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98 Percent of Dieters Fail: A Sensible Lifestyle is the Answer
By Josie Anderson
What the Diet Industry Does Not Want You To Know: 98 Percent of Dieters Fail. 98
Percent of dieters either quit the diet or are not able to keep the weight off
permanently. This is because diets are to restrictive and force people into
cheating because their diet is not providing the nutrition that the body
requires. Most diets require something to be cut out. Low Carb Diets require
that you restrict carbs, the body needs carbohydrates for energy thus if there
is restrictive carb intake the body will crave carb laden foods causing diet
sabotage. Low fat diets require that you cut out fat, making people fear all
fat believing that any fat is bad, and causing the body to crave fat laden
foods.
Why is the diet industry going to set you up for failure and not tell you that
you have a 98 percent chance that you will come crawling back to them yet once
again. To get your money. It’s been estimated that $46 billion was spent on
diet products and programs last year alone. The average diet plan cost over $80
dollars each week. If 98 percent didn’t fail the diet industry wouldn’t be
needed any longer. Nobody would be overweight and everybody would know what
would work to lose weight.
Sports Nutrition: the Lifestyle that is not a Diet
Have you seen an infomercial that has ever told you to listen to your body, eat
what it needs and not force your body into craving foods that would cause fat
storage because your starving it of essential nutrients? Probably not, because
most information on sports nutrition is available for free and it’s something
that you do for a lifetime, not a diet you go on for a certain period of time
then regain weight and then again hand over your wallet once more to somebody
with the latest promise that won’t say that 98 percent will be back again
within five years.
Your body needs carbohydrates, your body does need fat. The key to losing weight
is to eat a balanced diet and not to poison your body with the junk food that
is abundant in today’s world. Fruits, vegetables, whole grains, complex
carbohydrates, healthy fats and lean meats are the staple of sports nutrition.
Fueling your body to be able to perform what you require of it during the day is
what will help you lose weight.
Fueling Your Body Means Eat
Yes you can eat food and lose weight. Healthy choices and knowing how many
calories that your body requires to perform at optimal efficiency will keep
cravings for junk food away. The brain alone requires 380 calories per day for
the average 150 pound man just to be able to lay in bed all day, the liver
requires over 500 calories per day. You have many other organs that also
require a certain amount of calories each day. To determine how many calories
you need per day just for your resting metabolic rate take the amount you weigh
in pounds and multiply that by 10. So if you weigh 160 pounds that is 1600
calories required for your body just to perform basic functions like pump
blood. Just to be sedentary you need to add 25% of 1600 to your daily
requirements, so that would make it 2000 calories per day just to sit and watch
tv, get up and walk to the bathroom and do other basic things without doing
anything that would require work The more activity you do the more calories
your body requires. The key is not to give your body these calories in the form
of candy bars, potato chip, soda etc. Feeding your body with foods that are
lower than 30% in fat will amaze you how much food can make up 2000 calories.
Eating more often:
Instead of eating just breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Have the basic 3 meals per
day with a healthy snack between them. This will prevent mid-morning and
mid-afternoon raids on the junk food machine and help keep your energy up.
For more in depth information on a Sports Nutrition Lifestyle the following
books can provide a wealth of information:
Nancy Clark's Sports Nutrition Guidebook
Avery's Sports Nutrition Almanac
Power Eating by Susan M. Kleiner
Any of these books will give you the information you need to stop supporting the
diet industry and shelling over your money once again for a likelihood of 98%
chance of failure. Enjoy food and don’t let anybody make you afraid of it, food
is there for our bodies, it’s just the junk food that is bad and there are
plenty of healthy alternatives out there that will satisfy any craving.
Josie Anderson is a personal trainer and is the owner of
http://www.weight-loss-program-101.com providing weight loss
resources to help with many weight loss goals and newsletter to keep you up to
date on the latest in the health and fitness industry.
Link to this page
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| Nancy Clark's Sports Nutrition Guidebook |
| Nancy Clark, M.S., R.D. |
| Boost your energy, reduce stress, lose body fat, build muscle, and improve your performance with this best-selling sports nutrition guide! Includes realistic eating strategies to help you make the right food choices in today’s eat-and-run society. It shows how to navigate your way healthfully through grocery stores, fast food drive-throughs, restaurants, and even your own kitchen. Highly recommended for athletes, exercisers, and average folk who want to understand how to design a personalized diet. |
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| Simplebean Top 10 |
| 1. | Eating for Life: Your Guide to Great Health, Fat Loss and Increased Energy!, Bill Phillips |
| 2. | Eat, Drink, and Be Healthy: The Harvard Medical School Guide to Healthy Eating, Dr. Walter C. Willett |
| 3. | The G.I. Diet : The Easy, Healthy Way to Permanent Weight Loss, Rick Gallop |
| 4. | Body for Life: 12 Weeks to Mental and Physical Strength, Bill Phillips |
| 5. | The Omega Diet: The Lifesaving Nutritional Program Based on the Diet of the Island of Crete, Artemis P. Simopoulos |
| 6. | Food and Mood: Second Edition : The Complete Guide To Eating Well and Feeling Your Best, Elizabeth Somer |
| 7. | Your Miracle Brain: Maximize Your Brainpower, Boost Your Memory, Lift Your Mood, Improve Your IQ and Creativity, Prevent and Reverse Mental Aging, Jean Carper |
| 8. | The Ultimate Fit or Fat, Covert Bailey |
| 9. | Dare to Lose: Four Simple Steps to Achieve a Better Body, Shari Lieberman, Ph.D. |
| 10. | The Get with the Program! Guide to Good Eating: Great Food for Good Health, Bob Greene |
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The Good Carb Cookbook: Secrets of Eating Low on the Glycemic Index Sandra Woodruff Sandra Woodruff demystifies the carbohydrate confusion, and shares her secrets for eating low on the index. The book charts hundreds of common foods and their glycemic index rating. It has more than two hundred recipes, plus tips to modify high-glycemic family favorites with low-glycemic ingredients, helping you lose weight, maintain blood sugar, and achieve optimal health. |
Dare to Lose: Four Simple Steps to Achieve a Better Body Shari Lieberman, Ph.D. Lieberman explains the importance of metabolism in weight loss, pointing out the factors that slow down metabolism-such as stress, yo-yo and crash dieting, and sedentary lifestyles-and ways to counteract them. |
Mayo Clinic on Healthy Weight: Answers to Help You Achieve and Maintain the Weight Thats Right for You (Mayo Clinic on Health) Mayo Clinic Here is the information that the esteemed Mayo Clinic physicians and dietitians give their patients about weight control. In addition, it also includes extras like how to read a food label; recipe ingredient substitutions; luscious-looking, illustrated recipes; the number of calories burned during various exercises; and tricks for changing bad habits. |
Stealth Health: How to Sneak Nutrition Painlessly into Your Diet Evelyn Tribole, MS,RD Using the many tricks up her sleeve, nutritionist Evelyn Tribole can get just about anyone to eat healthy. With more than 100 recipes that sneak fiber, calcium, and other nutrients into the diet, Stealth Health can turn even the most devoted junk food junkie into a health nut. |
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