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slynne
Nutrition Tool Mark Unseen   Mar 14 19:23 UTC 2007

I came across a pretty useful tool for anyone interested in diet and
nutrition. I had to do a diet analysis for school but I was also curious
about how bad my diet really is, especially since I have been trying to
eat intuitively. 

The link is:

http://mypyramidtracker.gov/default.htm

This is a site where you can enter everything you eat in a day and get
nutritional information not just for one item but for one's entire day
of eating. If one does enough days, one can track trends. I kept a food
diary for a month. I wrote down every thing I ate, even if it was just
2-3 M&M's from the gumball machine at work. 

What I found is that I eat about 80% of the calories that should
maintain my weight. Not surprising to me really. I have always known
that weight is more than just how many calories one eats. I still eat a
lot of calories though (an average of 2320 per day). My worst day had
almost 4000 calories and I had skipped breakfast! That's what eating
almost a whole large pepperoni pizza will do. go figure. 

My total caloric percentages from carbohydrates, proteins, and fats are
as follows: Carbohydrates 56%; Proteins 13%; Fat 31%.  These values do
not differ more than 2% from any of the USDA recommended percentages of
55% of calories from Carbohydrates, 15% of calories from proteins, and
30% of calories from fat.  

Honestly, that kind of surprised me because I would have thought that I
eat way more fat than that. I am going to continue with the food diary
and see if I keep getting the same results. 

Anyhow, I just wanted to share that tool for folks who are curious about
exactly what they eat. 

41 responses total.
furs
response 1 of 41: Mark Unseen   Mar 15 00:02 UTC 2007

I use www.fitday.com to track mine.  I average around 1800-2000 a day,
which I know is not enough, especially since I'm training to be in a
triathlon. But it's hard for me to eat more.
slynne
response 2 of 41: Mark Unseen   Mar 15 00:52 UTC 2007

Jeanne? Do you find yourself feeling hungry a lot? If not, you are
probably eating enough. 

A triathalon? That is sooooo awesome! When is it?
furs
response 3 of 41: Mark Unseen   Mar 15 10:35 UTC 2007

well, the main one I've been training for is July 22.  It's a 1/2 mile
swim, 12 mile bike and 3 mile run.  But I'm doing a small indoor one
this weekend for training (it's 20 minutes swim, bike & run each
indoors)  And my crazy cousin who talked me into this in the first place
has another one in mind in June that we might do.  This one is a 1/4
mile swim, 10 mile bike and 3 mile run, so we might do it as practice.

Well, my rule is if I'm hungry I eat.  So really the only time I get
super hungry is in the mornings when i wake up.  So do feel like I'm
eating all the time, I eat about 6 meals a day.  I'm sure I have days
that I eat more than 2000, but I think I had a couple this week where I
only had 1600.  So  it just depends on how I feel from day to day.  But
I'm eating a lot of fruits and veggies so I feel like I"m eating a ton
of quantity.
mary
response 4 of 41: Mark Unseen   Mar 15 12:32 UTC 2007

I too like fitday.  All of these programs are a nice way to keep
portion-creep in check.  I tend to fall into the pattern of 
thinking I'm eating mostly healthy stuff, so I can eat all I want.
Wrong.  It doesn't matter if it's ice cream or apples if 
I'm eating more than what I'm burning, I'll be carrying
it around for a while. 

I'll check out the link.  Thanks, Lynne.
denise
response 5 of 41: Mark Unseen   Mar 15 18:06 UTC 2007

Jeanne, that's so cool about doing the triathlons!  Let us know when 
and where and perhaps we can get a cheering section for you. :-)
cmcgee
response 6 of 41: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 15:17 UTC 2007

View hidden response.

cmcgee
response 7 of 41: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 15:24 UTC 2007

Here's the abstract of the article in the hidden Response 6:  

Portion-control dishes helped people with diabetes lose weight
Last Updated: Monday, June 25, 2007 | 4:29 PM ET
CBC News


"Eating from plates and cereal bowls marked to show portion sizes helped
people with diabetes to shed pounds comparable to the results of weight
loss drugs, researchers in Alberta found.

As well, more people who used the portion control plates   26 per cent
were also able to decrease their use of diabetes medications after six
months, compared with almost 11 per cent of those who did not receive
the special tableware."

I went online to take a look at the plates.  Essentially they are
different diameter plates, with hand painted pictures and dividing lines
to show what to put on your plate, and how much space it should take up.

I've heard of a similar rule:  1/2 of plate geography for vegetables,
1/4 for breads/grains, and 1/4 for protein.  Looking at this, I realized
that the difference in an 8-inch luncheon plate, a 10-inch dinner plate
and a 12-inch dinner plate can make a huge difference in how much you
consume at a meal.  

Might be time to measure out portions (I'm with Mary on that, I have to
*constantly* retrain my eye to exactly what a 1/2 C serving looks like)
on my favorite plates and see which one is the best size to use in the
1/2, 1/4, 1/4 system.  

edina
response 8 of 41: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 15:25 UTC 2007

That's brilliant.  I know that I have been working hard at reducing 
portion size with my husband and I.  What's funny is that he rarely 
goes back for seconds...so I think a lot of it is visual.
slynne
response 9 of 41: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 15:44 UTC 2007

I think that something like a plate that helps with portion control is 
a good idea and certainly is better for one's health than other methods 
such as weight loss drugs. 

But I will point out a few things about this study that I think are 
worth noting. 

1. It was a six month study. I would like to see a more long term 
study. There are many methods of losing weight that have some limited 
success at six months. There are many fewer where the weight loss is 
still present at one year and even fewer still where the weight loss is 
still present at five years. 

2. The average weight loss of 1.8 percent of body weight is about 5-6 
pounds lost for a 300lb person. That really isnt much weight loss. I 
wonder if portion control can help with diabetes even if one doesnt 
lose weight? 

3. While 1/4 of the patients in this study who used the plates were 
able to decrease the use of diabetes meds, that is about 15% more than 
would have been able to anyways even without special plates. I wouldnt 
call that a wildly successful program although I am sure that the 15% 
of people who found the plates helpful might disagree.

 I think that since plates dont have side effects like other weight 
loss methods do, at the very least one can say that the plates do no 
harm and may do some very small amount of good. 

mary
response 10 of 41: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 16:35 UTC 2007

If I didn't make it an ongoing project to keep my weight down (as best I 
can) (and it is work) I'd easily weigh 300 pounds.  I'd be a very unhappy 
person at that weight and I know my health, both physical and 
emotional, would take a hit.

So how do I figure into your facts about dieting not working?

It works for me although imperfectly.  But that's sure better than
not working at weight loss at all.
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