10 ways to lose weight without dieting

10 ways to beat cravings and lose weight WITHOUT dieting (and it starts by channelling the superhero in your head)

  • Training your brain to expect pain when you snack could stop food cravings
  • Shocking the body by biting into a lemon could also distract you from the fridge
  • Meg Arroll and Louise Atkinson say learning to say no will help you shed pounds
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Want to lose weight without going on a diet? 

Psychologist Dr Meg Arroll and health writer Louise Atkinson say learning to control your cravings and eating habits is key to shedding the pounds and may be easier than you think.

Their new book The Shrinkology Solution explores the psychology behind losing weight, and they have shared some of their tips.

Changing your posture, massaging your head or even flicking yourself with a rubber band could help stop you reaching for the biscuit tin.

Here Dr Arroll and Ms Atkinson write in Healthista to reveal 10 ways to cut down your food cravings:  


Health experts say there are psychological ways to train yourself to resist cravings, which could help unhealthy snacking and improve your chances of losing weight

1. When you want to go back to the buffet: STAND TALL

You need to channel your inner Super Hero to imbue strength, force and composure. 

It’s simple. Just stand with legs shoulder width apart, feet flat on the ground, keep your head up, looking straight forward, place your hands on your hips and breathe deeply.

‘Body language can have a hugely influential force on behaviour,’ says Dr Meg Arroll.

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‘Studies show that holding a power pose like this for just two minutes is enough to increase levels of testosterone (the dominance hormone), reduce cortisol (the stress hormone) and boost your feelings of power and control.’

2. When you need chocolate: GRAB SOMEONE TO HUG 

Sometimes a physical craving for puddings or chocolate is driven by low levels of the feel-good brain chemicals dopamine and serotonin. 

Yes, chocolate can give you a mood boost, but studies show a few minutes spent kissing, cuddling or (if it is safe and appropriate to do so) having sex can trigger extremely beneficial chemical cascades in the brain including the neurotransmitter, oxytocin (known as the love hormone) which makes you feel warm, fuzzy and connected inside.

If you’re on your own grab a steamy novel (try a Mills & Boon series or 50 Shades of Grey) and have a quick read – this can boost the brain’s pleasure centres.

3. If the biscuit tin beckons: HIT YOUR REMOTE CONTROL 

Cognitive behavioural therapy (or CBT) is often used by psychologists to teach people how to change unhelpful patterns of behaviour by effectively changing the way they think.

It is an effective way to boost the ‘low frustration tolerance’ which can happen when difficult or unpleasant situations lead to comfort eating. Try this simple hack:


The psychologists suggest a form of cognitive behavioural therapy and envisaging how you will feel after eating unhealthy food before you do it, in the hope it will put you off

1) Press your PAUSE button to put your body into freeze-frame. 

Now imagine yourself giving in to the craving, lifting the lid on the biscuit tin, pulling out a biscuit and eating it. 

Be honest about how the scene normally plays out. Yes, you’ll get a brief burst of gratification, but what else?

2) Next, breathe deeply for a few moments and FAST-FORWARD to how you are likely to feel five or ten minutes after eating the biscuit(s). 

Are you disappointed with yourself? The guilt, shame and self-recrimination that normally accompany eating behaviour can feel quite strong now.

Don’t push these feelings away as they will help you…

3) Now that you have seen the future, press REWIND on your remote control and bring yourself back to the present, but this time watch a scene unfold again where you DON’T eat a biscuit.

How do you feel now? Strong, in control and fabulous?

WHAT SIZE BREAKFAST, LUNCH AND DINNER IS BEST FOR WEIGHT LOSS?

A blow out breakfast, ‘average’ lunch and small dinner may be the best combination for those suffering from diabetes or obesity, research suggested in March 2018.

Obese diabetes patients following such a diet lose 11lbs (5kg) over three months compared to a 3lb (1.4kg) weight gain for those eating the traditionally recommended weight-loss plan of six small meals a day, a study found.

Sticking to just three meals a day of varying sizes also reduces diabetics’ glucose levels and insulin requirements, as well as their hunger and carbohydrate cravings, the research adds.

Lead author Dr Daniela Jakubowicz, from Tel Aviv University, said: ‘The hour of the day — when you eat and how frequently you eat — is more important than what you eat and how many calories you eat.

‘Our body metabolism changes throughout the day.

‘A slice of bread consumed at breakfast leads to a lower glucose response and is less fattening than an identical slice of bread consumed in the evening.’ 

Results further suggest fasting glucose levels decrease by 54 mg/dl (from 161 to 107) in those eating three meals a day group compared to only 23 mg/dl (from 164 to 141) in those consuming six.

Healthy levels are considered to be less than 108 mg/dl. 

Having breakfast as the main meal of the day also significantly reduces the need for insulin by -20.5 units/day (from 54.7 to 34.8) compared to those spread out throughout the day, which requires people have 2.2 more units a day (from 67.8 to 70).

Overall amounts of glucose in the blood are also lower just 14 days after adopting a three meal a day eating plan. 

4) Finally, with this increased confidence and empowerment, press PLAY on your remote control and make a choice about what you want to do. 

You really do have the ability to change the future.

4. When you want to binge: GIVE YOURSELF A MINI SHOCK 

‘A quick, sense-jolting distraction can be enough to nudge you out of destructive thought patterns (‘what’s the point of this diet?’) and get yourself grounded before things cascade out of control,’ says Dr Meg. Try the following: 

Biting into a wedge of lemon.

Ramping the volume on your radio.

Pulling open the freezer and grabbing a handful of ice.

Picking up a book or magazine and quickly read a paragraph backwards out loud (talking the words requires greater use of cognitive capacity and more effective distraction).

Chant song lyrics out loud. Your brain has to switch off to focus on the next line of the song instead.

5. When you’re craving crappy food: STRIKE A POSE 

The mind and body are one integrated system, so focusing on a physical challenge is a great way to push thoughts of eating aside. 

Non-yogis should try balancing on one leg (close your eyes briefly to make it harder), but more advanced practitioners will be able to stop a craving in its tracks with a quick headstand.

6. When you want dessert: TAP YOUR FOREHEAD 

There’s a well-established psychological practice called ‘Emotional Freedom Technique’(EFT) which has been proven to really help curb even the strongest cravings. 

It might sound kooky, but the idea is that tapping specific acupressure points helps to ‘unblock’ energy obstructions and when paired with a targeted bit of positive self-talk it can help boost your ability to cope with strong desires for certain foods.

Find the ‘karate chop’ point on the outer edge of one hand. 

Using the index and middle fingers of your other hand tap this area five times while breathing deeply and silently repeating ‘I am able to cope with these cravings and nudge them from my consciousness’.

Repeat the process on the inner edge of the eyebrow, the outer side of the eye, under the eye on the bone of the eye socket, under the nose where it dips, on the dip of your chin, on your collarbone, slightly in from the sternum, under the arm, about 10cm down from the armpit.

End the exercise by tapping the inside of both wrists together and tapping the top of your head with a the flat of your palm.

7. When you want a tub of ice cream: DO EMERGENCY HYGGE 


Getting cosy and taking time for yourself could boost your feelings of contentedness and help you avoid eating in order to feel better

Hygge loosely means a ‘sense of cosiness and comfort’ and it is known to engender deep feelings of contentedness. 

So plan in advance to create your own personal Hygge supply by gathering together items such as: thick cosy bed socks; a super-soft blanket; a delicious selection of exotic herbal teas; earthy scented candles and tea lights; beautiful natural objects like pinecones, twigs and colourful leaves that help you connect with nature.

Keep this box ready and whenever you fear you are about to be overwhelmed by cravings, take out its contents and immerse yourself in non-food Scandi comfort.

8. When you feel sad and want cake: MASSAGE YOUR FACE 

One reason we turn to sweet treats when we’re blue is because some (usually unhealthy) food can have a drug-like impact on the reward systems of the brain.

That’s because the brain is hard-wired for survival, so any behaviour that increases our chances of survival is likely to trigger a reward or pleasure system, instigating the release of a brain chemical called dopamine. 

But research has shown that hands-on treatments can have just as effective biochemical effects on our bodies. 

Massage has been shown to increase levels of serotonin (the ‘happy’ hormone) by as much as 28 per cent and reduce cortisol (the ‘stress’ hormone) by as much as 31 per cent. 

So when you face a strong craving for cake and you suspect you are chasing a feel-good fix, try giving yourself a quick face massage instead. 

It is a completely calorie-free exercise with longer-lasting impact than the 3-minute boost you might get from a donut:

Warm a little massage oil or face cream in your hands

With your chin up, sweep the hands up and down the sides of the face

Place your fingers in the centre of your forehead and draw the fingertips repeatedly to the sides of the face, smoothing the brows

Starting at the end of each eyebrow, make small circular motions around the eye sockets with index and middle fingers

Take the fingers in circular movements below the cheekbones and out to each ear

9: When you think you’re hungry (but you’re not sure): TRY THE BROCCOLI TEST

When you are about to reach out for a slice of cake imagine that cake is a plate of broccoli. Raw. Do you still want to eat it? If yes, you really could be hungry. 

If so, eat broccoli – not cake.


Arroll and Atkinson suggest imagining whatever you want to eat is broccoli, so you can test whether you’re really hungry – if you are hungry enough to eat broccoli you should eat real vegetables instead of the snack

10. When you’re still picking: PING AN ELASTIC BAND  

Wear an elastic hair band around your wrist and when the urge to pick hits, ping that band. 

Studies (which admittedly administered mild electric shocks instead) show that a sharp sensation is enough to send a mild ‘pain’ message to your brain which makes a tenuous link between your actions and pain. 

‘Repeat the process often enough and you really will form a neural pathway which puts a negative association (the sharp pain of the elastic band) in your brain alongside the urge, so subconsciously you start to associate the habit with the unpleasant sensation,’ says Dr Meg.

This article was originally published on Healthista and is being reproduced with their permission.  

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