| When we discover that we are heavier
than we want to be, we have a natural inclination to eat less food. We
may skip lunch or eat only a tiny amount of our dinner in the hope that
if we eat less our body will burn off some of its fat. But that is not
necessarily true. Eating less can actually sometimes make it more
difficult to lose weight because of the imbalance in your lifestyle.
Keep
in mind that the human body took shape millions of years ago, and at
that time, there were no such things as diets, let alone fad diets. The
only low-calorie event in people's lives was starvation. Those who
could cope with a temporary lack of food were the ones who survived.
Our bodies therefore, have developed this built-in mechanism to help us
survive in the face of low food intake.
Losing
weight is not something you can do overnight. A carefully planned
weight loss program requires common sense and
certain guidelines. Unfortunately, there is a lot of misinformation
floating around and lots of desperate people are easily duped and
ripped off.
Every day you can open a magazine or
newspaper and see advertisements promoting products, pills or patches
that will take excess weight off quickly. Everyone seems to be looking
for that magic weight loss pill. Millions of people are trying to lose
weight, spending billions of dollars every year on diet programs and
products without long-term success.
Often people
do lose some weight but if you went back and checked with the same
people five years later, you would find that nearly all of them have
regained whatever weight they lost due to the fact that their lifestyle
didn’t change.
The myth is that people get
heavy by eating too many calories. Calories are a consideration it's
true, but overall they are not the cause of obesity. People actually
take in fewer calories each day than they did at the beginning of the
last century. If calories alone were the reason we become overweight,
then we should all be overweight. But we are not.
Collectively,
we are heavier than ever. Partly it is because we are more sedentary
now than ever before. But equally as important is the fact that the fat
content of the western diet has changed dramatically. And because
it’s quicker and easier than ever before to purchase junk
food full of saturated fat, people simply eat too much of it without
considering the health related problems of eating so poorly. In a lot
of cases it’s not until people are actually confronted with
the real possibility of something happening to them that they take
action and commence a dieting plan.
On the other
hand, when most people decide to do something about their weight or
determine that they want to change their lifestyle, a lot of the time
it’s a spur of the moment decision or a New Year’s
resolution. Deciding to lose weight without having put any thought or
planning into it is like wanting to get a house built without a plan.
People
find out and plan their holiday destination, plan to build a home and
yet when it comes to losing weight, they don’t plan a thing.
There is a great saying along the lines of - people don’t
plan to fail, but rather they fail to plan. It’s so very
true. If people took the same approach to weight loss as they did at
planning their holidays, then their chances of success would be as good
as having a great holiday.
The average person simply
does not plan to lose weight, they just want it to happen and
unfortunately it just doesn’t happen that way. As a minimum
before commencing any dieting plan, people should have short, medium
and long term weight loss goals. They should also write down who
inspires them to help them keep motivated through the tougher times.
It’s
very important to know what’s being eaten on a daily basis
before commencing a diet, so a food diary is an absolute must. People
need to sit down and plan their meals. If meals are being planned in
advance then it’s more likely that sensible eating habits
will become a part of a healthy lifestyle. Along with planning meals,
people should plan to make time in the day to exercise.
To
reduce body fat there does need to be a focus on increasing the amount
of exercise that’s done and not just solely on food intake.
People who diet without exercising often get fatter with time. Although
a persons weight may initially drop while dieting, such weight loss
consists mostly of water and muscle. When the weight returns, it comes
back as fat. To avoid getting fatter over time, increase the metabolism
by exercising regularly.
Leading experts now
recommend that people who want to lose weight should start increasing
their physical activity. Just being more active in general such as
climbing the stairs instead of taking the elevator, moving around
instead of sitting still, sitting up instead of lying down as well as
showing some excitement and enthusiasm instead of boredom are things
that more effectively burn calories and reduce body fat.
Generally
these days people are more aware and accepting of the fact that they
need to be exercising and a lot of people do commence exercising when
they want to do something about their weight. But what they
don’t do, is change their eating and drinking habits. They
still eat the same bad foods and probably more of it under the illusion
that everything will be fine because of the amount of exercising they
are doing.
At the beginning of a new exercise and
dieting campaign people may take to the streets by walking slowly
around in the hope of losing weight. They exercise like this for a few
weeks, they don’t lose any weight and then they quit. And the
reason they quit is a very simple one; they become frustrated and
disillusioned about not having lost any weight.
Quitting
is inevitable because the only thing that changed for these people in
those few short weeks is that they started walking. However
it’s very unlikely anybody is going to lose weight by just by
walking slowly around the street and not changing any other aspects of
their lifestyle.
People do the right thing as far
as starting to exercise is concerned but they want instant
gratification, it’s the quick fix syndrome. Instead of
looking at the long-term picture and working on changing their overall
lifestyle habits to accommodate gradual weight loss, it’s the
same old thinking of I want it now. And because it doesn’t
happen now, they quit and any weight that has been lost goes straight
back on.
Though what’s been written to
this point are some of the main areas where people and diets going
wrong, the biggest mistake people tend to make when starting a diet is
to restrict what it is they eat to such a degree that the body
doesn’t get enough of the essential vitamins and minerals,
nutrients, fibre, carbohydrates and protein to support weight loss.
When people do this, what they eventually end up doing is put the body
into survival mode and slow down their metabolism.
Weight loss will occur initially but generally
it’s only excess water weight that is lost and because the
bodies metabolism has slowed down, most of what’s eaten is
then stored as fat because the body is storing it for later use
(survival). When people then give up on their diet and go back to
eating what they were having before, they put the weight back on as
quickly as they lost it and gain more weight because their metabolism
is still working as slow as when they stopped dieting.
So
where people and diets go wrong is through the lack of planning, not
having any goals, lack of inspiration to stay motivated, not eating
sensibly, skipping meals, restricting what they eat, making bad rather
than common sense choices, having the wrong mindset, acting on a whim,
not exercising or not enough vigorous exercise, the lack of commitment
and not being mentally prepared to handle the bad days that come along.
If people sat down and mapped out a plan of what it
is they wanted from a change of lifestyle just as they would if they
were going on a holiday or building the dream home they always wanted,
then the majority of people wouldn’t fail. A point to
remember is that the more a person knows about themselves in terms of
what they’re doing before starting a weight loss plan, can
make a huge difference to their long term success.
When
it comes to losing weight and being able to maintain it there are no
shortcuts. People need to focus on the long-term health benefits of a
change of lifestyle rather than wasting their time on unhealthy quick
fix diets.
Successful long-term weight loss comes
from a combination of all the things that have been mentioned in this
article. The chances of success for those people who implement any of
the ideas contained here are going to be far greater than for those
people who decide do something about their weight problem based on a
whim.
Copyright © 2005 Mark Allan. All
rights reserved.
This article may be freely
distributed electronically or in print as long as the
author’s bio and links are included.
About
the AuthorMark Allan is a health, wellness and
weight loss mentor and author of the eBook “How to Eat and
Drink What You Want and Looook Great”. Log in and get a FREE
personal online weight loss profile at www.easilylookgreat.com and find
out what can be done to help you lose weight, gain weight or maintain
your weight by simply changing your lifestyle.
Mark Allan
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