Are You Really Ready To Diet?
Almost Ready To Take The Plunge? Diet Expert Samantha Heller Offers Tips To Getting Started
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Play CBS Video Video Seeing Yourself Thinner Need a little motivation to exercise? New technology offers previews of what diet and exercise can do. Maggie Rodriguez talks fitness with Health Magazine clinical nutritionist Samantha Heller.
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Video Memory Booster For Women Nutritionist Samantha Heller shows Julie Chen what women can do to help prevent memory loss. Heller recommends eating chocolate and healthy fats, eye exercises, and recognizing the power of fragrance.
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Video Mistaking Hunger For Thirst Clinical nutritionist Samantha Heller from Health Magazine tells Tracy Smith that drinking low-calorie flavored drinks can help curb your appetite and quell your hunger pangs.
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(CBS/AP)
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Quiz Are You Food Savvy? Have you consumed myths about diet and nutrition? Take these quizzes to find out.
Heller visited The Saturday Early Show to outline the steps she'd take to launch a new diet and exercise program. She spoke with a producer prior to her appearance:
The Saturday Early Show: So what's the first step?
First, you need to determine how motivated you are to do what it takes to adopt a new, healthier lifestyle. On a scale from one to ten, one being "Fuhgedaboutit" and ten being "YES - 1000 percent motivated," where does your motivation fall?
If it's below about 8, then perhaps this is not the best time for you to begin a weight-loss program.
If you lack that strong motivation, what do you do?
Ask yourself, why? What's getting in the way? Is it a fear of deprivation, hunger, not knowing what needs to be done? All that can all contribute to a lack of motivation.
Let's talk about ways to get motivated. Obviously, losing weight is good for our health, but face it, for a lot of people the big motivation is how we look. Isn't that right?
Yes. Lots of people put pictures of themselves on their refrigerators as reminders to stay on the straight and narrow, or pictures of how they'd like to look - usually of movie stars and models. But for most of us that's just unrealistic, even counter-productive. And anyway, after a while most people just stop noticing pictures like that.
There's a free Web site that offers an alternative to this - it's called WeightView.com, and you can upload a digital picture of yourself. Then they run it through an imaging process that supposedly shows what you'd look like if you lost up to 20 pounds. The idea is, you can print both pictures and this will give you a more realistic motivation to shed those pounds.
This kind of thing may help some people - others, maybe not. It's up to you.
Okay, say you're sufficiently motivated to lose weight. Does having a kind of game plan help you stay that way?
Yes. It's very important to create a specific game plan. Write down a meal-by-meal plan to help you get organized. Take into account where you live and work and what is realistic in terms of your daily life. If you need help, see a registered dietitian.
So having clear goals are important.
Yes. Set goals, but make them achievable. Size may matter in some things, but success versus failure is more important here. If you set a goal of excercising four times a week but only manage three, it feels like failure. Better to go for success with three. Attaining that goal gives you motivational momentum and makes it easier to achieve the next one.
Another thing: write down your goals, and share them with friends and family. Having a motivational support group can be very helpful.
Let's talk about practical matters. Lots of dieters skip meals to save calories. Does that work?
Do NOT skip meals or starve yourself. Getting overly hungry is a set-up for dietary disaster. But don't eat after dinner, either.
Also, keep a food record. Writing down what you eat every day can seem like a pain in the neck, but it helps increase your awareness of what and how much you are eating. A food record can also help you see how varying situations effect your food choices and portions sizes. For example, parties, meetings, eating alone, traveling, and so on.
Motivation and determination are obviously important, but how about attitude?
Be positive. Give yourself a pat on the back for making healthy choices and decisions. But don't berate yourself if you fall off the wagon. Look at the event as a learning experience - then get it back together and move forward.
How about some tips for helping your motivated self attain your weight-loss goals.
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