Weight Control
CALORIE COUNT
How do
you determine the proper calorie level per day for you? Your physician can
help, taking into account your present weight, desired weight, state of health,
and normal activities. He may suggest perhaps as few as 1,200 calories per day
if you are an adult woman, 1,500 to 1,800 if you are an adult man. These levels
are about half those of non-dieters.
Within these limits, you can diet
reasonably happily on a wide variety of foods and obtain all essential
nutrients. Or your physician may suggest a reduction of intake level by as
little as 300 or 400 calories. It is usually not considered wise to depend upon
a reduction of less than 300 or 400, since one or two miscalculations or
indulgences may mean no weight loss at all.
Remember that the objective is permanent weight loss, not a
flashy quick cut down, promptly followed by a return of the excess pounds. So
what if it takes several months or even a year to reach your ideal weight -as
long as you will be using a tolerable diet, one you can sustain, retraining
you’re eating habits so you can enjoy the new habits and the desired weight
level for the rest of your life.
Always remember that only one-half pound of
weight loss per week means 26 pounds for the year, and 1 pound a week means
over 50 pounds lost. In setting up your diet, your physician most likely will
move in the direction of a little of everything, to assure balance and variety.
He will make certain you get something from each of the four
basic food groups (see page 49). He will be thinking in terms not merely of
reducing but of general health, of reducing without risk of malnutrition or
risk of fomenting heart disease.
As an example, sample menus for 1,200 calories
a day diet might go like this:
Breakfast: 1/2 small grapefruit; 1 poached egg;
1 slice of toast; 1 small pat of butter or margarine; coffee or tea.
Lunch: A
3-ounce cooked serving of lean meat, poultry, or fish; 1 serving of vegetable;
1 serving of fruit; 1 slice of bread; 1 small pat of butter or margarine; 1
glass of skim milk.
Dinner: A large broiled beef patty; 1/2 cup of asparagus;
1/2 to 1 cup of tossed green salad with vinegar dressing; 1 slice of bread; 1
small pat of butter or margarine; 1/2 cup of pineapple; 1 glass of skim milk.
Snacks, if desired, may consist of bouillon or consommé, tomato juice, raw
vegetables, coffee or tea, or food saved from meals.
You may find it convenient
to use a mini-pocketbook calorie counter available in pharmacies and food
stores.
For your general guidance, the table lists the calorie content of many
commonly used foods
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