62% of us have adopted healthy changes!

That’s good news, isn’t it?

I’m guessing most of our reader community (if not everyone), falls in that 62%.

So how about sharing what healthy change (or changes) you might have made?  Add them to the Comments.  What a great way to support each other!

My Share

I’ve been working to reduce the amount of brown rice I eat.

Important Note:  This is not because brown rice is bad. There is much to recommend it, especially if it replaces white rice and white flour in things like bread, tortillas, pizza and most desserts. So don’t go pitching your brown rice in the compost bin!

Balance  But balance is always key–and my diet has become too heavy on the brown rice scale. This was problematic for a couple reasons:

  1. Compromised Diversity  Eating too much of one food means I don’t have room for the dozens of other foods needed to keep our microbiome happy. (Remember, we talked about the value of “wild diet diversity” in the microbiome workshop I did with Natural Grocers’ nutritionist Helen Dohrman in July.)
  2. What’s Right for Me  Everyone’s different (surprise!), including our dietary needs. Over the years, I’ve found that my body feels better with a few less grain carbs. As someone who could happily exist on a diet of bread, I transitioned to brown rice when I had to eliminate gluten. But now I realize that I can’t just substitute brown rice for bread as the majority of my diet, just because it’s gluten-free.

The Practicalities

A lot of diet hopes die when it’s time to go beyond dreaming to doing. To keep those  hopes alive, you gotta figure out the strategies to turn hopes into reality.  So how did I transition to better nutritional balance and diversity?

Going Cold Turkey  When it comes to diet changes, I am more successful going “cold-turkey” rather than trying to “be moderate.” So I decided to reduce my grain carbs by just completely cutting them out of my lunch meal.

Taste Bud Transitioning  At first, it was hard to feel like a lunch was complete without brown rice topping my salads or as a base for stir-fries and skillets, my lunchtime standbys.  So I had to pay conscious attention to breaking my taste buds’ automatic yearnings, i.e., acknowledging those yearning but then consciously deciding not to heed them.

Gradually, the urge to dish up brown rice with every lunch is diminishing as I have given my taste buds time to realize that I’m actually satisfied without rice.

Steady Substituting  For breakfasts and dinners, I have begun substituting winter squash for grains. To make this manageable, I cook up a big batch of squash–usually several different kinds–and then store in the frig to eat as is, add to soups, throw in a scramble–or to just nibble on when I’m starved!

Best wishes for ever more healthy eating improvements

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