Losing Weight the National Geographic Way... (why the animals
are smarter than us)
I love wild-life documentaries. I love watching those amazing creatures
in their habitat, doing what
they do. Well, perhaps not the tearing-each-other-to-pieces part.. but
all the other stuff. Well, nearly
all the other stuff.
Not so long ago, I was watching a
documentary and it dawned on me that there
are not too many fat
animals in the wild. Apart from animals which are genetically
pre-disposed to have more fat for
protection or survival (Bears, Penguins, Seals, Craigs), your typical
animal in the wild is in pretty
handy shape. You might say Buffed. Lean. Ripped. Rock-hard.
A few years ago I went on safari in Africa and while I saw thousands of
animals, the only fatties I
saw were the hippos.... but who's gonna tell them? Not me.
Interestingly, it's only when us very clever humans get involved with
animals (i.e. feeding our
domestic pets) that we start to see the rolls appear. My friend has a
Labrador that's about the size
of a Hyundai..... she's like a three-door hatch with blond hair (the
dog, not my friend).
Anyway, I started to think; how come these 'dumb' animals who don't have
the magnificent
education and brain-power that we humans do, don't have access to all
those great diet books and
that cutting-edge research (whatever that means) and certainly haven't
read any of my blog (no
internet access)... how come they're.... never fat? None of them. Not
one.
Well the obvious answer is going to be that they run around all day
trying not to get eaten by
something with bigger, sharper teeth than theirs. Sure, we know that.
They obviously have great
exercise programs.... not to mention their incidental and occupational
activity levels (you should try
being a full-time hunter; huge calorie burner).
But, what about their diet? How do they know when to eat? How do they
know when it's dinner
time? How do they know how much to eat.... especially when there's not a
clever human around to
tell them.
Well, I kept searching as any good scientist and researcher would, and
here's what I found: Hang
on; you best sit down. This is big.
They eat when they need food. And when they don't need food, they don't
eat.
Imagine that; not eating unless you actually NEED food. Crazy. That's
never gonna catch on with
humans.
Apparently, animals have this weird ability to discern a phenomenon
called 'hunger'. When they
sense it, they eat.
A little scientific I know, but hang in there with me.
Legend has it that thousands of years ago, we humans had this special
ability also.
Okay, should I stop the sarcasm now? Oh alright.. but it's so much fun..
and I'm so good at it.
These days it seems that we are so dis-connected from what should be our
natural instincts, so
resistant to our body's physiological indicators, so programmed to eat
certain foods, in certain
amounts, at certain times, and so out of touch with what our body
actually needs ... that some of
us are rapidly heading
towards a future of obesity, poor health and
shorter-than-necessary life expectancies.
If only we would learn to listen to our body. If only we would realise
that it's much smarter than us
(the cerebral us).
There's a school of thought that teaches human bodies don't actually
need set meals, set eating
times, set micro and macro-nutrient intakes. This classroom teaches that
daily nutritional
requirements not only vary from person to person, but that they vary for
the same person, from day
to day. Some very smart people teach that eating instinctively, that is,
in accordance with what our
body is telling us, is optimal for health, function, appearance and
longevity.
Imagine that. No diets. No set anything. Just a series of signals and
responses. Clever.
Over the next month or so, you and I (if you stay with me) are going to
explore the concept of
instinctive eating, and in the near future I am going to conduct a
strict 28 day research project on
myself. I will document my results at the conclusion and tell you what
I've learned.
I have considered the possibility of making this a group effort if some
of you may be interested in
joining me. If there's significant interest we can explore it...
otherwise I will fly solo. I will be posting
my instinctive eating guidelines and rules in the next week, so you may
want to peruse them before
you make any decision on the 28 day extravaganza..
Anyway, it might be fun. If you are interested, or you have any,
thoughts, ideas or suggestions,
click on the comments thingy at the bottom of this article and share
with us all.
About the author: Craig Harper (B.Ex.Sci.) is an Australian motivational speaker,
qualified exercise scientist, author,
columnist, radio presenter, and owner of one of the largest personal
training centres in the world.
He can be heard weekly on Australian Radio SEN 1116 and GOLD FM and
appears on Australian television on Network Ten's 9AM. Motivational Speaker - Craig
Harper