Another Good Crosspost: Building Levees. . .

Laureen S.
on 7/18/12 11:01 pm - Maple Shade, NJ
Folks, I am reading these and finding much in them that I can relate to and while we are all different, I do believe that we share similar traits and that is what ultimately caused our obesity to begin with. . .  so hope you enjoy some of the information, it is more brain food. . .

Building levees

Posted: 17 Jul 2012 02:37 AM PDT

So yesterday, Yoni's (the obesity researcher -- not the musician!) quote was talking about our environment supporting our national weight gain.  He used the analogy of building levees (as in changing the environment) instead of giving people swimming lessons (teaching them how to navigate a food-ridden environment).  Swimming is hard -- people get tired when they swim -- and then they start to sink.

So think about your environment:

Your desk drawer.
Your kitchen cupboards.
Your break room.
The stash of whatever in the back of your closet, purse, glove box in your car....

Are you making easier to eat than not eat?

Are you shopping and preparing at the beginning of the week so it is easy to make smart choices when the work week rolls around?

If you are -- rock on!

If not, why??

It's hard.......??  Well, I've said it before -- it's all going to be hard in one direction or another but....

If you say "not right now" to the entire chip aisle, you won't have to say "not right now" EVERY SINGLE TIME you open your pantry door.  There will be no chips to stare you down!  And if there are no chips to stare you down, you won't be thinking about chips when you walk away, when you're sitting in front of the TV after a bad day, or in the evening when you're bored.

You've just created an environment where it is easier to go without chips than to eat them-- you've built a levee so you don't have to swim.

If you don't cave to the lure of the drive-thru (you know...."just for a soda"), you don't have to stare down the menu board advertising a snack wrap and a cookie for $1.  You can't control where drive-thru's pop up -- but you can eliminate them from your driving pattern (honestly, what are the chances you're going to dehydrate on the way home from work -- not likely, friends! Not likely!) 

Let's face it -- there are oceans and oceans of food to navigate in the course of a day -- your swimming skills are going to have to be refined.  But give yourself a break!  The opportunities to build levees in some parts of your life are there -- build safe havens so you don't drown in your own bathtub (house and office)


My Mantra is that I do not determine my success by the number hanging in my closet, nor will I let the scale determine that success either. . .  It is through trial and error I will continue to grow and succeed. . .  Laureen

"Success is a journey, not a destination."  Ben Sweetland

LisaAC
on 7/19/12 8:05 am - Philadelphia, PA
Good ideas!  Thanks for posting them. 

I try to make it difficult - wrapping food up so much that if I want to snack at night, I'll make so much noise, my huband will wake up is one way I do it.  If it's a treat, even a SF treat, I buy one item for each of us, so there isn't a bagful sitting there for either of us to tear into.

As for those drive-thru's...well, I just read up on the restaurant's policies or politics or the last thing they were sued for. and that usually puts me off them...if you have not yet seen "Supersize Me," do so!  You'll never want to visit that McD's again!

Lisa

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