Joel Hainley : San Francisco Bay Area Software Consultant

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Behavioural Dieting

February 15, 2008

I’ve been taking a psychology class over at DVC and while going through some assigned reading came across a section titled “Behavioural Dieting”. I’m not sure if this is what Dr. Phil, Weight Watchers, Jenny Craig and others suggest but I thought it was interesting, and might be of interest to others who spend their days, and nights, and weekends, working at a computer.

  1. Get Yourself Committed To Weight Loss - get yourself involved with others to help you work towards your goals. Things like weight watchers, jenny craig, etc.
  2. Exercise - Yeah, still gotta do that, changing your eating behaviors isn’t a silver bullet, you still have to exercise, which is just changing another behavior.
  3. Learn Eating Habits By Keeping A Diet Diary - they advocate making a complete 2 week record of when/where/what you eat, how you felt about it. Note if your feels/emotions just before and after eating.
  4. Learn To Weaken Personal Eating Clues - Once you’ve figured out what you learned from the previous step, try to restrict your eating to a single room. don’t read, study, listen to the radio, watch tv, etc. The idea here is to have to interrupt what you are doing to eat, and to only eat when you are eating. ( ha! )
  5. Count Calories, But Don’t Starve Yourself - Interesting thing here, if you’re having problems problems dieting, try dieting every other day. Apparently, people who diet moderately everyday lose as much as people who diet intensely every other day.
  6. Develop Techniques To Control Act Of Eating - smaller portions, wait 15 minutes before you get another plate of food etc.
  7. Avoid Snacks -eat a meal if you’re hungry, if you’re not hungry enough for a meal drink water, or set a timer and make yourself wait 20 minutes, and see if you’re still hungry.
  8. Chart Your Daily Progress - you need to keep track of your progress, but you need to realize that the real goal here is to change your habits towards food, and eating.
  9. Set Threshold For Weight Control - studies have shown people that set a threshold limit on their weight, tend to keep the weight off.

I though this was pretty interesting, the points that really caught my attention were items 4 and 6. As a developer, or any computer/network professional, we spend a lot of time in front of the computer. When we’re hungry we eat, but we don’t want to lose our focus, so we end up eating in front of the computer. Pretty soon we’re snacking in front of the computer, and then we’re never leaving our desks and having food flown in. ( well perhaps it’s not quite that bad but you get the idea ). There’s two really great things about forcing yourself to eat in a particular spot. You tend to eat less, because you have other things to do, and you take a break from what you’re doing, so you feel less and less like you spend the whole day sitting in front of a computer working.

The second point about “controlling the act of eating” is also interesting. I discovered the reality of this for myself last November when Shad ( a friend ) and I had lunch together at an indian buffet. I got a plate of food, and sat down and wolfed it down, and was headed back for another plate, when we got into a conversation. Fifteen minutes later I finally got up to get food and I was still pretty hungry, when I got back to my table with another plate of food, I took two bites and realized I was stuffed. Since then I’ve been forcing myself to wait 15 minutes for seconds, and if I still go back I try to make sure that it is a smaller portion and filled with only veggies and such. I can’t say that I’ve lost a huge amount of weight, but I definitely don’t get up from the table wishing I had stopped sooner. It’s nice to not overeat.

Categories
life, school
Tags
behavioural dieting, diet, food, loss, programmer, psychology, weight, weight loss
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2 responses

So 1) Weigh yourself every day, same time. Don't freak

Egyptian Prescription | February 15, 2008

So
1) Weigh yourself every day, same time. Don’t freak out if you gain a pound or two in a day, but if you keep it on for more then a day or two after, watch your diet until you are below your threshold weight. This is an application of principle #9.
2) You don’t need to exercise - it just helps. Imagine this - how long does it take you to burn 100 calories? 300 calories? For me, it is about 25 minutes on a treadmill. How hard is it to overeat 300 calories? 1 - 2 cookies.
3) Instead of counting calories, weigh everything you eat for a week or two. Eat 5 meals a day (protein and veggies) never eating more then a .75 a pound. That is an eye opener.
4) I borrowed this from NLP - raise your standards.

Of course, I gain and lose the same 3 - 5 pounds weekly!

Perhaps you don't need exercise from a "burn calories" standpoint

joelhainley | February 19, 2008

Perhaps you don’t need exercise from a “burn calories” standpoint but the building of muscle via exercise does invigorate the metabolism which allows you to burn more calories during the day. Also, i think there are some additional benefits of exercise in terms of better sleep, more clarity, focus, etc.

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