A slightly different approach to Weight loss
August 16, 2009 by admin
Filed under Weight Loss Information
In many western countries, excess weight is a problem for the majority of people. Those of us battling a few extra pounds would like to be able to lose it quickly, but the problem with quick weight loss is that the weight tends to come back rapidly. The healthiest weight loss programs are the ones where you lose weight slowly. It is so hard to be patient enough to wait for results, but it’s been shown repeatedly that if you lose weight slowly, by adopting healthy lifestyle habits, the weight is more likely to stay gone.
But there are healthy ways to jump start your weight loss, fortunately. You have to remember one principle that seems counterintuitive: you must eat in order to lose weight.
“Wait,” you’re probably saying. “Isn’t that how I got fat in the first place?” Well, yes and no. The reason you have to eat in order to lose weight is because when you stop eating, your metabolism slows. Your body thinks it’s experiencing a famine and conserves resources as a response. Not only will you have a harder time losing weight, you’ll have an easier time gaining it back when you start eating again. You want your metabolism to hum along at a steady rate and fine tune your eating habits to promote weight loss.
One thing that most diabetics know is that eating smaller, healthier, more frequent meals is a way to keep blood glucose levels stable. It is also a good way to keep a steady supply of energy rather than energy surges and crashes, and as it turns out, it’s a good way to steadily lose weight. If you know you’ll be eating again soon, you’re less likely to binge than if you’re starving and you know it will be six hours until supper.
You can follow this eating plan on an 80/20 schedule: eight out of ten days you follow the frequent, healthy mini-meal plan, and the other two you can eat as you normally do. The great thing is, you might feel so much better that you adopt the healthy frequent meal schedule for good. It feels good and is easy to maintain.
The best part is, once you have your metabolism running well, it is easier to lose weight because you’re never in “starvation” mode, binging then “being good” for a day or two. You do have to eat reasonably healthy, however.
Now, with this eating plan, there aren’t any “forbidden” foods. The more you remind yourself you can’t have that slice of cheesecake, the more you’ll want it, and the more you’re likely to binge on it along with other unhealthy foods. While there are no forbidden foods, the preferred foods are lean protein, fruit, vegetables, and complex carbohydrates. If you do this for eight days out of ten, then you can give yourself a break from it for a couple of days. Chances are that by then, you’ll have noticed you’ve lost a little weight and will be motivated to keep your healthy eating habits.
Losing weight and keeping it off is more about making lifestyle changes you can live with rather than deprivation or fasting.
Breaking the Insulin Boom and Bust Cycle that keeps you Fat!
August 16, 2009 by admin
Filed under Featured, Weight Loss Information
Most people think that extremely overweight people are simply eating too much and moving too little. While that is certainly a factor, there are other metabolic properties that have an effect, too. Obesity involves a vicious cycle in metabolism that eventually results in insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes. Learning how your metabolism works is the key to stopping this unhealthy cycle.
The processes in your body that take the nutrients you ingest and turn them to energy (whether it’s energy you use by exercising and moving, or energy stored as fat) are collectively known as your metabolism. Your metabolism wants to give you energy when you need it, so that you can walk, work, or do housework without feeling faint or hungry.
A few years ago, everyone blamed carbohydrates for weight problems. While simple carbs like white sugar and white flour can be harmful over time, carbs themselves aren’t necessarily the “bad guys” that everyone made them out to be. If you have a healthy balance of nutrition and an active lifestyle, your metabolic furnace will run well. But sometimes it gets out of balance, you gain weight, and you raise your chances of acquiring diabetes and heart disease.
What happens first is a blood sugar spike that follows consumption of simple carbohydrates. To cope with the sugar overload, your body produces extra insulin. Whatever unused energy from the food is not used is stored as fat. After a while, your body becomes resistant to the effects of insulin and stops using insulin efficiently. Your blood sugar levels increase, which promotes further insulin resistance. Weight gain is very common in this pattern of eating. After several years of this, your body cannot use insulin well, and you end up with type 2 diabetes, which raises your risk of other health problems like heart disease and kidney disease.
Unfortuantely, there isn’t a simple fix to this metabolic cycle that causes obesity. You have to help your metabolism get back to normal again. That is a lot of what happens when people are newly diagnosed as diabetic. Once they are regularly monitoring blood sugar levels and can see exactly how high their blood sugar goes after a couple of donuts, they can clearly see how those simple carbohydrates can cause long term problems. Decreasing your intake of refined sugars and increasing your exercise are the two proven ways to break out of this metabolic spiral, lose weight, and have a healthier body.
Fitness Camp to Home: A guide for parents!
August 16, 2009 by admin
Filed under Weight Loss Advice
It wasn’t easy sending your child to fitness or weight management camp. It was probably very expensive, and you no doubt missed your child. A teen can change an awful lot over a summer, even without going to weight loss camp, and it’s tough to miss out on that. Once your child returns home, he or she needs support in maintaining healthy habits learned at camp. There are a number of reasons that children have a tough time maintaining their weight loss once they return home. Below are a few of the difficulties and how you can help avoid them.
Unrealistic expectations are common because parents forget that their teen faces the double difficulty of losing weight while still growing. Sometimes they don’t so much lose weight as they gain height and “grow into” their weight. The point is, when they return home, they may not have lost that much weight. But don’t focus so much on the number on the scale: he or she may have grown an inch over the summer, making any weight lost more significant. Be positive about what your teen has accomplished rather than comparing it to what you think he or she should have accomplished.
Parental guilt can be destructive all around. Some parents feel guilty for “letting” their child become overweight, and some feel guilty about sending their child to weight loss camp. When your child returns home from camp, it’s an opportunity for the entire family to start again with healthier habits and to lose some of the old habits, like going out for ice cream a couple of times a week.
The kitchen itself could be a problem. If your child has just spent two months learning healthy eating habits and comes home to a refrigerator full of ice cream sandwiches and a pantry full of potato chips, it’s going to be exceptionally hard to maintain those habits in the face of such temptation. Before your child returns, stock the kitchen with easy to prepare and eat foods that are healthy. One of the best examples of this is fruit. In summer you can get fresh fruit easily, and for most fruits, the only preparation required is a good washing.
You may think you’re helping your teen by being a “food Nazi,” but if you do nothing but tell your child what he or she cannot eat, it’s a classic setup for rebellion. Encouragement is great. Talking it out is great. But saying “no treats ever, period” is unrealistic and not really supportive. Encourage the good habits your child has developed rather than looking for faults and pointing them out.
Be a good role model, but don’t go overboard. If you look perfect, get up every morning at 5 a.m. to jog, and happen to have a fast metabolism, your child is going to look at that as a set of unrealistic expectations. On the other hand, if they see Mom or Dad lying hour after hour in front of the television with a bag of chips and a bowl of dip, they’re going to wonder why they bothered learning their healthier habits. It is much better for everyone if your organize activities like a walk after dinner, or a weekend hike at a local park.
In summary, your teen’s return home from fitness or weight loss camp is an opportunity for the entire family to “reboot” with better eating and exercise habits. Let them know that you are supportive and that you are “there” for them and don’t go overboard in enforcing “rules” and you’ll have a healthier environment for them and for you.

