![]() I lost 3. 0lbs over 5 months eating 1 meal in the evening. This is my experience. I’ve written this for those who have heard about eating one meal a day and want to seek out the experience of someone doing it. If you decide to do something similar it’s my hope that you can benefit from my experience. I write this as if a friend had asked me to describe the diet. Be advised: The effectiveness of diets vary from person to person and I cannot guarantee that taking this approach will work for you. Please see my disclaimer at the foot of this post. There are ways you can lose weight in a month without burning yourself out. It doesn't have to be a hard task when you're trying to get healthy. I can say with confidence because me and my husband followed it and got results. Super SHRED (2013) is a 4-week very rapid weight loss diet, written by Dr. Ian Smith of The Doctors. Use this page as a cheat. UPDATE Aug 2. 01. After you’ve finished reading this article you should head over to my other site called 1 Mad Diet– I can answer any questions you have over there. When it comes to this site Hubbys Home, it turns out I’m possibly the world’s worst blogger and I don’t tend to respond to the comments here. I do feel bad about that, because when people take the time to reach out, it’s a bit of a slap in the face to get ignored. I’m sorry about that and I’ll try to make amends, but in the meantime come on over to 1. MADdiet. com and we can talk there. Thanks. Please continue reading. I was spending a lot of time reading about dieting and weight loss – getting into the minute detail – listening to people who insisted that you had to cut out certain types of food and eat specific foods, in specific ratios, at specific times. It was good for a while and I made some progress but it wasn’t sustainable for me with everything else that was going on in my life. I spent more time researching the best way to lose weight than I invested in actually doing something about it. I had a full time career and when I wasn’t working I was looking after the children while my wife worked. I was exhausted, I hated the 6 small meals diet because I never felt full – I got injured running – and I quit, regaining the weight soon after. It doesn’t have to be this way. For a long time I suspected that it was possible to lose weight eating a normal balanced(ish) diet. I called it the sub- optimal diet because it involves eating things that traditional diet wisdom says you shouldn’t eat. I’m talking about normal foods that families eat for lunch and dinner. The staples – bread, pasta, rice, potatoes, fish, meat, vegetables, fruit, dairy, and all the rest. The sorts of things an army officer, like the General, might get served up in the mess tent. Ordinary, regular food served up in decent portions that fills your belly and keeps you feeling satisfied for hours afterwards. But I’m also talking about the good stuff (IN MODERATION!!), like cake, chocolate, sweets, candies, pastries and other things that normal people eat – what would life be like without these delights? Life is already complicated enough, so make it simple. I’ve always believed that for most people there’s no need to weigh and measure food. No need to get the supposed optimal balance between protein, carbohydrate and fat. Following a balanced diet as outlined by the NHS is good enough. Sure, if you’re going for Olympic gold, then get freaky about your diet, but for the majority of people looking to lose a bit of weight in order to feel better about themselves and extend their lifespan, there’s no need to have a finely tuned and detailed diet plan. Similarly, I’ve always believed that there’s no need to kill yourself exercising. Exercise because you want to, because it’s fun, because it’s a challenge – but other than taking a brisk walk every day, you stand to do your diet more harm than good by flogging yourself at the gym on a daily basis – especially if, like me, you’re no longer in the prime of life. Build up fitness and exercise regimes slowly and deliberately to get the most enjoyment and benefit. Let’s get this straight. Even if you can get past the ridicule or at least the fear of it, you’re going to encounter other problems like injury and lack of motivation. By all means aim to get fit and put on a little muscle, but don’t feel compelled to try to make two major changes to your lifestyle at the same time. My own experience has taught me to master the mindset of the diet first and then progress to the strenuous exercise in the final stages of a diet (if that’s what you want to do). Diet as part of a lifestyle. I needed a diet that suited me and my existing lifestyle. I needed it to be simple and inexpensive. I needed it to be something I could sustain over a long period of time and something I could adapt to a permanent lifestyle when I lost the weight. My life is based around being at home with the children – cooking, cleaning , doing housework and building a home based business. I’m 4. 3 years old and I have the full time responsibility for looking after our four young children. I’m on duty all day long and I haven’t time to do any of the nonsense that many other diets require. Nor do I want to pay the ridiculous price tags for the pills, potions and superfoods currently being touted as the answer to everyone’s problems. Superfoods are super but they are also expensive and they are not the miraculous missing link in a successful diet. I needed a diet that limited my choices and left me to make only good decisions. Being a work at home mom or dad means that you’re near the fridge all day, it means you’re preparing and cooking food for other people, it means your schedule is crazy, it means you have stressful moments when the business or the family life get a little bent out of shape. And as you doubtless know, comfort eating often seems like a way to relieve the stress. Comfort or convenience eating is mostly eradicated by the simple fact that I try to eat just once a day, so the proximity of the fridge isn’t a problem. Even now at 3. 0 lbs down, my family has no idea I’m eating only one meal. And just because you’re on a diet it shouldn’t mean the rest of your family have to go on a diet too. My lifestyle choices shouldn’t inconvenience them. I don’t want to turn down the chance to go for a family meal in a restaurant or a some other social function just because I’m on a diet. How does the diet work? Monday to Friday – One main meal in the evening, with a dessert. Saturday – Two meals – lunch and dinner, with more freedom to snack in between. In other words, a cheat day. Sunday – Two meals – lunch and dinner, with a dessert. Throughout the day I drink water and tea. The tea is made with whole milk and one sugar and typically I’ll drink about six cups a day. Snacking isn’t something that I schedule in but there are occasionally times during the day when I’ll eat a snack.(I would point out that I think it’s probably better to snack throughout the day (and also advisable), but I have some specific reasons why I don’t tend to – besides, the tea with the whole milk and one sugar is pretty close to being a snack with the fat, carbohydrate and protein. Meals based around meat, chicken, fish, rice, potatoes, pasta, bread, vegetables, fruit, milk, cream, cheese, eggs – and usually followed by something sweet. I often try not to eat during the day at all, but if I feel weak or very hungry I’ll eat something that has about 1. This is not about starving myself this is about controlling when I eat so that I can be assured of creating a moderate caloric deficit every day. But it’s important to realise that these snacks are not mini meals, they’re not designed to satisfy my hunger, they’re purely functional. One of the reasons this works for me, as I’ve already mentioned (but it bears repeating), is I drink tea with full fat milk and sugar throughout the day which tends to keep me going. I guess if you could classify it as snacking. On Saturday I’ll eat two meals, lunch and dinner but I pretty much eat what I want and when I want. This is my day off, some people call it a cheat day, but I don’t consider it cheating as it will be part of the lifestyle I adopt after the weightloss phase is complete. On Sunday I have 2 meals, lunch and dinner, but I’m strict about how much I eat and I use the day to prepare me to get back on the diet on Monday. Exercise during the diet. I made a conscious decison not to take on any additional exercise other than walking once or twice a day with the dogs. Taking on exercise as part of your diet may seem like a good idea, but my own experience is that exercise hampers my efforts. From time to time I do some body- weight exercises mainly for fun or for the challenge but it’s not central to creating weight loss. If there are days when I don’t get out for a walk it doesn’t have any significant impact on my progress. The right mindset for successful dieting. I believe that most diets will work if you develop the right mindset, and most will fail if you don’t. This approach to dieting may not suit you and that’s fine, go find something else, but you’re still going to need to develop the right mindset. When you have a lot of weight to lose it can be hard to buy into the idea that you’ll need to stick to a diet for months. The results you want to see won’t be evident for a long time so you need to get invested in the process as much as the outcome. It’s so important to get a reward from your efforts on a daily basis. Understand that the real result is not what the scale says but whether you stuck to your eating plan. Get it into your head that if you repeatedly do the same thing day after day and stick to the plan, the occasional failures will be absorbed by the successes and you’ll reach your goal. You are going to feel hungry on a diet, learn to get comfortable with it. Hunger is a signal and not a command. Again this is not an exercise in starvation, that’s a stupid and potentially dangerous way to lose weight, it’s about learning to control your intake to ensure that your body gets enough nutrition whilst producing enough of a deficit to lose fat over a period of time. Set limits. The evening meal is not an open ended thing. There’s a tempation to drag the evening meal out for an hour or two but resist it and set an end time after which you will not eat. Vegetarian Food Chart/ Meal Plan for 2 year old/ 1. Toddler Food Chart. Toddler Food Chart. At 2 years, your toddler is a proficient eater. She can eat everything that you are eating with less spice, as long as there is no history of allergy. These plans try to keep a balance of nutrients across meals, by giving you ideas to ensure a healthy and balanced diet for your child, but it is important to keep in mind that your child is unique and you must follow her cue when feeding. Unlike food chart for babies, you will see more variety here. Also, dairy is limited to 1- 2 cups per day, so that children do not fill themselves up on milk alone. Give wide variety of dairy products if you child does not like milk, like cheese, paneer, curd etc. The portions are tentative, so if your child wants to eat more, count your blessings and give more. Remember to include wide variety of pulses in your child’s diet. From lentils to chickpeas to beans and soya, there is no dearth of variety. Also include nuts, seeds and dairy in some form in your child’s diet. Alternative grains like ragi, buckwheat, millets too have good amounts of protein in them, so no need to fret that your child is not getting enough protein. Sample diet plan for toddlers/ food for 2 year old Diet for underweight toddler. Some tips for parents of toddlers: Try not to over- feed. Do not give in to the ease and indulgence of fast food often. This is the age when healthy eating habits can be cultivated and nurtured for life. Talk to your child about nutrition and difference between healthy and junk food. Eat healthy yourself as children learn by watching you. Non- vegetarian food chart for 2 years old toddlers. If you like it, do share it in your circle. Do leave a comment to ask a question or let us know your feedback. Shishu. 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