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Tips
To Reduce
Weight Without Dieting
Ayurveda Tip To
Reduce Body Weight
Herbal Weight
Reducing Drink :
Ingradients :
Asana
(Heartwood)
Water
*What is Asana
Botanical
name : Pterocarpus marsupium Roxb.
Family
: Fabaceae
Sanskrit
Names :
Asana, Beejaka, Petaca, Bandhukavriksha
English
: Indian kino tree, Malabar kino tree
Hindi
: Vijayasara, Bijasal, Bila
Malayalam : Venga
Useful
part : Heartwood
How To Prepare
Boil sufficient quantity of
Asana
Heartwood
in plain water
for 10-15 minutes
How To Use
1 Liter daily , use as drinking water
People have low blood sugar level should not take this
water
Fat Reducing Gruel
Gruel
prepared out of Barley rice / Yavam Rice
How To Use
Take this gruel as your dinner
Some of the Ayurveda products can
be recommended of obesity
Varadi kasayam
Varanadi kasayam
Kanchanara guggulu
Vilangadi choornam
Some of the Ayurveda Therapies can
be recommended of obesity
Udwarthanam
Podikizhi
Kasayadhara
Herbal steam bath
Virechanam
Vasthi etc
Note :
There are many reasons for
over weight / obesity . So better to consult a medical
practitioner to find out the reason , and take treatment
accordingly for best result
To know about Ayurveda weight
management package kerala
doctor@ayurdoctor.com
Reduce
Weight Without Dieting
Many people struggling with their weight are
what Stephen P. Gullo, Ph.D., a prominent weight loss
expert in
New York City, calls food therapists—people who use food
to deal with stress and the problems of life.
They have developed a one-word response to any and all
problems: Eat!" says Dr. Gullo, author of Thin Tastes
Better
(Carol Southern Books, 1995).
It's not surprising that so many people use food as a
tranquilizer, says Dori Winchell, Ph.D., a psychologist in
private practice specializing in eating disorders in
Encinitas, CA. "From the time you're a baby through
childhood, whenever you're unhappy, someone soothes you
with a cookie. We've been pairing emotions with eating for
so long that it's little wonder we know anything else."
What's more, admits Dr. Winchell, food works. "Food can
create soothing changes in brain chemistry, and even the
simple act of chewing will increase endorphins and ease
your pain."
To top it off, the stress you feel when you're upset
actually makes you feel hungry and creates body fat.
Chronic stress from deadline pressures at work to painful
baggage from your past triggers your body to increase the
production of cortisol, the hormone that encourages fat
storage, particularly around the belly. Your body also
pumps increased adrenaline into your bloodstream, which
makes your pancreas churn out insulin. That leads to
incessant hunger, explains Pamela M. Peeke, M.D., M.PH.,
assistant clinical professor of medicine at the University
of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore and author of
the best-selling book Fight Fat After Forty
(Viking Press, 2000).You eat for relief, which,
unfortunately, lasts only as long as the last bite. Then
the problems you were trying to solve with food suddenly
reappear. (Surprise: They never went away.) And you feel
like a failure: Not only didn't you solve your problems,
you created a new one, right there around your waist!
The solution? Find tools besides a fork to attack
emotional angst. In the time it takes to forage for your
favorite quick-fix food, you can take steps to break the
cycle, beat stress, eliminate emotional eating, and yes,
finally drop that excess weight for good without even
trying.
Feed Your Real Hunger
Sometimes food cravings mean you want food, but often,
especially for emotional eaters, they're saying you want
something else: It could be creative stimulation,
companionship, or more satisfaction in life. That was true
for Karen Jones (not her real name) of
Rockville, MD, who shed 70 lb from her 210-lb frame when
she identified her eating triggers as boredom,
frustration, and loneliness. "I'd tried, and ultimately
failed, countless diets," says Jones. "But once I
understood why I was eating and started confronting those
issues head-on, the weight came off without any diet at
all." Not sure what you're actually "hungry" for? Here's
how to figure it out and "feed" it.
Play detective. Keep a food journal, suggests eating expert
Joan Chrisler, Ph.D., professor of psychology at
Connecticut College in New London. "Every time you reach
for food, write down what you eat and how you were
feeling. Bored? Frustrated? Happy? Before long, you'll see
a pattern. Then you can start to break it."
Shop for some stimulants.
Do you eat when you're bored? Time to make a new "grocery"
list, says Dr. Chrisler. Buy inexpensive, accessible
things such as books, CDs, and tapes or DVDs of favorite
films that provide the emotional lift you're seeking from
food. Keep them handy, and turn to them when you're down.
Make a human connection.
"For some people, food is love," says
Prevention
columnist Edward M. Hallowell, MD, psychiatry instructor
at Harvard Medical School. "You may be hungry for feeling,
closeness, and companionship." Or, like Karen, you eat to
escape painful feelings. "Make a human connection
instead," suggests Dr. Hallowell. "Call your best friend."
Make sure you pick someone who makes you feel good. If you
have issues with a parent or friend, calling them could
lead you to finish off an entire row of cookies.
Create new habits.
Many people eat every time there's a lull, such as during
TV commercials, says eating disorders expert Sandra Haber,
Ph.D., adjunct associate clinical professor at Adelphi
University's Derner Institute in
New York City.
Be prepared for those lulls. "Keep manicure supplies,
stacks of empty photo albums, or a cross-stitch project by
the TV for something to do," she suggests. Even better,
find a hobby. When you're engrossed in something you love,
you forget all about eating, especially if you're active.
Falling in love with bicycling, for instance, has helped
Karen Jones maintain her new 140-lb figure.
Head toward your dreams. Maybe you're hungering for a big
change, such as a more satisfying career. Go for it, one
little step at a time. "Take a class at a community
college, or just start talking to people in that field.
Moving toward goals is exhilarating," says Dr. Peeke, who
saw one client drop 60 lb once she left a safe but
unfulfilling job and pursued her dreams to be a caterer.
Rethink your rewards. Like most people, you probably eat to
celebrate happiness too. (Don't most happy occasions
involve eating?) Find new, affordable rewards such as
earrings or tickets to a play or movie.
Put Down Your Pain
Suppressed emotional pain can show up as excess pounds,
even if that pain is from your deep past, says Dr.
Winchell. Research shows that bad childhood experiences
can lead to self-nurturing with food. You can't change the
past, but you can improve the present. Here's how.
Confront the here and now.
"If dwelling on the past burned calories, no woman would
be overweight," says Dr. Peeke. "Instead of ruminating,
take action." If your mother was abusive, resolve to be a
better mother yourself. If certain relatives upset you,
limit your time with them. And if you need help, get
therapy. "When you confront your pain head-on, it gives
you control of it, so you don't need food," says Karen
Jones.
Speak up. "We all want harmony, but achieving
true harmony doesn't mean stuffing down feelings—and
food—like many women do," says Dr. Haber. "It means
speaking up and letting the people in your life know how
you feel. Finding that courage is empowering," she says,
and it can help you deal both with the people in your life
and food.
Rewrite history. "When was the last time you succeeded,
laughed, or had a great time?" asks Dr. Winchell. "How did
you feel? Rewrite your mental history books to focus on
those moments, and you'll spend less time eating your
sorrows away." School, work, and society teach us to
concentrate on our mistakes, so we can correct them. The
result: We remember all the bad stuff. Every time a bad
memory pops up, replace it with a good one. You'll feel
better about your life.
Make nice with yourself. For a day, pretend you have a cartoon
bubble over your head, and catch everything you say to
yourself, suggests Dr. Haber. Write it down, and read it
back. Negative self-talk keeps you buried in your pain.
"Keep saying you're fat and lazy, and it's little wonder
that you hide away and feed yourself junk," she says.
Instead, offer yourself the same encouragement you'd give
to a friend. It feels artificial at first, but when you
catch yourself saying something mean, stop, and make it
nice.
Feed your soul.
Nurturing your spiritual self is a way to heal pain and
lose weight. In surveys by The Solution, a weight loss
program that focuses on skills in self-nurturing and limit
setting, program founder Laurel Mellin, RD, the author of
a book by the same name (The
Solution, Regan, 1998) found that the 73 percent
of participants who developed a deeper sense of
spirituality were more likely to maintain their weight
loss and lost seven times as much weight as those who
didn't gain spiritual depth. Church is one place to find
spiritual purpose, but there are other places to look.
"Try volunteering," says Dr. Peeke. "Serve food at a
shelter. Help an adult learn to read. When you teach
someone else, you learn to believe in yourself. You also
get in touch with your human spirit."
Step toward success.
Don't let the fact that kids used to taunt you for being
fat define you, says Dr. Peeke. "Say, 'Okay, I have a
problem with weight, but that doesn't make me a terrible
person.' Focus on something you do well. When you succeed
at something, your self-worth increases, and you feel able
to succeed in other areas of life, too."
Learn to Relax
To completely conquer emotional eating, you need to trump
stress, the source of anxiety and artificial food
cravings. "I was amazed to learn that all my pangs didn't
mean I was really hungry," says Naomi Henderson, 58, an
entrepreneur in
Bethesda,
MD, who found herself growing along with her new company.
"I'd eat a full meal and be ravenous 45 minutes later! All
my cravings were from stress." Stress-taming tricks such
as beginning each day with a 20-minute blissful bath
instead of a hurry-up shower helped her drop from a size
18 to a 12.
Of course, tried-and-true stress blasters such as steamy
baths and good books help douse stress for the moment. But
to really give it the heave-ho, you need to stress-proof
your body with lasting relaxation exercises. Two of the
best: yoga and meditation. These practices use deep
breathing and mental concentration to make you more aware
of your body and emotions. Deep-breathing relaxation
exercises also affect your body's physiology, lowering
blood pressure and slowing heart rate, making it easier to
distance yourself from the everyday worries that trigger
stress and overeating.There are many variations of
meditation. Some require professional instruction; others
are extremely simple.Or try yoga. Yoga classes and
videotapes are available nearly everywhere.
Regular
Practice of Yoga and other exercises
Tips to Stop Emotional Eating
· During down times, remember good times: Stick old photos in
albums instead of eating chocolates.
· Comfort yourself with a new pair of shoes. They'll look better
on you than the extra weight you'll gain from a
Boston
cream doughnut.
· Keep a little project near the TV to avoid eating during
commercial breaks. This one will really pay off.
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