Grazing: A Better Way to Eat?

It seems like every time I look at a magazine, there’s some new research on the best way to eat to lose weight, be healthier, and look my best. I guess three squares just don’t cut it anymore; today, the trend is more toward eating small meals throughout the day or grazing, eating only when you’re hungry, without restricting yourself to mealtimes. Forget the days when dieting meant you could hardly eat at all—now the approach is to be eating almost constantly, in hopes that it will fuel metabolism and stave off hunger cravings. Is this really a healthy way to eat, or just Hollywood hype

Eat to Your Health
The idea of grazing overlaps with other eating philosophies, such as mindful or intuitive eating, learning to be fully aware of the ways in which your body responds to food and hunger, and the trend, since the 1980s, of snacking as a supplement to meals. 

“Are you eating because you’re hungry or because it’s dinnertime?” is the question proponents of grazing ask. We’ve programmed ourselves to eat at certain times in order to set a social standard and leave time for other things, like work and play, but is this really what our bodies need? Our hunter-gatherer ancestors probably didn’t sit down to regular meals; more likely, they chose to pick up nuts and berries as they found them and as they needed to appease their hunger. Liberated from allegedly archaic mealtimess, grazers can instead revert to their own instincts, becoming mindful of their hunger and exactly what they would like to eat. That may mean munching on trail mix throughout the morning and eating a cheese sandwich at 4:00 p.m., rather than eating a full lunch and dinner and craving snacks later on. 

There’s also evidence to support the theory that eating more frequently throughout the day is healthier in terms of preventing extreme hunger that leads to binge eating or overeating at meals, providing consistent fuel for an active lifestyle, and improving blood sugar control. One study, “Meal Patterns and Practical Applications for Obesity Management,” by Matthew F. Good, a registered dietician from the University of Akron, Ohio, looked at the eating habits of 665 overweight or obese subjects. While the study showed no significant increase in the subjects’ metabolism (one of the reputed benefits of frequent eating), it did reveal that the amount of calories the subjects ate at meals was indirectly related to the frequency with which they ate. That means that the more meals we eat, the smaller they are and, very probably, the fewer calories we take in for the whole day. 

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12.24.2010
firoz mulla
If anyone were to read the book "Shopped " By Blthmore UK. THE SUPER POWER OF THE UK SUPER MARKET. you would curse yourselved by going all around to look for proper food. There are no foods that are not mixed with hype. Yes they all have some sort os marketing tachnique and we land up buying the bugers and tosted salmon that is exepired kept near the freshly baked bread so the pong is not noticed. Do we want that type of future generation or are going vegetarian all the way? I thank you Firozali A.Mulla DBA
I'm grazing right now and plan to continue doing so all day. It's the only thing that stops me from eating my own hand because I'm so hungry.
12.03.2010
Victoria Gannon
I know that when I eat in a "grazing" manner, I tend to feel full, but not overfull, and I don't eat huge meals because I'm starving. I think it's important to just pay attention to your hunger--eat a little when you're hungry, and stop before you feel too full.
12.03.2010
Renae Hurlbutt
Grazing makes sense, but only if the food we graze on isn't crap. This is where grazing could turn into a problem.
I think a lot of people would have trouble with this. A small meal means a yogurt and some carrots, not a sandwich and chips. So many people today are completely oblivious about proper portion size, and they'd just end up eating six regular-sized meals.
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