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So did I. I have made many attempts to calculate my calorie intake. It was very difficult. But now with No-s, as Reinhard put it, there is only three meals. It is so simple for me to calculate. This whole process makes it somewhat simple to be successful. --- In , Maxine Smith <maxsteinmetz@y...> wrote: > Thanks I needed that. > Maxine > > Reinhard Engels <beautiful_idiot@y...> wrote: > First off, thanks all for your congratulations. I > really do appreciate it. > > I had a thought as I was urban rangering home from the > hospital the other day: > > Portion control is obviously an important issue, and > not directly addressed by the no-s rules. But if you > think about it, it is addressed, and not all that > indirectly. Here's how: there is no practical way to > control portion size if you don't control portion > number. If you don't see it all in front of you at > once, you can't get a sense of how much it is without > a whole lot of calculating (which almost no one does > after the initial diet honeymoon). > > It's critical to develop and be able to rely on this > sense. Think of it as the difference between being > told "an 8000 pound object is approaching you from SSW > at a velocity of 32 meters per second" vs. seeing that > you are about to be hit by a truck. Which of these is > going to get you to step out of the way faster? Math > is great for many things, but your eyeballs are nice, > too. The nosdiet framework gives your eyeballs a > chance. It puts it all right there in front of them. > They're a much better tool for portion control, > because temptation really does come barreling around > the corner like an out of control truck. You won't > always have to time to reach for pencil and paper. > > So many overweight people love to take multiple small > "no thank you" portions. They think as long as they > take less than a certain amount at a time, it doesn't > really count, that the portion control alarm won't go > off. And they're right; the alarm won't go off, but > that's the whole problem: it should. If bank alarms > were rigged to go off only when large amounts of cash > were stolen the vaults would soon be empty. And the > funny thing is people think they are fooling the > people around them. This is almost never the case; > they're just fooling themselves. Stick with fewer, > bigger portions. Better let the alarm go off and have > it ring in your ears than tip toe around it. An noisy > alarm can be a great teacher. > > Reinhard > > > > > --------------------------------- > > > To visit your group on the web, go to: > > To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: > > > Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service. > > > > --------------------------------- > Do you Yahoo!? > New and Improved Yahoo! Mail - 100MB free storage! > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
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