For decades, the mantra for
healthy eating has been “eat a low-fat, low-cholesterol diet.” Touted as
a way to lose weight and prevent heart disease
and other chronic conditions, millions of people have followed this
advice. Seeing a tremendous marketing opportunity, food companies
re-engineered thousands of foods to be low-fat or fat-free. The low-fat
approach to eating may have made a difference for the occasional
individual, but as a nation, it has nether helped us control our weight
nor become healthier. In the 1960s, fats and oils supplied Americans
with about 45 percent of their calories. About 13 percent of the
population was obese and less than one percent had type 2 diabetes.
Today, Americans take in less fat, getting about 33 percent of calories
from fats and oils; yet 34 percent of the population is obese, and eight
percent has diabetes (mostly type 2). (Source: Harvard School of Public
Health).
Research has shown that the total amount of fat in your
diet isn’t linked with weight or disease. What actually matters is the
type of fat in your diet. Trans fats and saturated fats increase your
risk of cardiovascular disease, while monounsaturated and
polyunsaturated fats do just the opposite. But then you ask, “what about
cholesterol in food?” The answer is, for most people the mix of fats in
their diets influences cholesterol in their bloodstreams far more than
cholesterol in food. Click here to read the entire post.
I'm an ACE certified personal trainer and National Masters Over 60 Powerlifting Champion with over 25 years of experience in the health and fitness industry. I've seen a lot of fads come and go, but three things remain constant in getting healthy and staying fit. A positive mental attitude, a healthy balanced diet, and a fitness program built on proper strength training and cardiovascular exercise. Practice these three things daily and you will discover that they lead to "The Fountain of Youth."
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