Water, Diet Sodas And Weight Loss
By: Donovan Baldwin
Copyright 2006 Donovan Baldwin
What on earth does water have to do with weight
loss? Actually, a lot more than you previously
imagined.
Are you aware that some studies have shown that
your brain cannot distinguish between hunger and
thirst? Sometimes when your body is telling you
that you are thirsty, your brain may be hearing
that you are hungry. So what do you do? You put
food in your mouth when a glass of water might
have been sufficient. Most food has calories,
most water doesn't. Simple equation. 'Nuff said
on that topic.
By the way, ever wake up in the middle of the
night and crave a snack? Nine times out of ten,
a glass of water will do the trick. I know, I
didn't believe it either until I tried it. It
really works!
Tissue, muscle, cells, even blood are all
comprised to a large per cent of water. When
your brain starts getting signals that water is
needed...well, remember the confusion factor
mentioned above? We eat something instead of
giving our body what it really craves and needs!
Your entire body works much better, by the way,
when the fluid levels are kept up where they
need to be.
BUT I DRINK LOTS OF LIQUID AND STILL GAIN
WEIGHT!
Sure you do, but what KIND of liquid. I won't
even talk about sodas, coffee, or tea sweetened
with sugar. I'm going to assume that you already
know that sugar is not the way to go if you want
to lose weight, but what about the artificially
sweetened drinks?
Did you know...
ARTIFICIAL SWEETENERS CAN CAUSE YOU TO GAIN
WEIGHT?
Some studies have shown that using artificial
sweeteners can contribute to weight gain in at
least two ways.
First, there is the confusion factor. When you
use artificial sweeteners, you, and your brain,
become confused about the calorie content of the
food you eat. You may actually find yourself
eating more in an effort to satisfy an internal
urge or interpretation, and this urge may be
related to the assumed "fact" that the sweet
soda you just drank didn't have that many
calories, so neither does this cinnamon roll.
Actually, before artificial sweeteners, our
bodies and brains were pretty good at relating
calorie content to food based on the sweetness.
A WORD FOR PARENTS!
Our bodies' understanding of "sweetness" and the
development of the internal calorie estimating
apparatus mentioned above apparently occurs in
childhood. Early use of artificial sweeteners
could cause the grown-up years later to ingest
more of sweet foods than they should.
The second way in which artificial sweeteners
may contribute to weight gain is what could be
called...
THE SUGAR TRAP!
Your body is a complicated device which has
developed a huge number of inter-related,
synergistic, stimulus sensing and automatic
response mechanisms. It has learned to begin
things happening inside when something sweet is
detected. The digestive system is prepared to
receive a certain type of fuel...which it
welcomes! When you ingest food or drink which
has been artificially sweetened, all your little
hormones, glands, cells, and systems begin
asking, "What's going on?" Like prisoners in an
old movie, they start rattling their tin cups
and yelling out, "FEED ME!" Oh yeah, that was
the plant in "Little Shop Of Horrors", wasn't
it?
Anyway, your internal messengers are now not
very happy, nor will they be until you send down
some calories for them to munch on. See the
trap? It reminds me of when I managed a
restaurant when people would order a salad and
diet drink and then smother the salad in
high-calorie, high-fat dressing and have ice
cream for dessert. Get the picture.
WAIT! IT MIGHT EVEN BE WORSE!
Artificial sweeteners are much sweeter than
ordinary sugar, and that's why you can sweeten a
cup of coffee with one little white pill.
However, there are some studies which indicate
that artificial sweeteners become somewhat
addictive. If that isn't bad enough, this brings
us to one of the most popular drugs in
America...
CAFFEINE
Even though a lot of people who want to lose
weight are drinking artificially sweetened
drinks, a lot of these drinks - coffee, tea,
sodas - contain caffeine. Caffeine is a
diuretic. It dehydrates you, causing your body
to lose water. Remember, water = good. When you
are dehydrated, low on internal liquid, your
metabolism slows down. This means your body gets
by on fewer calories and stores the rest as fat.
Think it through: You get dehydrated, you get
thirsty. You just drank a cup of tea, coffee, or
soda, so you can't be thirsty, can you? Since
your brain can't really tell the difference
between hunger and thirst signals, it tells you
to eat something when all that's really going on
is that you need a drink of water.
SO WHAT CAN YOU DO?
1. Substitute water for most of the other stuff
you're drinking.
2. "Buy" your artificially sweetened drinks. My
wife came up with this idea, but I have seen it
used in other contexts as well. If you drink an
artificially sweetened drink and/or one with
caffeine, buy it back with at least an
equivalent sized drink of water. Eight ounces of
coffee? Follow it with eight ounces of water.
3. Is water boring for you? Then try flavoring
your water with lemon or something else. Use
herbal teas that have their own flavor and might
not even need to be sweetened.
4. Include soups and juices in your diet. These
are high liquid content. Just be aware that
while nutritionally better for you than diet
drinks or drinks with caffeine, they DO contain
calories.
5. Can't do without sweetened drinks? Try stevia.
This is a natural food additive available online
and at most health food stores. While it has a
sweetening effect, the FDA does not allow it to
be called or marketed as a sweetener. Due to its
chemical makeup, it does not seem to produce the
cravings for more food as do other non-sugar
sweeteners. I read that in a book, but I tried
Stevia and that's how it worked for me. I was
drinking four to eight cups of coffee sweetened
with artificial sweeteners a day, and munching
tons of snacks as I drank the coffee! I started
using stevia, and the desire for constant
snacking went away. I will warn you, while
technically VERY sweet, it does have an acquired
taste. I figure if I could get used to it,
anybody could. It's the only sweetener in our
house now.
About Author
The author's interest in fitness and
health began in 1970 when he first read
Dr. Kenneth Cooper's "Aerobics". Find
more weight loss tips at
http://nodiet4me.com . You can find
additional articles on fitness, health,
and weight loss at
http://nodiet4me.blogspot.com .
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