Staying in the High Response Cost, High Yield Zone
As you all know from reading Dr. Phil’s book, managing your weight successfully
involves changing your lifestyle and mastering the keys. This is a process that
involves exchanging unhealthy habits for healthy ones.
One of the habits we have been working on is exchanging Low Response Cost, Low
Yield (LRC/LY) foods for High Response Cost, High Yield (HRC/HY) foods. Part of
the way we have been doing this is by retraining your taste buds to appreciate
the sweetness of fresh fruit and the different flavors you can create from herbs,
mustards and vinegars.
In the program, we allow diet sodas and sugar substitutes like stevia and xylitol
and recommend low fat and non fat products. These can be part of a healthy diet
used correctly. We can use these to enhance HRC, HY foods.
Used incorrectly, these fat-free and sugar-free products can keep you hooked on
sweet tastes and LRC/LY foods. Dr. Phil stresses whole and unprocessed foods as
the foundation for a healthy eating program. These HRC/HY foods are also fantastic
“hunger-suppressors” as he discusses in the book. Many of these “fat-free,
sugar-free” foods are highly processed and are LRC/LY foods. Because you
think they are “healthy” because they are “fat-free and sugar-free”
you are tempted to overeat because they seem safe. They also keep your taste buds
craving sugar and fat.
It’s time to teach your taste buds to appreciate the sweetness in fresh
fruit - if you want to enhance the sweetness add a little cinnamon or real vanilla
(no sugar) - these spices are naturally sweet and good for you too.
Use fat-free or non-fat dairy products with other HRC/HY foods - use cottage cheese
with berries, put some low-fat or non-fat cheese on a salad or spice up some plain
non-fat yogurt with mint and top your grilled chicken with it.
I have emphasized trying a new vegetable every week - I want you now to try a
new spice as well. Try adding basil to your salad, crushed sage, parsley and garlic
as a “crust” for your chicken or mint to your fruit and yogurt parfait.
Make holidays a time to create a special favorite that is HRC and HY and be the
one to start some new healthy family traditions!
Also to all of the challengers:
Carry your food journal with you and write down every time you eat or drink something.
When you try to remember at the end of the day you may forget something. Also
make sure you are checking all of your portions and following the nutrition chapter
recommendations explicitly.
Here is a review of the portions:
This means - protein at each meal - palm sized portion
2 low-fat dairy servings a day (1 cup milk* or yogurt, ½ cup cottage cheese,
1 slice cheese or 1 oz)
2 fruit servings (1/2 cup = tennis ball or cupped hand)
4 vegetable servings (same as fruit)
2-3 carb servings (you can exchange these for more veggie servings - 1 slice of
bread, ½ cup or tennis ball, cupped hand)
1 fat serving (size of your thumb or a tbsp)
*If you are insulin resistant you should not use milk and avoid caffeine until
we get that resolved.
** Written By JJ Virgin, CNS, CHFI
|