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"Get The Skinny."
by Caroline J. Cederquist, M.D.
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Portion Distortion: Super Sizing
America!
Ah, the good life. Dining out, shopping for clothes, dining
out, shopping for clothes, dining out, shop. . .wait a minute. Is there a
pattern here?
Americans are eating out more and more, and leading
researchers say that's a big part of why so many of us are overweight. The
biggest part of that big part? Big portions!
When we eat out, we are usually getting a portion of food
that is double, or even three or four times the size of what is considered
a normal serving. Many restaurant meals are upwards of 1,000 calories for
a single meal! Remember what a big deal the Quarter Pounder was when it
was introduced in the 1970s? Nowadays, it's not surprising to see
one-third and one-half pound burgers on a menu.
And its not just at restaurants. Grocery stores, bakeries,
delis, everywhere, the portions are simply ballooning. Remember when a
muffin was roughly the
size of a cupcake? Not any more!
Yet researchers find, we're still eating the whole thing,
whatever the thing, without comprehending the alarming increase in our
daily caloric intake.
It's not that restaurants and food producers are deliberately
trying to make us fat. They're just trying to protect their market share
of your food dollars, and to do that, they look for ways to improve value
and appeal for their consumers. Actual food ingredients are relatively
cheap, compared to packaging, labor, rent, research, marketing, lobbying,
advertising, and all the other expenses of bringing you that meal or
snack. So from their end, it's just good business to give you more and
make you feel like you're getting a deal.
Everyone loves a bargain, and good value keeps us coming back. The regular
old 7-11 soda grew into a Gulp, and then a Big Gulp and then a Super Gulp.
The basic American hamburger and fries meal got super sized, then
double-sized. But no matter how big they get, we keep eating whatever is
served. With that much more food passing as a single meal, they might as
well call it trouble-sized!
Many of us were raised hearing the admonition to "clean
that plate," and we feel obligated to finish whatever is served,
whether or not Mom is still
watching.
So take a plate full of way more food than we need, together
with the training to eat more than we might even want, and you have a
pretty reliable recipe for over-eating, and hence, weight gain. But
perhaps the most important consequence of all the commercial super sizing
is what it's done to our perception of appropriate portions. As we get
used to seeing those big portions when we eat out, we tend to recreate
them in our home kitchens, so that even when we do our own cooking, we
again serve ourselves more than we need, or even should have.
Researchers found that of all the places where we're getting
bigger portions, fast food servings have grown the most, followed by those
we dish up at
home. Our sense of appropriate servings has simply been distorted.
So what to do? When you're at home, fill the plates from the
stove and bring them to the table. Repeated studies have shown that if the
food is within arm's reach, we'll eat it. But if we've got to go and get
it, we are less likely to have more.
And before you do go for seconds, just sit a few moments and
let your body catch up. It takes about 30 minutes for the hormones that
signal satiety to get the message from the stomach to the brain.
When eating out, just imagine that every meal you order has a
notation in the menu that says "serves two." Decide how much you
want to eat at the
beginning of the meal, and before you even start, put the rest in that
take-home container.
And when you've had enough, stop. Being satisfied doesn't
mean feeling stuffed, and enjoying a good meal shouldn't leave you
uncomfortable afterwards. That mountain of mashed potatoes isn't Mr.
Everest,
and you don't have to eat it just "because it's there."
And finally, whether you're driving through, or sitting
inside, or even ordering delivery, always resist the temptation to super
size.
It may seem like a great bargain at the moment, but in the
long run, you end up paying for the extra calories, not with those extra
few cents, but with your health.
THROUGH THICK & THIN
Remind yourself that you don't have to eat everything you're
served, even if your mother is with you. After being trained all our lives
to "clean that plate," this can be a tough one. But go ahead and
ask for that doggie bag, or give yourself permission to just leave some of your dinner on the plate.
081605
Caroline J. Cederquist, M.D. is a board certified Family Physician and a
board certified Bariatric Physicians (the medical specialty of weight management). She specializes in lifetime weight
management at the Cederquist Medical Wellness Center, her Naples, FL private practice, you can also
get more information about Dr Cederquist and her
weight management plan by visiting
www.DietToYourDoor.com
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