DreamHost Good Host BurnTheCallories: 2010-11-07

Saturday, November 13, 2010

5 great diet plan for better weight control

Having a right diet plan is a key for diet success. I gave u a few tips that maybe realistic for u to try...

Dieat Plan Tip #1 - Eat Slowly - Take your time when you sit down to eat.The chances you will stuff yourself or overeat diminish and you will reach the point of satiety much more quickly if you eat slowly! The more you are satisfied with what you have eaten the less likely you will continue to think of food. That chocolate Black Forest cake won't be as 
tempting either!

Diet Plan Tip #2 - Have Delicious Meals That Fit Your Meal Plan Prepared Ahead Of Time. Having meals prepared ahead of time makes it convenient to eat according to a plan and on schedule.
You can make it more convenient to stick to your diet plan than it is to eat that bag of candy by having your diet plan meals prepared and available when it is time to eat-- and when you get
hungry.

Diet Plan Tip #3 - Get Used To Eating For Your Purpose Instead Of For Your Taste Buds. Satisfying your taste buds when you get the urge to gorge down a Big Mac will
never develop a healthy, lean, muscular physique! Keep in mind you are eating to develop a lean, healthy muscular physique every time you open your mouth! The temporary taste satisfaction of a jelly-filled donut will be gone real fast but the empty calories you just devoured can defeat 
a whole day's worth of bodybuilding effort!

Diet Plan Tip #4 - Be creative with your cooking to make sticking to your diet enjoyable. Ideally, with proper preparation and some recipe research you can create delicious mouth watering meals that meet your diet plan criteria.

Diet Plan Tip #5
Learn to cook. Employ spices from other parts of the world. India and China
are two countries with interesting choices to really spice up your diet plan.

Friday, November 12, 2010

Destroying your Metabolism - Why 95% of Dieters Regain their Weight within 1 Year


You have to check out this study of how to lose 17lbs in 12 weeks, but in the process totally destroy your metabolism.
"Researchers at the University of Colorado placed 250 subjects on a well-designed diet plan. After 12 weeks the subjects lost 17 pounds of fat (good), but their resting metabolic rate decreased by 125 calories per day (bad). Because calorie-restricted diets lead to less muscle and lower metabolic rates, 95 percent of dieters regain all of the weight they lost within one year."
There's no way any of those dieters can say that this type of a weight loss plan was worth it. I bet they were feeling pretty good about themselves after 12 weeks, but then the tide started to turn...
Interested in how you don't have to fall victim to these metabolically destructive diet plans?

There's only one way.
Here's the answer if you haven't already figured out the one way to boost your metabolism naturally: You must add at least 3 days of strength training per week! Resistance training will help you build back up your lean muscle, which in turn will burn more calories throughout the day. This will help to offset a reduction in calories and will negate the loss of muscle fiber from dieting alone.
These workouts don't have to be marathons. The weight loss system that I use, doesn't ask for any more than 20 -30 minutes of exercise and you can do it right in the comfort of your own home. It's even more important as we age to start engaging in strength training. The latest studies on strength training done at Tufts University were conducted on 50+ year olds.

Do you know what they found?
The subjects were able to add 3lbs of muscle in 12 weeks and "elevated their resting metabolic rate by seven percent and increased their daily energy expenditure by 15 percent." And that was with minimal workout requirements. Imagine what you could do with a complete exercise program?
The bottom line is that it is never too late to start building back up your metabolism and now you know it is easier to get started than you think.

Best of luck on losing weight the safe and natural way through both diet and exercise!
PS. If you need a place to start, check out my free weight loss e-course on "How to Lose Belly Fat Starting Today!" I've reserved a limited number of copies to give away and you can grab yours today at http://www.stephencabral.com/FreeReports.html
Committed to your success,
Stephen Cabral
Author of Fatlossity - the Complete, In-Home, Step-by-Step, Weight Loss System
http://www.Fatlossity.com

Want To Lose Fat? Here Are The Top 10 Reasons To Never Go On Another Diet

Have you ever wondered why it seems impossible to lose weight, no matter which diet you try? The reasons below will help you to understand why your weight loss efforts in the past may not have given you the results you had hoped for.

1. Diets will destroy your metabolism
Calories are not evil. They are not something to be avoided at all costs. Calories are a unit of ENERGY. Your body needs energy every day, and it does its best to stay in a state of balance (calories in = calories out, energy consumed = energy burned). Thus, if you suddenly cut calories in an effort to lose weight, your body will react accordingly. Your body does not know why it is suddenly receiving less energy, but in order to maintain balance, it will immediately begin to slow down your metabolism in order to match your energy burned with your energy consumed. That is why you will eventually see weight loss slow, then stop. This is also the main reason why dieters will gain their weight back, and then some. By dieting, you have programmed your body to burn significantly fewer calories throughout the day, so as soon as the diet ends and calorie intake increases, that extra energy will now be stored as fat.

2. Diets will make you fatter
Muscle is metabolically active tissue, meaning it is burning calories throughout the day, while body fat is basically stored energy. Think of muscle as your metabolism's engine. The bigger the engine (more muscle mass) you have, the faster your metabolism can run. Unfortunately, one of the ways that your body slows down its metabolism in reaction to a diet is by cannibalizing muscle mass, and using it for energy. So, while the scale will be telling you that you are losing weight, your metabolism will be cratering because some of the weight you are losing will be muscle mass. Then, after you quit the diet and go back to your normal way of eating, when you gain the weight back, it does not come back as the muscle you lost, but as fat. So, not long after you quit the diet, not only will you weigh the same, or more, than you did when you started, but you will have more fat, less muscle, and a slower metabolism.

3. Diets leave you with no energy
As we have learned, calories are units of energy, and your body needs energy to get through the day. Did you realize that a 160 lb man, who did nothing for 24 hours but lay in a hammock and breathe, would burn in the neighborhood of 1600 calories? Dieters will often eat as few as 800 to 1000 calories per day, so it is easy to see why they would feel tired and run down. Since carbohydrates provide our main source of fuel (glucose and glycogen), low carb diets zap you even more. Did you know that while your body can burn fat for fuel, your brain and central nervous system can only use glucose for fuel? That is why, especially during the induction phase of low carb fad diets, people often feel sluggish, irritable, and not as sharp mentally as normal. Of course, every low carb dieter will tell you that it is only bad for a few days, then your energy levels pick up again. That is because your body, wonderful machine that it is, can manufacture its own glucose to provide energy for your brain. Unfortunately, it does this by breaking down muscle mass into its component amino acids, which it then converts to glucose. So, while you may be more alert once again, this is a sure sign that your metabolism is now slowing down as you cannibalize muscle mass to make up for the energy deficit the diet is causing.

4. Diet programs are usually unrealistic
Counting calories, points, food exchanges, grams of this and grams of that, is just not a realistic strategy for long term weight loss. We all lead busy lives and being forced to do ridiculous calculations every time you eat is no way to live. Unless you are measuring all of your food, most people will generally underestimate the amount that they eat, often by more than 50% (what you estimate to be 1 cup is probably 1 ½ cups, 4 ounces is probably 6, and so on). This is especially problematic in restaurants or other social settings. So, the calculations will not even be accurate anyway.

5. Diets provide false hope to get you hooked
Anyone who goes on a calorie restricted diet, especially a low carb diet, will generally experience a significant weight loss in the first week or two. Diet programs will often try to hook you in with promises of big weight loss up front. When that promise comes true, the diet guru or diet center or supplement seller has you under their spell. The reality is, it is very easy to lose 5, 6, 7 or more pounds in your first week or two on a diet, and the reason is simple. Most of that weight is water. Of course, the person at the diet center won't tell you that. They will claim that their product or program is the magic behind your success, when the truth is you are just losing water that your body needs. Remember that we said your body's main sources of energy are glucose and glycogen? Glucose, or blood sugar, is the product of carbohydrate digestion. Glycogen is glucose that has been stored in the muscles and liver. When you severely cut back on calories, especially carbohydrates, you do not adequately replenish your muscle glycogen as you use it. Well, each gram of glycogen stored in your muscles holds 1.4 grams of water with it, so when your glycogen levels are depleted, water weight loss results. As soon as you replace your glycogen stores, that weight will come back on.

6. Diets make you feel like a failure
Eventually, everyone will 'cheat' on their diet, or more likely, go off of it all together. When that happens, the inevitable wave of guilt is sure to follow as you tell yourself that you blew it. The diet industry has to be the only industry in this country where nobody gets what they pay for, and then they blame themselves for it. Of course, people will often punish themselves for blowing it by going on a binge, which just makes the guilt worse and compounds the problem. Convinced that this failure was their own fault, the person then often goes off in search of another diet.

7. Fad diets are unhealthy
Any diet that eliminates entire food categories such as carbohydrates or fats robs your body of important nutrients. As discussed above, carbohydrates provide your body with its main source of fuel. And, while trans fats and saturated fats should be avoided, did you realize that your body needs a certain level of fat in the diet in order to function properly? Monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats are healthy fats and a critical part of your daily nutrition. Also, diets that force you to eat ridiculous foods, such as nothing but cabbage soup, rely on semi-starvation for their temporary weight loss effects, causing many unpleasant side effects in your body.

8. Fad diet marketers lie to you
Promises of fast, effortless weight loss are simply lies designed to make your wallet smaller much faster than your waistline. No infomercial gadget or magic pill or supplement will lead to long term weight loss. If any of these products really worked, don't you think you might hear about in on the news instead of some cheesy late night infomercial? Face it, if any of them really worked, nobody would be fat! The truth is, real long term weight loss takes effort, and anyone who tells you otherwise is lying to you.

9. Diets will stress you out
If you are spending your day worrying about how many calories you have eaten, or how many points you have left, or if you have had too many grams of carbs since lunch, it is inevitable that other activities, duties, and responsibilities of yours will suffer. Modern life has enough stress without adding in unnecessary and, in the long run, unproductive stress on top. Food and nutrition are essential parts of life that should be enjoyed, not feared, dreaded, or micromanaged. Committing to simple lifestyle changes instead of regimented diet rules is a more effective approach to weight loss, that will also allow you to keep your sanity intact.

10. Diets do not work
It cannot be said any more simply than that. Diets by themselves do not work. Repeat that to yourself until it sinks in for good. If all of the evidence above is not enough to convince you, just think about it. How many people do you know who have been on one diet? None. They have all been on dozens of different diets, right? Well, if any one of those diets really worked and resulted in healthy, permanent weight loss, why would anyone need another? The reason that there are hundreds of diets out there is because none of them work, and the diet marketers know that. They are just banking that you don't know it yet, and will hopefully give them more money to try one of their other miracle diets.
Receive your free health and fitness Video Tip of the Week at http://www.HealthyWeightInnerCircle.com, along with dozens of articles on fitness, nutrition, weight loss, and diets. The site also contains over 100 instructional exercise video clips, as well as weekly and monthly workout routines, and members-only forums where members can have discussions, get information, and ask questions about fitness, nutrition, exercise and more. Dave Soucy is a Fitness Expert, Coach, Consultant, Author, and Certified Personal Trainer. He is the author of several works including "A Healthy Back in Ten Minutes a Day" at http://www.YourHealthyBack.com and "The Busy Woman's Fitness Solution" athttp://www.UltimateHomeWorkout.com

Awesome Ten Quick Training Tips For Better Health and Fitness



1) MIX IT UP.... Change your training program frequently and avoid doing the same workout, over and over again. Change the exercises, volume, intensity, repetitions, and rest periods weekly or monthly. Always doing the same old routine causes your body to adapt to it, therefore there will be no changes and causes stagnation. (Linear and Non Linear Periodization)

2) Be sure your fitness goals include some or all of these aspects: structural needs, functional needs, metabolic concerns, flexibility, working with an injury, sport specific goals, and of course personal goals.

3) Have a posture assessment, so you can focus on areas to improve upon for correct spinal alignment, shoulder, knee, head positioning, structural scoliosis, and functional scoliosis.

4) Include all of the following aspects of fitness for a more effective and balanced program, Aerobic endurance, Anaerobic endurance, muscular strength, muscular power, proprioception, and flexibility.

5) For greater strength gains perform slow eccentric (negative) and fast (positive) motions to innervate more type II muscle fibers.

6) Before you start plyometric exercises, the following guidelines should be met to be certain you have strength and speed to do so. Be able to squat at least 1.5 times your body weight with impeccable form to reduce the risk of injury, and be able to perform five repetitions of the squat with 60% of body weight in 5 seconds or less.
For upper body plyometrics the athlete should be able to bench press 1x the body weight for individuals weighing over 220 lbs, and 1.5x body weight for those under 220 lbs. The athlete should also be able to perform 5 repetitions of the bench press with 60% of body weight in 5 seconds or less.

7) The majority of your strength training exercises should be compound in nature, focusing on multi-joint movements and focusing on core strength.

8) Weight belts should only be used for high intensity lifts, power lifts, and lifting maximal loads. When a belt is used, the abdominal muscles and muscles in lower back can relax, and this will promote the detraining of stabilizer muscles and may contribute to their weakness and may therefore be detrimental rather than beneficial.

9) Learn proper lifting mechanics from a professional such as a NSCA Strength and Conditioning Coach (CSCS), or NSCA, CPT, not your friend who lifts weights and think they are now a professional weight lifter just because they go to the gym.
10) Understand the Five Point Contact principle and how it is applied to most supine and seated exercises. Visit http://www.BioMechanix.net to learn about this concept.
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