BASIC Nutrition - A Quick, Common-Sense Guide To
What You Should Be Eating to Stay Healthy and Get Results Right Now
By
Nick Nilsson
Think
proper nutrition is complicated? It doesn't have to be.
Follow these simple principles and you'll never go wrong.
I would bet that without even thinking, you could name 4 or 5 diets or
eating plans that are in the popular media...Weight Watchers,
Nutrisystem, Atkins, South Beach, etc. Every time you turn around,
there's a fantastic "new" approach to eating. It's enough to make your
head spin!
But it doesn't have to be that complicated. I've
got some easy-to-follow nutritional principles that will help keep you
on the right track. Beginner or advanced, these will work for you!
1. Focus your eating on natural, unprocessed foods
as much as possible.
While I know it's not always possible to get fresh fruit and veggies
and other unprocessed foods everywhere you go, your body will always
respond best when you feed it foods that are not altered through
processing. Your body has evolved over thousands and thousands of years
to process foods in their natural state - it's only relatively recently
that processed foods have appeared on the scene.
Your body has the digestive mechanisms for
efficiently processing foods in their natural state. When you add in
the fats, salt, sugar, additives, etc., your body starts having a hard
time digesting and coping. Think of it like trying to put regular gas
into a vehicle that runs on diesel. It may run, but it's not going to
be very efficient with the fuel and it could cause problems down the
road (no pun intended!)
Bottom Line: Eating foods that are not processed
allows your body to function more efficiently. You'll lose fat without
even trying.
2. Get plenty of good quality, lean protein
sources in your diet
When you're training, your body has a much greater
need for protein. During weight training and endurance training
especially, your body is constantly breaking down muscle tissue.
Protein is required to rebuild it. By regularly feeding your body good
protein sources, you'll be able to hold onto and build muscle mass
easier.
Good sources of lean protein include meats (look
for leaner cuts like sirloin), poultry, eggs (while not lean, eggs will
not shoot up your cholesterol as many worry), fish, low-fat dairy,
soybeans, and various legumes (beans).
As far as how much protein your body needs, this
will vary according to how much you weigh and your activity level. A
level of around 1 gram per pound of lean bodyweight is a good guideline
(we don't count total bodyweight because fat is not metabolically
active and doesn't require protein to sustain it).
3. Don't be afraid of "good" fats
Fats can be extremely beneficial, even when you're
trying to lose weight! Fats are important in a tremendous variety of
bodily processes including hormone production, immunity, joint and
organ protection, and even burning bodyfat. Without the "good" fats,
your body will not function as well as it could.
"Good" fats include sources such as fish, nuts,
flax oil, borage oil, and olive oil (there are many other good sources
as well). Increasing your intake of these good fats can help keep you
feeling good and burning your own bodyfat more efficiently.
Your total fat intake should be around 30% of your
daily calories. A good way to go about getting this is to try and keep
your focus primarily on low-fat foods while purposefully adding the
"good" fats into your diet (like eating a few almonds every day or
taking fish oil or flax oil capsules).
4. Carbs are fine
Despite all the talk about carbs being the enemy,
it's important to note that carbs and foods that contain carbs can
actually be quite good for you! It's generally the refined sugar added
to foods that is the problem, not the carbohydrate as a nutrient on its
own.
5. Non-nutritious foods should be minimized
This is an easy one. More than likely, you already
know that you shouldn't be eating Cheesy-Poofs or chocolate bars 3
meals a day. The calories you get from these foods don't come with any
actual nutrients. When your body is missing nutrients, it craves more
food (not to mention the insulin response to the sugar in many of these
foods) and you tend to eat more of the poor food that doesn't have
nutrients in it.
It's ironic to think that many overweight people
are actually malnourished! When you eat nutrient-dense foods, your body
gets the nutrients it needs and functions much better.
5. Salads, fruits and vegetables will give you
lots of fiber, roughage and nutrition
Eat plenty of salds, fruits and veggies every day.
This is usually one that everybody already knows yet doesn't normally
focus on. The fiber in the foods helps keep you from getting too hungry
and helps keep your digestive system clean.
6. Just do the best you can
It's not always easy or convenient to follow good
eating principles. There are plenty of tasty temptations to be found
every time you turn around.
The REAL key to proper nutrition is to focus on
trying to do well MOST of the time, not all of the time. It's what you
do most of the time that will give you the long-term results you're
looking for. Determining that you MUST be perfect all of the time is a
sure way to set yourself up for disappointment when the time comes that
you don't eat a perfectly healthy food choice.
Sometimes, you just have to eat those Cheesy Poofs
and not worry about it.
------------------
Nick Nilsson is Vice-President of the online
personal training company BetterU, Inc. He has a degree in Physical
Education and Psychology and has been inventing new training techniques
for more than 16 years. Nick is the author of a number of bodybuilding
eBooks including "Metabolic Surge - Rapid Fat Loss," "The Best
Exercises You've Never Heard Of," "Gluteus to the Maximus - Build a
Bigger Butt NOW!" and "The Best Abdominal Exercises You've Never Heard
Of" all available at (http://hop.clickbank.net/?trainer49/betteru).
He can be contacted at betteru@fitstep.com.
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