Читать книгу The Viva Mayr Diet: 14 days to a flatter stomach and a younger you - Dr Stossier Harald - Страница 37

Dinner

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Poached trout with vegetables and lemongrass (see here)

By the time you’ve finished this chapter and inwardly ‘digested’ all of the information it contains, you will have the tools you need to change your eating habits for life. This is not a complicated process. Even I managed it and I have spent most of my life just eating whatever happens to come my way. I am not the kind of person who really thinks about what I am putting into my body. Until now, that is. Meeting Dr Stossier has made me realise that leaving my body’s nutrition to fate or convenience – or whatever you like to call it – is close to criminal. How can I expect my body and face to stay healthy and young if I don’t even feed it properly?

Although the Viva Mayr Diet is very much focused on how we eat (which we will deal with in the subsequent chapters), before you can think about that, you need to decide what to eat.

This is where good digestion begins and, as good digestion equals slimness, youthful looks and a healthy lifestyle, it’s extremely important. We are all masters of what we put in our mouths. In other words, we all have choices. No one is force-feeding us. As Dr Stossier puts it; ‘If you want to go down the junk food route, then that’s your decision. If you decide to opt for a healthier life that’s your decision, too.’ And we both know which one he would prefer us to choose.

Years ago, one nutritionist said to me that ‘healthy eating begins in the supermarket’. Pretty basic, but something we tend to ignore as we pop a few ‘treats’ into the trolley. We all have our weak points. I have a total thing for shortbread biscuits, which I obviously don’t tell Dr Stossier about, for fear of being sacked before I even begin to work on his book. But as I prepare to go for a stay at his famous Viva Mayr Clinic to research this book, I wonder if I will be searched on my way in and what may be the consequences of hiding one packet of M&S Organic shortbread fingers in my luggage. They are organic, after all.

Food provides our bodies with nutrition. Different foods provide the body with the substances it needs to live; in other words, they convey life. In order for them to give us life and health, they need to contain nutrients as well as their life force and vitality. These nutrients are defined by the quality of the food we choose to eat. So what should we be eating? Probably not shortbread biscuits. Even organic ones.

Our nutrition is divided into three groups: proteins, carbohydrates and fats. I have heard this countless times, but have no idea what it means or what I am supposed to do with this knowledge. I have also been told that we should be eating around 50–55 per cent carbohydrates, 15 per cent protein, and 30 per cent fat. Also important is fibre. So what does this all mean?

The Viva Mayr Diet: 14 days to a flatter stomach and a younger you

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