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By Tom Venuto
Author
of Burn the Fat, Feed the Muscle
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Clean eating has no official
definition, but its usually described as avoiding processed
foods, chemicals, preservatives and artificial ingredients.
Instead, clean eaters choose natural foods, the way they came
out of the ground or as close to their natural form as possible.
Vegetables, fruits, legumes, 100% whole grains, egg whites,
fish, and chicken breast are clean eating staples.
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Clean eating appears to be a desirable,
sensible, even noble goal. Eating clean is what we should all strive
to do to achieve optimum health and body composition isnt
it? Arguably the answer is mostly yes, but more and more people
today are asking, is it possible to take clean eating too
far?
Physician Steven Bratman thinks so.
In 1997, Bratman was the first to put a name to an obsession with
healthy eating, calling it orthorexia nervosa. In his book, Health
Food Junkies, Bratman said that whether they are trying to lose
weight or not, orthorexics are preoccupied with eating healthy food
and avoiding anything artificial or toxic.
Orthorexics are not only fanatical
about eating the purest, healthiest, most nutritious (aka clean)
foods available, says Bratman, they often feel a sense of righteousness
in doing so.
Whether orthorexia should be officially
classified as an eating disorder is controversial. The term appears
in pub med indexed scientific journals, but its not listed
in the DSM-IV as are anorexia and bulimia. Opponents wonder, Since
when did choosing a lifestyle that eliminates junk food become a
disease?
Media coverage and internet discussions
about orthorexia have increased in the past year. Websites such
as the Mayo Clinic, the Huffington Post and the UK-based Guardian
added their editorials into the mix in recent months, alongside
dozens of individual bloggers.
In most cases, mainstream media discussions
of orthorexia have focused on far extremes of health food practices
such as raw foodism, detox dieting or 100% pure organic eating,
where some folks would rather starve to death than eat a cooked
or pesticide-exposed vegetable.
But closer to my home, what about
the bodybuilding, fitness, figure and physique crowd? Should we
be included in this discussion?
In their quest for adding muscle mass
and burning fat, many fitness and physique enthusiasts become obsessed
with eating only the cleanest foods possible. Like the
natural health enthusiasts, physique athletes usually avoid all
processed foods and put entire food groups on the forbidden
list. Oddly, that sometimes includes rules such as you must
cut out fruit on precontest diets because fruit is high
in sugar or fructose turns to fat.
According to Bratmans criteria,
one could argue that almost every competitive bodybuilder or physique
athlete is automatically orthorexic, and they might add obsessive-compulsive
and neurotic for good measure.
As you can imagine, I have mixed feelings
about that (being a bodybuilder).
If I choose to set a rule for myself
that Ill limit my junk food to only 10% of my meals, does
that make me orthorexic or is that a prudent health decision?
If I plan my menus on a spreadsheet,
am I a macronutrient micromanager or am I detail-oriented?
If I make my meals in advance for
the day ahead, does that mean Im obsessive compulsive, or
am I prepared?
If I make one of my high protein vanilla
apple cinnamon oatmeal pancakes (one of my favorite portable clean
food recipes) and take it with me on a flight because I dont
want to eat airline food, am I neurotic? Or am I perhaps, the smartest
guy on the plane?
Some folks are probably shaking their
heads and saying, you bodybuilders are definitely OCD.
I prefer to call it dedicated, thank you, but perhaps we are obsessive,
at least a wee bit before competitions. But arent all competitive
athletes, to some degree, at the upper levels of most sports?
Athletes of all kinds not just
bodybuilders - take their nutrition and training regimens far beyond
what the average Joe or average soccer mom
would require to stay healthy and fit.
What if you dont want to be
average what if you want to be world class? What then? Is
putting hours of practice a day into developing a skill or discipline
an obsessive-compulsive disorder too?
Okay, now that Ive defended
the strict lifestyle habits of the muscle-head brother and sisterhood,
let me address the flipside: being too strict.
Where does the average health and
bodyweight-concerned fitness enthusiast draw the line? How clean
should you eat? Do you need lots of structure and planning in your
eating habits, or as Lao Tzu, the Chinese philosopher said, does
making too many rules only create more rule-breakers?
Debates have started flaring up over
these questions and as inconceivable as it seems, there has actually
been somewhat of a backlash against clean eating. Why
would THAT possibly happen? Eating clean is eating healthy,
right? Eating clean is a good thing, right?
Well, almost everyone agrees that
its ok to have a cheat meal occasionally, but
some experts - after watching how many people are becoming neurotic
about food - are now clamoring to point out that its not necessary
to be so strict.
The diet pendulum
has apparently swung from:
Eat a balanced diet with
a wide variety of foods you enjoy.
To:
You MUST eat clean!
To:
Go ahead and eat as much
junk as you want, as long as you watch your calories and get your
essential nutrients like protein, essential fats, vitamins and minerals.
Talk about confusion! Now weve
got people who gain great pride and a sense of dedication and accomplishment
for taking up a healthy, clean-eating lifestyle and weve got
people who thumb their nose at clean eating and say, Chill
out bro! Live a little!
The current debate about how clean
you should eat (or how much you should cheat) reminds
me of the recent arguments over training methods such as steady
state versus HIIT cardio. Whatever the debate of the day, most people
seem to have a really difficult time acknowledging that theres
a middle ground.
Most dieters, when they dont
like a certain philosophy, reject it entirely and flip to its polar
opposite. Most dieters are dichotomous thinkers, always viewing
their endeavors as all or nothing. Most dieters are also joiners,
plugging into one of the various diet tribes and gaining their sense
of identity by belonging.
In some cases, I think these tribes are more like cults, as people
follow guru-like leaders who pass down health and nutrition commandments
that are followed with religious conviction. Seriously, the parallels
of diet groups to religious groups can be downright scary sometimes.
Whether the goal is to optimize health,
to build muscle or to burn fat, theres little doubt that many
individuals with all kinds of different motivations sometimes take
their dietary restrictions to extremes. Obviously, an overly restrictive
diet can lead to nutrient deficiencies and can adversely affect
health, energy and performance.
In some cases, I can also see how
swinging to any extreme, even a healthy obsession with
pure food could lead to distorted views and behaviors that border
on eating disorders. If you dont believe its a real
clinical psychological problem, then at the very least, you might
agree that nutritional extremes could mean restricting social activities,
creating inconvenience or making lifestyle sacrifices that are just
not necessary.
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I believe theres a middle
ground - a place where we can balance health and physique
with a lifestyle and food plan we love and enjoy. Even more
important, I believe that your middle ground may not be the
same as mine. We all must find our own balance.
I believe that going back to
BALANCE, but this time with a better definition of what balance
means, is the approach of the future.
I also believe that some new
rules would help us find that balance.
If you'd like to learn the rules
that bodybuilders and fitness models follow to "eat clean"
and stay lean, then check out Burn
The Fat Feed The Muscle.
Tom Venuto, author of:
Burn
The Fat Feed The Muscle
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In this candid and revealing
interview, David Grisaffi, an in-the-trenches fat loss and
abdominal training expert and author of the best-selling ebook
Firm and Flatten Your Abs, interviews fat loss expert and
best selling author Tom Venuto.
These fat loss pros discuss
what it really takes to uncover your abdominals, and the reasons
why it takes more than hundreds of situps and crunches to
succeed. Some of the facts Tom reveals will surprise you because
you wont hear them from most other experts in the weight
loss and fitness industry.
Why? Because they either dont
know or they have a vested interest in keeping the truth hidden
from you. In this revealing discussion you'll learn top secret
ab training techniques and the truth about diet scams and
rip offs!
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In this interview, Tom Nicoli,
a clinical hypnotherapist who was featured on Dateline NBCs
Ultimate Weight Loss Challenge, meets with fat loss expert
and best selling author Tom Venuto.
The two Toms discuss what it
really takes to increase or even skyrocket your
fat loss success and they uncover the reasons why it takes
more than hard work and physical effort to succeed
it also takes the right mindset. Some of the facts Tom reveals
you will surprise you because you wont hear them from
most other experts in the weight loss and fitness industry.
Why? Because
they either dont know or they have a vested interest
in keeping the truth hidden from you. !
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About
The Author
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Tom Venuto is a natural bodybuilder,
certified personal trainer and freelance fitness writer. Tom
is the author of "Burn
the Fat, Feed The Muscle, which teaches you
how to get lean without drugs or supplements using secrets
of the world's best bodybuilders and fitness models. Learn
how to get rid of stubborn fat and increase your metabolism
by clicking
here.
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