吃早餐有什么好处, 不吃有什么坏处?

Breakfast is Not the Most Important Meal

It might be the biggest nutrition myth. Here's why scientists now say breakfast is not the most important meal of the day, and what it means for your diet.

by Adam Bornstein
SHAR
For years I told people that breakfast was the most important meal of the day. Eat a big meal to start the day and everything will be ok. I published the advice in three books, referenced the smartest minds in nutrition, and the tip was generally accepted as “the right thing” to do for your health.

Turns out the “right thing” really depends on whether you want to eat early in the morning. That’s because two recent studies found that eating breakfast has no direct impact on weight loss. We’re not talking observational studies, like many done prior. This was a direct comparison of an early meal versus no early meal. And the results had a simple message:

From a physiological perspective, there’s nothing special about eating early in the morninga and triggering weight loss

Eating breakfast is not weight loss magic.

In the study, which looked at more than 300 people, participants were split into 2 groups. One ate breakfast and the other did not. While there were some small differences, the bottom line was that there was no significant difference in weight loss between the breakfast eaters and the breakfast skippers. In fact, both groups lost weight and this occurred without the researchers telling participants what to eat (or not eat) for breakfast.

The growing evidence should be a welcome relief for those who don’t like eating first thing in the morning. If there’s one thing that needs to be understood it’s this:

Breakfast is not the most important meal of the day.

But neither is lunch, dinner, or snacks. This isn’t meant to be puzzling or a letdown to those of you trying to crack the weight loss code. Believing that one meal is the foundation of success can be detrimental to your healthy living goals.

The Diet Refresh: What We Know About Meal Timing
The problem with the breakfast-is-best hypothesis is that it steers people into the “there’s only one way to eat” mentality. The truth is, it doesn’t matter when you eat your meals: Morning, night, or spread out through the day. If there are behavioral reasons why you want to eat breakfast, such as it energizes or improves focus, then those are good reasons to have an early meal.

If breakfast feels forced or makes you sluggish, then there’s no pressure to force feed just for the sake of eating. In fact, recent research also suggests that it’s your choice if you want to eat three meals, six meals or anywhere in between, and that there is a meal frequency that’s ideal for weight loss.

If you that sounds wrong, you might want to read this study and this one as well. Research can be flawed, but our body’s biological nature is not meant to be deceiving. Weight loss depends on how many calories you eat, the foods you eat, and the macronutrients you consume in your diet (that is, what’s the ratio of proteins, carbs, and fats). Add in your exercise tendencies, and that will determine how you look and feel.

Some people believe that eating more frequently has a host of benefits, such as curbing appetite. This can be true—but the opposite can also occur. Eating more can make you feel hungrier and consume more calories.

And there’s the thought that frequent meals improves your metabolism. But as long as total calories are equal (and macronutrients are balanced), your body will burn the same number of calories in the digestion process. That’s just science.

Yes, there are other processes in your body that can play a role in the weight loss process—most notably stress and hormones—but that’s a separate conversation altogether. Before you can even worry about those individual issues, you must make sure that you’ve established baseline eating habits that are the foundation for a healthy life. Once you do that, you might experience the type of change you didn’t think could happen for your body.

Why The ‘Breakfast is Best’ Model is Broken (And Always Has Been)
Here’s the problem with the breakfast hypothesis: The moment you insist that breakfast is essential, you create a mental block that over-emphasizes the importance of the meal. Suddenly if you miss breakfast, you believe that your fat loss will be slowed, you’re destined to eat more at the next meal, and your energy will be off.

It’s the real issue with diets: they create psychological barriers that make the journey seem harder, rather than suggesting flexible solutions that make the process more convenient to your lifestyle.

Changing your body is as much a psychological process as it is a physical one. You need to believe that you can become better. But you also need to believe in the program you’re following, and use an approach that can be maintained.

Any time you want to make a change you’ll have to make sacrifices. But don’t confuse working harder and removing certain habits with losing all control. That’s a recipe for failure.

For years, we were told breakfast is the most important meal of the day. In fact, physicians are notorious for scolding patients who skip breakfast—particularly people who are embarking on a plan to lose weight.

There is some credence here, by the way: a study conducted by scientists in Massachusetts in 2008 showed that participants who ate a calorically dense breakfast lost more weight than those who didn’t.

The theory was that the higher caloric intake early in the day led people to snack less often throughout the day and lowered caloric intake overall. There are also some epidemiological studies that show a connection between skipping breakfast and higher body weight.

However, the crux of the breakfast study is ultimately that a larger breakfast leads to lower overall caloric intake. That is, the argument for a larger breakfast ultimately boils down to energy balance; if that study is reliant on the position that weight loss comes down to calories in versus calories out, then the makeup of the food shouldn’t matter. And this isn’t the case.

What you choose for breakfast will have a big impact on what you eat the rest of the day.

Case in point–eating 5 eggs is not the same as eating 1 donuts, even if the calories are matched. So it’s true that if you choose to eat breakfast, the benefits of that first meal will depend on your food selection.

However, if we’ve learned anything from Mark Haub’s Twinkie Diet, it’s that you can eat garbage and lose weight; so clearly, something else is going on. The pro-breakfast folks declare that because insulin sensitivity is higher in the morning, eating a carbohydrate-rich meal early in the day is the greatest opportunity to take in a large amount of energy without the danger of weight gain.

There’s only one tiny problem with that theory: insulin sensitivity is not higher in particular hours of the morning. It’s higher after a minimum of eight hours of fasting. It just so happens that you fast when you sleep, so the information is misleading. More specifically, insulin sensitivity is higher when your glycogen levels (the energy stores in your body) are depleted, like after your sleeping fast.

That’s why some people experience benefits by pushing back their first meal. (Technically, your first meal is always breakfast because it’s when you “break” your overnight fast.) Intermittent fasting takes that a step farther and turns your body into a fat-burning, muscle-building machine. You see, if you skip breakfast and extend the fasting period beyond the typical eight to ten hours, you increase insulin even more.

In the end, there is no science that supports the idea—from a direct comparison—that eating breakfast is better than not eating breakfast. This is not about food choice; it’s simple a matter of food timing.

In reality, this is closely linked to the multiple meal hypothesis. French researchers found that there is “no evidence of improved weight loss” by eating more frequently. And they even went a step farther to show that in terms of the number of calories you burn per day, it does not matter if you graze or gorge—assuming that you’re eating the number of calories you need to lose weight and the macronutrients (proteins, carbs, and fats) are equal.

If you’re told to eat 2,000 calories per day, it doesn’t matter if it’s separated into five 400-calorie meals or three larger calorie feasts. (However, the composition of those meals does matter.)

But that’s not all. Canadian researchers decided to compare three meals per day to six meals per day, breaking the six into three main meals and three snacks (the routine that has been advocated by every diet book written in the last twenty years). The results? There was no significant difference in weight loss, but the people who ate three meals per day were more satisfied and felt less hunger.

What does it all mean? Some people might have a psychological dependence or belief that they need breakfast. It makes them feel better, it gives piece of mind, or maybe it very realistically helps control morning hunger.

From a physiological perspective–or how your body actually reacts to breakfast–there’s nothing special about eating early in the morning when it comes to triggering weight loss. In fact, forcing yourself to eat at a particular time, or a prescribed number of times, is just as big of a problem as saying you need breakfast.

What About Your Metabolism?
Before we go on, remember there is nothing wrong with eating breakfast. You can eat breakfast and be perfectly healthy and use it as part of an effective weight lost plan. But it’s important to remember that if you’re forcing breakfast for it’s supposed weight loss and metabolism benefits, you’re now free to choose if you want an early meal.

In another study conducted at the University of Bath, participants either ate or skipped breakfast for 6 weeks. This time, there was no change in metabolic (fat loss) or cardiovascular health. This was important because unlike the general weight loss study, this research assessed the old concept of, “breakfast ignites your metabolism first thing in the morning.” And yet, when metabolisms were actually tested, there wasn’t any evidence to prove the theory.

While there isn’t anything wrong with eating breakfast, potential downsides do exist. The problem with a traditional breakfast is that it creates a big eating window. That is, the number of hours during the day that you are consuming food. This is typically about a fifteen-hour period (between seven a.m. and ten p.m.).

In a recent groundbreaking study by the scientists at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, it was found that a larger eating window was associated with more fat storage and a higher likelihood of health problems such as diabetes and liver disease.

This study was done with mice, but the findings are too important to overlook. The mice were put on a high-fat diet that would typically cause obesity. One group of mice ate whenever they wanted, and the other could only eat for eight hours, starting in the afternoon and finishing at night. The mice that ate whenever they wanted gained fat, developed high cholesterol, high blood glucose, and liver damage.

The mice with the eight-hour feeding period starting in the afternoon? They weighed 28 percentless and had no health problems, even though they ate the same amount of fatty foods.

The scientists believe that by cutting down how long you have to eat, your body does a better job of metabolizing your fat, glucose, and cholesterol. What’s more, because you’re eating for a smaller window of time and starting later in the day, your body is burning more fat. Why? Because you pushed back breakfast, extended your overnight fast (which occurs while you sleep), and became a fat-burning machine.

What’s more, by skipping breakfast (or just starting it later in the day), you also prime your body to feel hungrier less often. That’s because the moment you start eating food, your body creates an expectation for calories. And for most people, that expectation means hunger pangs that are too hard to overcome, leaving you grabbing for snacks by ten a.m. and eating more calories than you should by the end of the day.

To Breakfast or Not To Breakfast: The Choice Is Yours
Here’s what you really need to know about breakfast: It’s great for some but not for others. (I love breakfast foods, but rarely eat breakfast anymore.) Insisting that someone has to eat breakfast to lose weight could be the one change that actually makes it harder to experience long-lasting change. Some people aren’t morning eaters, and there’s no reason they have to change that aspect to be healthy.

Don’t believe in dogma. Just as you have a unique body, you can have a unique diet.

If you like breakfast, eat it. If you like snacking, make that your habit. But don’t let anyone convince you that your success will depend on any one meal.

But the process can be made easier. It can be enjoyable. And most of all, it will be effective if you take the right approach.

Eat breakfast. Don’t eat breakfast. That choice is yours.

And by making that choice, and determining what’s best for you, then you’ll be on the path to change that works and lasts.
 
不吃早餐的好处:省了
吃早餐的坏处:浪费

结论:不吃算球

Breakfast is Not the Most Important Meal

It might be the biggest nutrition myth. Here's why scientists now say breakfast is not the most important meal of the day, and what it means for your diet.

by Adam Bornstein
SHAR
For years I told people that breakfast was the most important meal of the day. Eat a big meal to start the day and everything will be ok. I published the advice in three books, referenced the smartest minds in nutrition, and the tip was generally accepted as “the right thing” to do for your health.

Turns out the “right thing” really depends on whether you want to eat early in the morning. That’s because two recent studies found that eating breakfast has no direct impact on weight loss. We’re not talking observational studies, like many done prior. This was a direct comparison of an early meal versus no early meal. And the results had a simple message:

From a physiological perspective, there’s nothing special about eating early in the morninga and triggering weight loss

Eating breakfast is not weight loss magic.

In the study, which looked at more than 300 people, participants were split into 2 groups. One ate breakfast and the other did not. While there were some small differences, the bottom line was that there was no significant difference in weight loss between the breakfast eaters and the breakfast skippers. In fact, both groups lost weight and this occurred without the researchers telling participants what to eat (or not eat) for breakfast.

The growing evidence should be a welcome relief for those who don’t like eating first thing in the morning. If there’s one thing that needs to be understood it’s this:

Breakfast is not the most important meal of the day.

But neither is lunch, dinner, or snacks. This isn’t meant to be puzzling or a letdown to those of you trying to crack the weight loss code. Believing that one meal is the foundation of success can be detrimental to your healthy living goals.

The Diet Refresh: What We Know About Meal Timing
The problem with the breakfast-is-best hypothesis is that it steers people into the “there’s only one way to eat” mentality. The truth is, it doesn’t matter when you eat your meals: Morning, night, or spread out through the day. If there are behavioral reasons why you want to eat breakfast, such as it energizes or improves focus, then those are good reasons to have an early meal.

If breakfast feels forced or makes you sluggish, then there’s no pressure to force feed just for the sake of eating. In fact, recent research also suggests that it’s your choice if you want to eat three meals, six meals or anywhere in between, and that there is a meal frequency that’s ideal for weight loss.

If you that sounds wrong, you might want to read this study and this one as well. Research can be flawed, but our body’s biological nature is not meant to be deceiving. Weight loss depends on how many calories you eat, the foods you eat, and the macronutrients you consume in your diet (that is, what’s the ratio of proteins, carbs, and fats). Add in your exercise tendencies, and that will determine how you look and feel.

Some people believe that eating more frequently has a host of benefits, such as curbing appetite. This can be true—but the opposite can also occur. Eating more can make you feel hungrier and consume more calories.

And there’s the thought that frequent meals improves your metabolism. But as long as total calories are equal (and macronutrients are balanced), your body will burn the same number of calories in the digestion process. That’s just science.

Yes, there are other processes in your body that can play a role in the weight loss process—most notably stress and hormones—but that’s a separate conversation altogether. Before you can even worry about those individual issues, you must make sure that you’ve established baseline eating habits that are the foundation for a healthy life. Once you do that, you might experience the type of change you didn’t think could happen for your body.

Why The ‘Breakfast is Best’ Model is Broken (And Always Has Been)
Here’s the problem with the breakfast hypothesis: The moment you insist that breakfast is essential, you create a mental block that over-emphasizes the importance of the meal. Suddenly if you miss breakfast, you believe that your fat loss will be slowed, you’re destined to eat more at the next meal, and your energy will be off.

It’s the real issue with diets: they create psychological barriers that make the journey seem harder, rather than suggesting flexible solutions that make the process more convenient to your lifestyle.

Changing your body is as much a psychological process as it is a physical one. You need to believe that you can become better. But you also need to believe in the program you’re following, and use an approach that can be maintained.

Any time you want to make a change you’ll have to make sacrifices. But don’t confuse working harder and removing certain habits with losing all control. That’s a recipe for failure.

For years, we were told breakfast is the most important meal of the day. In fact, physicians are notorious for scolding patients who skip breakfast—particularly people who are embarking on a plan to lose weight.

There is some credence here, by the way: a study conducted by scientists in Massachusetts in 2008 showed that participants who ate a calorically dense breakfast lost more weight than those who didn’t.

The theory was that the higher caloric intake early in the day led people to snack less often throughout the day and lowered caloric intake overall. There are also some epidemiological studies that show a connection between skipping breakfast and higher body weight.

However, the crux of the breakfast study is ultimately that a larger breakfast leads to lower overall caloric intake. That is, the argument for a larger breakfast ultimately boils down to energy balance; if that study is reliant on the position that weight loss comes down to calories in versus calories out, then the makeup of the food shouldn’t matter. And this isn’t the case.

What you choose for breakfast will have a big impact on what you eat the rest of the day.

Case in point–eating 5 eggs is not the same as eating 1 donuts, even if the calories are matched. So it’s true that if you choose to eat breakfast, the benefits of that first meal will depend on your food selection.

However, if we’ve learned anything from Mark Haub’s Twinkie Diet, it’s that you can eat garbage and lose weight; so clearly, something else is going on. The pro-breakfast folks declare that because insulin sensitivity is higher in the morning, eating a carbohydrate-rich meal early in the day is the greatest opportunity to take in a large amount of energy without the danger of weight gain.

There’s only one tiny problem with that theory: insulin sensitivity is not higher in particular hours of the morning. It’s higher after a minimum of eight hours of fasting. It just so happens that you fast when you sleep, so the information is misleading. More specifically, insulin sensitivity is higher when your glycogen levels (the energy stores in your body) are depleted, like after your sleeping fast.

That’s why some people experience benefits by pushing back their first meal. (Technically, your first meal is always breakfast because it’s when you “break” your overnight fast.) Intermittent fasting takes that a step farther and turns your body into a fat-burning, muscle-building machine. You see, if you skip breakfast and extend the fasting period beyond the typical eight to ten hours, you increase insulin even more.

In the end, there is no science that supports the idea—from a direct comparison—that eating breakfast is better than not eating breakfast. This is not about food choice; it’s simple a matter of food timing.

In reality, this is closely linked to the multiple meal hypothesis. French researchers found that there is “no evidence of improved weight loss” by eating more frequently. And they even went a step farther to show that in terms of the number of calories you burn per day, it does not matter if you graze or gorge—assuming that you’re eating the number of calories you need to lose weight and the macronutrients (proteins, carbs, and fats) are equal.

If you’re told to eat 2,000 calories per day, it doesn’t matter if it’s separated into five 400-calorie meals or three larger calorie feasts. (However, the composition of those meals does matter.)

But that’s not all. Canadian researchers decided to compare three meals per day to six meals per day, breaking the six into three main meals and three snacks (the routine that has been advocated by every diet book written in the last twenty years). The results? There was no significant difference in weight loss, but the people who ate three meals per day were more satisfied and felt less hunger.

What does it all mean? Some people might have a psychological dependence or belief that they need breakfast. It makes them feel better, it gives piece of mind, or maybe it very realistically helps control morning hunger.

From a physiological perspective–or how your body actually reacts to breakfast–there’s nothing special about eating early in the morning when it comes to triggering weight loss. In fact, forcing yourself to eat at a particular time, or a prescribed number of times, is just as big of a problem as saying you need breakfast.

What About Your Metabolism?
Before we go on, remember there is nothing wrong with eating breakfast. You can eat breakfast and be perfectly healthy and use it as part of an effective weight lost plan. But it’s important to remember that if you’re forcing breakfast for it’s supposed weight loss and metabolism benefits, you’re now free to choose if you want an early meal.

In another study conducted at the University of Bath, participants either ate or skipped breakfast for 6 weeks. This time, there was no change in metabolic (fat loss) or cardiovascular health. This was important because unlike the general weight loss study, this research assessed the old concept of, “breakfast ignites your metabolism first thing in the morning.” And yet, when metabolisms were actually tested, there wasn’t any evidence to prove the theory.

While there isn’t anything wrong with eating breakfast, potential downsides do exist. The problem with a traditional breakfast is that it creates a big eating window. That is, the number of hours during the day that you are consuming food. This is typically about a fifteen-hour period (between seven a.m. and ten p.m.).

In a recent groundbreaking study by the scientists at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, it was found that a larger eating window was associated with more fat storage and a higher likelihood of health problems such as diabetes and liver disease.

This study was done with mice, but the findings are too important to overlook. The mice were put on a high-fat diet that would typically cause obesity. One group of mice ate whenever they wanted, and the other could only eat for eight hours, starting in the afternoon and finishing at night. The mice that ate whenever they wanted gained fat, developed high cholesterol, high blood glucose, and liver damage.

The mice with the eight-hour feeding period starting in the afternoon? They weighed 28 percentless and had no health problems, even though they ate the same amount of fatty foods.

The scientists believe that by cutting down how long you have to eat, your body does a better job of metabolizing your fat, glucose, and cholesterol. What’s more, because you’re eating for a smaller window of time and starting later in the day, your body is burning more fat. Why? Because you pushed back breakfast, extended your overnight fast (which occurs while you sleep), and became a fat-burning machine.

What’s more, by skipping breakfast (or just starting it later in the day), you also prime your body to feel hungrier less often. That’s because the moment you start eating food, your body creates an expectation for calories. And for most people, that expectation means hunger pangs that are too hard to overcome, leaving you grabbing for snacks by ten a.m. and eating more calories than you should by the end of the day.

To Breakfast or Not To Breakfast: The Choice Is Yours
Here’s what you really need to know about breakfast: It’s great for some but not for others. (I love breakfast foods, but rarely eat breakfast anymore.) Insisting that someone has to eat breakfast to lose weight could be the one change that actually makes it harder to experience long-lasting change. Some people aren’t morning eaters, and there’s no reason they have to change that aspect to be healthy.

Don’t believe in dogma. Just as you have a unique body, you can have a unique diet.

If you like breakfast, eat it. If you like snacking, make that your habit. But don’t let anyone convince you that your success will depend on any one meal.

But the process can be made easier. It can be enjoyable. And most of all, it will be effective if you take the right approach.

Eat breakfast. Don’t eat breakfast. That choice is yours.

And by making that choice, and determining what’s best for you, then you’ll be on the path to change that works and lasts.
 
话说爱吃晚饭,是我们人类发生疾病的一个原因;也是许多疾病久治不愈的一个原因。许多人认为,晚间饿了就要吃东西;其实不然;晚间饿了不吃东西,才是正常的。1418年,明朝永乐皇帝朱棣的宠臣——翰林学士胡广死了,享年只有37岁。胡广是个文人,其特点是守口如瓶。朱棣与他商量事,他是绝对不会泄露的;因此朱棣很喜欢他。但是朱棣也很讨厌他,因为胡广爱吃晚饭。在古代,一个人如果吃晚饭,就会被认为是放荡。但是胡广说自己长期有病,身体十分虚弱;一顿饭吃不多,因此必需多吃几次饭。朱棣也就原谅他了。
中医和佛教都说:“过午不食”。所谓“午”,就是中午11点——13点,过了13点就不能再吃饭了。饿了怎么办?可以喝果汁、吃水果。
中医和佛教提倡不吃晚饭,不是为了节约粮食;而是为了养生。此外,中国人人吃饭还有许多规矩,比如:吃东西要把嘴唇闭上,不能巴击嘴。又如:夹菜不能过界,只能在菜盘靠自己的一边夹菜。再如:吃饭的时候不能说话。
但是最大的规矩是不准吃晚饭。如果你吃晚饭,那么就要被视为不规矩。那么官府就不允许你参加科举考试,可能你连个媳妇也找不到,而且你做买卖也很麻烦。
胡广当了翰林之后,才开始吃晚饭。诚如他自己说的,他自己长期有病,身体十分虚弱;一顿饭吃不多,因此要吃晚饭;而且晚饭非常丰盛。然而胡广的身体并没有因为吃晚饭而强壮起来,反而毛病越来越多。于是就吃死了。
(1)过去,我们汉族人不吃晚饭
俗话说:“马不吃夜草不肥。”。同样的道理,人不吃晚饭也不会肥胖。目前大多数人群太肥胖,据说,在美国大约有60%的人群是胖子;然而美国人的饭量并不大。这是为什么呢?这是因为美国人爱吃晚饭和夜宵。为什么吃晚饭和夜宵会肥胖呢?因为人在夜里睡觉不消耗热量,因此吃进去大量的热量就会转化为脂肪。这些脂肪存积在肾囊里,那么肚子就丰满了,然后肚子就越来越大了。当然这些脂肪也分布在身体各个部位,诸如:皮下、血液、心肌、肝赃等,这造成了人体功能的减退。
人不吃晚饭就会饿,其效果与喝开胃汤同功。因此不吃晚饭不吃亏,因为等于你喝了免费的开胃汤。谁如此好心眼,让你喝免费的开胃汤?这就是大自然看见你不吃晚饭,而赏赐给你的。你不感到快乐吗?紧接着,你饿一会儿就不饿了,你开始自己吃自己了。大肥膘慢慢地消失了,你慢慢地苗条了。别人很惊奇,问你吃了什么减肥药?你说,天机不可泄漏。
有人说,你刘弘章胡说八道。因为你不干体力活,不知道吃晚饭的重要。错了,因为我从16岁在清华大学附中住校念高中,直至在北京医学院住校念大学,每天锻炼身体跑一万米,你说累不累?当然累!而且正是长身体的时候,但是我不吃晚饭。老师和同学都奇怪。现在有些人下班回家,扯开肚皮大吃特吃晚饭。美其名曰:“补充营养。”。其实不然,这叫找病。因为不保持饥饿感,不得病得什么?
一个人不可吃的太多。七分饱的概念,不仅是每顿饭七分饱,而且整天都是七分饱。然而我们吃的太多,我们总是担心自己饿着,总是担心孩子饿着,总是担心老人饿着,总是担心病人饿着;我们中国人见面总是问人家吃了没有,甚至请吃饭也一定让人家吃得很饱。然而我们好心办了坏事,因为我们把自己和别人撑出病来;而且浑然不知。
我们中国人不知道从什么时候吃起了晚饭和夜宵。怪哉!要知道,不吃晚饭,不会把人饿死。但是晚饭吃得多,会把人撑死。这是最基本的养生常识。尤其是小孩子,如果晚饭吃得很饱,那么极易发热。即便是年青人,如果晚饭吃得很饱,那么极易做恶梦而损害大脑。况且老年人,如果晚饭吃得很饱,那么极易发生猝死。
吃晚饭和夜宵的坏习惯,造成了中国食品的紧张。一边是农民大量地生产粮食,牧民大量地生产牲畜,果农大量地生产水果,渔民大量地捕捞鱼虾;一边是汽车、火车不停地运输;而另一边呢,是十三亿个无底洞。然而这一切生产运输,都可以减半。因为人类不必吃晚饭。
一个人活着不要吃很多食物,不能认为吃的食物越多越好;也不能认为不吃食物才好;一定要适量。这个量就是七分饱。怎样才能七分饱呢?这就是早餐必需吃,因为要促使肝脏的胆汁排泻;午饭要吃饱,因为要补充营养;而不吃晚饭是为了保护胃气。这就是一天要作到七分饱的方法。
有人主张每周有一天不吃饭,也是这个道理。不过,如此操作容易影响肝脏的胆汁排泻。还有人主张每月有三天不吃饭,这样也不好,同样会影响肝脏的胆汁排泻。因此每天不吃晚饭是比较安全合理的。
那么小孩子、体力劳动者、老年人、病人,如果饿了怎么办呢?可以喝果汁、吃水果。
如果孩子从小就培养这个良好习惯,那么他就会感觉到一天的时间很充沛。他不会因为饭后写作业而感到很困倦。
如果成年人培养了这个良好习惯,那么他就会感觉到下班之后的时间很充沛。他不会因为晚饭占据的时间而影响娱乐。
如果老年人培养了这个良好习惯,那么他就会感觉傍晚的时间很长。他不会担心夜间突发猝死。
当然最受欢迎的应当是家庭主妇,她们最爱算账;如果全家不吃晚饭,那么饭钱就省了不少,煤气费也省不少,也不用刷碗了。当然也把自己解放了。
也正是因为如此,过去上自皇帝,下到农民都是不吃晚饭;不信你问一问老年人。不过,说我们汉族人绝对不吃晚饭是不对的。过去,我们汉族人每年只吃一顿晚饭。这顿晚饭要在每年除夕的交子时刻吃。子时是23点—1点。也就是说,除夕晚饭要在此时吃;不过都是吉祥话,拜年的话,而不是大吃大喝。因为在子时吃饭,因此这个饭叫饺子;又因为是夜饭,因此饺子是素馅的。不过饺子不能多吃,长辈吃四个,小辈吃八个,这叫四平八稳,取个吉利。同时长辈要给小辈押岁钱,小辈要给长辈磕头。
不过,现在的汉族人,已经不听老一套了。除夕之夜要吃丰盛的晚饭,而且夜里24点还要吃饺子,而且饺子里要放很多肉,而且要多吃。于是除夕之夜的医院最忙,你看吃撑着的、喝醉的、冠心病的病人都挂了急诊;弄得医生手忙脚乱,因为有些医生也是半醉值班。这叫高高兴兴过大年吗?纯粹是丧气。
(2)为什么现在盛行吃晚饭
这是在新中国刚刚成立的时候,苏联专家提倡一日三餐造成的。这些苏联专家批评中国人的饮食习惯不合理,说每天把食物集中在中午,极易造成暴饮暴食而损害肠胃。因此他们大力宣传一天要平均分配食物摄入,叫作三四三原则。也就是说,早饭吃全天食物的30%,中饭吃全天食物的40%,晚饭吃吃全天食物的30%;只有这样才是符合营养科学。当时,苏联专家的号召就是圣旨,于是城里的公众积极响应号召,都吃晚饭了。
可是当时,中国的农民不听这一套,照样不吃晚饭。他们早晨天不亮就空腹下地干活,然后回家吃点儿早餐。吃完早餐有下地干活,干到中午吃午饭;吃完午饭就睡觉,叫歇晌。歇完晌又干活,这一干就到天黑。回家之后干什么呢?有的就喝一碗粥,有的就玩去了。当时,苏联专家很生气,说中国的农民不懂科学。
到了1959年,中国农村成立了人民公社,农民一律免费吃大食堂;一日三餐,不吃白不吃,农民当然吃晚饭了。然而仅仅一年的丰盛晚饭,就把许多农民吃出病来;也迎来了1960年开始的三年粮食困难时期。因此有些农民说:“大食堂的晚饭,把中国吃垮了。”细想也是,这个晚饭把几亿农民的食物需求量,翻了一翻。中国大陆有多少粮食储备能够如此消耗,不把粮库吃得精光不算完。结果真的吃光了,怎么办?饿着呗。于是,中国的城里人也跟着倒霉饿肚子。因此中国人一饿就是三年;当然,三年粮食困难时期,还有其它原因。
不过,在三年粮食困难时期,中国人不再吃晚饭。因此发生糖尿病、高血压的病人极少。只是因为营养不良而发生肝炎、癌症、肺结核的病人猛增。
难熬的粮食困难时期终于过去了,中国城里人好了伤疤忘了疼,又开始吃晚饭。改革开放以后,城里的饭馆林立,而且晚上最兴隆。中国的农村也跟城里学。于是中国的病人猛增。
应当指出,外国人也提倡不吃晚饭。他们说:“晚饭送给敌人吃。”也就是说,你最恨谁,就让谁吃晚饭。
(3)刘纯在《短命条辩》里说:“过饱伤人。饿治百病。”
 
中西医都主张吃早餐
以前有篇论文,不吃早餐的人比吃早餐的人更容易长胖。
后来其他研究人员把抽样人数从二十提高到八十,结论就不成立了。
 
我发现,早上吃点东西反而饿得早;早上什么都不吃,过了中午12点也不饿。
 
我发现,早上吃点东西反而饿得早;早上什么都不吃,过了中午12点也不饿。
全都晚上找补回来?
 
后退
顶部