5 Reasons You Can Give Up Counting Calories

5 Reasons You Can Give Up Counting Calories

If you think that a calorie is a calorie – and it doesn’t matter if it comes from kale or cookies, then it’s time to rethink what you think you know about calories. Contrary to what your Momma, track coach, or even Doctor led you to believe, all calories are NOT created equal, and thinking you’ll lose weight simply by counting them or cutting them will likely leave you hungry, irritable, malnourished and not much lighter than you were when you started. So, instead of slashing and burning the caloric field, let’s level it with the following food for thought:

1. All Calories Are Not Created Equal

Thinking that all calories are the same is an antiquated notion. Granted, by definition, calories represent units of energy provided by a particular food, but thinking they’re all alike is like saying a diamond and a rhinestone are the same because they both glitter. The quality matters most with calories, as with diamonds, and enhances their value.

2. Crap is Crap, No Matter How Many Calories are Involved

Calories from nutrient-rich foods vs. nutritionally bankrupt ones from processed or refined carbs will affect the body differently. Healthy, nutrient-rich foods will keep hunger at bay, help maintain stable blood sugar levels, minimize cravings, and enable your brain to signal your belly that it’s full. Nutrient-poor foods will have the opposite effect, wreaking hormonal havoc, spiking insulin, setting off cravings, dulling satiety signals, and encouraging overeating. In other words, nutrient-dense foods help keep weight in check naturally; no calculator is required.

3. Think of Counting Calories as Nutritional Navel-gazing

Tracking every scrap that goes in your mouth may give you a feeling of control over your food, but it doesn’t mean you’re getting enough of the nutrients your body needs. Take, for example, those who diet on processed, portion-controlled, microwaveable meals (you know who you are). Aside from being loaded with chemicals, GMOs, and allergenic and inflammatory ingredients, these crappy excuses for food don’t deliver enough protein, fiber, good fats, or even volume to make you feel full, much less healthy and vibrant. The result is that you’re hungry, mentally foggy, and malnourished, possibly setting the stage for a host of health problems down the line – but you do know how many calories you ate getting there. For what that’s worth.

4. But Jared Lost All That Weight Eating Subway Sandwiches!

No disrespect, but if you’ve seen the “before and after” photos, you have to ask, just what was Jared living on before he went on his infamous crash sandwich diet? Call it what you will, but all he did was a classic caloric restriction, and yes, while it does work for a time, it’s not recommended. It’s hard to sustain in the long term, and it won’t make you feel energetic or vibrant in the short term because you’re not supporting your body with enough essential nutrients. Worse, these crash diets actually slow down metabolism, lowering your food-burning furnace, an adjustment your body makes to conserve energy and prevent starvation. So, what’s the workaround? Trade hunger, calorie-counting, and denial for filling nutrient-dense, organic or local produce, poultry, pasture-raised meats, and wild fish. Eat them until you are full, not until you’ve hit some abstract, virtually meaningless magic number. By eating these kinds of foods, your body will tell you when you’ve had enough. Refined carbs like wheat, grains, and sugar – the crystal meth of the supermarket aisle – never will.

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5. Put Away the Abacus and Fill Up on the Right Stuff

To curb appetite, feed your body with foods that fill your belly, send the message of satiety to the brain, and supply the body with health-enhancing nutrients. There is abundant evidence to show that low-carb diets generally satisfy far more effectively than high-carb ones. At the top of the satiety superstar list are the “good” fats like coconut oil, avocados, nuts, wild fish, and grass-fed, organic meats, which help balance hormonal and metabolic responses and are delicious additions to any plate. Next up: nutrient-dense, non-starchy vegetables while adding belly-filling bulk. Last but not least is protein, which is extremely helpful in creating feelings of satiety and takes more energy for the body to metabolize. The bottom line is that all three will help reduce appetite with little effort, blood sugar spikes, and no counting. All you need to do is enjoy them.

Read more about boosting energy with proper food, combining

To whip your fridge into shape quickly, easily, and healthfully, check out the essentials of a fantastic diet here.

This article originally appeared on DrFrankLipman.com.

Image: Jason Tester Guerrilla Futures

 

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After my initial medical training in my native South Africa, I spent 18 months working at clinics in the bush. There I became familiar with the local traditional healers, called sangomas, which kindled my interest in non-Western healing modalities. In 1984, I immigrated to the United States, and became the chief medical resident at Lincoln Hospital in Bronx, NY. While there, I became fascinated by the hospital’s addiction clinic, which used acupuncture and Chinese medicine to treat people suffering from heroin and crack addiction. Seeing the way these patients responded so positively to acupuncture made me even more aware of the potential of implementing non- Western medicine to promote holistic wellbeing. As a medical student, I was taught to focus on the disease rather than the patient, and as a doctor I found myself treating symptoms rather than the root causes of illness. Frustrated by the constraints of my training, and the limitations in helping patients regain true health, I began a journey of discovery to search for the path to meaningful long-term health and wellness. I began studying nutrition, acupuncture, Chinese medicine, herbal medicine, functional medicine, biofeedback, meditation, and yoga. In 1992, I founded the Eleven Eleven Wellness Center in the heart of downtown Manhattan – one of the first-of-its- kind clinics to integrate these varied modalities. As one of my patients, the chef Seamus Mullen told The New York Times, “If antibiotics are right, he’ll try it. If it’s an anti-inflammatory diet, he’ll do that. He’s looking at the body as a system rather than looking at isolated things.”