ancientnet.com ancientnet.com
Search:    Site Home :> About Us :> Privacy :> Terms of Service :> Add Your Link :> Add Article   
 
 

Discover The Best Source For Omega 3 Fatty Acids

What is the best source for omega 3 fatty acids? And what makes it preferable to other sources? - Dan Ho
 

The Health and Fitness of a Nation ? What Happened?

Do you ever wonder why a whole culture of people, and that would be we Americans, got so fat, so out ... - Dr. Leslie Van Romer
 

Infectious Mononucleosis: The Kissing Disease Unveiled

This article provides information about a very common infectious disease among adolescents and young ... - Leslie Ann Dauphin, Ph.D.
 
 

Understand Drug Therapy

Drug therapy for depression. - Justin Meyer
 

Levels of the Aura, Body and Consciousness

A look at how there is a connection between the Aura and the Human Body and Consciousness. - George Lockett
 
 

Site Home » Hygiene & Health » Nutrition & Sustenance
 

Eating Binges ? A Fact of Human Life?

 
Author: Michael Bens

The eating binge is something thats well known to most of us especially those of us who are struggling to lose weight. In extreme cases, binge eating is even a disorder people seem to lose control of their eating, concentrating on a single food group and consuming literally thousands of calories in a very short period of time. Afterward, the result is a feeling of guilt, or that you have blown it and, of course, the intake of that many calories at a time is disastrous to weight loss.

However, many experts have commented that dieting or restricting food intake can actually trigger binging for those who have that tendency already. Its almost as though the restriction of food makes us feel so deprived that we respond by binging, and the guild that follows a binge can derail the diet for an even longer time that necessary. Many of us would give anything to be able to control the impulse to binge eliminating it altogether would be ideal, in fact. In this way, we would really be able to control food intake and lose weight.

Most people look upon binging as a problem behavior an expression of some sort of distress, or even a type of neurotic behavior to be cured. After all, this type of eating is extreme during a binge, people consume many times their ideal calorie intake for the day, and there seems no way to avoid weight gain if this becomes a habit. However, there is also evidence that indicates binging may just be a fact of life for all humans, a leftover from the way in which we obtained our food early on in human development. Think about it. Before agriculture came on the scene and regulated the food supply throughout the year, humans spent many millennia as hunters and gatherers. In fact, we should all remember that this pre-civilized, hunting and gathering existence went on for much longer than civilization had. Humans have practiced agriculture for little more than six thousand years, but humans (or advanced pre-humans) have been around for about 35 thousand years. So for the vast majority of human history, we were hunters and gatherers, and in that state, believe it or not, binging was a really good idea.

Think about it. This was before refrigeration or any other organized means of food preservation. People moved around constantly, and sometimes food was plentiful, while other times it was scarce. When food was scarce, there was no way to get more. Humans just had to do without, or survive on very little. That meant that when a hunt was successful, or when the early humans stumbled upon a grove or fruit trees, binging was the most reasonable, well-adapted response. The food was there at that moment, and who knew when it would be there again? So the early humans would have eaten as much of it as was humanly possible in short, they binged. They had to. It had to keep them going until the next lucky find.

Our bodily drives are stronger and more primitive than what our minds tell us. So, while we might know, intellectually, that binging is not a good idea and that we should eat a pre-approved number of calories per day, the urge to binge is still as strong in us as it was in early humans. The difference, of course, is that our food environment is not self-limiting there are no natural restrictions. We have access to almost all types of food at all times, unlike early humans. So, though our environment doesnt necessitate binging, the behavioral drive is still strong.

That also explains why dieting can bring on a binge. A diet is like a period of scarcity or famine biologically, this makes us want to binge, to make up for it, as soon as food becomes available. And the more you restrict your eating, the stronger your impulse to binge will be, because for early humans (physiologically identical to us) that was good survival behavior. Thats why the behavior is so hard to overcome at one point, it was not just acceptable it was necessary to human survival.

Author Bio:
Michael Bens is an expert on this subject. Michael has written several articles in the past on this topic.
You can search for this article using: nutrition, herbal nutrition supplement, nutrition facts, herbalife nutrition products
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Reprogram Your DNA For Optimal Health & Longevity
 
Yoga: How To Develop A Home Practice
 
Discover The Best Source For Omega 3 Fatty Acids
 
The Importance Of Food Supplements
 
How I Blasted My Arms Past The 18 INCH Mark Without Drugs!
 
What Obesity Debate?
 
The Connection Point Between the Physical and the Non-Physical Consciousness
 
The Secret of Stopping Smoking - Without Cravings or Weight Gain
 
Aerobic Exercise and the FITT Principle
 
Mini-Strokes: Maxi-Confusion
 
 
 
Free 3 way links
 
 

Computers & Software

 

Online & Board Games

 

Realty & Property

 

Society & Issues

 

Employment & Careers

 

Medicine & Treatment

 

Travel & Accommodation

 

Online Shopping

 

Business & Companies

 

Self Help

 

Fashion & Relationships

 

News & Events

 

Creative Arts

 

Science & Space

 

Hygiene & Health

 

Recreation

 

Teens & Kids

 

Sports & Adventure

 

Academics & Education

 

Food & Recipe

 

Vehicles & Automotive

 

Finance & Banking

 

Garden & Home

 

Politics & Government


 
Site Home :> Privacy :> Terms of Service
Copyright © 2008 www.ancientnet.com