How to Break Bad Eating Habits
Bad habits are made to be broken. Learn easy tricks to help you eat better every day.
If You’re a Serious Snacker
The fallout: You may end up overeating. A healthy snack or two between meals is fine. Snacks can keep blood sugar steady as well as allow you to rack up more servings of fruits
and vegetables. “It’s when you snack in place of eating real meals that you’re more likely to lose track of how much you’re
eating,” says Tara Gidus, R.D., an Orlando, Florida–based spokesperson for the American Dietetic Association. Of course, what
you eat matters, too. Typical snack foods (chips, cookies, pretzels) aren’t that nutritious or satisfying, so it’s easy to
overdo them.
The fix: To keep your energy up and hunger at bay, allow yourself two snacks a day of 100 to 300 calories each. “Rather than a cookie
or a candy bar, opt for something that feels like real food―half of a small sandwich, whole-grain crackers with cheese, a
handful of nuts, baby carrots with hummus, or yogurt sprinkled with cereal,” says Gidus. Click here for more low-calorie snacks.
If You’re a Mindless Muncher
The fallout: Television makes people particularly prone to spaced-out eating. In fact, “folks who eat while watching the tube take in
20 to 60 percent more than if they are focused on their food,” according to Brian Wansink, a professor of marketing at Cornell
University and the author of Mindless Eating ($15, amazon.com).
The fix: Figure out which situations trigger mindless eating for you, then consciously make an effort to eat only when you’re fully
engaged. If you need a few snacks, set limits on what you’ll eat. Dole out a single serving before you sit down on the couch,
or delay your snack until you can pay attention. Minimize damage by dipping into low-cal foods, such as cut vegetables, air-popped
popcorn, rice crackers, and whole-grain cereal.
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