Eating in between meals helps curb your appetite when you are having your main meals, I eat a total of 5 to 6 times a day to avoid sugar spikes and keep my metabolism going at a steady pace, as a Diabetic I found this to be helpful for me. However, remember that you have to do what works best for you. Here are some tips that can help you guys with that:
Managing The Munchies: Surprising Ways To Curb
Cravings
by David Foreman, RPH
(NAPS)—If you ever feel you have a slim chance of losing weight, here are a few facts to consider.
First,
studies suggest that eating a diet lacking in variety can lead to more food
cravings.
These may revolve around texture (creamy, crunchy), taste (sweet,
salty) or settings (movie theaters, ballparks). The “forbidden fruit” concept
alone may be enough to trigger a craving. Before you board up your cupboards,
however, there may be simpler ways to curb cravings in the short term that will
result in avoiding unwanted weight gain in the long run.
Natural Solutions
1) Get Nutty: Nuts, specifically walnuts
and almonds, are loaded with protein and healthful, appetite-satisfying fats.
Not only do they curb cravings, but as a study published in the International
Journal of Obesity showed, people who ate a handful of almonds daily for six
months lost 18 percent of their body fat.
2) Take Happy Beans: A clinical study
published in Obesity, the official peer-reviewed research journal of The
Obesity Society, concluded that sugary food cravings dissipated significantly
when participants consumed a specific white kidney bean extract called Phase 2
Carb Controller. The extract, found in many carbohydrate-blocking nutritional
supplements, not only gave participants an average seven-pound weight loss, but
it even boosted their overall happiness. Look for products containing Phase 2
at your favorite place to buy supplements, including GNC and The Vitamin
Shoppe.
3) Sniff Jasmine: One recent study found
that inhaling jasmine (a nonfood odor) reduced chocolate cravings; another
showed that smelling a neutral odor diminished other common food cravings. This
suggests that smelling something that doesn’t remind you of, or is similar to,
food may help you reduce cravings. So springing for some essential jasmine oil
and lighting up a jasmine candle may be a good idea.
4) Sleep In: A study from the University
of California, Berkeley, suggests that food cravings are more likely in
sleep-deprived individuals. The high-level brain regions used for complex
judgments and decisions can become impaired by sleep deprivation, while the
more primal brain structures that control motivation and desire are amplified.
Studies also show that people who regularly get six hours or less of sleep per
night not only gain weight more rapidly than those who get eight hours, they
also struggle to lose weight long term.
Learn More
For
further natural health tips, go to www.phase2info.com,
www.herbalpharmacist.com, facebook.com/TheHerbalPharmacist and @Herbalrph on
Twitter.
• Mr. Foreman is a retired pharmacist,
author of “Pillars of Health: Heart Disease” and radio host of “The Herbal
Pharmacist.”
When you’re trying to eat right, nature
may offer many ways to combat food cravings.
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