DIET CATEGORIES
Rate This Diet
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (Rated 3.27/5 from 11 votes)
Loading ... Loading ...

Diet Smart Plan



The Diet Smart Plan (TDSP) is the creation of author Barry Sanders. The plan involves a series of small, healthy changes to a person’s diet that result in more significant benefits over a period of time rather than drastic measures to meet a expected deadline for weight loss goals.

Note that this diet is in no way associated with DietSmart.com - an on-line diet program that was eventually integrated into eDiets.

A typical dieter has a goal of exiting the diet as soon as possible because in their mind, a diet is restrictive. If the diet was more in alignment with their normal diet, the dieter would not want to vacate the program as quickly and desired results would happen through consistency of healthy behaviors.

The Diet Smart Plan is based on the participants’ eating awareness. TDSP is calorie conscious but not concerned with more detailed nutritional aspects such as protein, carbohydrates, fats, points, or good fiber. Keeping the dieter focused on just a few simple aspects, the dieter is more likely to adopt those few healthy habits and make them behaviors rather than overwhelming them with multiple items that lead to frustration and eventually, failure.

Guidelines

TDSP has only three basic guidelines:

Foods

The Diet Smart program categorizes food into 5 groups:The five food categories are

Sample Meal Plan

Based on a 200lb person.

Breakfast Calories
Medium Banana 90
Oatmeal 100
 
Midmorning Snack
Granola Bar 100
Apple 60
 
Lunch
1/4 pd. Cheeseburger (lettuce, tomato, onion, mustard) 295
2 oz. potato chips 150
Side salad with raspberry vinaigrette 80
 
Mid-Afternoon Snack
Pepperidge Farm Goldfish (55 pieces) 140
 
Dinner
6 oz. Chicken tenderloins - grilled 180
1 cup green beans 40
medium baked potato with ultra low-calorie butter 195
carrots 25
 
After dinner snack
1/2 bag of popcorn 100
   
Total 1555

Calorie Counting

Prior to each meal or snack, participants “research”, or verify the calorie count of foods prior to consumption to ensure that the meal or snack fits within the daily limit providing for flexibility in many situations. After the meal is consumed, calories from items eaten including condiments and other extras to ensure all calories are counted (unless the food is a free food). TDSP is only concerned with the total from the meal, not details from individual items. The participant keeps a running total all day. At the end of the day, the slate is wiped clean and the participant starts again the next day at zero.

Exercise and Support

Exercise

Asking participants to wait to begin an exercise program rather than starting day helps participants readily adopt an exercise program later. Participants begin by focusing on weight loss for six weeks and then begin a regular weight loss program. The loss of weight helps participants exercise more easily and separates the concepts for easier adoption. Participants who did not have a regular exercise regime prior to TDSP are asked to wait until week six to begin a routine.

Support

The Diet Smart Plan works well through dual accountability. The participant commits to having a support team to help keep them on track. In return, the support team members commit to the participant not to tempt them when dining, being supportive, and being there through “thick and thin”.

See Also

Diet Smart Plan (TDSP) by Barry Sanders (available at Amazon).

Comments

dalia

give me some good food diet that i can eat and become slim





Last modified: April 1, 2008