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Changing Your Eating Habits to Lower Your
Glycemic Index
When we were children in school, we were taught to eat certain
foods to maintain a healthy diet, but unfortunately, as we age,
those needs change. Besides, who is going to tell a child to
eat whole wheat bread? Sour dough bread? Whole grain cereals?
At that age, the important thing was to assure that a child ate
three complete meals a day compared to grabbing a candy bar or
bag of chips!
Children’s needs are definitely different from those of an
adult, and even adult needs change as we grow older and our
bodies go through the changes that are part of the process of
aging. As that happens, eating healthy becomes more important,
and we learn that some of the foods we are used to eating are
not as healthy as we once thought.
Many of us were taught in school nutrition classes that the
complex carbohydrates were those of a non-sugar basis such as
breads and cereals instead of cakes and candy bars. Although
breads and cereals are still healthier than a candy bar, we now
know that they still convert to sugar in the bloodstream, and
thus we should eat them in moderation. The sad part is that if
we had been taught as children that whole grains, such as whole
wheat bread and oat, barley, and bran cereals were healthier,
we would have become used to those products and wouldn’t give
it a second thought.
Because we did not learn that at an early age, we have had to
learn it later in life, and thus the transition to a different
way of eating is much more difficult. When you have been used
to eating high-calorie white bread all of your life, the change
to whole wheat or sour dough bread is very difficult. This is
especially difficult if you have a family member who blatantly
refuses to eat wheat bread, so you have to avoid the temptation
to eat white bread because it’s in the house.
It’s important to learn as early as possible about healthy
eating so that the transition to carbohydrates with a low
glycemic index is not such a shock for your body. Anytime you
change your eating habits, your body has to become used to the
transition, and that may take a few weeks before you no longer
crave the foods that you used to eat. That doesn’t mean you
need to give up all of the high glycemic index carbohydrates,
but you want to reduce your consumption of them for your body’s
health.
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