Master Your Diet with Your Food Journal To Live A Healthy Life
Think keeping a food journal is a waste of time? You might want to think again. Study after study consistently tells us that self-monitoring - that is, keeping track of what you eat, how much exercise you get, and how much you weigh - is one of the key components to successful weight loss. In a recent review of 22 studies on the subject, the authors concluded that, across the board, there was "a significant association between self-monitoring and weight loss."
What the studies tell us is that when you're accountable to someone - not just to yourself, but also to a healthcare provider, a life partner or a friend - you greatly improve your chances of losing weight and keeping it off. And, the more often you keep track, the more successful you're likely to be. In one study involving nearly 1700 people, those who kept food journals six days a week lost double the weight of those who kept food diaries only once a week or less.
Why does this work? Because a food journal's one of the best tools around for helping you to monitor - and change - your behavior. You can't change your behavior until you analyze - and acknowledge - what you're currently doing. Once you've got a clear picture of how much you're eating and how much (or how little) you're exercising, you're in a much better position to figure out what you need to work on.
And there's more to it than simply writing it down in your food journal. What's even better is to record not only what and how much you're eating - it's also good to note why. Were you hungry? Or was your eating was triggered by fatigue, boredom, anger or stress? This honest self-appraisal will help you see where you're eating appropriately - and where a little behavior modification is called for.
There are all sorts of ways to keep track - anything from low tech paper diaries to high tech apps for your phone - but no matter how you keep tabs on yourself, there are a few things that will help ensure your success: