Friday, November 27, 2009

8 Weight Loss Secrets From Around the World

Whatever happened to just enjoying good food, in moderation, without guilt? These global tricks reveal it's possible, and show you how.

1. Stop eating before you're full.
The Okinawans, whose average BMI is 21.5 for those who eat a traditional diet, call this hara hachi bu, or eating till you're 80 percent full. Of course, we're not suggesting that you leave the table hungry. But eating until the buttons pop stretches the stomach by about 20 percent each time you do it, so you inevitably need more food to feel satisfied, explains Bradley Willcox, MD, co-author of The Okinawa Diet Plan. He says that putting your fork down "when you feel that first twinge of fullness" gives your brain a chance to realize that you are full before you overdo it.

2. Drizzle on the healthy oils. Healthy fats like olive oil, a staple of the Mediterranean diet, and canola oil, a staple of Okinawans, make vegetables tastier, so you're likely to eat more of them. And, as we know, eating a diet rich in produce is key to maintaining a healthy weight.

See: 7 Tricks to Drop Pounds


3. When you're eating, just eat. No other culture multitasks meals the way Americans do with our TV dinners, fast-food drive-throughs and grab-'n-go food that's designed to fit into a car cup holder and be eaten with one hand. In Japan, it's considered rude to eat while walking. And you'll never catch the French gulping coffee in the car. "In France, there are no car cup holders because you don't drink coffee while driving," explains Will Clower, PhD, author of The Fat Fallacy
: The French Diet Secrets to Permanent Weight Loss. "Eating and drinking aren't errands. It's not what you do on the way to something else." Good advice. When you're distracted by work, traffic or the TV, you're apt to overeat without even realizing it, notes Dean Ornish, MD, author of Eat More, Weigh Less. "If you really pay attention to what you're eating, you enjoy it more fully and don't need as much food."



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4. Get moving.
People in Asian countries, France and the Mediterranean tend to be slim because they're more active. Not that they spend hours at the gym; they simply walk a lot.

5. Enjoy regular meals. One reason French women don't get fat is because French women eat three meals a day. You may think skipping meals cuts calories, but all it does is evoke a primal "fear of hunger response" that causes overeating later, explains Dr. David Katz, MD, author of The Way to Eat. "Throughout most of our history, we had too little to eat. So when you go for long periods without eating, you stir up all that native programming, which says eat like crazy when you can, because all too often you can't." Start with breakfast. Studies show that breakfast-eaters are slimmer than skippers.

See: 8 Healthy Breakfast Recipes for Energy and Weight Control

6. Dine with others. Eating with family or friends vs. alone in your car, at your desk or on the couch is part and parcel of traditional cultures. Not only does camaraderie make the meal more enjoyable, it's slimming. "Eating with others restrains your own behavior," notes Dr. Katz. "You eat more slowly, which increases the likelihood that you'll register when you're full before you've eaten more than you should."

See: Make Healthy Choices at any Restaurant

7. Chow down only when you're hungry. Americans eat for all sorts of reasons besides hunger, especially from boredom, loneliness, stress or fear, a foreign concept in other cultures. "You can't make food the solution to every issue in your life and expect to be thin," says Dr. Katz. "If you eat from boredom, find a hobby. If you eat to relieve stress, learn meditation or yoga."

See: 8 Ways to Control Your Cravings and Save Your Diet

8. Have a glass of wine. A staple of French and Mediterranean tables, wine adds joy to the meal, and because it contains potent antioxidants, is at least partly responsible for why these cultures traditionally have lower rates of cardiovascular disease and mortality despite their higher-fat diets. And while some studies show that we tend to eat more when we drink, a Finnish study actually found that male drinkers were leaner than abstainers.
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From the Community…

Comments 1-10 of 194
  • Amiata's Avatar
    Posted by Amiata Fri Oct 2, 2009 10:02am PDT

    There's never been a better excuse to have a glass of wine :)

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  • Dina's Avatar
    Posted by Dina Fri Oct 2, 2009 10:21am PDT

    Love tip #2. I am all about olive oil now. Never use dressing on my salads. Just a sprinkle of olive oil. Way less fattening and it actually tastes good.

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  • Liz's Avatar
    Posted by Liz Fri Oct 2, 2009 10:33am PDT

    I wish I could stop eating when I'm full... but sometimes it's just too good ;)

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  • Lauren's Avatar
    Posted by Lauren Fri Oct 2, 2009 11:28am PDT

    I agree with #2 also. I'll take olive oil on a salad over bottled dressing any day, and grilling veggies with just a little bit of oil is so, so tasty! I'll never understand why people smother their food with pacakged bottled dressings, butter and cheeses - or why this seems to the standard in so many restaurants.

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  • Kaming's Avatar
    Posted by Kaming Fri Oct 2, 2009 11:35am PDT

    These are all good advices!

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  • Katie B's Avatar
    Posted by Katie B Fri Oct 2, 2009 12:38pm PDT

    I didn't think canola oil was healthy...

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  • J, Philadelphia's Avatar
    Posted by J, Philadelphia Fri Oct 2, 2009 1:27pm PDT

    Love this article!! Great facts!!!

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  • Fit_Chick's Avatar
    Posted by Fit_Chick Fri Oct 2, 2009 3:49pm PDT

    Rachel - Veganism may work for you and your body, but everyone's body is different. I personally believe that, as long as fresh produce, whole grains and healthy fats are staples of your diet, other things (dairy, meat, seafood, eggs) can be enjoyed in moderation.

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  • Ana Caterina's Avatar
    Posted by Ana Caterina Fri Oct 2, 2009 5:51pm PDT

    Love all the tips!

    I've actually made my lifestyle around this a year ago. I used to be all fast-food, eat-on-the-go meal skipper, until people around me (family members) started getting sick with diabetes and heart conditions as a result of such a lifestyle and I decided that's not what I want for myself in the future.

    Now I only regard fast-food places as a part of the city skyline, try to eat at my dining table whenever possible and go out of my way to avoid anything prepackaged or filled with hydrogenated oil.

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  • umabala's Avatar
    Posted by umabala Fri Oct 2, 2009 10:48pm PDT

    Take steps and not the elevator; have more fruits

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