Eating habits can Affect your health, Here’s Everything You are doing wrong!

Vegetarians Who Don’t Eat (Green) Vegetables!

Many vegetarians eat rice-based meals (particularly polished, white rice). Plain white rice, coloured/flavoured rice, biryani, dosa, idli and so on. Now People turn up their noses to super-healthy indigenous veggies like lady’s finger, brinjal, avarai, kothavarai, etc. in favour of potato-based curries. Healthier veggies like capsicum, beans, cauliflower or cabbage are taken only in limited amounts.

It’s common to see meals like these: a large amount of rice, eaten with limited amounts of vegetables; a healthier meal would contain as many veggies as rice.

Snacking As Much As Eating!

Whether out of boredom or due to a need to socialise, we devour savoury fried snacks like samosas, chaat, murukku/chakli, bondas, bajjis, vadas that pack in a lot of fat and carbs, and/or sweets that have a lot of sugar. We eat them every few hours along with milky tea or coffee (with sugar). Gulab Jamuns are an egregious example.

Basically fried dough and milkfat chilled in sugar syrup; two balls have about 387 calories. You will have to jump rope for 40 minutes to burn them off. If you take some savoury snack like murukku along with it (to take the edge off the sweetness), that’s another 200 calories. Then drinking a cup of coffee with milk and sugar, to top it off, packs another 150 calories. You’ve just consumed the equivalent of a full meal!

Non-Vegetarians Who Want Every Meal To Be A Meat-Lovers’ Delight!

 

This is true especially for those who frequent ‘western’ fast-food joints. The body only needs a certain amount of protein; anything above that has to be processed and ‘handled’ by the kidneys, liver, etc.

The extra protein puts a strain on them, and over time, the organs involved wear out and that create health problems. These problems are preventable – by eating no more than what is required or by substituting non-meat proteins.

Some non-meat complete proteins include eggs, milk, cheese, yoghurt, soy and quinoa. You can also pair up certain incomplete proteins to get complete proteins – like beans and rice, a staple of many cultures.

 We Don’t Drink Sufficient Water

More than water, we drink sugary soft drinks or sweetened juices. A 375 ml can of cola has 10 teaspoonfuls of sugar! Every can is a loaded bomb aimed at your pancreas.

It is indeed lamentable that when a free, zero-calorie, healthy, life-sustaining drink is readily available, we often pay for a more ‘fashionable’ soft drink. The marketers have convinced us that our self-image is better with a can in hand.

Fruit juices are only slightly better than colas – they contain natural sugars like fructose, but sugar is sugar! Better to eat the fruit than drink the juice – the fruit has a lot of fibre and other nutrients that are lost when juiced.

Eating As If It Is A Competition!

Maybe this was true in the stone-age – when food was scarce and people had to fill up whenever it was available and eat more than the other guy. When food is plentiful (as it is in this day and age, especially at festivals, parties, celebrations or buffets), there is no need to out-eat the other guy. If we are paying, we try to eat as much as we can – to make sure we ‘get our money’s worth’. If it’s free, great – then we fill up anyway!

 Overeating 

Overeating is one of the main causes of weight gain. At restaurants, you can pack and take leftovers home, or better yet, pack half the meal (for later) even before eating. No need for waste, however, just take enough for each meal and reserve the rest.

 We Don’t Chew, We Just Swallow

Eating fast without chewing food properly can cause a toll on your overall health. Our stomachs are very likely full well before our brains have a chance to sense the fullness. So, we end up overeating.

It takes about 20 minutes for the ‘tank full’ signal to reach the brain, which then tells us to stop eating (not that we listen, we continue to eat even after we are full). If we can slow down the initial eating – by taking smaller mouthfuls, chewing at least 20 times and eating the fibre-laden food (like vegetables) first, it will give more time for the ‘full’ signal to develop, with less food consumed overall.

 We Don’t Relax When Eating 

We gobble something convenient (but unhealthy) for breakfast in a hurry, as we are getting ready for the workday or grab some fast-food on the way and eat it while driving or travelling. We eat in a state of stress, in the presence of stress hormones like cortisol which affects metabolism and increases fat storage.

Taking the time to have a relaxed meal enables you to be mindful about what you’re eating, which helps the body process the food much better.

 We Don’t Cook, We Eat Out

Actually, we don’t even eat out! A number of food delivery companies bring to your door, pretty much anything you want to eat in 30 minutes or less! Restaurant food tends not to be healthy, and you have no idea what’s in it.

The oil may be old, the veggies may be wilted and there may be added artificial flavouring and colour – you really don’t know what you’re eating.

Eating All Day Long

The human body can properly metabolise 2 or 3 meals a day; it cannot handle continuous feeding. A recent study found that we eat over a period of almost 15 hours a day. That leaves 9 hours; assuming we sleep for 7 hours, we are pretty much eating all the time.

Breaks give the organs time to recover after processing and metabolising a meal. Without breaks, the organs have to work continuously, and over time will get exhausted and give out, leading to all sorts of chronic health issues. Give your body a rest.

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