There are times on
your weight loss journey when progress can come to a halt. Days or weeks can go
by without you seeing movement on the scale, and it can get downright
frustrating. After working with thousands of clients, I’ve noticed certain
patterns that can cause this weight loss stoppage. Here are 3 of those
patterns.
1) Eating more than you think you are.
Weight Watchers,
Jenny Craig, Zone Delivery Service, and other diet systems have one undeniable
benefit to them – they define for the average person how large an actual serving is. Most of us underestimate the volume of
food we eat (and consequently, underestimate the number of calories we consume
in a day).
By fixing in your
head what a serving size or portion of food looks like, we can better estimate
(and consequently, evaluate and calibrate) the amount of food we eat at each
meal. Keep in mind, when it comes to weight loss, you need to take in less
calories than you burn each day.
Two good rules of
thumb :
- A
portion of meat (3 oz.) is the size of a deck of cards.
- A
portion of carbohydrates (1 cup) is the size of a tennis ball.
Please remember to
fill up on non-starchy vegetables – they are full of nutrients, have very
little impact on blood sugar, and contain little in the way of calories.
2) Not eating frequently enough.
It is a social custom
to eat three square meals a day. While this may do for social purposes,
for weight loss, you will want to aim for more frequent feedings. It is
recommended that you consume a minimum of 5-6 small meals each day. By doing
so, your body gets the signal that food is abundant, and there is no need to
conserve energy.
Additionally,
frequent feedings maximize your metabolism, as your body is constantly busy,
burning calories by digesting your meals. By not letting too much time pass
between meals, you stabilize blood sugar levels since they never really get the
chance to drop. By keeping your blood sugar stable, your hunger levels are
minimized, decreasing the chances that you will be tempted to overeat at your
next meal.
3) Choosing to drink your calories instead of eating
them.
This is a very common
problem among those attempting weight loss, due to the abundance of healthy diet smoothies, protein concoctions, and
weight loss shakes. There are 2 factors to keep in mind when relying on these
liquid meal replacements.
First, many of the
liquid diet shakes on the market and all fruit smoothies have an abundance of
sugar in them. This causes an immediate surge in energy followed by a huge
crash due to the release of insulin to control the blood sugar rise. This
dramatic shift in blood hormone levels (particularly insulin levels) is
something you want to avoid, both for health reasons and for weight loss.
Secondly, most weight
loss shakes are devoid of fiber. Fiber is one of your most precious allies when
you are dieting. It helps you feel full and blunts the rise in insulin levels
when all that sugar hits your bloodstream. While fruit smoothies do contain
some of the fiber from the pulp of the fruit, a better strategy would be to eat
the actual fruits contained in the smoothie.
Lastly, the amount of
calories that can be concentrated into a shake or smoothie is far greater than
the equivalent volume of actual food. A
16 oz fruit smoothie may contain as many as 600 calories, and will not fill you
up all that much! On the other hand, eating 600 calories of fruit will prove to
be much more than the typical person can manage in a single sitting (at least,
I personally don’t know anyone that can eat more than 2 pounds of bananas at a
single sitting!).
Think about it- when
making major dietary changes, you want to get the most out of your calories.
Wouldn’t you rather fill up, rather than drink something and be hungry again
soon after? weight loss, Weight Watchers,
Jenny Craig
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