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The Actual Size Diet
With the New Year upon us and countless people
making resolutions to lose weight, I thought now would be a good time to drop this bomb of
simplicity. Before you give up on your resolution, please give this some thought. It's not
like any other diet you ever heard of. With all of the so-called diets out there, wouldn't
you like to hear about a diet that's easy to understand? Counting calories can be a complicated
matter, especially when you have to constantly try to guess how many calories are in something.
Then, you have to figure out how many calories you are burning off every time you do any exercise.
With that in mind, wouldn't you like to find a diet that you don't have to be a licensed nutritionist
to understand? Then go on the Actual Size diet. All you have to do is put your food on a scale
and see how much it weighs (or just guess the weight of it). Whatever it weighs, that is exactly
how much weight you will gain when you eat it. Pretty simple, huh? I figured that out all by
myself. And I'm just a truck driver.
In all my years (47), I must have read at least
one
hundred articles about proper diet and exercise. Obviously,
if you've ever seen me, you know
I'm no fitness guru, but I know crap when I read it, and most
of those diet articles (dare
I say) have a very pungent odor. If you don't believe it, just
wait another year and see if
science doesn't change it's mind about what is or isn't good
for you. They are always changing
their minds. One day something is good for you, the next day
it isn't. I'm sure they are mostly
right, but I'm still hanging in there until the day they decide
that cigarettes and coffee
are the breakfast of champions. In the meantime, I go with
what I call common sense, or, the
Actual Size diet.
For several years now, we've heard that potatoes
are high in starch and
calories, and not really all that good for you, especially
if you are diabetic. If you are
diabetic, please don't listen to me, consult to your doctor.
After all, I'm just a truck driver.
But if you are a normal, healthy person, it is this truck drivers'
opinion that potatoes are
good for you. And they are not that fattening, when eaten in
moderation. (Moderation is the
key. Baked is good too.)
I ought to know because I lost thirty pounds one
winter, by eating
only a potato for supper each day. It's true, when I was driving
for a construction company,
I got laid-off for the winter and spent that entire three months
eating light and taking long
walks. My favorite evening meal was one baked potato and sometimes
a salad. I wasn't afraid
to eat breakfast or lunch in the normal way. I just concentrated
on eating a light supper.
And I always ate early, about 6pm. Then had no snacks after
that each day. I also walked four
miles, three times a week. By the time I went back to work
that spring, I was thirty pounds
lighter, feeling good and not afraid to take a long walk.
Being an old Army guy from way
back, I know a little bit about exercise. I would even argue
that exercise might be more important
than diet. When I was in the Army, I ate big. Every meal was
an all-you-can-eat buffet. I pigged
out every day. Of course I worked it off every day too. During
that time, I ate huge and still
managed to lose weight and get into the best shape of my life,
simply because of all the hard
work and exercise I did at that time. We busted our butts from
sun-up to sundown. Of course,
normal people don't have to work that hard, so we had better
watch what we eat.
Whenever
I drove over-the-road, I would gain weight like a snowball
rolling down a hill. Because of
my inactivity, every little bit of food I ate went directly
to my hips, waist, or other area
that didn't need it. Being the lazy guy I am, I decided that
since I wasn't going to do any
exercise any time soon, I would really have to start watching
what I ate. I tried to use what
knowledge I learned along the way in life, but common sense
kept creeping into the picture.
I'd look at a piece of chocolate cake and consider the calories
and the amount of exercise
required to work it off. But common sense would tell me that
it is physically impossible to
gain more weight than the actual weight of the food. So, if
a piece of cake weighs a half-pound,
then I figured that I'd gain exactly that, if I eat it. (So,
of course, I ate it.)
Of course,
diet and exercise is important. And truckers have a tough time
working off calories when they
are busy driving all day and dealing with the day-to-day stress
that comes along with the job.
Please, find the time to take a daily walk. While you are waiting
to be loaded, instead of
taking a nap, take a walk. (They say you actually burn calories
in your sleep, but I'd be willing
to bet you'd burn a few more while walking.) Try parking at
the far end of the truck stop,
when you have the time. If you are doing a live-load, why not
knock-out a few wall push-ups
and stretches while you wait? But as far as diet is concerned,
you simply cannot gain more
weight than the actual weight of the food. Burning off those
calories is another story. So
go ahead and have that piece of cake. Then go to www.bigcitydriver.com
for more useful trucker
tips. Just don't get any frosting on the mouse.
Ken Skaggs C2006
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