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Health Tips
How
To Lose Weight And Maintain Energy
If
you have excess body fat that you want to lose, you must understand
that diets don't work! In order to lose weight healthfully
and successfully keep it off, you should look at your eating.
After all, eating contributes to weight problems...particularly
the over-eating that commonly occurs after blowing a strict
diet.
Strict diets teach you willpower. Strict diets leave you feeling
deprived of one of life's pleasures - food. Rather than diet,
you should learn how to healthfully eat diet portions of
any food that you currently enjoy and would like to eat throughout
the rest of your life. Healthful eating offers more long-term success
than crash dieting. Healthful eating also ensures adequate vitamins,
minerals, protein and carbohydrates--the nutrients you need to exercise
at your best.
The following eating tips can help you successfully lose weight
plus have energy to train hard and exercise at your best.
Expect to gradually lose weight at a realistic rate of one-half
to three pounds per week depending on your body size and total amount
of fat you have to lose.
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Twelve
Steps for Successful Weight Reduction
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#1
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Write down what
you typically eat in a day, then evaluate your meal patterns and
eating habits. Do you nibble all afternoon? Devour huge dinners?
Munch-out at night? If you eat very few calories during the day
but then over-eat at night, experiment with eating a bigger breakfast,
lunch and a planned afternoon snack. Then you will be less hungry
at night and better able to eat a smaller dinner.
By giving yourself permission to eat more calories during the day,
you will not only have more energy to exercise, you will also prevent
yourself from getting too hungry. Generally speaking, once
people are ravenously hungry, they don't care about what
they eat nor how much and can too easily over-eat.
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#2
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If you over-eat
when you are stressed, nervous or lonely, remember that no amount
of food will satisfy you. You really need a hug and human
comforting. Food is only fuel. It will not resolve your problems.
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#3
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To lose weight
appropriately, you should know your calorie budget. To determine
the number of calories for your reduction diet, you first need to
estimate your maintenance calories:
- Multiply
your desired weight by 10 to determine your resting metabolic
rate (the amount of calories you need to simply lay in bed
all day and breathe). For example, if your target weight is 120
pounds, your resting metabolic rate is about 1,200 calories. You
burn off these calories even if your are injured or taking a rest
day from exercise.
- Add another
third to half of that number for your general daily activity excluding
your specific training or exercise program. If your are mostly
sitting, studying, or working at a desk, you need fewer calories
than if you are active during the day (i.e. going up and down
stairs, walking around, doing errands). For examply, a 120 pound
mother with 2 children is quite active and burns approximately:
1,200 calories (resting metabolism) + 600 calories (general activity)
= 1,800 calories (without exercise).
- Next, add
on calories burned off during your exercise program. Here is the
calorie expenditure for some popular sports, based upon weight
and calories burned per minute of activity:
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Calories
burned per minute(by body weight)
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| Activity |
110
lbs
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130
lbs
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150
lbs
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170
lbs
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| Biking,
13 mph |
8.5
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10.0
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11.5
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13.0
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| Running,
8 min/mile |
10.8
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12.5
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14.2
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16.0
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| Squash |
10.6
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12.5
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14.4
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16.3
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| Swimming,
hard |
7.8
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9.2
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10.6
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12.0
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| Walking,
normal pace |
4.0
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4.7
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5.4
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6.2
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NOTE: This is
a rough estimate of your calorie needs. You may burn more
calories or fewer calories, depending on many factors unique to
your body. For example, fidgeters need more calories than mellow
folks! A registered dietitian can help you more accurately determine
your actual energy needs.
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#4
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Subtract 20%
of your maintenance calories to determine an appropriate calorie
target for weight loss. For example, if you maintain your weight
on about 2,000 calories, you should plan to lose weight on about
1,600 calories. Note that individuals of a more petite body structure
will subtract fewer calories than average sized individuals. If
you cut back more than 20%, you will likely become ravenously hungry
and put yourself at high risk of blowing your diet.
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#5
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Organize your
eating into a balanced plan. For example, divide your 1,600 calorie
diet into three meals plus snacks, such as: breakfast - 500 calories;
lunch - 500 calories; afternoon snack - 100 calories; dinner - 500
calories. By eating the majority of your calories during the
day, you will have energy to exercise at your best. You will
also be able to (easily) "diet" at night because you will
be less hungry.
Remember: you will not gain weight by eating a substantial
breakfast or lunch. You will gain weight, owever, if you
skimp on these meals, get too hungry and then over-eat during the
evening!
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#6
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Eat slowly.
Over-weight people tend to eat faster than their normal-weight counterparts.
Your brain needs about 20 minutes to receive the signal that you
have eaten your fill. No matter how much you consume during these
twenty minutes, the satiety signal won't move any faster. Hence,
you should try to pace your eating. Practice chewing slowly, putting
down the fork between bites rather than eating non-stop, and tasting
and savouring the food.
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#7
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Once
a week, relax and enjoy a piece of birthday cake, a special
Sunday breakfast or a planned treat. This will give you incentive
to maintain your reducing program when tempted at other times.
When enjoying this treat, be sure to eat it slowly to fully
enjoy the taste. After all, the best part about food is the
taste. |
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#8
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Keep away from
food sources that tempt you. For example, read the newspaper in
the living room rather than the kitchen. Avoid jogging past the
bakery. Stand away from the buffet table at a party. By keeping
food out of sight, you will be more likely to keep it out of minde
-- and out of your mouth!
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#9
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If you tend
to eat because you are bored, stressed, tired or lonely, make a
list of ten non-food activities that you can do instead of eating:
water the plants, take a bath, call a friend, write letters, go
for a walk, go to sleep, etc.. If you eat because you are stressed,
take steps to resolve the real problem. Recognize that no
amount of food will resolve the stress. Learn how to handle stress
and anxiety without over-eating.
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#10
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Think positive.
Every morning before you get out of bed, visualize yourself eating
appropriately and acheiving your nutrition goals. This will help
you start the day with a positive attitude. Continually remind yourself
that you would rather be leaner than over-eat.
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#11
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Measure success
by looking at yourself naked in the mirror. If you see, and pinch,
less fat, you have less fat! If you weigh yourself, do so
once a week first thing in the morning, after you have gone to the
bathroom and before you have eaten. Don't weigh yourself after a
workout or at night -- that gives a false weight! Remember that
if you are starting an exercise program, you may gain pounds of
muscle while you lose pounds of fat. The scale may read the same
weight, but your body will be different.
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#12
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Be
proud of your healthy eating patterns and keep reminding yourself
that when you eat well, you not only feel better but you also feel
better about yourself. Plus, you have enough energy to exercise and
enjoy life. |
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