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Learning How to Become a Good Loser
By Charles Remington
The Quest to Reach Your Ideal Weight
It was late in the day and my next patient I would be meeting for the first
time. As the woman entered my office upon introduction I was surprised by her
response to my question of how she heard about me. She went on to say it was
through an article she read in a regional newspaper about a coach who had
become well known for getting his clients to become good losers. Once we had
taken seats in my office I asked her, “What can I do for you today?” She
answered, “Can you help me to lose weight?” My response stunned her, “Is that
all you want me to do?” You see too many times a potential client is focused on
getting started and not on what the finish will be. She went on to say that
dieting had become a second career. She described herself being very good at
losing weight, but no matter what diet she tried nothing worked for very long
and the weight always came back, usually with a few extra pounds tagging along
to make matters worse. She saw herself as weak, lacking in discipline and her
self-esteem was in ruins. I admired her determination; here she was ready to
try again, still hoping after all those years of failure. She said, “I’ve tried
everything; there’s something wrong with me.” I responded, “There’s nothing
wrong with you. You’ve been on diets that are wrong. We don’t fail at diets,
diets fail us.
Over the last thirteen years I have met thousands of people in the same fix. By
the time they come to me, a nutritionist in private practice and known to my
clients as The Fat Loss Coach, they have been on every diet imaginable. Their
experiences have already proven that diets do not work, but they do not
understand why. They come to me searching for a new diet, when what is really
called for is a new lifestyle. Why do they need a nutritional coach? They have
become good at being overweight and the beliefs and behaviors that support it.
It takes more than knowing what to do; you must develop behaviors, which keep
you doing what you know.
That was the reason I asked if losing weight was all, she wanted me to help her
do. You see, losing weight alone is not enough. To do it right, we would need
to make sure the weight she lost was fat, without the loss of lean muscle and
bring balance to her metabolism. She commented, “I think my metabolism is
dead.” After laughing, I responded by saying,” She would have to break away
from the conventional wisdom, which I have proven is not very wise, metabolism
is more than just burning calories. I explained, I would teach her the
difference between anabolic and catabolic metabolism. In simple terms anabolic
means the building up or repairing of tissue and catabolic refers to the
breaking down of tissue. To reach her desired ideal weight she would need to
learn how to balance both the anabolic and catabolic process. I pointed out,
that each time she had lost weight by dieting; her body became stuck in the
catabolic mode. Unfortunately, that is why all diets seem to work only in the
beginning. The problem with her dieting, as she lost weight, was a loss of both
fat and muscle. Muscle loss occurred because her metabolism became trapped in
the catabolic phase. Her body was shutting down because it was being under fed.
She was fighting against thousands of years of hormonal evolution, that when
under stress of under-eating the body wants to store fat. I said, “You are
fighting an opponent that is not easy to defeat, it’s a lot easier to work with
your body’s chemistry than against it.”
Her next response told me she was starting to catch on. She said, “Are you
telling me that I am an over-weight under-eater. I smiled and responded, “nine
out of ten new clients I meet are just as surprised as you, when I tell them
they are under-eaters not over-eaters.” She went on to say, I’m afraid to eat,
I spend much of my day in front of a computer and I was worried that a job with
a low physical activity meant I shouldn’t eat more than small amounts at a time
and not very often”. I said, “foods not your problem, it will become your
solution. I will teach you, the secret to managing your weight lies in three
changes in eating behavior. To control your hormonal response you must eat the
right type of food, in the proper portion, at least four times per day. This
will control your blood sugar levels and the insulin, glucagons and cortisol
response to what you eat. Like most clients, you are suffering from peeks and
valleys in your blood levels. In peeks the pancreas releases too much insulin
and the lean tissue or muscles are over-fed and the excess is stored as fat. In
the valleys there is too little production of insulin and the lean tissue is
now under-fed. This is what caused your desire for snacking during the valleys
and your over-eating late in the day. When you eat too little amounts this
increases the production of the hormone cortisol due to stress, which causes
increased fat storage, combine this with increased insulin levels during peeks
in blood sugar and the fat storage is mainly in the abdominal region.
Losing fat without losing muscle begins with not being too aggressive or extreme
with your reduction of carbohydrates. You need carbohydrate management, not
carbohydrate elimination. Carbohydrates must be controlled in two ways, first
is the glycemic index, which refers to how quickly do the carbohydrate turn to
blood sugar or glucose. Second is the glycemic load, which refers to how much
glucose it turns into. Over the last thirteen years, working with more than
10,000 clients I’ve found by reducing carbohydrates by 20% of daily needs and
within 48 hours replenishing the glycogen (glucose and water) in the muscle by
eating 100% of daily carbohydrate requirements, allows for fat loss, without
muscle loss. In essence you have two fat burning days, then a recovery day. By
doing this you’ll have the best of both worlds. You will experience fat loss
that averages between 1-2 pounds weekly, while muscles are being well fed.
There will now be a balance between the anabolic, rebuild and repair, and
catabolic, breaking down and elimination. The proper amounts of calories you
eat on your recovery day will keep the dreaded plateau that most dieters
experience.
Her final question was not surprising, she said, “this all makes sense, but how
will I be able to keep off the fat I lose? I’ve never been able to keep it
off.” My answer however took her by surprise. I said, “You don’t lose fat, you
shrink it. You do not eliminate fat cells you make them smaller. If you think
you lost something, then you don’t have to manage something you no longer have.
That is why you have never made it your lifestyle.” Learning what to eat is
half the mission getting to your ideal weight and staying there, you must also
develop new eating habits that become your eating character. Managing your
weight is a lifestyle, it’s someone you become, and not something you try. I
will help you form the belief, discipline and passion to manage your new
knowledge of eating. I have helped thousands become their ideal weight from the
inside out. Working together we can get you to your ideal body composition by
transforming your thoughts and disciplining your habits into a lifestyle.
Charles Remington
Nutritionist
2 Time Mr. Connecticut
www.thefatlosscoach.com
About The Author
Charlie is the author of a nutritional software program that has sold over
100,000 units since 1995. He starred in a nationally broadcast television
infomercial that in 1997 was recognized by the Jordan Whitney report as one of
the twenty five popular infomerical’s in the U.S.A. Mr. Remington’s expertise
and passion has been well demonstrated on several National Television talk
shows, as well as regional news broadcasts. He has been the featured guest
delivering his message that foods not the problem, it’s the solution over
national and regional radio talk shows. He has been recognized in publications,
radio and television as an expert in nutrition.
Link to this page
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