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Eat to Lose: Weight Loss More Successful with Balanced Diet

1 June 2009 7 Comments

On a drastic diet? Eat, says nutrition expert Liz Freitick.

“It may sound illogical. But you should actually eat to lose weight instead of starving yourself by extreme dieting,” says Freitick, a University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics nutritionist.

According to Freitick, severe calorie restriction can signal your body into “starvation mode,” when the body works extra hard to protect itself by hanging on to every last pound.

“Starvation mode slows metabolism and can significantly slow or even stop weight loss,” she says.

Freitick says there are three “lean by extreme” categories that can sabotage weight loss:

Liquid Diets

“Getting all or most of your food through meal-replacement drinks and other fluids never really satisfies appetite,” says Freitick. She refers to a study, published in the International Journal of Obesity, testing the theory that liquids don’t satisfy hunger.

According to the study, one group ate an additional 450 calories of jelly beans a day for four weeks. Another group consumed an extra 450 calories of soda a day during the same time period. The results revealed that the people who ate the jelly beans compensated for the extra calories by limiting other foods. The soda drinkers did not and consumed 450 additional calories each day.

“Occasionally replacing a meal with a liquid meal replacement is not going to hurt,” says Freitick. “But a consistent liquid diet can be nutritionally poor and will sabotage you in the long run. You don’t really learn how to manage eating healthier with typical foods.”

Very Low-Carb Diets

“It’s one thing to watch your carbs, especially simple carbohydrates,” says Freitick. “But regardless of their recent popularity, very low-carb diets are not a good idea.” Freitick explains that while proteins and fats may satisfy, they don’t provide a full feeling in your stomach. Higher-fiber complex carbohydrates like fruits, vegetables and whole grain do that. In addition, carbs provide a quick-release source of fuel and energy for the body.

“A lack of carbohydrates often makes you tired and feel weak,” Freitick points out. And cutting out the carbohydrate-containing foods (like fruit, milk and yogurt) that contain important vitamins and minerals may be hurting your long-term health.

Food Groups Restriction

“Most of us can’t eliminate foods we really enjoy, but we do have to limit them,” says Freitick. Your body really likes to have a variety of foods at every meal, including healthy fats, to help stoke your internal burner and boost metabolism. The trick is to choose foods for your meals from each food group (grains, fruits, vegetables, low-fat dairy and lean proteins) as often as possible.

Along with this, it helps to figure out whether you’re eating because of hunger or out of habit or other reasons. Then learn to stop eating before you’re over-full — that is, to stop when you’re comfortably satisfied.

Nutritionists recommend a weight loss of one-half to two pounds per week (an average over time) by figuring how many calories it will take for you to lose and to maintain your weight. Freitick says calorie-counting doesn’t work for everyone, but calories do count when you want to lose weight. The calorie level you need to shed pounds is based on gender, activity level and overall metabolism. A simplified, general rule is that women should not eat fewer than 1500 calories a day; most men should eat at least 1800 to promote weight loss.

It can be a challenge to eat fewer calories while eating plenty of healthy foods, but doing so along with getting regular heart-pumping exercise will give you the best results. Most important: choose healthy foods in moderate amounts and enjoy eating.

Found this great article via Twitter from The Estacada News. Thought it was a great one to share here.

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7 Comments »

  • Kim said:

    I have lost about 55 lbs in the last year and I have 20-25 lbs left to go. At first the weight just melted off but now I’m having trouble getting those last few off…I really need to work on my meal plans and get more nutritious food into my diet.

  • Diet said:

    thank you, this one help me alot.

  • Coach Jenn (author) said:

    Hi Kim – Thanks for the comment. Adding strength training is key. I was stuck with my last 15 to lose until I added strength training. You can do it! Feel free to email me with other questions or concerns too.
    - Coach Jenn

  • Margaret said:

    This is a great resource on maintaining fitness and well-being.
    People focus to much on one aspect of their food or exercise regime, rather than looking at the overall picture.
    Thanks for sharing your knowledge with everyone.

  • Angels in my Life said:

    it is really important to have a strict diet in order to have a good and healthy body…

  • Supernova said:

    thanks for the tips..this is really helpful…

  • Quaxerenexeby said:

    Hi, Congratulations to the site owner for this marvelous work you’ve done. It has lots of useful and interesting data.

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