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Re: OT: WW question

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Hmmm... We have a " rule " in the house of no store-bought cakes, cookies, etc.,

including box-mixes. If we want something of that nature, we have to make it

from scratch. Flour, sugar, eggs, etc -- from scratch. You'd be amazed at how

" artificial " the store-bought stuff starts to taste after doing it from scratch

all the time. We have three reason for that " rule. " First, calories have to be

" earned " -- you have to REALLY want it to go through the trouble of fixing it

that way. Two: it's a LOT cheaper. Three: it tastes so much better than

store-bought.

Just a thought on food and calories.

Indyrose

(Trying to figure out how to make that Bumpy cake from scratch!!)

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> Subject: Re: OT: WW question

> To: exercisevideos

> Date: Wednesday, April 6, 2011, 9:32 AM

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> 

>

> I'm missing a lot of original posts again, I only know

about this one because of Judy's reply. Grrrr.

>

> By way of a very simple answer, no, WW's point system

is definitely not the same as a low carb diet. It is intended to be a very

balanced nutritional approach. As Judy says, you can spend your points however

you want, however, we do give you nutritional guidelines we tell you to include

every day (Good Health Guidelines, page 61 of the new Getting Started book for

you WW members who are actually wondering what I'm talking about). You may have

heard it is the same as a low carb diet but this is a HIGHLY simplified

interpretation. Some things that are lower in points do often turn out to also

be lower in carbs but this is based on a formula that takes into account several

macronutrients in a serving of a food and does not directly single out carbs.

>

> I've seen a couple of posts about people recommending

only x number of carbs per day for weight loss or whatever. I have refrained

from commenting but finally will. And you've heard this from me before so I try

not to keep saying it but I can't help it. If you are going to go on some

special DIET to lose weight... what happens after you lose the weight? How do

you learn, while you're losing, how to keep it off once you're done? Anytime

I've ever done anything like that I might have lost weight but it found me again

as soon as I started eating " normally " again and I hear this all the time. Most

people can't live long term on diets, especially ones that restrict certain food

categories. Obviously, if you need to restrict certain foods for obvious health

reasons (diabetes, allergies, etc.) you learn to live within the contraints of

that system. They are often extremely difficult to live with though and anyone

who does will tell you that yes, they got used to it but in most cases they

wouldn't necessarily choose to live that way. So why would you do it short term

for a short term fix and not want to make lasting, liveable changes for a long

term fix? I'm not specifically doing a commercial for WW although yes, this is

exactly what we teach you (whether you choose to apply it that way is up to you

though). I think you have to find a way that works for you but I think whatever

it is, if you ultimately want long term results, then find a long-term solution

that involves changes you make slowly not only to what you eat but how much you

eat and how you think about food and your relationship with it. A more wholistic

approach that takes into account emotions, food choices, portion size, why you

eat and making changes fit your lifestyle too will work much better short and

long-term than a " diet " will. For example, if your lifestyle includes eating out

a lot, unless you actually want to stop eating out then you need to find ways to

make weight loss and weight management after you lose the weight work with that

lifestyle. (And yes, WW does teach you how to eat out and still lose weight and

maintain your weight loss.) It should, in other words, become a lifestyle for

you to eat healthy in healthy portions (and exercise too!) foods from all

different categories (including treats) to maintain excellent nutrition and

health. Notice that " lifestyle " has the word " life " in it and " diet " has the

word " die " in it... which do you choose? :-)

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> OT: WW question

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> Is Weight Watchers point system the same

as a low carbohydrate diet?

>

> Curious,

>

> Jen

>

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