We look in the mirror, try on a new pair of pants, or step on the scale, and are not happy with what we see or feel. Maybe we are running after a bus, walking the dog, or playing with the kids or grandkids and find that we are rapidly out of breath where once we would not have given it a second thought.
We are officially “overweight”, and something must be done!
The reaction is automatic, and an entire industry has grown up which feeds on this one thought:
“I must lose weight!”
“Weight loss and fat loss are not the same thing. You must learn to distinguish between the two. The scale can be very misleading if it’s the only criteria you use for measurement.” –Tom Venuto, “Burn the Fat Feed the Muscle”
However, the problem is not just that “weight loss” and “fat loss” are not necessarily the same. The big problem, at least for me, is that people who don’t know a lot about how the body, exercise, and nutrition work, and the interactions between and among them, tend to assume that since the problem is “weight” the solution is “less weight”.
This often leads the person down two trails, often at the same time, if you can imagine that.
The first is the simplest path.
“I have too much “weight” on my body because I eat too much…or eat the wrong things.”
Just to show how a lack of understanding of the previously mentioned factors can lead the person astray, their diet, i.e. what they eat, not “fad” diet, can be excellent, but they might have too much fat on their body because of lack of exercise.
That is, their “weight” per se might not be the issue but what this weight is comprised of…in this case, fat.
The solution that most of these people choose is to eat less, that is “go on a diet”, or try to follow some very restrictive or complicated eating pattern.
While there will always be a few who are successful with such tactics, most will not be so lucky, and I use the term “lucky” intentionally. They are lucky in that these generally ineffective weight loss methods just happened to work for them.
There are many pitfalls in the world of dieting to lose weight, and, overall, this is one of the least effective methods of losing excess pounds. I have described elsewhere, and in depth, many reasons why diets don’t work, and to keep this article short will skip the details now. However, there will be a link at the bottom of this article which anyone can follow to learn more about this.
One last point here: Do not confuse “diet” with “good nutritional choices”. Cutting chunks of nutritional resources out of your normal eating activities is not the same as making rational selections of foods, exercising portion control, and applying a certain amount of common sense and will power to the situation.
The other path that may be chosen is that of exercise.
While I can hardly imagine faulting anyone forĀ Diet Pills For Women choosing exercise as part of their “fat loss” or “weight loss” regimen, blindly leaping into an exercise program can be just about as useless as choosing to live on soda crackers and ice cream.
A great health tool at almost any level, to be an effective weight loss tool, the specific exercises done, the intensity at which they are done, the frequency with which they are practiced and the progressive nature of the exercise program are all going to be major factors in the outcome.
Again, usually someone who loses a significant amount of weight simply because they have begun to “exercise” is simply lucky.
Actually, effective, HEALTHY weight loss when both options of regular exercise and proper nutrition are followed simultaneously. The drawback which remains is, that if you really want to lose weight, you have to know what you need to know about eating, and what you need to know about exercise…and implement this knowledge.