
If two groups of people eat virtually the same number of calories and similar foods—but one group's diet is high in fiber and the other's is low in fiber—the group eating the high-fiber foods will lose more weight than the group consuming little fiber. In fact, those in the high-fiber group may lose more than 10 pounds in a year just by raising the fiber content of their diets. Fiber helps cleanse the body by taking unabsorbed fat with it, including up to 5% of dietary fat. Over time, this reduction of calories absorbed adds up. Also, fiber makes extra work for the body because it is harder to digest than other foods.
Eating fiber helps control appetite by giving a satiated feeling with fewer calories—and all weight loss/gain is based on calories. Low-fiber carbohydrates are quickly converted to glucose by the body, causing spikes in insulin levels and leaving you craving more low-fiber carbohydrates. Because it takes longer for high-fiber carbohydrates to be digested, glucose enters the blood more slowly and more evenly. Avoiding glucose spikes helps control food cravings.
Eating high-fiber carbohydrates throughout the day, divided between three moderate meals and two snacks, will help keep blood glucose and insulin in balance. This discourages binge eating and unhealthy snacking and reduces agitation. Fiber in fruits, vegetables, and other foods may decrease insulin resistance.
Please don't skip meals or snacks. Breakfast is the most important meal. Most calories should be consumed early in the day. Eating raises the metabolism and evens out glucose levels. The metbolism has been very slow all night during sleep and you need some "fuel" in the morning to get things running again.
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