Calorie Counting Chart
Use it to Lose it!
A
calorie counting chart
is the key to losing weight. Many advertisements suggest that counting calories is not important, but when you look in to these weight loss programs more closely they have wording like eat a normal helping, or eat sensibly. See what the internets most famous weight loss guru has to say about using a calorie counting chart.
From Calorie Couter Chart Clueless
To Calorie Competent
Tom Venuto
Why
is it that any time you hear the words “calorie counting” or “food
journaling”, people start running for the hills? If creating menus,
counting calories and keeping a food journal are research-proven,
effective tools for nutrition awareness, education, motivation and
accountability (they are), then why is there so much resistance to it?
One
reason is because it’s perceived as work and hard work doesn’t sell!
Another reason is that skeptics say, “What about intuitive eating?”
“What about people who lose fat without counting calories?”
Sure, you could choose not to count calories and eat what you
“feel” your body is asking for, but if you do, that’s called guessing.
If you guess correctly and eat the right amount, you lose weight. I
would call that luck! Would you rather roll the nutritional dice or bet
on a sure thing?
Nutrition journaling and menu planning replace guesswork with
precision.
Perhaps even more important, they are also crucial parts of
the learning process to raise nutritional awareness. There’s only ONE
WAY to truly understand food and how it affects YOUR body: You have to
go through all four stages of the learning process:
Stage 1: Unconscious incompetence - you are
eating the wrong foods in the wrong amounts and you’re not even aware
of it. (You don’t know what you’re doing and you don’t know that you
don’t know what you’re doing)
Stage 2: Conscious incompetence - you are
eating the wrong foods in the wrong amounts, but for some reason, you
now become aware of it. This is often because of a “hitting bottom”
experience or an “I’m not gonna live like this anymore” epiphany. (You
don’t know what you’re doing and now you know that you don’t know what
you’re doing!)
Stage 3: Conscious competence - you educate
yourself and begin to eat the right foods, but it takes a lot of
thought and effort to eat the right things in the right amounts. (You
know what you’re doing, but you have to think about it and work very
hard to make it happen because you’re using willpower and still
learning)
Stage 4: Unconscious competence - you’ve
made the conscious effort to eat the right foods in the right amounts
and you’ve counted calories and kept a nutrition journal for long
enough and with enough repetition that these behaviors become habits
and a part of your lifestyle. (You know what you’re doing and you do it
easily and automatically without having to think about it).
I think the concept of intuitive eating has merit. If we
listened to our body’s true signals, I believe that our appetite, our
activity and our body weight would properly regulate themselves. The
problem is, in our Western, technologically-advanced culture with an
obesogenic environment, a sedentary lifestyle, social pressure and food
cues tempting us at every turn, our intuitive bodily wisdom constantly
gets short-circuited.
In our modern society, being able to eat by instinct and
successfully guesstimate your nutrition or trust your feelings of
hunger and satiety are not things that come naturally or easily.
The only way sure-fire way to reach that hallowed place of
unconscious competence where eating the right foods in the right
amounts becomes automatic and you truly understand YOUR body is by
going through the nutrition education process.
Two simple ways to count calories and get this nutrition
education you need are the meal plan method and the nutrition journal
method.
The Meal Plan method
Using software or a spreadsheet, create a menu plan meal by
meal, with calories, macronutrients and serving sizes calculated
properly for your goals and your energy needs. You can create 2 or more
menu plans if you want the variety. Then, follow your menu plan every
day. You simply weigh and measure your food portions to make sure your
actual intake matches your written plan. With this method, you really
only need to “count calories” once when you create your menus. This is
a method I use and recommend in my
Burn the Fat Feed the Muscle program
The
Nutrition Journal (Food Diary) Method
Another way to track your nutrition intake is to keep a
nutrition journal or food diary, either on paper or with an electronic
device, software or website. This is more like “calorie counting” in
the traditional sense. Throughout the day, after each meal, you log in
what you just ate, or at the end of the day, you log in all your food
for the entire day. The former is the best option, since people seem to
get really bad cases of “eating amnesia” if they wait too long before
writing it down.
I recommend counting calories and keeping a nutrition journal
at least once in your life for at least 4-12 consecutive weeks or until
you achieve unconscious competence. At that point, it becomes optional
because habit and intuition take over.
You can come back to your meal-planning and journaling any
time in the future if you slip back or if you have a very important
goal you want to work on. It’s a tool that will always be there for you
if you need it.
For more information on
calorie counter charts.
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