Thursday, July 24, 2008

Health

On Fitness Blog by U.S. News & World Report

To Lose Weight, Use the Power of Three

March 28, 2008 10:56 AM ET | Katherine Hobson | Permanent Link

My usual response to the question "How do I lose weight?" is "Eat less, exercise more, or do some combination of the two." That advice is short, sweet, and, my friends have told me, not particularly helpful. So from time to time I plan to pass on concrete tips or techniques that some people have found help them lose weight safely and intelligently (i.e., no cabbage soup diets). My current favorite comes from the totally excellent book Mindless Eating, by Cornell University's Brian Wansink, which looks at all the environmental cues you don't even realize are influencing how and what you eat.

In the book, he talks about a concept called "the power of three," which involves making three small changes in your eating patterns and keeping them up for a month, by which time they're far more likely to have become a habit. I'm expanding that to exercise, too. The beauty of the idea is that you can pick things that fit your lifestyle, needs and weaknesses.

Here are mine:

1. Walk the dog for 30 minutes every day at lunch.

2. Eat a smaller but nutritionally balanced breakfast, now that I'm not riding my bike for two hours in the mornings.

3. Restrict the daily cookie ration to after dinner only.

Share your three!

Tags: diet and nutrition | weight

Tools: Share | | Comments (3)

Reader Comments

My 3

1. Only eat dessert after one meal a day.

2. Take whey protein every day.

3. Wait 10 mintues when I have a craving to decide if I really want it.

My 3

1. Eat a plate full of vegetable salad before meal

2. Eat healthy, avoid fried stuffs

3. Do 30 minutes physical exercise like walk

My 3

1. Find an exercise you enjoy so that you will find time to do it. Mine is hiking.

2. Eat breakfast every day--proven to be a weight-loss help.

3. Do interval eating. When it's time to eat--eat. When it's not time, don't eat. Good for those who can't tell if they're really hungry.

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About On Fitness

Senior Editor Katherine Hobson writes about keeping your body fit and your diet healthy—and what those phrases actually mean, according to science. A longtime endurance athlete, she enjoys both training and Nutella in moderation. Ask her your burning exercise and nutrition questions at onfitness@usnews.com.

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