SolveYourProblem
eLearning Series:
Burn, Burn, Burn Those Calories
(and eat healthier too)
(
15 pages )
TAKE
ACTION TO LOSE WEIGHT
Before we can
begin, we need to grasp an understanding of the problem.
Two out
of three Americans are considered overweight. The
primary cause is that we eat more and exercise less. There
is no doubt that the more advances we make that enhance
our lifestyle the heavier we become.
Wait a minute!
What about all those low-fat foods that we eat now? How come
I reduced fat in my diet but I’m still gaining weight?
It’s a simple
answer. A few years ago we all became aware of the detrimental
effects of fat in our diet. What did we do? We began to concentrate
on lowering cholesterol and taking fat out of our diets.
This is a good
thing. However, The National Center for Health Statistics
studied eating habits of 8,260 adult American between 1988
and 1991. Their research showed that Americans had significantly
reduced their fat intake but still packed on the pounds.
How can this happen?
There is no mystery. In the process of counting fat grams,
we stopped counting calories! Many of us bought in
to the theory that if it’s “low-fat” it won’t make us fat.
WRONG!
You can’t forget
about counting calories. If you eat more calories
than you need the body will store them as fat. It doesn’t matter whether
the calories are from fat or carbohydrates.
One school of
thought believes that eating small amounts of fat can actually
keep you from over indulging on total calories. The theory
is that dietary fat causes our bodies to produce a hormone
that tells the intestines to slow down the emptying process.
You feel full and therefore are less likely to overeat.
Adding a little
peanut butter to your rice cake may satisfy your hunger for
a longer period of time, thus preventing you from eating
more than you need.
Here’s more news
that is surprising. Tufts University scientists put
11 middle aged men and women volunteers on a variety of average,
reduced and low-fat diets.
The results? Extremely
low-fat diets which provided only 15 percent fat from calories
(this is a diet near impossible in real life) did have a
positive effect on blood cholesterol and triglyceride levels.
However, a reduced-fat
diet (much more realistic) only affected those levels if
accompanied by weight loss.
In fact, they
concluded, cutting fat without losing weight actually increased
triglyceride levels and decreased high density lipoproteins
(HDL), the “good” cholesterol that helps protect again heart
disease.
We can deduce,
therefore, while excess fat isn’t healthy, fat is also not
necessarily a bad thing. Without some fat in our diet, the
body won’t make nerve cells and hormones or absorb some of
the fat soluble vitamins.
Okay, so how can
you determine your ideal weight? Just how much fat and how
many calories should you consume to reach and maintain a
healthy weight?
One answer
won’t work for everybody. So you need to do some
figuring to determine how much fat and how many calories
you can have. First, you need to determine your ideal weight.
Here is a simple method to determine what that weight should
be...
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