Weight Maintenance Diet
A weight maintenance diet is the healthy eating food plan
you use once you've exercised and dieted down (or up) to your
"ideal" weight, as worked out by a physician, not by you.
Most of us will be in the category where we need to lose
some weight, but there are people out there who are too skinny
and they need to put on a few pounds to be healthy, too.
The latest research shows that people with fat families and
friends tend strongly to be fat themselves, just as people from
skinny families tend to be very thin. They haven't quite worked
out how much of this obesity is genetic, and how much comes
from the way we all need to fit in with the people we love or
look up to.
When you have reached your ideal weight through diet and
exercise, you then have to try to stop losing any more weight.
Then, at the same time, you have to keep yourself from piling
the pounds back on again.That's what happens to most people,
once their diet is over.
The diet is never over. Once the weight has come off, you
need to switch to a balanced nutrition food plan. You should do
this for the rest of your life.
Your ongoing food plan for continuing weight control needs
to be a well-balanced and healthy diet. What’s more, it has to
slot in well with your lifestyle. If it doesn’t fit your
lifestyle today, you need to bend your lifestyle to fit the
food plan - or you’ll just get fat all over again.
This means that you can only eat bigger portions if you
exercise a great deal, or if you do heavy manual labor or sport
each and every working day.
The rest of us just need to learn to be happy with a more
moderate plateful at every meal. We also have to cut out the
bad foods like desserts and ice creams, not just because they
are full of calories with little goodness. It's because they
induce us to eat more than we should of other things as
well.
It's a vicious circle, and we do best when we can avoid
it.
Now, let's look at well-balanced meals, and what
makes them so.
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