Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

Explore news, videos, and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

To get started, first

YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    The Secrets of Thin People

    Sang AnSang AnHow they get there, how they stay there

    Thin people favor bulky foods.

    Barbara Rolls, a professor of nutrition at Pennsylvania State University, has done extensive research on "calorie density," or the ratio of calories to the weight of food.

    Simply put, foods with a high water content -- fruits, vegetables, water-based soups and stews, and cooked whole grains -- are low in calories but satiating. Most also contain lots of fiber (an apple has three grams; one cup of cooked barley has six), which fills you up.

    Whether consciously or not, many thin people follow the strategy of starting out with a sizable soup or salad, which leads them to eat less for the rest of the meal. One Rolls-led study found that subjects who began a meal with a low-calorie salad -- about 100 calories for three cups -- were more likely to eat fewer total calories. "It subtracted about 12 percent of the calories from the meal," she says. Foods with a lot of water, she adds, "can help you perceive that you've eaten more." Drinking water with a meal, Rolls has found, doesn't have the same effect

    From Real Simple: The No-Diet Diet

    Thin people watch portion sizes.

    No, most thin individuals don't travel with a food scale and measuring cups or demand fat-gram counts from waiters.

    But to keep an eye on what they eat without being obsessive, many focus on filling their plates with mostly fruits, vegetables, and lean protein. "No one ever got fat from a grilled shrimp," says Stephen Gullo, Ph.D., a psychologist and the author of The Thin Commandments Diet (Rodale, www.amazon.com).

    They also use strategies such as buying just a single serving's worth of food, eating portion-controlled frozen meals, passing up gargantuan-portion family-style restaurants, and using smaller-than-normal plates.

    The National Weight Control Registry (NWCR), an ongoing study of how more than 5,000 people keep off the weight they've lost long-term, has found that successful weight maintainers tend to eat five small meals a day rather than three squares, which may make it easier to scale down portions.

    Learn Low-Fat Cooking Methods at Real Simple.

    Thin people can put themselves first.

    For five years, Anne Fletcher, a registered dietitian and the author of Thin for Life (Houghton Mifflin, www.amazon.com), worked in an obesity clinic. "So often the women I saw were people who refused to take time for themselves," she recalls. "Their whole lives were spent giving, giving, giving -- which women tend to do anyway, but it was really to a fault. Sometimes you need to put yourself first."

    Thin women prioritize eating right, exercising regularly, and reducing stress -- all of which are conducive to staying slim. Fletcher confesses to missing the occasional Little League game to work out but contends that such behavior shouldn't induce guilt. Rather, it's about taking care of yourself.

    "When people take the reins, they realize that the solution to weight control is inside them, not in some magic potion or fad diet that their mother or sister is on."

    Thin people have thin parents.

    And genes are only partially responsible.

    "Perhaps 30 percent of being thin is genetic -- the rest is environment," says James O. Hill, Ph.D., director of the Center for Human Nutrition at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, in Denver, and cofounder of the NWCR. If you're raised playing sports and eating healthy, unprocessed foods, chances are you'll continue those habits into adulthood, significantly raising your odds of staying slim.

    Holly Johnson, age 45, a co-owner of a Sarasota, Florida-based marketing and public-relations firm and the mother of an eight-year-old, describes her father as a "beanpole" and says her mother still weighs "within three pounds of what she did when she married my dad."

    But while genetics were clearly in her favor, Johnson credits healthful home-cooked meals for creating a model of good eating that helps her maintain her weight. "We always had breakfast and dinner together," she says. "I was brought up with family meals, and now my family sits down every night and lights candles. Dining and healthy eating are important to me."

    More from Real Simple:
    9 Additional Secrets of Thin People
    Too Tired, Too Busy or Too Bored to Work Out?
    Smart Snacks on the Go

     

    57 comments

    • A Yahoo! User  •  3 years 3 months ago
      Linda, I was 5'6" and 132 at your age, and most of it is not fat, it's just how your bone structure is. I wouldn't worry so hard if I were you. I look at all my pictures of when I was your age, and think......"WOW I looked great!" And one day you will too.
    • none  •  3 years 3 months ago
      I'm naturally thin. I believe that it has to do with genes and my metabolism. Because as much I want gain wieght. I just don't. I go out to eat junk food on a regurlar basis. But the wieght just doesn't show. the heaviest I've weight is 120 lbs. and that was when I graduated from high school.
    • G  •  3 years 3 months ago
      Those people who don't have a healthy lifestyle yet are still thin: chances are yea you LOOK thin, but the reality is you are not in shape. Someone who is a bit heavy but goes to the gym everyday could probably outrun you. It also means you probably have very little muscle as well. The main point is: whether you look heavy or slim is sort of the vain secondary. The main point is to be in SHAPE and healthy. When you are you feel it. Just because you are thin or heavy doesn't mean you are healthy or not healthy. It's always your habits that determine that and effect your future years.

      I'm naturally on the thinner side, but I still work out and eat healthy not to loose weight but to have more energy and better health which will increase my longevity.
    • miltowngurl  •  3 years 3 months ago
      i found out i was celiac and had to stop eating gluten. i have been eating mostly fruits, veggies, and fresh food since last october. as soon as i stopped eating gluten, the weight just fell right off without even trying. i think a lot of people don't realize that they could have allergies or even diseases related to foods. if you are overweight and have trouble losing weight, i recommend seeing your doctor, an allergist, and a registered dietician. since i don't eat foods i am allergic to, i eat whatever i want, whenever i want, however much i want, and i don't gain an ounce. if you feed your body what it needs, it will be healthier and it will find its natural (weight) set point.
    • James H  •  3 years 3 months ago
      I am 70, weigh 170, at 5'11". Work out 3 days per week.

      I weighed 170 at 21 years.

      Trick? Weigh myself everyday and make adjustments in my intake.

      Use a good disigtal scale. Noticing a 0.4 lb drop or increase is important.

      Can't get that with an analog scale.

      Weighing once per week doesn't work for me.

      Good luck.
    • Amanda  •  3 years 3 months ago
      I am also one of those naturally thin people. When I was younger, I was known for being skinny and tall (though I am not really considered that tall as an adult). When I begin college, everybody was warning me about the "Freshmen Fifteen", but I ironically lost five pounds and have been this weight for the last couple years. I do have to agree with most of what was said in the article. I usually like to eat healthy food and soups & salads before meals and I do eat smaller portions. I love to eat junk food sometimes, but I like to eat pre-packaged single servings. Most of my family is thin also. However, I don't eat five meals a day. Sometimes I don't even eat three meals a day. For the last couple months, I have been eating one meal and a decent snack a day when before I was eating 2-3 meals a day. I just eat when I am hungry. I think that is what many have a problem with. They eat out of habit and are not actually hungry, but their mind is wired to think they are.
    • sierra alexis.  •  3 years 3 months ago
      i agree with most of this, but i'm thin myself, and i don't watch my portion sizes at all. i simply eat when i need to eat and eat until i'm enitirly full. i also would like to add that healthy thin people are genrally happy. most of the time if you have a sad, deppressed person agasint a happy, and healthy person, the happy and healthy person will probally be thinner faster by far. stress is killer. being thin can be natrual too you know. and i'd have you know both my parents arn't considered to be "thin" at all but i still am. but most of this is correct, just be healthy, happy, and do what your body says. you'll be just fine.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  3 years 3 months ago
      I've had to battle weight but mostly after I turned 30. Then my metabolism plummeted. I know I can't eat what I used to be able to and stay at a good weight. I have a voracious appetite which isn't good. I'm trying to learn how to control it better. These suggestions will help a little bit. I need to just get with it and try to do it and stick to it!!!
    • Mary Jo  •  3 years 3 months ago
      Have any of you tried Chia Seeds Great fiber and energy--Don;t take after about 2:30pm. I just think keeping my weight in control depends o plenty of fiber and it gives you a full feeling. I also use flax meal good in anything you bake-or add to a salad,
    • R Willi  •  3 years 3 months ago
      I am thin and from a thin family. The reason we are all thin is because we learned proper eating habits. The number 1 thing people must realize, if you eat until you feel full you have over-eaten. Fat people get mad when I have told them they eat too much they seem to think I have magic that keeps me thin. No, its very very very simple you dont need that much food.
    • dolly  •  3 years 3 months ago
      Yes, hyperthyroidism speeds up your metabolism, so no matter how many calories you pack you will have a hard time gaining weight. That is not a good thing! It is an abnormal condition of the thyroid that in some cases can be potentially lethal. It is known to cause heart problems as well as bone loss. It can rasie your heart rate to dangerous levels. Just because someone appears lean doesn't mean their healthy. Best thing to do is educate yourselves on how your own metabolism affects your body, and for those who have an exceptionally hard time losing weight maybe you should get your thyroid hormone levels checked, because there is also a condition called Hypothyroidism which can be treated.
    • Linda  •  3 years 3 months ago
      i am 14 and really concerned about my weight im a little over 5ft5in. and i weigh about 130. i've tried eating healthier and i do good for the first day or so, but then i go back to my other eating habbits. however, i have noticed playing tennis and running helps me lose weight. but after i excercise i am really hungry and pig out on food. i have a severe case of scoliosis, so its hard for me to excercise at times. i would like to get down to 115. and i wish i was like most of you. please give me some suggestions.
    • vic simon  •  3 years 3 months ago
      arf arf arf.... bow-woooowwwww!
    • DeAnn  •  3 years 3 months ago
      I have never been thin. I have been on diets since I was 11 yrs old. The only thing that ever actually "worked" for my wieght was when I was heavily addicted to crystal meth as a teenager. After I got clean, I gained weight of course. After each of my kids I gained more weight once I quit breastfeeding.

      I eat like a bird and exercise daily. The weight just doesn't come off. I try to limit myself to 1200 calories a day and work out at least 20 mins a day. It's been like this for 6 months now, since I "got serious" again. Everyone keeps staying with it. It just isn't working. OK, well, maybe I've lost 15 lbs in the last few months but that's MONTHS. I've heard people being able to lose 50 lbs in 6 mos or an entire two pounds in a week!

      No, I'm not snacking and yes I mix in strength training. No, I can't bump it up to an hour a day or else I won't be able to see my children at all or get enough sleep. I already get up at 5 just to make it to work on time at 7:30. I am working or working out right up until bedtime. It's depressing. I miss being able to play with them and spend time with my husband. He's also starting to lose hope. He's been so encouraging, but I can tell he sees it's not working.

      I can't keep living like this, but I don't want to keep gaining. The last 2 years I've put on pounds at a pretty consistant rate. I'm now at 226, down from 240. I'm 5'2" and a size 20. It really sucks because I have over 100 lbs to lose still. BMI calculators say 108-120 for someone under 30. I'm 28. I've been over 180 lbs since I was 25. It's just steadily come on since I got clean, but I refuse to go back to something that could cost me everything including my life.

      OK, I feel better. I just needed to vent. So many naturally thin people on the first page. I hate you all. :P j/k It's just not fair though. I've been naturally obese my whole life. Even at my thinnest at 17 yrs old I was 120 - "normal" BMI even though I was on drugs and ate only 2 flour tortillas and a glass of orange juice a day. I've never had heart, cholesterol, or blood sugar problems. I've never been even close to having blood pressure problems either. I'm still healthy and my doctor doesn't understand why the only complication to my obesity is joint issues in my knees - but even that may be because my kneecaps are genetically off center (my very thin sister has it too).

      Everyone says "get healthy" when what they really mean is "stop being obese" because all the numbers say I am healthy. This diet & exercise thing is demoralizing and making me miserable. I was happy before, just unattractive. Now I'm not happy and still unattractive. What's a girl to do?
    • S  •  3 years 3 months ago
      This article is miles above most Shine posts. Everything in it is right on the money. Sure, there are exceptions no matter where you look, but the rules apply to the overwhelming majority of people out there.
    • ELISA  •  3 years 3 months ago
      Well, I was always skinny growing up till about in my late thirtys, I gradually starting gaining weight. I would go on slim fast for a couple weeks and lose 10 pds. easy. Keep it off for a year or so. After 50 my metabolism changed drastically, my physician said that it was because my metabolism was sluggish. That has continued and now I have a very difficult time losing and almost seems impossible. A nutritionist/chiropractor that I treated with almost a year said that I had some carborhydrate intolerance. I read many articles on nutrition and have tried many diets and the only diet that has really worked in the past was the Atkins diet but I have a hard time sticking to it. Any suggestions anybody? I'm still trying. I'm 4' 11 1/2". My meals consists mostly of protein, veggies and some carbs.
    • maria  •  3 years 3 months ago
      I forgot to mention, "thin" does not equate being "healthy". I am quite healthy and I am not thin at all!
    • jennifer  •  3 years 3 months ago
      i have been thin since i was born, i never really got fat, maybe just a couple of kilos. when most of women struggle to get really thin , i desire to gain a couple of weight. i eat almost every two hours,almost anything sometimes eating to my hearts content, sometimes huge amount of servings. i take tea, soda, chocolate drinks, i'm not into any work-out or exercise. i really wanted to gain weight. i am a veggie person and i rarely eat fruits.
    • maria  •  3 years 3 months ago
      I am the opposite of a lot of people here. I have a thyroid problem and eat very small portions yet I gain weight very easily. I am not not thin, but not very fat either. I have a feeling if I ate the way normal people do I would be very fat. I am relatively active. I workout for about 2 hours every day and about 4 hours on saturdays. So I think it really does depend on your body and there is not general solution for everyone. Also I don't eat unhealthy either, i just gain weight anyways. I could eat a piece of cucumber and gain weight. btw I am not unhappy, its just the way my body is so I don't think these general rules would work for everyone. oh and I have thin parents and I am not thin. So there goes that rule.
    • S  •  3 years 3 months ago
      I had to comment on this:

      Rowdygirl: "it's not just about habits and behaviors; if that were true, no one would ever be overweight."

      So you are telling me that NO ONE in the world is fat because of habits and behaviors? That's an absurd statement. Clearly there are people out there who don't do anything suggested in the article, who stuff their face with the wrong food and then don't exercise. These people do this and are fat. But if you are to be believed genetics is the only thing to blame for them? No.

      I could become morbidly obese if I tried to. Actors have put on massive amounts of weight on purpose. Clearly habits and behaviors can be THE reason certain people are overweight.

    Join us on Pinterest

    DAILY SHOT VIDEO

    We apologize. An error has occurred. Please try again.