Full Name:

Address 1:

Address 2:

City:
State:
Zip Code:
Email (required):

If I like it and decide to continue, I'll pay just $16.95, and receive a full one-year subscription (9 issues in all), a 62% savings off the newsstand price!

Today's Daily Tip

Spotlight on Restorative Yoga

Let's face it: Some yoga poses taste a little bit sweeter than others. And if yoga were a smorgasbord, restorative postures ... (continued)

Multimedia

Video Channel:
From the Magazine

Behind the Scenes at a Yoga Journal Photoshoot

See the work and dedication of our editorial and art teams as we create the images to illustrate Chaturanga.

Watch Video



Print Print Email Email Comment Comment Add to Favorites
Log in to save to My Yoga Journal!
Add to Favorites
Bookmark Bookmark

Fear Factor

As the food industry relentlessly markets every fad diet and product, Americans are forgetting how to eat healthily and happily. Yoga can help you make better choices about what you eat—and skip the guilt.

By Ingrid Cummings

Lorraine Vavul, 43, an Indianapolis wife and the mother of two young daughters, struggles to make the right choices about her family's nutrition. Having overcome a weight problem, she's especially interested in the subject and even maintains a file of dietary tips. Over the years, she's compiled a welter of contradictory information about food. Even something as seemingly benign as an avocado disrupted her life when, 15 years ago, she learned that it was high in fat. Much to her disappointment, her beloved guacamole was suddenly taboo.

She recently welcomed avocados back into her home after discovering that they're now considered wholesome, thanks to their heart-healthy monounsaturated fats, which can lower LDL, or "bad" cholesterol. But she still has trouble keeping track of what's OK and what's not. "I consider myself health conscious," she says, "but I have no idea what's worse: saturated or hydrogenated fats?"

Vavul's bewilderment doesn't end with fats. She's still trying to distinguish good carbs from bad carbs and wheat from whole wheat. And now she's hearing that carrots—carrots!—are coming in for criticism from diet programs because they score high on the glycemic index. An exhausted and baffled Vavul just wants some definitive answers. "Why can't they resolve these issues once and for all?" she asks.

Like many other Americans, Vavul puts her faith in scientific experts for guidance. She's willing to overhaul her kitchen in the name of health, certain that science will eventually show her a way out of the continual uncertainty over diet. She looks to the food industry, nutrition experts, and the government to dispel her confusion—yet these powerful forces only deepen it.

But there's an often-overlooked force that could help Vavul out of her bewilderment: the teachings of yoga. The discipline's philosophy teaches you to make your meals from plant-based foods that form the foundation of the food pyramid—foods over which there's much less squabbling among nutrition experts. The physical practice deepens your awareness of your body, so you become more conscious of foods that bring a consistent sense of well-being—and those that make you feel bad after you eat them. Over time, practitioners often find themselves in a more comfortable and relaxed relationship with food. The practice could help Vavul resist mixed messages, learn to trust herself, and reclaim the pleasure of healthful eating.

Scientists are now turning up demonstrable evidence of yoga's benefits in this area. A recent study from the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle found that middle-aged men and women who were overweight and practiced yoga at least once a week lost five pounds over a 10-year period. Their non-yogi counterparts gained eight pounds. Lead researcher Alan Kristal, a professor of epidemiology at the University of Washington School of Public Health and Community Medicine, believes the weight loss had more to do with an increase in mindfulness than in calories burned. "You learn to feel when you're full, and you don't like the feeling of overeating," he says. "You recognize anxiety and stress for what they are instead of trying to mask them with food."

Page 1 2 3 4 5

See All Food Articles »

Print Print Email Email Comment Comment Add to Favorites
Log in to save to My Yoga Journal!
Add to Favorites
Bookmark Bookmark

Subscribe to Yoga Journal Magazine

Reader Comments

Anonymous

I have suffered with almost every eating disorder. I developed such a fear of different food groups. Only recently have i admitted this and have begun the healing process. I am learning to love myself and to appriciate the whole foods that God created for us to fuel our bodies with. I take each day at a time now. Instead of beating myself up about what I ate "bad" or what I didnt eat enough of. I think about what Im going to eat and make sure I have healthy options. If I am to have dessert I enjoy a few bites without guilt. Our food has been messed with so much that I too forgot what healthy food was. Thank you for this article. It helped me realize that I am not the only one and that there is hope for our country to reclaim a healthy mindset about food.

Scott

Actually, science has shown the benefits of eating a vegetarian or near vegetarian diet for several decades. It is the food industry that produces cheap filth they call food. It is also the food industry that has lobbied the U.S. government to prevent it from promoting the science and guidelines as originally created by the scientists. If you want to find blame for the confusion over what to eat, don't blame science. Blame the fat cats who want to profit over food. Then go out a dig a garden in your back yard. The exercise will do you good and so will the fresh produce.

Add a Comment »

Your Name:

Comment:

Join Yoga Journal's Benefits Plus

Liability insurance and benefits to support teachers and studios.

Learn More »

Enter to Win Great Prizes!

Enter to Win Great Prizes! Enter to Win Great Prizes! Prizes include a Yoga Journal conference pass, yoga mats, clothes, books, jewelry, energy bars, Yoga Journal DVDs, and more...

Enter Now »

Get 2 FREE Trial Issues and 2 FREE Gifts!

FREE Gifts! Your subscription includes
2 FREE GIFTS:

Yoga for Neck & Shoulders

A digital guide to 11 postures that relieve neck, back and shoulder tension.

Yoga Remedies for Everyday Ailments

A digital guide to 8 postures that relieve common health problems such as stress, backache, wrist strain, and insomnia.

Yes! Please send me 2 FREE trial issues
of Yoga Journal and my 2 FREE GIFTS

Full Name:
Address 1:
Address 2:
City:
State:
Zip Code:
Email (req):

If I like it and decide to continue, I'll pay just $16.95, and receive a full one-year subscription (9 issues in all), a 62% savings off the newsstand price!

Offer valid in US only.
Canadian subscriptions | International subscriptions

Save 62% off the cover price Pay Now and Get 2
Bonus Issues
Pay now and get
TWO EXTRA ISSUES FREE!
That's 10 issues for the
same low price!
Click Here to PAY NOW!