The Ups and Downs of Weight Loss without Wellness |
If you are reading my articles, you probably have been on at least two kinds of diets in your life. Chances are you have been on a lot more than two. Perhaps you are one of the 16 percent of all women who are continually on a diet. That is the category I was in. I used to tell people that I had been on a diet since age twelve.
Well, you and I are not alone. According to a government study in 1986, 32 million adult Americans are overweight and almost 16 million are severely overweight. Being overweight can often make you feel desperate about your life, and this desperate feeling encourages you to "try anything." A "try anything" attitude is what draws people to all of the various diets that are on the latest best-seller list at the bookstore. Unfortunately these diets, as you already know, do not work.
Statistics demonstrate that of the millions of people who go on diets every year and lose weight, only 3 percent keep the weight off. The other 97 percent lose the weight and then, bingo, put it right back on. Talk about desperation!
What is it about diets that keeps them from working? What makes the Wellness diet different from all the other diets out there? Well, simply put, this diet takes work whereas almost all the other diets promise something for nothing. Like almost everything else in life, if it is "something for nothing" it must be too good to be true. In the area of dieting, something for nothing is too good to be true.
WHY THE OTHER DIETS DO NOT WORK
One of the biggest reasons that other diets do not work is
that they do not change the Fat Stat of your body. In fact, it is the
Fat Stat which sabotages the diet. Here is how that sabotage
happens.
Let us say you go on a diet that allows only 500 calories a
day, and those calories can be obtained from any kind of food.
Your body says "Whoa, what's going on?" and tries to stop you
from losing weight by activating your Fat Stat. While you are on a
restricted diet, your Fat Stat is trying to preserve your weight and
not allowing it to go down. This causes your metabolic rate, the
rate at which your body burns calories, to go down. If it goes
down, then your body will need fewer calories to maintain
weight. So it follows that if your body needs fewer calories to
maintain weight, then even though you have restricted your
calorie intake your body will actually need fewer calories. In
other words you will not lose weight. Having slowed down your
eating habits, your body slows down too. Imagine your body in
slow motion. To hold onto its weight, your body's metabolism
slows down to use fewer calories. If you were stranded on a desert island without food this might help preserve your health,
but barring that situation, you are out of luck.
Of course, if you really restrict your caloric intake (with
starvation, for example ), or if you go on a limited calorie diet for a
period of two or three weeks, you will lose weight. This will
happen because your Fat Stat can maintain your weight for only a
limited amount of time. If you continually consume fewer calories
than your body expends, you will lose weight. But then
what happens when you start to eat normally again? Your Fat Stat
goes wild with excitement when it sees all that food. It tries to
return your body to its previous weight and to retrieve all the
weight you lost. lt soaks up the extra calories (extra because you
bad been consuming so few) and zaps the weight back on.
The Fat Stat asked your body to conserve energy while you
were dieting, so when you eat normally your body takes a while
to adjust. During this adjustment period the body gains weight
very rapidly because the Fat Stat is still busy conserving energy.
Therefore, the normal caloric intake of 1500 will seem like 2000
or 2500 to your body and it will store those "extra" calories as fat.
Remember, we evolved in a struggle for survival of the fittest.
The fittest human being would be one who could survive during
periods of drought and other natural disasters when food was
unavailable. Therefore, the slowing down of metabolism for
preservation of body weight was helpful in evolution and a
positive attribute. However, it is not a positive attribute when
you are trying to lose weight. Consequently, while it might have
taken you a month to lose 5 pounds, it may take you only two
weeks to gain the 5 pounds right back. Not only will you gain the
5 pounds back, but often, you will gain an extra pound or two
as well.
As your Fat Stat is subjected over and over again to calorie
restrictive weight loss diets, such as starvation or very low calorie
diets, it works harder to maintain your weight. So the more diets you have been on, the harder the Fat Stat fights against you. The
more the Fat Stat fights back, the harder it is to lose weight and
the easier it is to gain that lost weight back, plus a few extra
pounds along the way.
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