Six Healthy Eating Habits to Incorporate into Your Daily Routine
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By now, you likely know that a proper diet is vital for your physical, mental, and emotional well-being. However, you don’t need to become a perfect eater overnight. Instead, focusing on adopting healthy eating habits and making small changes to your daily routine is far more effective.
Here are six simple habits to start incorporating into your life for long-term benefits:
Enjoy Smaller Portions
You don’t have to completely restrict yourself from indulging occasionally. Practice eating smaller portions or splitting entrees with friends. When reaching for snacks, look for the serving sizes indicated on the packaging, and stick to them.
Eat Slowly and Mindfully
People often eat quickly without really tasting their food or paying attention to how much they’re consuming. Eating slowly is an easy way to consume fewer calories since it takes your body time to realize you’re full. Listen to your body and stop when you feel satisfied, not stuffed.
Drink Lots of Water
Staying well hydrated helps maintain regular digestion and boost energy levels throughout the day. It’s recommended adults drink a minimum of eight glasses of water each day. More fluids are required if you’re exercising or in a hot climate.
Load up with Vegetables
Eating vegetables is an easy way to fill up quickly with low calories and plenty of vitamins, minerals, and fiber. Try adding some greens like spinach or kale into smoothies or salads, swapping white potatoes for sweet potatoes as a side dish, and working some cooked veggies into pasta, burritos, and tacos well as lunch bowls.
Eat A Variety of Foods
Make sure you’re getting a variety of healthy foods in your diet. This includes fruits, vegetables, whole grains, lean proteins, nuts and seeds, legumes, and healthy fats. Eating a wide range of these foods will ensure you meet your nutritional needs.
Incorporate Intermittent Fasting
This isn’t about starving yourself but rather about giving your body time and space between meals to digest food and absorb nutrients more efficiently. To begin Intermittent Fasting, choose the window of time within a day that works best for you and stick to it. For example, you can only eat between 10 am and 6 pm. The other hours only consume water. This will help your body become better at metabolizing food and reduce your cravings and sugar intake.
Conclusion
Ultimately, creating healthy eating habits all comes down to finding a balance between allowing yourself some indulgences and understanding how specific foods will impact your health positively or negatively. Achieving this equilibrium could be difficult at first as you push through old habits, but the benefits to your health will be worth it in the long run.




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6 Comments
Martha
Excellent list and I follow them all, especially drinking lots of water. That’s the only thing I drink and you know I love my fresh garden vegetables!
Cindy Rae Fancher
Great advice, I am in the process of learning more about intermittent fasting and greatly reducing carbs. More veggies! Thanks so much.
Brenda Marie Fluharty
Afrer reading this I want a nice salad. Wonderful tips.
Tamara
Wow, I am surprised to discover that I am already doing most of these habits. Before I became a Mom I unvoluntarily did the intermittent fasting. I went to work without having breakfast, and because it was always so hectic, I didn’t get a chance to grad a snack until lunch time. Then dinner around 7:30/8pm. However, the rest of my lifestyle was not healthy. My caffeine intake and the persistent stress level were probably really bad. Also I had trouble sleeping. Well, even worse than today.
Dr.Amrita Basu
I like IMF and eating smaller portions .But drinking more water is a game changer.Great list abd so doable
Jeanine Byers
I read an article once that said we need 9 servings of fruits and veggies per day. Three fruits, three green veggies and three starchy veggies. I have tried it and I feel better when I do it. But smaller portions help, too, in terms of feeling better and avoiding weight gain.