Dieting Myths & FactsMyth: Eating late at night will pile on extra weightRecent experiments carried out at the Human Nutrition Research Centre in Cambridge revealed that people who ate their main meal at 8pm burned up exactly the same calories as others who had theirs at lunch time. Over eating at this time of night though, is worse because there is not much time left in the day for your body to actively burn up any extra calories Myth: Obesity is geneticOnly 1% of obese people can blame their parents for passing on a ‘fat gene’. The obesity epidemic is down to sedentary lifestyles with energy-rich and fat-laden diets. Myth: Yogurt is the perfect food for people on a dietMany dieters swear by it, but some yogurt can be as fattening as ice-cream. Greek yogurt has 10% fat. Myth: Calories derived from fat make you fatter than calories from carbohydratesIt makes no difference whether excess calories are from fat such as butter or a carbohydrate like bread, both will make you gain weight. Myth: Exercise only makes you want to eat moreOften people shy away from doing exercise using this excuse. However, research has shown that after 20 minutes of exercise, people ate no more than those who had done nothing. Myth: Chocolate makes you fatMost diets tell you to avoid chocolate. But in scientific studies no individual food has been implicated as the sole cause of weight gain.Fact: Becoming a vegetarian helps weight loss Myth: You can change your body shape through dietingPeople often diet not because they are overweight but because they are unhappy with their body shape. Sadly, they are wasting their time. You can only modify and streamline your given shape. If you are carrying no extra weight and you are still unhappy with your shape, then exercise is the answer. Myth: Reduced fat foods help you to lose weightMost diets promote low-fat foods. They can help but many are bulked out with other ingredients to replace the fat, which means that the calorie count (the crucial factor in determining whether the food will make you put on weight) is barely reduced. |
