Who Wouldn't Want to Lose Weight Without Dieting?
Of course we'd all like to Lose Weight Without Dieting?
But is it really possible?
I think at some point we have all asked this question and searched and hoped for the magical answer.
First, let me say that the answer isn't magical.
And second, allow me to share my definitions of "diet" and "dieting".
I
think when we ask "is it possible to lose weight without dieting?",
what we are really asking is "how can I lose weight without denying
myself the pleasure of the foods I really love?"
In this sense,
"diet" refers to a specific food format with food restrictions. With the
Atkins Diet, the number of carbohydrates you eat are restricted. With
Weight Watchers, the number of calories in a day are restricted. With
the "HCG Diet", calories and general nutrition are restricted!
So
that is one definition of "diet". But the other way the term "diet"is
used is to generally describe how we eat. On "Superbowl weekend, I
follow a strict pizza, chicken wings and beer diet"! Another example, in
my personal case, would be "I follow a well balanced, high nutrition
diet." No food is restricted on Superbowl Weekend (okay, maybe no tofu
or brussel sprouts... ) and similarly no food is absolutely taboo the
way I eat either (again with the exception of tofu and brussel
sprouts!).
In my case, I have learned how to eat in a manner that
allows me to replace the meals I care very little about (mostly
breakfasts and lunches) with an easy-to-prepare, inexpensive, high
nutrition alternative. This leaves me free to enjoy the odd pizza,
pastry and burger and those rich and tasty dinners I love so much! By
doing this, I have a "diet" that allows me to lose weight without
dieting.
I know we have all partially fallen for, or at least wanted to believe, that there is some "Secret Trick" to weight loss:
"This one simple exercise will give you 6 pack abs, with just 2 minutes per day!"
"The herbal weight loss secret your doctor won't tell you about!"
"Eat this one simple food and never diet again!"
The
truth of the matter is, your body is a complicated machine and no
mechanism within it works in a vacuum. With the human body, it's more
like: "most of the time" if you do THIS, then THAT will happen. But THAT
can't happen if you also did "that other thing" as well.
Most
diets today work on the premise that if you simply burn more calories
than you consume then you will lose weight. On the surface, that makes
perfect sense, and that is why most of us buy into that logic. But if
that were true, and calories in, calories out were the only factors in
weight loss, then why is it that 80-95% of diets fail within a year?
Here's
an interesting story from my own experience. When I was in my early
20's, I volunteered for 3 months in a Guyana, South America. During 5 of
those weeks we were in the rainforest and the only food we had was: a
big bag of rice, a big bag of flour, and a big bag of chick peas. We
also had some yeast, salt, and a couple of other small items. But the
bottom line was, we basically only had carbohydrates with no protein,
fat, vitamins or minerals. At the end of those 5 weeks, all the men in
our group had turned to emaciated stick figures while all the women had
gained weight and plumped right up!
We all ate the same thing. We
all did the same work. We all got the same amount of sleep. The only
difference was our sex. Because we have different hormones working
within us, each of the sexes responded to this form of nutritional (not
caloric) starvation differently.
So let me explain what I have
learned about nutrition and our body's responses and how I now use that
information to lose weight without dieting.
First off, calories in
and calories out can't be discounted. It is an integral part of the
formula. Calories play a direct role in providing us with energy. But
indirectly, calories are also usually accompanied by nutrition in the
form of vitamins, minerals and trace elements. So generally speaking,
when you decrease your calories, you decrease the nutrition that
accompanies them as well. We have to be super careful about that.
Equally
important to the volume of calories is the ratio of calories in
protein, fat and carbohydrates. I'm sure you can imagine that a 2000
calorie per day person will have a different physique consuming 15% of
their calories in the form of protein as opposed to somebody who only
consumes 5% protein.
One super important factor that is usually
overlooked is your hormone production. Human Growth Hormone (HGH) will
burn fat, build muscles and strengthen bones. Insulin will block HGH.
And Cortisol is HGH's arch nemesis and builds fat, burns muscle and
depletes bones of nutrients.
What you eat. The times you eat it.
The amount of fat you're already carrying. Your sleep patterns. Your
daily stressors. And the toxic load on your body are all factors in how
your body produces these hormones. What are you doing to maximize your
HGH potential and minimize your cortisol production?
Then of
course there is the level and type of exercise you undertake and your
body's base metabolic rate. ALL of these things play a role in your
weight loss or weight gain.
Think about this one "weight loss
fact": There are 3500 calories in a pound of fat. So, if you've been
maintaining your weight and then decrease your daily calorie consumption
by 500 calories, then in 1 week (7 days x 500 calories = 3500 calories)
you'll have burned off a stored pound of fat.
That make perfect sense and seems easy enough.
But
what if you replace a 600 calorie, high protein, nutrient rich
breakfast with a 100 calorie can of pop? What would happen to your
insulin level? your HGH production? your base metabolic rate for the
day???
Do you still think you'll lose 5 pounds on the week??? I would wager that you may actually gain weight!
Stay
tuned. In upcoming articles I'll go over each of these weight loss/gain
factors one by one. By the end you should have the knowledge necessary
to know how to lose weight without dieting!







0 comments:
Post a Comment