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Categories of Diets
| Atkins Diet | Fat Loss Diet | Low Carb Diet | Pre Post Workout Diet |
| Health Diet | Keto | Mass Gain Diet | Vegan |
Diet and Weight Loss Advice
If i had advice to give someone who wanted to become fit healthy and actively control or lose weight, i would have to say speak to a professional person such as a personal trainer and consider changing your lifestyle.
Sometimes you need a special diet
Of course, some medical conditions do require special eating
plans. In these instances, any recommendations from your doctor
should be followed.
The balanced eating plan
There is an eating plan that gets results. You can
achieve and maintain a healthy body weight and you don't have to
cut out any foods because you can eat everything – in
moderation.
It's called a balanced eating plan and it's nothing new. Combined
with moderate physical activity, it will change your life.
With a balanced eating plan, it's what you leave in that makes all
the difference. For a balanced eating plan to be successful, you
need to:
- Eat plenty of vegetables, legumes and fruits.
- Include a variety of cereals (including breads, rice, pasta and noodles), preferably wholegrain.
- Include lean meat, fish, poultry or alternatives.
- Include milk, yoghurts, cheeses or alternatives.
- Drink plenty of water.
- Limit saturated fat and moderate total fat intake.
- Choose reduced fat varieties of foods where possible.
- Choose foods low in salt.
- Limit your alcohol intake, if you choose to drink.
- Consume only moderate amounts of sugars, and food and drinks containing added sugars. In particular, limit sugar-sweetened beverages.
Meeting your body's needs
A stable body weight means that the amount of kilojoules from food
matches the kilojoules used by your body. If your weight is
increasing, this may mean that you are eating too much food, doing
too little physical activity or both.
Different food components contain different levels of kilojoules:
- Fat is the most concentrated – it contains 37kJ/g (kilojoules per gram).
- Protein contains 17kJ/g.
- Carbohydrates have 16kJ/g.
- Alcohol has 29kJ/g.
Carbohydrates are your body's fuel
Carbohydrates provide the body with kilojoules, or fuel. Foods
that contain the most carbohydrates include:
- Fruit
- Vegetables, especially potatoes and corn
- Legumes, including dried beans, peas and lentils
- Grains
- Bread
- Breakfast cereal
- Rice, pasta and noodles
- Low-fat milk and yoghurt.
These foods are rich in vitamins and minerals and are generally low in fat. This makes them well suited to a healthy eating plan. Some are excellent sources of dietary fibre, including wholegrain varieties, legumes, fruit and vegetables. Foods with lots of added sugar (like soft drinks and sweets) are another source of carbohydrates, but these contribute extra kilojoules with few vitamins and minerals.
Protein helps your body build new cells
Protein is an essential nutrient that you need throughout life.
Your body needs it to make, maintain and renew all its tissue and
cells. Protein can be found in animal and plant-based foods:
- Animal protein – protein-containing foods from animals are meat, chicken, fish, eggs and dairy products.
- Vegetable protein – protein-containing foods from plants include tofu, nuts, seeds, lentils, dried beans and peas, and soy milk.
Fat helps your body absorb nutrients
You need to eat some fat. It's important for many body processes.
Fat protects your organs, keeps you warm and helps your body
absorb and move nutrients around. It also helps hormone
production. It is important to choose foods with the healthiest type of fat.
Many Australians eat more fat than they need, which can lead to
weight gain and heart disease. The healthier fats are unsaturated fats. They can be found in sunflower oil, safflower oil, peanut and olive oils, poly- and
mono-unsaturated margarine spreads, nuts, seeds and avocado. These
are much better for you than the saturated fat found in butter,
cream, fatty meats, sausages, biscuits, cakes and fried foods.
Be active every day
Once you have a healthy eating pattern, you'll soon feel like you
have more energy and you'll want to be more active. To make it
easier for you to get the right amount of physical activity each
day, here are a few suggestions:
- Think of movement as an opportunity, not an inconvenience.
- Put together at least 30 minutes of moderate intensity physical activity on most, preferably all, days.
- Enjoy some regular, vigorous exercise if you can for extra health and fitness.
- Remember, the more activity you do, the greater the benefits you'll enjoy.
A healthy lifestyle is easier than you think
Changing your eating and physical activity habits can be difficult
at first. But once you've started, it's easy to sustain. Here are
a few tips to help ease the transition:
- Combine an active lifestyle with healthy eating.
- Make small, achievable, lifelong changes to your lifestyle and eating habits.
- Fill up on low-kilojoule nutritious foods.
- Keep portions moderate in size.
- Eat until you have had enough – not until you are full.
- Do your best to avoid eating when you are not hungry.
- Recognise that on some days you might be hungrier than on other days.
- Eat slowly and enjoy your food.
- Eat regular meals including breakfast, lunch and dinner.
- Reduce the amount of 'extra' or 'sometimes' foods that you eat.
Examples of 'sometimes' foods include biscuits, cakes, desserts, pastries, soft drinks and high fat snack items such as crisps, pies, pasties, sausage rolls, other takeaway foods, lollies and chocolate.
Feel good about yourself
Being healthy includes feeling good about yourself. Don't accept
the unrealistic images portrayed in the media. At times, there are
pressures on top of work and family, which make it harder to
maintain a healthy lifestyle. Adopting balanced eating habits can
help you feel better about yourself.
Fad dieting is one pressure you don't need in your life. Healthy
food and physical activity will give you more energy and leave you
feeling healthier. You will also be able to set a good example for
your children and look after your family by offering them healthy
food.
Once a wide range of nutritious foods and physical activity become
part of your everyday routine, the idea of dieting will start to
seem strange.



