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Index Page –› Health & Hygiene –› Nutrition & Nourishment
 

Healthy Weight: Do I Want a Portion or a Serving?

 

It took me a year and a half to lost 25 pounds and my clothing size dropped from a 12 to an eight. Keeping a healthy weight was harder than losing weight. Most of the time I make good food choices, but I can get off track at restaurants, wedding receptions, and other social events.

After doing some research on weight loss I realized it comes down to what's on my plate. Amy Norton, in her Reuters article, "Cutting Calories, Portion Sizes May Really Work," says portion size can play a vital role in the number of calories we eat. "If there's more food on the plate, more goes in the stomach," she explains.

So I developed a system for making healthy food choices. Before I eat anything I ask myself, "Do I want a portion or a serving?" A portion is the amount of food I choose to eat, such as a large Chicken-Caesar salad. A serving is a measured amount of food - a cup, four ounces, one piece - based on nutritional information.

The answer to my portion or serving question depends on the answers to other questions.

WHICH MEAL IS IT? Breakfast is my start-up fuel for the day and I try to eat healthy. According to "Harvard Men's Health Watch," research findings suggest that breakfast eaters are leaner than those who skip breakfast. We have to make wise decisions, Harvard says, and eat high-fiber cereals, low sugar or non-sugar cereals, nonfat milk, whole grain breads, soft margarine, and an occasional egg. I always eat two fruits for breakfast.

AM I REALLY HUNGRY? Humans eat for many reasons: hunger, family pressure (Aunt Edith's famous dougnuts), social pressure (everyone else is eating), anxiety, boredom, and distraction. "Weight-Loss Help: How to Stop Emotional Eating," an article on MayoClinic.com, notes that many of us turn to food for comfort. Emotional eating can sabotage weight loss, Mayo continues, so "you need to learn to recognize true hunger." I have learned to do this.

WHAT ELSE HAVE I HAD? If I've already had three balanced meals and healthy snacks I don't need popcorn and soda pop at the movies. Though I don't keep a food diary, I keep a list of what I've eaten in my head. I don't snack before bedtime because I don't need the calories and would have a poor night's sleep.

IS IT A FAVORITE FOOD? I'm a noodle nut and love pasta in all forms. So I have to be careful when I eat Italian food. Most restaurants serve huge portions of pasta. I estimate the serving size and usually eat a third or less. Ice cream is another one of my favorite foods and eat a particular brand that is fatfree and sugar-free.

WHERE IS THE FOOD ON THE PYRAMID? I follow the Mayo Clinic Healthy Weight Pyramid and plan meals around it. The meals I fix for my husband and I follow the pyramid guidelines pretty well. But I'm not always able to get quality produce in the winter. (I live in Minnesota.) Often I have to go to several stores to get vegetables and fruits, but our health is worth it.

IS THIS A CALORIE DENSE FOOD? The idea that eating too much fat makes you fat is false, according to the American Diabetes Association. Weight gain comes from eating too much food and too many calories. The association says "fat has more than twice as many calories as carbohydrates or protein." I eat calorie-dense foods, but small servings of them, and have cut my protein intake by two thirds.

After working hard to lose weight I'm not going to blow it by gaining the weight back. The National Institutes of Health, in a publication titled "Embrace Your Health," recommends smaller amounts of food, ONE serving of high-calorie foods, eating lower fat foods and lower calorie foods. I try to follow these recommendations.

Deciding between a portion and a serving took practice, but I've learned to do it in seconds. I'm very aware of how I "spend" my calories. Though I sometimes eat large portions, most of the time I eat normal servings. I walk 10,000 steps a day and have maintained a healthy weight. Asking the question, "Do I want a portion or a serving?" may help you to keep a healthy weight, too.

Copyright 2006 by Harriet Hodgson

Author: Harriet Hodgson
 
Author Bio:

Harriet Hodgson

Harriet Hodgson has been a nonfiction writer for 27 years. She is a member of the Association of Healh Care Journalists and the Association for Death Education and Counseling. A prolific writer, she is the author of 25 published books and hundreds of print and electronic articles.

Hodgson has written about parenting, recycling, sexual harassment, aging, Alzheimer's disease, caregiving, communication, nutrition, physical activity, weight management, anticipatory grief, and many other topics.

She started out as a teacher and earned a B.S. with honors from Wheelock College in Boston, MA. She went on to earn an M.A. in Art Education from the University of Minnesota and did additional graduate work. After spending a dozen years in the classroom Hodgson changed careers and turned to writing.

All of her writing comes from life experience. Hodgson has talked about her experienes on some 150 radio talk shows, including CBS Radio, Minnesota Public Radio, WCCO Radio and "Coping With Caregiving," an Internet-only radio program broadcast worldwide. In addition, she has appeared on dozens of television programs/stations including CNN.

Hodgson is a Past President of the Wing of the Aerospace Medical Association. A past president of the Minnesota Medical Association Alliance (MMAA), she represented MMAA members on the Minnesota Medical Association Health Care Reform Task Force. She is an active community volunteer and all of her volunteer efforts focus on health.

Hodgson is cited in "Something About the Author," "Who's Who of American Women," "Who's Who in America," "Who's Who in the World," "The Dictionary of International Biography," and "Contemporary Authors," published by Gale Research.

Hodgson lives in Rochester, Minnesota with her husband, C. John Hodgson. She enjoys learning, travel, antiques, singing, and spending time with her twin grandchildren.

 
 
 

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