Start with selecting a diet you can stick with.
"It should be
clear by now that there is no one diet that works for everyone," Jill
Ashbey-Pejoves, lead dietician at Northern Westchester Hospital in Mount
Kisco, N.Y., said in a hospital news release.
One that works for you
"The best diet is the one that works for you. Don't starve yourself or eliminate entire food groups," she advised.
If you want to lose weight, you need to eat a healthy and well-balanced diet, she said.
Deprivation diets don't work because depriving yourself of something just makes you want to eat it even more.
Plan what you'll eat each day, so you won't be forced into a quick decision and make a poor choice.
Eliminate unhealthy snacks
Pack
your own lunch and snacks. Eliminate unhealthy snacks and desserts from
your home and replace them with fruit, Ashbey-Pejoves said.
Track your eating habits. Doing so keeps you focused and honest and helps you plan and see what works and what doesn't.
Any weight loss effort should include exercise. A mix of aerobics, resistance training and stretching is best.
Resistance
workouts build muscle and muscle burns more calories. Doing only
aerobics may not help you lose weight because that type of exercise
stimulates appetite, Ashbey-Pejoves said.
Be sure to keep hydrated by drinking plenty of caffeine-free beverages.
Every
meal should begin with a salad or broth-based vegetable soup. They help
you feel full because of their high water content, but are low in
calories.
Many salad dressing are high in calories, so try seasoned rice vinegar instead, Ashbey-Pejoves said.
Use smaller plates
She
also suggested that you use smaller plates; fill half your plate with
non-starchy vegetables, put out a fruit bowl, and eat slowly and chew
your food thoroughly.