Plateaus and Pitfalls
Here is the second article I got from a friend in my hospital support group. I hope it helps someone.
God bless you,
Annette
From: "Brandee"
Date: Fri Jan 20, 2006 8:20 pm
Subject: FW: [HFBSSG] Article: Plateaus and Pitfalls brandee290174
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Plateaus and Pitfalls:
Overcoming Weight Loss Obstacles
By Renee Cloe
ACE certified Personal Trainer
Extracted from The Fitness Partner Connection ? at
http://primusweb.com/fitnesspartner/
I'm eating a low-calorie, low-fat, high-carbohydrate diet.
I'm exercising 5 times a week. I'm doing everything right and
I'm still not losing any weight. Why not? That's the million-dollar
question asked by plateau campers everywhere. They seem to be doing
everything right... and yet it's not working. There are several factors
that can trip up your best weight loss efforts. If you can identify
and conquer them, you'll be well on your way to long-term leanness.
Let's start with your exercise program. Been doing the same thing
for a while? Getting bored maybe? When your routine becomes ho-hum,
your body quickly adapts to it and your results are less dramatic.
So, if you always do the same aerobic activity at the same intensity,
or you always do the same circuit of weight machines in the same order...
Stop that!
To keep seeing results you need to present yourself with new challenges.
It's important to try new things, choose activities that you genuinely
enjoy, and exercise at an intensity that challenges you. Whether you're
trying something new or just spicing up the old routine, you want to
achieve a gradual and progressive increase in intensity. This might
mean incorporating an occasional hilly route into your bike rides,
intervals of slow jogging into your walks, adding some free weights
to your machine workout, or signing up for a spinning class instead
of reading magazines on the stationary bike. Just keep it interesting.
Boredom and complacency can unravel your best-laid plans.
Weight training is the cornerstone of a lean body and a fast
metabolism. The more lean muscle you have, the more calories your
body burns throughout the day. If you've been doing tons of
cardiovascular activity, but slacking on the weights, that could be
one of your sticking points. On the flip side, if you've been
faithfully pumping iron but you can't get shed the fat; perhaps a
little more aerobic activity is in order. The two modes of exercise
compliment each other. The weights strengthen and tone the body,
and the cardio defines it. Together with stretching, they form the
basis of any well-rounded program.
The other critical factor in successful weight loss is, of course,
your diet. The old bodybuilding adage is that success is 80 percent
diet and 20 percent training. In other words, you can have the best
training routine around, but if you're not eating right, your results
will still be minimal.
Take a good hard look at the way you've been eating. Have you been
taking in too many calories? Too few? Do you diet and deny yourself
all day only to binge at night? Are you consuming an overabundance
of highly processed carbohydrates? Is your protein intake adequate
for your size and activity level? Have you perhaps gone overboard by
trying to eliminate all fat from your diet? Do you eat large
quantities of "good" foods without ever feeling truly satisfied?
Can you remember the last time you ate a fresh vegetable?
If your results with a traditional low-fat, high-carbohydrate diet
have been less than stellar, you may want to do some research into
Paleolithic nutrition, The Zone, or the Mediterranean diet. These
diets are based on an adequate but not excessive amount of lean
protein, an abundance of fresh fruits and vegetables, and small
amounts of monounsaturated fats like those found in nuts, seeds,
and olives.
Whichever eating plan you choose be sure to adjust it accordingly
depending on how you feel and how your body responds. Don't ever
blindly follow a rigid "diet" based on someone else's rules and
guidelines. Be flexible and focus on small positive changes.
Balance, moderation, and common sense are key.
Some suggestions:
- Drink plenty of water.
- Eat several small meals and snacks a day (4 - 6 if your schedule
allows) to keep your metabolism in high gear and help to stabilize
your blood sugar throughout the day. Don't go more than 5 hours
without eating.
- Make sure that your protein intake is adequate. Your protein needs
are based on the size of your lean body mass and your activity level.
People with more muscle mass or more intense training routines
require more protein. For a protein recommendation in grams, multiply
your weight in pounds (1 kilogram = 2.2 pounds) by one of the
following numbers:
0.4 Current RDA for sedentary adult
0.5-0.75 Recreational exerciser, adult
0.6-0.9 Competitive athlete, adult
0.8-0.9 Growing teenage athlete
0.7-0.9 Adult building muscle mass
0.8-0.9 Athlete restricting calories
0.9 Maximum usable for adults
(Nancy Clark's Sport's Nutrition Guidebook, Second Edition -
Lemon 1995; Lemon et al. 1992; Walberg et al. 1988)
- Choose mostly lean protein sources such as chicken, fish,
egg whites, low fat dairy, and soy.
- Watch your intake of highly refined carbohydrates such as waffles,
fat-free cookies, rice cakes, and white bread. Try to replace them
with heartier grains or legumes such as oatmeal, beans, lentils,
and sprouted or whole grain breads. These are higher in fiber,
protein, and other nutrients and they hit your blood stream more
slowly, giving you a longer lasting source of fuel.
- Don't be afraid of heart healthy monounsaturated fats like those
found in olive oil, nuts, seeds, and avocado. The omega-3 fatty
acids found in fish are quite beneficial as well. A little bit of
fat will slow the entry rate of carbohydrate into your blood stream,
keeping blood sugar stable and helping to reduce hunger, mood swings,
and cravings.
- Include a little protein, carbohydrate, and fat with each meal or
snack. You'll be more satisfied with your food and less likely to
get hungry between meals.
- Eat a variety of different foods and don't get obsessive! Eat well
the majority of the time and enjoy some occasional treats.
The final, perhaps most important, component of weight loss success
is your attitude. Pay special attention to your mental and emotional
connections to food and exercise. If you find yourself sitting on
the sofa, watching television and eating ice cream rather than
working out, ask yourself why. There has to be some benefit to it,
some payoff that, at the time anyway, seems greater than your
long-term goal of health and fitness. You have to identify and
acknowledge your fitness downfalls before you can do anything to
change them. Remember that you can't continue doing the same thing
the same way and expect different results. If what you're doing is
not working, make changes!