| 10
Myths About Losing Weight
By Wayne A. McDonald
Losing
weight is simple. There are two steps involved.
First, know what to do, then do what you know.
We tackle the first step by walking you through
the common myths surrounding losing weight. This
article will give you the know how. The second
step, I'm afraid, is up to you.
Myth
#1 You can lose fat fast.
Let's distinguish between weight and fat, specifically,
body weight and body fat. Body fat is stored energy,
waiting to be used. Body weight consists of this
fat, but also includes muscle, bone and blood.
You can lose weight fast, but losing fat is a
slower process.
You
can not lose more than half a kilogram of body
fat a week. If that does not sound impressive,
losing half a kilo represents 16,500 kilojoules,
or walking 80 kilometres! If you lose weight any
faster, it will not be body fat. A good bodyfat
level for female is 26% fat, and yet this represents
half a million stored kilojoules or roughly 2,000
pancakes. So give yourself some time to make an
impact.
People
can falsely represent diets by working the idea;
the faster you lose weight, the more effective
the diet. Any recommendation that sounds like
this, "I've lost 6 kilograms in only 4 weeks,"
can be analysed using this following formula.
At best, this person lost half a kilo of body
fat each week, multiplied by four weeks, equals
2 kilograms. Therefore, they lost four healthy
kilograms of muscle and fluid. Losing such a large
amount of muscle and fluid is easy, but not desirable.
Myth
#2 Eliminate carbohydrates like rice and pasta.
Rapid weight loss can occur on diets very low
in carbohydrates. But don't get excited, the weight
loss is water and muscle, not fat. Carbohydrates
are the body's most readily available energy source.
Limiting your intake of carbohydrate forces your
body to dive into its stored glycogen deposits
(carbohydrates are converted and stored as glycogen
in the muscle). Stored glycogen holds four times
its weight in fluid. As the stored glycogen is
used, the attached fluid is released from the
muscle and eliminated from the body. Instant,
and for some, significant weight loss. Many athletes
who compete in weight categories use this technique.
Moreover,
once the body consumes the glycogen deposits,
it strips away muscle tissue converting, through
a complicated process, protein into glycogen.
Muscle weighs four times that of fat and its loss
dramatically lowers your body weight - not to
mention a reduction in your metabolic rate, energy
and strength. However, no reduction in fat.
This
poor weight loss will only be temporary. You can
not go without carbohydrates for long. Your brain
uses carbohydrates exclusively and will make you
crave something sweet to feed itself. Soon as
you eat carbohydrates again, the muscle restocks
and all the weight is put back. A yo-yo effect.
Just like the temporary weight (fluid) loss achieved
using a sauna. Twenty minutes after your next
drink all fluid, and weight, is replaced.
A
much better eating plan only restricts the amount
of carbohydrate allowing you to gain all the energy
you require and uses protein foods to control
the insulin (hormonal response from eating carbohydrates)
responsible to storing the carbohydrate as fat.
Myth
#3 Eat less.
I know what you are thinking when you try to lose
weight by eating very little. You think your body
will use stored body fat if you deprive it of
any other form of food or energy. But this is
not what the body thinks or does. The most important
thing to keep in your mind is change what you
eat. To lose fat effectively you need a diet where
you actually eat more food.
The
body does not know the difference between a mars
bar and a carrot - it assumes the same amount
of food will supply the same amount of energy.
Our body is an adaptation machine trying to always
maintain status quo. This refers to our level
of bodyfat also.
When
you cut down the amount of food you eat, stretch
receptors in the stomach lining send a message
to the brain. The brain is told you have consumed
less food and assumes less kilojoules. Wanting
to maintain body fat at a constant level, the
body adapts to the reduction in food. The brain,
fearing body fat will drop, responds by releasing
enzymes that promote the storage of energy into
the fat cells and prohibit the release of fat
from storage. Your metabolic rate is sensitive
to the reduction in food. One published study
reported that dropping food intake by only five
percent can cause your metabolic rate - the number
of calories you burn at rest - to drop as much
as 18%. The body also reacts by slowing the transition
time of food in the stomach, so you have more
time to absorb kilojoules. Some believe the numbers
of digestive enzymes increase so you absorb more
kilojoules from less food.
Basically,
if you eat less, you are fighting your body. But
do the opposite; eat more by changing your diet
to one that includes more voluminous food, such
as salad, vegetables and rice-cakes, your body
will work with you. Now your body will speed your
metabolism to burn more calories, store less fat,
push fat from storage into the blood stream and
increase the transition time of food through the
stomach so you absorb less kilojoules.
Myth
#4 Diet is the key to losing fat.
Body fat is stored energy, a fuel source for the
body, waiting to be used. While diet controls
how many kilojoules enter the body, exercise is
the most effective way of using the stored fat.
Fat loss through diet alone usually amounts to
50% of total weight lost, the rest is muscle and
fluid. Fat loss through exercise accounts for
virtually 100 % of any weight lost.
LSD
is the best way to lose fat. LSD meaning long,
slow distance. Body fat can only be used as a
fuel source in the presence of oxygen, but requires
twice the amount of oxygen compared with carbohydrates
and protein. Sitting down reading this article
you are burning pure body fat. You are breathing
enough oxygen. Do any activity that causes you
to breathe heavily and you will stop burning body
fat. As a rule, exercise at an intensity that
you could still carry on a conversation. You can
now see that to use body fat, running hard for
ten minutes is not as good as walking for 30 minutes.
Remember LSD.
Myth
#5 Supplements are unnecessary.
Dietary "authorities" often tell us
health supplementation is unnecessary for the
maintenance of good health. Maintenance of good
health only means not falling sick. Yes, if you
do not take supplements you will not become sick.
However, I like to live in optimum health - not
minimal health - and specific supplementation
can help our bodies' function at an optimal level.
In reference to losing fat, the best supplementation
to assist us is Durathon, a fat metaboliser consisting
of a powerful, adaptogenic Chinese herb, at a
potency which transfers your body from carbohydrate
metabolism to fat metabolism. Taking Durathon
can increase the number of fat calories burnt
from 3.5% to a massive 46.7% when exercising.
Significant fat loss is the only side effect of
using Durathon. Further, the "carbohydrate
sparing" action by increasing fat usage with
Durathon will also slow lactic acid build up -
decreasing muscle soreness and physical fatigue.
Durathon
is not a stimulant, contains no ephedra or caffeine
so you lose fat, not sleep. Durathon does not
interfere with any other supplement or medication.
Additionally Durathon has many health-giving properties
for uses and is a significant adaptogenic agent.
This means Durathon has increased benefits for
anyone suffering stress, physical fatigue or using
a diet low in carbohydrates or calories. For optimal
fat metabolism, take two 600-mg capsules of Durathon
first thing each morning or one-hour before exercising.
The majority of users feel the difference within
days and measure improvement within weeks.
Myth
#6 Spot Reduction.
You can not work any area specifically to lose
fat. Performing hundreds of sit-ups does not use
fat selectively from the stomach. To demonstrate
this, professional tennis players show great differences
in muscular strength between the playing arm and
the other arm, but the amount of fat is the same
on both.
Exercising
draws from all fat stores in the body. However,
women differ where they store their body fat.
Some women have little storage on their torso
and greater amounts on their arms and legs. Others
may hold the fat on their lower body and have
skinny upper bodies. Unfortunately no matter how
much fat you lose, the fat pattern you start with,
never changes.
Myth
#7 Skip Breakfast.
I know. You're not hungry in the morning, or you'd
rather sleep than eat, or you're always in a rush
and besides it means you can eat more later when
you have time. Wrong. Even your mother knows,
and she's right this time, that breakfast is the
most important meal of the day. A study of 7,000
people over ten years revealed that those who
skipped breakfast were 30 % over weight. Another
study compared two groups who ate the same amount
of food each day. One group ate the food in the
morning, the other at night. The night group gained
weight, the morning group lost weight, meaning
the energy absorbed early in the day is utilised
by the body and not stored as fat.
Myth
#8 Follow a calorie controlled diet.
While you can count calories, your body can not.
Counting calories applies a logic your body does
not use. Your body measures the amount of food
eaten via stretch receptors in the stomach lining;
it can not count the kilojoules in food. Reducing
the volume of food you consume to a set daily
intake allows your body's adaptive mechanism to
work. The body can adapt in as little as four
days slowing metabolic energy expenditure, so
your dieting has no effect on losing fat.
Moreover,
the type of kilojoules you eat is more important
than the number. The body uses energy to digest
and absorb food. The amount of energy required
to ingest fat is only 10% that of carbohydrate
or protein. On a 4,000 kilojoule diet consisting
entirely of fat your body would burn 120 kilojoules
in the digestive process. If those 4,000 kilojoules
were carbohydrates and protein, your body would
burn a whopping 1,200 kilojoules! A good reason
to maintain a low fat diet.
Myth
#9 Alcohol doesn't count.
Many people change what they eat and increase
the amount they exercise but never change their
drinking habits. Look at alcohol as you do fat
- it contains almost as many kilojoules. Worse,
alcohol does not need to be digested; it is absorbed
straight from the stomach into the blood stream
and easily stored as body fat. Furthermore, alcohol
is a depressant; it slows your metabolism.
Myth
#10 Become a Diet Martyr.
Something is wrong if you are suffering on a diet.
Are you dieting to punish yourself? Have you looked
in the mirror and hated what you saw, so you deny
yourself food as punishment. While you're on a
diet do you think, "I'm losing weight, but
I'm still fat." If this is what you do, you
have planned to fail. Dieting should be pleasurable,
it is producing the desired result of changing
what you hated about yourself. Associate the pain
where it belongs, with overeating.
Also
change the "go without forever" philosophy
to planned days off the diet. I never have any
of my clients' diet for longer than three days
in a row before having a day off the diet. The
day off the diet is a mental relief. Let's face
it, you only desire what you can not have. If
I have a client with no will power, I'll have
them alternate one day on the diet and the next
day off. It is very effective. After a year, they
have dieted for six months and these are people
who in the past would not last on a diet for three
consecutive days. You see, will power does not
work in the long run because denial is painful
and your brain will not let you suffer for long.
What
works in the long run is Yin and Yang or the power
of positive/negative. Once you become healthy
your body will crave positive foods - sugar and
fats will not taste good. But regularly trying
these foods will reinforce that you are not missing
out on the "good" things in life!
To
be successful on a diet, it is important to set
short-term goals, such as losing your first kilo.
Give yourself an immediate reward, but never with
food, go to the movies instead. A constant reward
as you achieve each goal connects pleasure to
dieting. The power of this reinforcement will
ensure your long-term success.
Wayne
McDonald B.A.Sc. is an Australian health &
fitness authority, published author in female
body composition and exercise prescription.
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