Source : summertomato.com
What you eat is important, but even healthy food can stop you from losing weight if you eat too much of it.
I never recommend extreme calorie restriction (most people aren’t
very good at it anyway), but there are some tricks you can use to
slightly reduce the amount of food you eat without feeling deprived, or
even really noticing.
Your brain is easily fooled by shifts in perspective. It’s also more
responsive to external cues like an empty plate, than internal cues like
a full stomach. Understanding these influences can show you how to tilt
them in your favor.
In his brilliant book, Mindless Eating: Why We Eat More Than We Think,
Brian Wansink encourages you to use the “mindless margin,” a daily
100-200 calorie buffer zone where your brain doesn’t notice a difference
in how much you’ve eaten.
Usually we eat more than we should because of the mindless margin,
but you can use the same principles to subtly influence your behavior
and mindlessly eat less.
Over time this calorie difference can help you drop weight. It’s slow, but it’s steady. And best of all, it’s painless.
10 Simple Ways To Eat Less Without Noticing
1. Use smaller plates

Using smaller plates and filling them up is a proven way to eat less without noticing.
2. Serve yourself 20% less
The mindless margin is about 20% of any given meal. In other words,
you can eat 80% of the food you’d normally eat and probably not notice,
so long as no one points it out to you. You could also eat 20% more—not a
bad idea if you’re scooping vegetables. If you have those smaller
plates mentioned above, serving yourself a little less should be just as
satisfying.
3. Use taller glasses
Just like less food looks like more food on a smaller plate, height
makes things look larger than width, even when the volumes are the same. A vertical line looks longer than a horizontal line and tall glasses look bigger than wide ones
You can cut down on your liquid calories by choosing taller glasses rather than shorter, fatter ones.
4. Eat protein for breakfast
People love to hype breakfast eating as a miracle weight loss cure,
but only breakfasts high in protein have been proven to suppress
appetite and reduce subsequent eating throughout the day. Skip the
waffles and head to the omelet station instead.
5. Eat three meals a day
I bet you thought eating many small meals was better than eating
three bigger ones throughout the day, but the data tells us otherwise.
Though skipping meals can make controlling your appetite more difficult,
eating more than three meals a day has not been shown to have any benefit, and may even be worse for appetite control.
Eat when you’re supposed to and you shouldn’t need any extra food.
6. Keep snacks out of sight or out of the building
Study after study have shown that people eat a lot more when is food
visible rather than put away where it can’t be seen, even if they know
it is there. Research has also demonstrated that the harder food is to
get to, even if the extra effort is just removing a lid or walking to
the cabinet, the less likely you are to eat it. The extra work forces
you to question the value of your action, and this gives you the
opportunity to talk yourself out of a decision you may regret later.
To avoid extra snacking keep tempting foods out of sight, or better
yet, out of the house. On the flip side, keep healthy foods prominently
displayed and easy to reach.
7. Chew thoroughly
Since I’ve been paying more attention to eating speed,
I’ve been horrified to observe that most people don’t chew. If you’re
one of those guys who chews the minimum number of times before
swallowing or shoveling in another fork full, chances are you’re eating
substantially more at every meal than your thoroughly chewing peers. Slow down, chew each bite (counting your chews can help develop the habit) and watch as you fill up faster on fewer calories.
8. Don’t eat from the package
Your stomach can’t count. When you can’t see how much you’re eating
you’re more than a little likely to lose track and consume double or
even triple the amount you’d eat if you took the time to serve yourself a
proper portion. Use a plate, or a bowl, or even a napkin, just make
sure you get a good visual of everything you’re going to eat before
taking your first bite.
9. Don’t eat in front of the TV

10. Don’t pay attention to health claims
But wait, isn’t healthy food supposed to be better for you? In
theory, yes. But truly healthy food—vegetables, fruits and other
unprocessed foods—rarely have labels at all. Instead foods with health
claims tend to be processed junk repackaged as better for you
alternatives.
Even worse, research from Wansink’s lab has shown that people
drastically underestimate the calories in foods with visible health
claims on the packaging. People also tend to eat more food overall as a
result of this miscalculation. He refers to this effect as the “health
halo,” and it’s a recipe for packing on the pounds. For real health,
stick to humble foods without labels.
How do you mindlessly eat less?
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