March news: Yale researchers decide which diet plan is best. Real food and common sense might be in the running!
Werewolf Diet: One of the newest fads in celebrity diet circles is one that might have you howling at the moon. The werewolf diet, also called the Lunar Diet, says that you can lose weight and improve your immune system by fasting and dieting according to the phases of the moon.
The Leave It to Beaver Diet Plan
When I see a Cabbage Soup Diet hailed as a
way to “shed holiday pounds” or “lose weight quickly before an important
event,” I get a sudden involuntary cramp. Nothing wrong with cabbage, and I
imagine the diet has its good points, but I’m not sure I’d want to be around
somebody who eats cabbage for seven days in a row.
Guess who did all the work... |
Nutrition is important, so I’m not belittling
the need for eating plans. However, I think back fondly to the days before I
even heard the word “diet.” Because I
grew up on a farm in the 60s, the daily menu was set. We had meat, potatoes,
and vegetables twice a day, and the morning started with cereal or the bacon and
eggs standard. A few pancakes might show up at times, and we often had fish on
Fridays, but you get the picture. The Leave It to Beaver diet.
Mom bravely tried a chop suey meal once in
the 60s, but the family reviews were somewhere between confusion and revolt.
Three pre-teen boys in overalls weren’t yet ready for such a cultural
awakening—even if the meal had no more to do with Asia than the Chinese
checkers game in our closet.
I can’t remember hearing much about diets
even in my college years. In Iowa City, I lived with three friends, and our
attempt to cook alternating meals for each other broke down after a few
weeks—about the time the sink became permanently clogged with spaghetti, banana
peels, and pop-top rings.
However,
I did hear of one diet plan during those years. Perry had a Dodge station wagon
filled with boxes of instant mac and cheese and cases of RC Cola. He was the
first techie I ever met—at a time when the only computer on campus was a
mainframe about the size of Rhode Island. His profession has since become
popular, but I still haven’t seen his exclusive mac and cheese diet touted anywhere. And you're out of luck if you want an RC Cola.
During the past few decades, a new diet plan
pops up about as often as a new fast food outlet opens. The list includes diets
such as the Atkins, South Beach, Mediterranean, grapefruit, vegan, low-carb,
high protein, and Jenny Craig. Some are more
appealing than others. The Blood Type Diet just doesn’t work for me—sounds too
vampirish. However the Okinawan Diet comes from the part of the world with the
highest life expectancy. Maybe it’s the tofu and goya. The Kangatarian Diet has a certain bounce to it—vegetarian plus kangaroo meat. The Cookie Diet sounds most sinful, while the Hallelujah Diet most inspirational.
I guess it’s obvious that I’m not a diet guy,
but I did hear an interview recently from a proponent of low sugar intake. Dr.
Robert Lustig has a book—Fat Chance—and he
has supporters and detractors. I imagine sugar and candy companies don’t send
him birthday cards. He basically advocates exercise and a diet low in sugar,
low in salt, high in fiber, and high in unprocessed food. “Eat brown and green
food,” he says. “Eat food that doesn’t even need a label.”
So that brings me back to the farm. In many
ways, we followed Dr. Lustig’s plan. We didn’t call it exercise—it was just
plain fun until we were older, and it became chores and work—but we ate food
off the land, much of it natural and unlabeled--plenty of it brown and green. Oh sure, we had a salt shaker
back then, and Mom’s chocolate chip cookies had some sugar in them, but our
energy was high, and maybe the best thing is: we never even thought about what
we ate. It was the Thoughtless Diet. And
there was not even a thought of including cabbage soup on the menu.
For a look at "The Sweet and Sour Fructose Debate," click here.
by dan gogerty (picture from lessonbucket.com)
agreed nutrition is important that is why i have summed up the best tips for healthy diet plan in my article.. check them out! https://goo.gl/dgv5gM
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