health tips thanksgiving

Thanksgiving is upon us and its time you get to spend with your family and friends to celebrate and we have some great healthy tips for you! Since Thanksgiving fares happen once a year, we often take on the mentality of letting ourselves go ahead and splurge. The Tuesday after Thanksgiving weekend, you step on the scale to a shocking number. Can you seriously be up that much in a mere day or two? Understanding what is happening in your body can help you overcome these post-Thanksgiving blues and even avoid sabotaging your weight altogether.

health tips thanksgiving

WHAT’S ACTUALLY HAPPENING DURING THE THANKSGIVING

The average Thanksgiving meal is packed with sodium. Think gravy, stuffing seasoning and that marinated vegetable salad. Our bodies respond by retaining extra water in order to maintain a healthy blood level. This is considered water weight, and it’s not necessarily permanent. It usually goes away once we return to our normal eating habits. Eating lots of carbohydrates stimulates a similar response. Mashed potatoes, dinner rolls and desserts. We often don’t go for a workout right after Thanksgiving dinner, so the carbs that aren’t used immediately are turned into glycogen and stored away for later energy use. The body needs about 3 to 4 grams of water for each gram of glycogen it stores, which explains why we gain water weight.
Even if you’re watching what you eat during the holiday season, weight gain can still sneak up on you through excessive alcohol consumption, which typically occurs at various holiday parties spread out over the holiday season starting with Thanksgiving. When you drink alcohol, your will power is lowered and you are less likely to stick to a clean nutrition plan. Alcohol also inhibits the body’s ability to digest food, causing it to sit in the intestines for longer. Alcohol is also calorie dense, and reduces the body’s ability to burn fat. Altogether, alcohol makes it easier to gain weight.
Although one day of indulgence probably won’t cause any noticeable physical changes, overeating during the entire holiday season might. Year after year, most of us pack on at least a pound (some gain more) during the holidays — and keep the extra weight permanently. So here are the 5 health tips that will help your save you waistline during Thanksgiving and holiday season in general.

Thanksgiving Health Tips: Move More

Create a calorie deficit by exercising to burn off extra calories before you ever indulge in your favorite foods. Weight training is especially helpful in spiking your metabolism after the activity is done. Eat less and exercise more is the winning formula to prevent weight gain. Increase your steps or lengthen your fitness routine the weeks ahead and especially the day of the feast. Make fitness a family adventure by going for a walk all together after the meal.

Thanksgiving Health Tips: Don’t Go Starving

Contrary to popular belief, skipping meals in order to reduce caloric intake will only make things worse. The hungrier you are going into the meal, the faster you’ll eat and the more you’ll load on your plate. Snack on protein rich foods and veggies throughout the day to keep your belly full on enough calories that you’ll still have room for all your favorite foods during the meal. If you aren’t famished, you will be able to take time to acknowledge your food and appreciate the eating process, rather than quickly scarfing it down to fill the void. This will help you eat until you’re satisfied but not until you’re full, which in turn can help you reduce your total calorie intake. When you’re eating mindfully you enjoy it, savor it, take time to appreciate it.

Thanksgiving Health Tips: Be Vocal

Butter on the green beans, cheese sauce on the broccoli, gravy on the potatoes, cream in the mashed potatoes, full fat ice cream on the pie. All these added things to the basic food items really pack on the calories punch of the meal. Ask if there is any way the host can have the sauces, dressings, oil, butter and toppings on the side of the dishes so people can control the amount they put on it. Alternatively, you can ask for portion of the plain vegetables or basic parts dishes be placed on the side for you before these higher calorie things are added.

Thanksgiving Health Tips: Police Your Portions

Thanksgiving tables are bountiful and beautiful displays of traditional family favorites. Before you fill your plate, scan the dinner table and decide what you’re going to choose. Then select reasonable-sized portions of foods you cannot live without. Don’t waste your calories on foods that you can have all year long like dinner rolls and mashed potatoes. Fill your plate with small portions of holiday favorites that only come around once a year so you can enjoy desirable, traditional foods. Skip the seconds, try to resist the temptation to go back for second helpings. Leftovers are much better the next day, and if you limit yourself to one plate, you are less likely to overeat and feel guilty. While each of us has our own favorites, keep in mind that some holiday foods are better choices than others. White turkey meat, plain vegetables, roasted sweet potatoes, mashed potatoes, defatted gravy, and pumpkin pie tend to be the best bets because they are lower in fat and calories.

Thanksgiving Health Tips: Chill Out

As stressful as managing all this food and alcohol is, it’s best that you try not to stress. During the holiday season, people are stressed, and stress can cause people to eat more. Many people gain weight because they eat for the wrong reasons. The stress hormone cortisol makes the body hold onto calories for longer, making it even harder to burn off the excess fat. Relax and enjoy the time with your family and friends!

About the Author: Ana Plenter

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Ana Plenter is a an Award Winning Personal Trainer, Fitness Competitor & Competition Coach and the Founder of Build My Body Beautiful & Body Beautiful Fitness

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