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Dear Junk Food,

I want to break up. It’s not me, it’s you. You lure me in and make me feel so good when I am with you. Your love potion is undetectable – it’s the perfect blend of sweet and a little spicy.

But, Junk Food…you always end up hurting me. I indulge myself with you and the next day I feel empty, sad and out of control. Ah, the power you have over me (and, as I have heard, so many others!) keep calm junk food

When I’m not with you, I feel free and light and in control. I can rule the world. But, when you get your sneaky hands on me, I am cast under your spell and don’t know how to break free. You are not worthy of being in my body.

Just the other day, I gave you another chance and indulged into your wanting ways. But, you disappointed me once again. My friends warned me to stay away from you and I should know better. But you are so enticing…you put me under a spell.

So…I want to break up. I want you to know I am on to your trickery. People will catch on to you and your deceitful ways.

I’m going for Healthy. Healthy loves me and my body and makes me feel energized and happy and in control. We enjoy each other and absorb each other’s attributes. We blend well together and appreciate each other.

Healthy doesn’t disguise its multiple personalities like you do. It is what it is.  No sneaky layers, misleading messages or promises that can’t be kept. Healthy is true and real and doesn’t need to defend its contents. What you see is what you get.

So, Junk Food – good luck. Eventually, everyone will catch on to you and that will keep you from harming others.  It’s only a matter of time. I will not feel deprived when I pass you up, I will feel empowered that I made the healthy choice for me and my future.

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Why We Can’t Put Those Chips Down.

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There is a growing body of evidence that supports what many of us have always thought  – junk food is truly addictive.  The more we eat, the more we want.  Our brains crave junk food in much the same way as a drug addict craves drugs. And this is no accident.  Junk food has been designed and marketed with one goal in mind – to get us to eat more of it!

Early last year, Michael Moss wrote a cover story for New York Times Magazine about the science behind junk food addiction and taste.  He interviewed James Behnke, a top executive at Pillsbury, about his attempt during a 1999 meeting,  to get the CEO’s at America’s largest food companies to look seriously at America’s growing obesity problem.  Behnke discussed a pivotal moment of the meeting when Michael Mudd, a VP at Kraft, made an uncomfortable analogy.  He compared the large food companies to the tobacco companies in the way they advertised harmful products to children.  And he went on to claim “the toll taken on the public health by poor diet rivals that taken by tobacco.”

On this basis, Mudd presented a plan to address obesity and asked for the food industry to be part of the solution, but he was not successful.  Since that meeting in 1999, obesity rates have continued to surge.  Today, one in three adults and approximately one in six children are clinically obese.

Maybe it was naive to expect these tremendously successful food companies to make any changes that would alter their highly profitable brands.  At the time of the meeting, General Mills was reaping over $500 million in annual revenue just from their line of Yoplait yogurts.  These yogurts were marketed as a healthy food, but most flavors contained over 20 grams of sugar per 6 oz container (more than twice the sugar per serving as the marshmallow cereal Lucky Charms). And they had just launched Go-Gurt, the squeeze yogurt with 10 grams of sugar per tube (close to the 15 grams per sugar for the same serving size of most ice creams).

Sugar, Fat, Salt & Other Food Industry Tactics

Moss, a Pulitzer prize winning author, continued on to write “Salt, Sugar Fat: How the Food Giants Hooked Us”.  After more than four years of research and over 300 interviews, he found that there was a “conscience effort – taking place in the labs and marketing meetings and grocery store aisles – to get people hooked on foods that are convenient and inexpensive.”  The food industry uses sugar, salt and fat, to make processed foods addicting, as well as other scientific techniques to make sure that we keep eating.

Sugar:  Sugar alone has been shown to be more addictive than cocaine.  Food manufacturers use sophisticated taste science to determine the “bliss point” that makes us crave more.

Fat:  The industry strives to find the best ‘mouth feel.’ That’s the feeling we get when we bite into a warm, gooey taste of cheese, or crispy fried chicken.  The feeling rushes right to the same pleasure centers of the brain that sugar does.

Salt:  Moss describes salt as “the miracle ingredient that solves all of the problems.”   Salt provides a burst of flavor, but also acts as a preservative so that the food can last on the shelf for months.  Salt also hides much of the off-notes in flavors that are common to processed foods.

Vanishing Calorie Density:  Big food companies also look for this attribute when designing junk food.  The term “vanishing calorie density” refers to the feeling we get when something melts quickly in our mouths.  When this happens, our brains think that there aren’t any calories in it, and, as such, we can keep eating it forever.  Cheetos are a perfect example of this type of food.

“Craveability”:  The food industry aims for this goal, so they can be assured that we keep eating.  Moss explains that foods with bold distinctive flavors can overwhelm our brains, which in turn, prevents us from over indulging on them.  To combat this, food industry scientists strive to create “craveabliity” in a food.  This is the exact balance between enticing our taste buds, but not overwhelming them, thereby overriding our brain’s natural tendency to say “stop”.

So – what are we to do?  The key is to eat less processed and packaged junk food.  Try to shop around the perimeters of the grocery store (think vegetables, fruits and meats) and stick to whole foods as much as possible.  Snacking occasionally, and in small amounts is OK, but be aware that these foods are purposefully designed to be addictive.  Understanding some of the science behind these packaged food may help us in resisting them.  Remember the food industry’s goal is to make money, not to keep us healthy.

  • lisa

    Love it!

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Say Goodbye to “No”

Do you remember being told “no” as a child or telling your own children “no”? Why does that little word make the forbidden seem so enticing??  That is exactly what happened to me whenever I tried a diet that included a lot of “no’s”. Whatever I was not supposed to eat, well, that is exactly what I wanted to eat! Even if I had no interest in that food the day before, it suddenly became all I wanted. That is how I discovered, that diets did not work for me. I only got hungrier and more frustrated. I needed a way of life – a way to live every day without feeling deprived.

For me, that way is to simply eat less of everything. There is nothing reasonable that I don’t let myself eat, but I try to never finish my plate. Yes, there are certain foods that I wouldn’t touch, but they aren’t foods I want anyway (i.e. Devil dogs, Twinkies, Big Macs). It is much easier to simply eat less of everything, rather than face all those “no’s” everyday! If I really crave it, I will have it.

No for lisa

One perfect example, for me, is the chocolate covered graham crackers at Starbucks. They are sold in a packet of two and I love them. If I really have a chocolate craving, I buy the packet and immediately throw out one of the crackers. (Yes – it is wasteful – don’t tell Grandma!) It satisfies my craving and I am not tempted to have another because it is gone – literally. Another trick I use is the napkin. As soon as I feel that first hint of fullness – I throw a napkin over my plate. This works especially well in restaurants where you look funny eating from under a napkin! So often we feel a bit full, and then pause, and dig right in again. Try to pay attention to this first feeling of fullness and stop eating then. It is amazing how it becomes a habit and how your body gets used to eating less food. So in the end you are not even saying “no” to more food, because you are simply full and satisfied!

Portion control allows you to eat lots of different foods and it takes away the constant negative voice in your head saying, “Don’t eat that!” Without that reminder, you may be surprised to find that you don’t want that junk food after all. Maybe the only reason you really wanted it in the first place was because someone or some diet said you couldn’t have it!

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