9.30 p.m. -- one egg roll, one bowl rice eaten half with dal and half wih curd.