jbschuyler
Well-Known Member
True.On a semi-related note to this thread, I have long felt that beer gets overly scapegoated for weight gain. I've spent tons of time in the last 25 years hanging out in large groups of beer-drinking dudes. I can't count the number of times in these groups I've heard conversations that go something like this:
"Whoa man, puttin' on a bit of a belly there huh? LOLS"
"Yeah man... the beer is catching up with me!"
"No doubt! Me too!"
etc.
And I know most of them genuinely believe it. I'm not a nutritionist, but I just don't buy it. No, beer definitely doesn't do your waistline any favors, but my point is this: if your day-to-day consists of large amounts of pizza, burgers, fries, soda, potato chips, chicken wings, processed convenience foods, desserts, candy, etc. then it seems absurd to single out beer as the culprit for a growing belly. It's not a "beer belly," it's a "crappy diet belly."
If beer were as bad for weight as it is held to be in scapegoat lore, I'd definitely have a beer belly. I'm 43, not into sports at all, office job, and drink beer almost every day. I work out a few times a week max, and never terribly hard, at that. Somehow, at 5'11" and 180lbs, I manage to be the same weight and waist size as my 20s. Heck, if the light hits me right, I can even see abs.
In my early-mid 20s I started to feel a bit run-down and lethargic from my "college student" diet of processed food and junk, so I decided to make changes, and I'm so glad I did.
IMO, it comes down to 3 things: 1) you can't fly blind; you can treat yourself to unhealthy things in moderation, but it's mandatory that you understand the nutritional impacts of everything you eat (learn how to read food labels, etc.); 2) eat meals made from the ground up with whole ingredients as often as humanly possible instead of overly processed "convenience" foods that are almost always brimming with salt, fat, and sugar to make them palatable; 3) LEARN HOW TO COOK.
The last point is very important because I just don't see how it's possible to consistently eat tasty and healthy meals if you're wanting everything just served to you on a platter all the time. Not only is it expensive, it rarely lives up to the promise.
These days I cook 5-6 nights a week, always making sure to make too much so there is a steady stream of healthy leftovers for lunches and to stock the freezer for lazy nights, etc. I only eat meat once or twice a week, a crap ton of fruits and vegetables, lots of legumes, lots of healthy grains like quinoa and farro, lots of seeds. I generally avoid desserts altogether, don't buy chips or junk snacks (out of sight, out of mind), and water has 100% replaced soft drinks (I haven't drunk a Coke or Mountain Dew or similar for probably 10 years or more.)
The best part is, this is not a fad diet that takes immense willpower to stick with, it's just ingrained in my lifestyle now and has been for years. With proper care in your meals, you can almost eat as much of it as you want without worrying too much. When you maintain a properly stocked pantry of herbs and spices and vinegars and healthy oils and other staples, there is no need to suffer through bland meals. The myth that eating healthy must mean bland and boring is another one that needs to die. I'm not eating boiled chicken breast and cabbage water here.
Of course, my approach probably wouldn't work for a bodybuilder or serious athlete, but I don't aspire to be either of those things so I don't care.
I'm not a nutritionist either, but luckily my wife is!