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Seven Myths About Good Eating Habits

By: Sheila Ffloyd
 

Your body can be thought of as a precision machine. It comes with thousands of intricate parts that combine to make an amazingly functional team. Like any machine, your body needs regular maintenance and fuel.

Your body needs to be fueled with the right nutrients in order to run at its maximum capacity. Following good eating habits is important to your overall health, but you also need to be able to sift through the layers of poor information.

Below, you'll find some myth busters on good eating habits:

1. "Working out on an empty stomach is best." Myth. Your stomach is rumbling for a reason: it wants a bit more fuel before you go to the gym. Ignoring the message will force your main engine to run on empty. So have a small snack, such as a piece of fruit, before undertaking physical exercise.

2. "Energy bars and drinks are good meal replacements." Wrong again. While these can be fine on the fly or in a pinch, meal replacement bars and drinks are no match for a properly balanced diet. In order to get the antioxidants you need, reach for fruits and vegetables for a boost of vitamins, fiber, minerals and fluid.

3. "Breakfast isn't important." Of course, your mother was right about this one. Breakfast is and will always be the most important meal of the day. Eating a healthy breakfast gives your body the supercharge it needs to meet the challenges of the day. Skipping breakfast robs your body of precious fuel, and will leave you feeling tired and hungry all day long.

4. "Low-carb diets provide all the nutrients we need." Another myth. For temporary weight loss, low-carb diets may work, but in terms of overall good health, they come up short. We need carbohydrates for our very survival, and they start by developing muscle tissue, and storing energy for later use.

5. "It's okay to eat what you want, when you want it." Not true my friend. That's too easy. Regular exercise and frequent good food choices will help, but you have to maintain both, forever, for the wellness benefits to add up. That does not mean "all or none", but rather seek the balanced diet that we hear so much about. Bread and cheese for three nights straight won't cut it.

6. "Reduce calories as much as possible." Losing weight involves both exercise and cutting calories, but if you cut too many, you run the risk of doing more harm to yourself than good. Chop calories gently, targeting one or two pounds per week. If you are losing weight too quickly, add some more fruits and veggies to slow things down.

7. "Skip alcohol and soda." Yes! Not a myth. Good drinking habits are part of good eating. Soda pop really is just colored sugar water with chemical flavor. Why add to the profits of those companies, when you can drink tap water, juice, or milk? Drink regularly throughout the day. (Though it should be noted that the eight glass a day "rule" is not actually based on scientific research, but is itself a frequently repeated myth.) Don't let yourself get dehydrated.

A good understanding of a balanced diet will help you to make good eating choices. It's not really complicated, you just have to make a few adjustments, and you will make a big leap toward better wellness. Fuel yourself with good food, and keep your motor running smoothly for a longer life.

Article Source: Main Articles

Sheila Ffloyd contributes regularly to several popular online magazines, on alternative health and health news themes.
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