Hi Everyone,
Thank you so much for checking-in this week. It's great to hear from so many of you...give yourselves a big cheer for all of your planning, chopping, preparing and following through this week: Hip hip hooray!! We WILL have a happy and healthy holiday and even lose a bit of weight!
Sue mentioned that she was reading
The End of Overeating and that got me thinking about all of the books that I will be receiving for Christmas. My husband and I go out of our way to find books that we think each other will like, and most years we discover that we have both purchased at least 1 book that is the same.
I was wondering
which books each of you would recommend to someone trying to learn more about healthy eating and weight loss? This is the maximum weight loss thread, so I imagine we all have at least a little interest in this topic...hehe.
The top books that I would recommend for someone interested in learning more about this particular lifestyle are
The Starch Solution by Dr. McDougall -
this is the program ,
The Pleasure Trap by Dr. Lisle -
this will help with understanding why knowing what to do isn't always enough, and
The China Study and
Whole by Dr. Campbell -
this will provide deeper background . That's my short list. There are so many others...like
Salt, Sugar, Fat: How the Food Giants Hooked Us, reviewed by Dr. McDougall below:
John McDougall wrote: Salt Sugar Fat: How the Food Giants Hooked Us
by Michael Moss
Salt Sugar Fat
Michael Moss, Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative reporter at the New York Times, has written a #1 bestselling book that I recommend you buy and read.
This is not a diet book or cookbook. No practical solutions for the current obesity and health catastrophes facing our nation and the developed world are offered.
Rather, this book explains how normal unregulated business practices underlie the current epidemics of obesity, heart disease, and diabetes in the US and those parts of the world with increasing prosperity (China, India, Mexico, etc.). No one is purposefully trying to hurt you or your family—this is just raw commerce, where profits rule.
Salt Sugar Fat is an expose of how food companies use and manipulate science to sell the maximum amount of food to consumers. The book makes many important analogies with the selling practices of the tobacco industry. The food industry knows their products are fattening and sickening hundreds of millions of people, and like tobacco, they justify their behavior by claiming, “It’s not our fault, that's what the consumer wants—we're not making them buy our products.”
However, the truth is that by spending billions of dollars on developing and marketing highly irresistible and convenient foods, the food industry has forced consumers, against their will, into unhealthy eating habits. (Without the truth and a choice of alternatives, there is no free will.)
Food scientists use cutting-edge technology to calculate just the right amount of sugar to add to a food or beverage in order to make it most appealing. A “U” shaped pleasure curve exists, where more sugar adds to the appeal of a product, to a point. This amount is referred to as the “bliss point.” Beyond that amount, excess sweetness is a taste turn-off.
Salt’s powerful flavor turns even the poorest quality foods into pleasurable experiences. Fortunately, excess saltiness is distasteful, and the amount of salt needed for enjoyment is reduced after a short period of adaptation.
The third pillar used by the food giants to hook us is fat, which can be added in almost limitless quantities—making it the most toxic of the three ingredients, especially when it comes to obesity and diabetes. Remember what I say: “The fat you eat is the fat you wear.”
When health concerns about salt, sugar, or fat in their products arise, food marketers respond by dialing back on one ingredient and then pumping up the other two. They advertise the new food line as “no sugar added,” “fat-free,” or “low-sodium.” These taglines attract new customers and lower “the guilt factor,” which helps keep the most loyal patrons, called “heavy users,” buying their products.
The food industries’ win-at-all-costs strategy has led the average American to eat 33 pounds of cheese (triple of the amount eaten in 1970) and 70 pounds of sugar annually. Nondiscretionary salt (the salt hidden in foods, like cheese and lunchmeat) obligates consumers to eat twice the sodium that is recommended. After reading this book you will be left asking yourself how human beings can possibly survive on the chemical concoctions created by food companies.
Unfortunately, Salt Sugar Fat simply ends with no way out. After providing a detailed and very readable historical account of how we became a nation of fat, sick people, Mr. Moss offers no practical solutions. Apparently, his years of exhaustive research failed to uncover for him the basic problem: Over the past century the human diet has been transformed from primary starches (rice, corn, potatoes, and beans) into meals based on meat and cheeses followed by desserts fit for a king (all effortlessly served to the consumer as if prepared especially for them by a full court of servants).
The Starch Solution Answers the Problems Identified by Mr. Moss
The basic problem is that our primary sources of calories are now coming from fats found in meat, dairy, and vegetable oils, and refined sugars, with an overpowering load of salty flavor added. More manipulation of these unhealthy ingredients (Salt Sugar Fat) can never result in good health. Rather, the simple solution is to exchange them for rice, corn, potatoes, and beans with whole fruits and vegetables.
People naturally love salt and sugar. We crave sugar because this is our primary source of energy, and our love for salt insures adequate minerals for our body. Nothing is going to change our basic human physiology. Meat and cheese contain almost no sugar or salt. To entice people to eat these bland-tasting foundations they must be infused and coated with large amounts of salt and/or sugar. Breaded with a batter made of flour, salt, and sugar, unappealing chicken becomes a national bestseller (KFC). Starches have a big head start in appealing to consumers’ tastes because rice, corn, potatoes, and beans are naturally about 80% sugar (the healthy, unrefined kind). People like these foods so much that they call them “comfort foods.” Starches are also naturally low in sodium, refined sugar, fats, and cholesterol and are jam-packed with essential nutrients.
In order to make these basic starches competitive with the creations engineered by the processed food industry, the McDougall Diet adds sensible amounts of salt, sugar, and spice (primarily to the surface of the foods at the dinner table). Dr. McDougall wants people to eat and enjoy their meals and will compromise a little to reach this necessary goal. The title of the song from Walt Disney’s 1964 movie Mary Poppins, “A Spoonful of Sugar Helps the Medicine Go Down,” encapsulates his philosophy. A half-teaspoon of sugar sprinkled over a bowl of oatmeal reaches the “bliss point” for sweetness. A little salt added to the rice and beans hooks people into a program that allows them to regain their lost health and appearance. (Rarely, people cannot tolerate small amounts of salt and sugar and these few must avoid them.)
Along with taste, convenience and low cost are the other two reasons for the dominance of processed foods in our diets. With both heads of the household employed, families struggle to get food of any quality into their mouths. Focusing on starches makes meals convenient and inexpensive. Beans and rice with a few greens, sweet potatoes and broccoli, or a vegetable soup and bread are easy to make and cost less than $3 a day for an adult. (The same amount from fast food restaurants costs about $14 a day.)
More than honest information, like that provided by Michael Moss in Salt Sugar Fat, will be required in order to solve the massive epidemic of food poisoning created by a half-century of unregulated food industry practices. We need change on the scale of a revolution. The most available and tested vehicle for change has been government intervention to regulate unrestrained markets. By nature “free-enterprise” can be counterproductive to people’s health. Guided by their own profit-motives, Anheuser Bush would never have reduced drunk driving and R.J Reynolds would not have caused almost two-thirds of US smokers to quit over the past half-century. The food giants need help to change their customers’ buying and eating habits in order to resolve this massive epidemic of malnutrition.
July 2013 Newsletter:
Salt, Sugar, Fat: How the Food Giants Hooked Us.
Some of you may be more motivated by health movies/documentaries...if you have a favourite, I'd love to hear about it too...mine is still
Forks Over Knives. If you weren't aware you can actually purchase DVDs and books by some of the experts we love to follow right
here on this website. A couple of years ago I bought the ASW DVD for my parents because Mom had said she really didn't want to read more about this now that she understood the basics, so I thought maybe she wanted to listen to more. I was wrong about that...lol...but it worked out well for me because I got to keep the DVD!! For some there is no need for more books, videos or information. Once they understand, they can just go with it. If only...
Have a wonderful week and I look forward to hearing from you!
Amy XO
Here are the results for the second week in December:Next Weigh-In is on Friday, December 15th, 2017
Total group loss reported in 2017: 767.36 pounds
December 2017 Weight Loss Group :: Monthly Weigh-In Results
Total group loss in January 2017: 137.25 pounds
Total group loss in February 2017: 102.91 pounds
Total group loss in March 2017: 111.3 pounds
Total group loss in April 2017: 56.1 pounds
Total group loss in May 2017: 41.8 pounds
Total group loss in June 2017: 44.4 pounds
Total group loss in July 2017: 34.9 pounds
Total group loss in August 2017: 59.6 pounds
Total group loss in September 2017: 41.9 pounds
Total group loss in October 2017: 41.7 pounds
Total group loss in November 2017: 70.4 pounds
Total group loss in December 2017: 25.1 pounds
Week ending 12/08/2017: 16 participants reported a total loss of 9.7 pounds
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BeHealthy - 2.0
Svenja - 2.0
Suey51 - 0.8
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Total gains: 4.8
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Zsilent1 - 2.0
Anne57 - 1.2
Katie3 - 0.2
Werner1950 - 0.2
CamiJb - 2.2
Petmomful - 0.0
Wild goose - 2.0
Moonlight - 1.0
Stillcrazy - 0.6
Sundog - 1.6
Purposive - 2.0
amandamechele - 0.0
TrimFitMe - 1.5
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Total losses: 14.5
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Total group loss in December 2017: 25.1 pounds
Week ending 12/08/2017: 16 participants reported a total loss of 9.7 pounds
Week ending 12/01/2017: 21 participants reported a total loss of 15.4 pounds