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Weight
Loss Dieting
- One Very Important Key
to Success!
How
many times have you tried to diet or lose weight in the past?
How many
times have you had some initial success only to fall short
of your goals?
How many
times have you achieved your initial goal of losing wieight,
only to see them fly away faster than you were able to enjoy
the fruits of your labor?
Why does
this happen?
In most
cases, the answer is simple. You've failed one test... This
is a difficult test. This test I like to call consistent persistence.
Sometimes,
you will be missing other essential components. You need to
also include a variety of other things that will make the
consistent persistence useful. If you are consistently persistent
in doing the wrong things, you will still fail. So before
we get in to the final key, let's review the other essential
components.
Successful
dieting and or weight loss should always be geared towards
a total lifestyle change that you intend to be permanent.
If you cannot healthily sustain the changes for an indefinite
period, it probably isn't the right diet for you.
Reasonable
exceptions would include medically necessary emergency weight
loss, with a view to changing the program once the crisis
management was concluded.
If you
are trying to lose weight, you should have a goal of maintaining
that weight loss for at least five years. How many of the
fad diets out there today could withstand a five year test?
Not many.
With the
diet changes (that can be maintained for five or more years
in a healthy fashion), it is essential to increase your energy
expenditure.
You can
increase this energy expenditure with a variety of strategies.
Some of those include supplements that boost your metabolic
rate. As we have seen with the ephedra issue, it isn't always
the safest choice. A safer way is timing your activity to
boost your energy expenditure throughout the day.
One of
those ways is to exercise early in the morning before eating,
and then waiting for a period of time after having concluded
your exercise before you eat. If you have blood sugar regulation
difficulties such as diabetes or hypoglycemia, this may not
be the route for you to take.
Additionally,
because your body will accommodate to any exercise regimen
after a period of time, you will need to vary your programs.
Water
consumption at adequate levels is a must in any successful
plan. This will help to wash away the waste products and toxins
that the body will release as you burn away the fat (which
does store some toxins).
Adequate
supplementation with good quality vitamins and minerals is
also very important so that your body has the micronutrients
it needs to drive its metabolic processes.
Ensuring
that your body does not think that it is in a state of famine
is also important. While it is a good idea to decrease your
overall caloric intake, you want to make sure that you feed
you body on a regular basis, so that it knows that food is
still available and is coming soon.
Six small
meals a day is generally a good idea. Your choice of calorie
sources is also important. For many health reasons, it is
good to avoid highly processed products. Vine ripened, organic
produce is also a great idea.
Another
way to help yourself succeed and give your body a greater
variety of micronutrients and enzymes is to eat a large variety
of foods. Our bodies haven't yet really adapted to the advent
of agriculture, let alone a few monocrops. Variety, variety,
and more variety is a great idea.
Ensure
that your rest is adequate and of good quality. If you do
not rest adequately, all of your body's processes can be adversely
affected.
Take time
for yourself. Meditate or pray. This will help you on so many
different levels that there isn't enough time or space to
go into it.
Set yourself
reasonable, attainable goals with specific time frames. If
you don't achieve them, reset the goals and review your plan.
Maybe the goal was unrealistic or the plan was faulty. Entertain
both possibilities. If you don't know how to tell, enlist
professional help.
Measure
your progress. Measuring in inches and energy is a better
way to evaluate how you are doing rather than by pounds. Also
very useful and a good measure of health factors, is to record
how your body fat percentages change (for better or for worse).
So now
you have the basic principles down. While a three month interval
is a great way to look at progress points, if you stop there,
you have failed. You need consistent persistence. At every
goal point, re-evaluate your plan, refine it, work it, and
then repeat the process. If you need a holiday from your routine,
schedule it, don't improvise or you are likely to fall out
of the routine and have a difficult time getting back into
it.
Work it,
re-evaluate it, measure your progress, and repeat.
Consistent
persistence is the key to your success. This success must
also be built on sound principles and be realistic, sustainable,
and varied.
Don't
let yourself be discouraged, keep at it and fight to maintain
your consistent persistence because this is where success
lives.
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