January 23rd, 2008
It wasn’t a surprise to read a press release on a recent study conducted at Tufts University on food cravings. Researcher Susan Roberts said, “”The findings [of this study] suggest that cravings are for calories, not carbohydrate, as is widely assumed.” Although foods craved do contain carbohydrate, they often contain fat and protein, too.
The study then went on to say that food cravings are normal (91 percent of people report having them), but it appears that dieting increases the frequency. Which makes sense, of course — when we’re hungry, we crave food! No rocket science there.
In this month dubbed National Diet Month, it’s useful info to keep in mind as many of us seek healthy weight loss. When we start craving food, it’s a good sign that we need it. It’s not a sign that we’re weak willed.
If you’re having trouble managing food cravings, think first whether you really need to eat. Then, if you’re not hungry, but still craving, could deprivation be at work? When we cut out foods in the belief that they ‘make us fat’ or somehow interfere with weight loss, we might set ourselves up for wanting them even more. Think moderation, not elimination if this is the case for you.
Tags:
healthy eating ,
food cravings ,
weight loss“> healthy weight loss ,
diet
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Originally Syndicated via RSS from A Weight Lifted
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