By: Donovan Baldwin
I am sure you have heard me say this before about weight loss.
Effective, lifelong weight loss is simple...not easy, just simple.
We all seem to be seeking some ultimate and absolute weight loss secret. However, the "weight loss secret" has been known for years. Simply stated, if you take in more calories than you use, you gain weight. If you use more calories than you take in, you lose weight.
In their attempts to wiggle around those two simple facts, people have discovered that some foods, and some diet products, are effective in "helping" you cut down on the calories; and they have found lifestyles, and diet products, that "help" you burn more calories, but two simple laws have remained for healthy, effective, lifelong weight loss and weight management.
1. Get regular, moderate exercise
2. Regularly eat tasteful, nutritionally satisfying foods in reasonable quantities.
Do those two things, and your body will automatically adjust itself to a healthier, leaner, more fit state of existence.
Are there other things you can do to help the process along?
Of course there are. Drink more water, get more sleep, serve meals on smaller plates, eat more slowly...and so on. All these things and many other tips help the weight loss process, but, in the final analysis, it all comes down to those two rules up there.
Now, I said that if you do those two things, your body will automatically adjust itself to a healthier, leaner level. Unfortunately, since we are all different...in our the way we were raised, our ethnic background, the habits we have acquired, in our likes and dislikes, in our daily processes and procedures, in our metabolism, and in many other ways, the perfect weight loss system for one may not seem very effective for another. Also, since we may attack our weight loss problem with a different intensity or attitude or expectation, what we perceive as "being effective" may not satisfy our neighbor...or may seem miraculous to him or her.
Lacking the guidance of trained dieticians and personal fitness trainers, our actions in pursuit of proper nutrition and exercise may be a bit hit or miss. If we also take into consideration the manner in which most of us go about our daily lives...staying up too late, rushing around to get all our obligations (real and imaginary) properly discharged, eating unhealthy food in a state of stress and on the go...and from a point of ignorance...and there is no surprise at that statement I made about weight loss being simple, but not necessarily easy.
All that being said, however, most of us can easily make regular attempts to meet the requirements of the two laws I outlined above. We can easily find ways to insert more activity, both planned and opportunistic, into our lives, and we can exercise more control over the food we put in our mouths. A great knowledge of physiology and the science of exercise is not necessary, nor is it a requirement that we be extremely knowledgeable in the science of nutrition either.
Most of us are perfectly aware that a five, ten, or fifteen minute walk is probably better for us than sitting in front of a TV watching a completely mindless show. Okay, I confess, I watch "Everybody Loves Raymond" regularly. Hmmm! Why does my wife keep calling me Frank? I am sure that we all can grasp the concept that a few minutes on a bicyle is better for us than fighting the rest of the family for the last piece of pie.
We also know that if we have to slip into the kitchen for something to munch, a handful of nuts or an apple is probably going to be better for us than that piece of pie. Doing the healthy things from day to day is what will help us live up to the two laws I have mentioned.
Would we be able to more effectively exercise with a little more knowledge and training on the subject? Of course.
Would we be able to more effectively take control of our dietary and nutritional lifestyle with a bit more information? Of course we would.
If we have more knowledge about exercise and nutrition, will we be better able to make that weight loss plan of ours more effective? Without a doubt.
There is nothing stopping anyone from learning and applying knowledge about exercise and nutrition. It is not necessary to acquire all the knowledge and experience of the dietician or fitness trainer. A simple, basic understanding of the two fields will suffice in most cases.
Let me make one final point. In both of the two laws I mentioned above, the words "regular" and "regularly" appear. In terms of weight loss, fitness, and health, what you do today is not worth a hill of beans unless it is tied to events either before or after it. To go out and walk a mile today is a good thing, of course, but in terms of weight loss, health, and fitness, it will be a habit of walking a mile a day several days a week, over many weeks which will eventually result in the change you and I are seeking.
A good side to this is the empowering knowledge that a slip in our program today is not going to matter that much as long as we get back into the swing of things as soon as possible. If you have been exerising and eating properly, an extra piece of pie, a dish of ice cream, or a second helping of pot roast will not cancel out all that you have been trying to accomplish...just don't let it happen too often.
What the heck! Don't you agree that a major goal of a healthy lifestyle is the ablility to enjoy life to the fullest?
Article Source: http://articles.directorygold.com
Donovan Baldwin is a Texas writer and a University of West Florida alumnus. He is a member of Mensa, and is retired from the U. S. Army. You can find more of his articles on health, fitness, diet and weight loss at nodiet4me.com/articledirectory/
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
2 Basic Laws Of Weight Loss
Posted by pipat at 4:43 AM
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