Many people complain that they don’t get around to eating either a healthy balanced diet or to follow a balanced slimming diet, because they do not have the time to obtain the foods such diets require.
But if you really want to change your diet and lifestyle habits, you need to take a long hard look at your circumstances.
If you answer “Yesâ€, then you will have to make some changes to your busy programme, but rest assured that none of these changes are difficult or time consuming.
The first step is to keep the following in mind:
Planning
All it takes is some planning and if you are such a busy, high-powered person, you are probably excellent at planning schedules and programmes. Apply your organising skills to the present problem of obtaining foods that will improve your diet.
Useful tips
1) Obtain an example of a healthy, balanced eating plan (for example: visit the Health24 site, click on ‘Diet’ and ‘Weight loss’ and ‘Slimming Diet’ for a copy of a low-fat, high-fibre diet which is good for weight loss and can also be used as a basic low-fat diet to treat heart disease and problems with insulin).
2) Make a list of the basic foods you need to have readily available in your cupboard or pantry or freezer, i.e. foods that can be stored for longer periods:
Durum wheat
Buy these foods once a month when you go on your big shopping trip.
3) Make a list of foods that you need to buy on a weekly basis (i.e. foods that you can store in the fridge, not in the freezer):
4) Plan when you are going to do your big monthly shopping trip and when you do your weekly shopping trip.
If you are not able to do your weekly shopping, then delegate. Type out a shopping list and get your PA or secretary or domestic assistant to do the shopping for you. Nowadays you can also order food to be delivered to your home or office by certain supermarkets such as Pick ‘n Pay.
As most stores stay open for long hours on a daily basis and over weekends, shopping is much more accessible than it used to be. If you plan your schedule, you should still be able to pop in to a supermarket on your way home or over lunch.
5) Write out a schedule for making those foods that you need to prepare on a weekly or daily basis.
Many meals need hardly any preparation, e.g. breakfast: fruit juice, instant oats with fat-free milk or yoghurt, wholewheat toast with Lite margarine and Lite-jam or cottage cheese, and a cup of coffee or tea.
Other meals need the minimum of preparation, e.g. lunch: fresh fruit, wholewheat sandwich with Lite margarine, thinly sliced beef, lettuce and cucumber, fat-free yoghurt and a cup of coffee or tea – all you need to prepare is the sandwich which should take about 3 minutes if you have the basic ingredients available.
Some meals need a bit of preparation, e.g. supper: grilled fish with baked potato, mixed vegetables and a fruit (if you use the microwave to prepare the potato and the mixed vegetables, while grilling the fish, this meal should not take more than 20 minutes to cook).
You can also plan your programme in such a way that you cook certain dishes when you have the time, like over weekends, and freeze them for use during your busy week. Make pasta and vegetable bakes, or lean meat or fish and vegetable stews, or cooked legume dishes and freeze in portions for later use.
Remember, no matter how busy you are, and no matter how high-powered your job is, you can still make time for buying the foods you need for healthy, balanced eating or to lose weight.
Via health24.com
| M | T | W | T | F | S | S |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| « Jan | ||||||
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ||
| 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 |
| 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 |
| 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 |
| 27 | 28 | 29 | ||||
RSS feed for comments on this post · TrackBack URI
Leave a reply