[Food Rule: After dinner, walk a mile] Page: 1 of 1
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Fall 2011 University of North Texas
HMGT 1450.001 Principles of Nutrition
Food Rule Written Statement
File Number: F115620272
Food Rule: After dinner, walk a mile.
Statement: My food rule applies to the ""How should I eat?" section, concerning when to
eat, what quantities, and how to justify portions. As a general rule, if you can not justify a
walk after your meal, you are probably not eating right. This rule applies for many reasons:
if it is too dark outside to take a walk, it is too late to be healthily eating a true meal; if you
are too full after the meal to take a walk, you most likely ate too much food; and if your
meal is too short to justify a walk around the block, then you probably ate too fast.
According to The Dietary Guidelines for Americans ""poor diet and physical activity are the
most important factors"" in the obesity problem today (DGA 1). Michael Pollan's rule #54
agrees with the fact that eating a large meal late in the day can be detrimental to healthy
because it has been linked to ""elevated triglyceride levels in the blood,"" which has been
shown to cause heart disease and weight gain (Pollan 119). DGA chapter 2 says that strong
evidence shows ""portion size is associated with body weight... smaller portions is
associated with weight loss,"" which backs up the part in my rule that talks about eating a
small enough portion to be able to exercise after. DGA chapter 2 also says that strong
evidence shows ""regular participation in physical activity helps people maintain a healthy
weight,"" which reinforces my claim that a walk after dinner is a good idea. Pollan's rules
#49 and #51 support my last claim that taking longer to eat than you will on your walk is
important. Rule #49 states that if you eat slower ""you'll need less to feel satisfied,"" which
also helps with portion control; and rule #51 talks about taking longer to eat the meal than
the time the cook used to make the meal, which helps savor and prolong eating. After
reading my food rule, UNT students can increase physical activity and decrease portion
sizes. It is hard to control the type of food eaten as a college student eating in the cafeterias,
which is why my rule focuses more on how to eat than what to eat. I grade my food rule as
STRONG. My argument is heavily supported by Pollan in Food Rules, the principles are
highlighted with strong evidence in DGA 2010, and is also supported by and old proverb,
"After lunch, sleep awhile; After dinner, walk a mile."
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[Food Rule: After dinner, walk a mile], text, 2011; (https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc82792/m1/1/?q=%22dietary%20guidelines%22: accessed May 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, UNT Digital Library, https://digital.library.unt.edu; crediting UNT College of Merchandising, Hospitality and Tourism.