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experiencelifemag.com
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The Smart Way to Weight Loss
Tired of trying and failing to lose weight? Don’t despair! Here’s the study
guide you need to make the weight-loss honor roll once and for all.
By Experience Life Staff |
January-February 2009 |
Learning From Mistakes
1. Lifestyle
2. Psychology
3. Nutrition
4. Fitness
Key Weight Loss 101 Concepts
Resources
Back in grade school, even if a given subject didn’t come easily to you,
assuming you gave it your best shot, you could still get an “E” for effort.
Unfortunately, when it comes to weight loss, such consolation prizes offer
little in the way of comfort. If your attempts at weight loss have met
mostly with mixed or temporary successes, don’t despair. Give yourself some
credit for persisting in the face of adversity. And give yourself the benefit of
the doubt, too: If you’re carrying extra weight, it’s not because you’re lazy —
or even unlucky, although your genes may play a role. It’s more likely because
there’s a world of internal and external circumstances working against you.
You can change all that, but first you have to wise up to some basic facts.
The reality is, in this culture of stresses and excesses, maintaining a
healthy weight requires some serious know-how. Trying to lose weight before
you’ve acquired that essential wisdom is a little like ending up in a
graduate-level organic chemistry class without having taken the intro course:
Until you have the big picture and basic skills under your belt, not much is
going to sink in except a maddening sense of frustration. To make sense of
weight loss, you first need to know how it all fits together, what common
mistakes to avoid — and how to use our quick-study guide to coach you through
the core material. So in this article we’ll outline the essential lessons in
four key areas — the ones you most need to master so you can manage your weight
successfully. We won’t suggest that these basic concepts represent the
be-all and end-all compendium of weight-loss knowledge. But once you get these
prerequisites nailed, you’ll experience far fewer setbacks, and you’ll start
building the kind of momentum that may have eluded you in the past.
Learning From Mistakes
One of the best things you can do before embarking on any
weight-loss program is to look closely at what has and hasn’t worked for you in
the past. Choose to see your past experiences not as failures but as
experiments — all of which are leading you in the direction of a very
valuable discovery. If you’ve tried lots of things and none of them
worked (or haven’t worked for very long), it may be tempting to say, “But I’ve
tried everything!” Keep an open mind: Perhaps you’ve adjusted your eating
without much nutritional know-how. Or you’ve largely neglected exercise. Or
you’ve embarked on a weight-loss plan without considering your schedule and
lifestyle. Or perhaps you’ve done all that stuff right but still found yourself
repeatedly derailed by social and environmental triggers, a
metabolism-disrupting health condition, stress, or some form of self-sabotage.
As long as you can look at this information objectively, it’s potentially
useful to you. At the same time, you may also have to let go of what you
think you know about weight loss — a topic more fraught with myths,
misinformation and oversimplification than virtually any other. Here’s the
truth: Losing unwanted weight and keeping it off really isn’t as simple as
eating less and exercising more. Rather, it requires a variety of thoughtful
life adjustments, and experimentally combining separate-but-intertwining skill
sets in four key areas: lifestyle, psychology, nutrition and fitness. Those
would be the topics you’d see covered in a class called Weight Loss 101, and
that’s precisely what we’ll cover here. So read up, take a few notes, and
complete the extra-credit study questions. You’ll come away with the insights
and wisdom that form the basis of most major weight-loss breakthroughs.
1. Lifestyle
Most seasoned weight-loss experts agree that people who commit to making
lasting changes in several aspects of their lives — not just isolated changes to
diet and exercise — are the most successful in losing weight and keeping it off.
Change your life, they say, and your body will follow. Start by honestly
assessing any imbalances or trouble spots in your life, and pay attention to the
interactions between various sectors such as work, home, relationships and
money. If one area of your life is distinctly unhappy or out of balance, it will
tend to create problems in other areas of your life that may, in turn, inhibit
weight loss. For example, if you’re working long hours on the job, your
stress level will probably rise, leaving you more vulnerable to cravings for
unhealthy foods. Plus, you’ll be short on time to shop and cook, eat well, and
exercise. If you’re not getting enough sleep, you could throw your metabolic
system out of whack — increasing hormones, like ghrelin, that trigger hunger.
To achieve healthy, sustainable weight loss, you need to address the
underlying patterns and lifestyle behaviors that may have predisposed you to
gaining weight in the first place. Laurel Mellin, MA, RD, director of the
Institute for Health Solutions, and an associate clinical professor of family
and community medicine and pediatrics at the University of California, San
Francisco, suggests taking an inventory to identify areas of your life that are
currently less than healthy. “Most people automatically assess their exercise
and food, which is great,” notes Mellin, “but you also need to look at how you
are getting your pleasure and joy in life.” “Joy,” says Mellin, “is the most
effective appetite suppressant.” And in our time-compressed lives, it’s in
too-short supply. Ask yourself, she suggests: “Am I getting eight to nine hours
of sleep, some time for intimacy, time to restore and time for meaningful
pursuits that fulfill me?” If not, you’re probably looking at some core triggers
for weight gain — and some insidious obstacles to weight loss. A lifestyle in
balance, explains Mellin, “helps turn off the stress hormones that ramp up
appetites and contribute to accumulations of belly fat.” It also gives us more
opportunities to experience surges of feel-good neurotransmitters. “There’s a
whole array of healthy chemicals that are released as we exercise, laugh, play,
dance, sing, pray and cuddle,” says Mellin. At a biochemical level, she notes,
“all these aspects of a healthy, balanced lifestyle encourage activity and
inhibit the drive to overeat.” They also leave us feeling good about ourselves
and, thus, more predisposed to making healthier decisions. Lifestyle: Study-Guide Questions - Are you leading the life of a
healthy, active person? Do you have the interests, priorities and passions of a
healthy person? What positive changes or areas of learning do you think might
make the biggest difference?
- Do you have enough sources of healthy
pleasure, meaning, creativity and joy in your life?
- Are you aware of any
lifestyle habits or addictions (eating, drinking, skipping sleep, overspending,
overworking, watching TV, people-pleasing) that are absorbing your energy or
holding you back? What things are taking up an excess of your time and focus?
- Do you have a variety of fun, relaxing or exciting opportunities to move
and use your body throughout the day and week?
- Are you surrounding
yourself with other healthy and motivated people?
2. Psychology
Many people draw their mental and emotional commitment to weight loss from
their deep-seated sense of dissatisfaction with themselves — or at least with
their bodies. While this frustration can initially feel like a powerful
motivator, it’s not particularly effective at supporting behavioral change. In
fact, it can easily degenerate into a paralyzing cycle of self-hatred and
self-sabotage.
You can establish a mindset far more conducive to weight loss
by tapping the power of awareness and getting in touch with your deepest
motivations for wanting to live in a healthy, fit body. They could include a
longing to express your true nature, a wish to enjoy life more, a desire to keep
up with your grandchildren, or simply the drive to live in integrity with your
values. Rather than focusing on what you see as wrong with yourself, most
weight-loss experts suggest it is much more effective to let your motivation
come from a sense of how much better your life experience could be if it was
powered by a sense of health, vitality and solid self-esteem. If your temptation
is to be self-punishing (in thought or deed), be aware of those aspects of your
personality and seize every opportunity to be kind and compassionate
instead.
“As long as unconscious internal expectations of self-loathing are
alive and well within [ourselves], it’s reasonable to expect that we will
overeat or find another way to soothe and comfort ourselves,” says Mellin, who
pioneered a behavior-change and self-discovery methodology called The Solution
(www.solutionmethod.org) to help
people rewire their neurology in the direction of health and
happiness.
“Retraining the brain — the unconscious emotional core for
authenticity, balance, security, intimacy, vibrancy and spiritual connection —
turns off the drive to overeat and the drive to regain extra weight,” she says.
“The most effective mindset is built by repeating a basic expectation of your
life, not just your weight, which is: I am creating JOY in my life. That state
of joy is technically called ‘homeostasis,’ in which the stress response is shut
down and neurotransmitters are ramped up. Food becomes just food, and it’s
easier to eat in a healthy way, get off the couch and enjoy our lives.” When
you make any kind of big shift, having some kind of supportive methodology and
community can be invaluable, Mellin notes, because these support systems provide
positive feedback, focus and encouragement while anchoring you in your own
commitment and awareness. The Solution method, for example, integrates
in-person, online and telephone community-support components. Conventional
weight-loss approaches tend to ignore the fact that your body and mind are
inextricably linked: Nutrition and fitness have huge physiological impacts on
your emotional and psychological well-being and your attitude. Meanwhile,
feelings and mental wiring can have a huge effect on both your eating and
activity patterns, and on your metabolism. Weight-loss efforts generally involve
many significant behavior and attitude changes. And for that, you need both your
heart and brain on board.
Psychology: Study-Guide Questions
- Are you approaching
weight loss from an empowered perspective (the desire to reach your greatest
potential and happiness as a person) rather than from a negative one (the
assumption you are not “good enough,” and that only by losing weight can you
become “OK”)?
- Have you explored your motivations and values around losing
weight and articulated them in a clear, powerful way? Have you visualized your
ideal body and your life as a fit, healthy person?
- Are you aware of how
certain aspects of your psychology (belief or value systems, fears, patterns of
negative thinking, assumptions, etc.) might be playing a role in making or
keeping you overweight? Have you embraced a
- protocol for disassembling them
and replacing them with more positive and empowering perspectives?
- Do you
have a solid behavior-change methodology or a support group to help you
become aware of destructive patterns, rewire negative thinking, monitor progress
- and overcome hurdles? Do you keep a journal to help you recognize the
thoughts and feelings connected to your behavior patterns?
3. Nutrition
One of the biggest mistakes people make is approaching their eating habits as a
diet, relying on reduced-calorie diet foods or highly restrictive eating plans
to help them slim down. This strategy generally backfires because it tends to
reduce metabolism and degrade overall health, crippling the very systems
required to achieve and maintain a healthy weight. It is far more useful to
approach eating as a nourishing and pleasurable activity, the whole point of
which is to provide you with the best health, energy and vitality
possible. When you start thinking of healthy eating as a way of supporting
your body’s natural health and weight-regulating systems (rather than merely as
a way of limiting calories), nutrition becomes a lot more interesting — and a
lot more motivating. Good nutrition from a variety of whole, unprocessed foods
is essential to building healthy metabolism and regulating appetite. It
naturally helps heal the imbalanced biochemistry at the root of most weight
challenges. “Very few people understand that good nutrition makes losing
weight far easier,” says Darlene Kvist, MS, CNS, a licensed nutritionist who
conducts weight-loss classes and counseling at Nutritional Weight and Wellness
in St. Paul, Minn. That’s because proper nutrition helps correct the imbalances
in blood sugar, hormones and neurotransmitters that encourage us to eat
uncontrollably and to feel too fatigued and depressed to want to
exercise. It’s very common, Kvist points out, for people to blame themselves
and their emotional weaknesses for eating behaviors that, in fact, have their
roots in biochemical imbalances. “They may not see that the bagel they are
having for breakfast is setting them up for irresistible sugar cravings and
feelings of depression in the afternoon,” she says, “or that missing out on good
nutrition at lunch is causing them to overeat at night.” The most effective
weight-loss approaches focus on, first and foremost, building metabolism and
improving health. If you restrict caloric intake but fail to properly manage
your blood-sugar levels, identify underlying food intolerances or correct
nutritionally related hormonal imbalances, Kvist explains, you may find that
your body simply adjusts by metabolically slowing down. "Getting an
appropriate balance of protein, carbs and fats is important,” Kvist continues,
“but just as important is monitoring the nutritional character and quality of
those macronutrients.” Striving for good variety and high quality in your food
choices (freshness, wholeness, healthy preparation) is far more important than
achieving some “perfect” mathematical ratio of calories, carbs, fats and
proteins, says Kvist. The advice is what you’ve heard before: Emphasize
whole foods, including plenty of brightly colored vegetables; minimize your
exposure to processed flours, sugars and trans fats; and eat breakfast and
several other small meals throughout the day. But the thinking here is
different: Do all of this not to restrict calories, but to build vitality and
get your body’s natural weight-loss mechanisms on your side. That means,
among other things, minimizing your intake of the artificial sweeteners,
flavorings and other highly processed ingredients on which most diet foods are
based. “The same things that make us sick, make us fat,” says Mark
Hyman, MD, medical director of the UltraWellness Center in Lenox,
Mass., and author of UltraMetabolism: The Simple Plan for Automatic Weight Loss
(Scribner, 2006) and The UltraMind Solution: Fix Your Broken Brain by Healing
Your Body First (Scribner, 2009). He notes that our bodies respond to lackluster
nutrition and toxins (sugary, starchy, processed foods and artificial
ingredients) with irritation, confusion, hunger, low mood and inflammation.
Effectively, our bodies slow down and puff up. Conversely, explains Hyman,
the same things that make us healthy (including whole foods and regular
activity) naturally help moderate our appetite and optimize our
metabolism, inclining us to achieve an ideal weight without our having to try
too hard. They also boost our mood and improve our sleep, both of which bolster
our interest and ability to live a healthy lifestyle. Eating healthy may
require some new skills, acknowledges Hyman: “You need to learn a little about
how your body works. You also have to get organized about eating on a regular
basis and not letting your blood sugar drop too low, because that can very
quickly trigger a starvation response and cause your metabolic rate to drop.”
But most important, says Hyman, know this: “Whole foods provide your body
with more than fuel and basic nutrients. They provide complex information and
metabolic instructions. Give your body the right information, and it will start
solving your weight problems for you.”
Nutrition: Study-Guide Questions - Have you abandoned the “diet
mentality” in favor of a sustainable commitment to healthy eating for life?
- Have you educated yourself about nutrition and built a solid eating plan
around a variety of fresh, whole nutritious foods you enjoy? Have you emphasized
vegetables, fruits and legumes and minimized your intake of processed flours,
sugars and artificial ingredients?
- Have you stocked your shelves and
fridge with a variety of healthy, appealing foods — and learned some basic
food-preparation skills?
- Have you planned your food intake and broken it
into several small meals a day? Are you eating enough, and often enough, to fuel
your activity demands and minimize cravings and hunger? Are you drinking enough
water?
- Have you tracked your food intake in a journal and grown aware of
any undermining eating patterns? Have you identified any food intolerances and
taken note of how certain foods affect your energy levels and well-being?
4. Fitness
No weight-loss program is complete without an adequate fitness or activity
plan. Working out — whether at a health club, a yoga studio, at home or outdoors
— helps you build your metabolism and develop the lean muscle mass that’s
essential to long-term weight management. It also gives you energy, balances
blood-sugar levels, reduces stress and helps you build self-esteem. And one of
the best parts about improving your fitness is that it makes losing weight
easier and more enjoyable overall. A recent study by Consumer Reports found
that eight out of 10 people who succeeded in losing weight listed exercising
three or more times per week as their No. 1 strategy. One good reason for that:
Exercise increases mitochondrial function, which increases our metabolic rate so
that we burn more calories even while at rest. Exercise also increases our
energy levels and improves mood, which supports a healthy, balanced lifestyle.
An ideal fitness program includes a balance of cardiovascular, strength
and flexibility training. But the most important thing is to pursue activities
you enjoy, that provide some level of challenge and that improve your
fitness level over time. But what about burning fat? “Don’t worry about
it,” says Sally Edwards, MS, a leading fitness expert and heart-rate-training
advocate. “Exercising merely to burn calories and fat rarely holds much appeal,
and it’s not the most effective approach for lasting weight loss.” So what
is? Fitness building. Challenge is what triggers metabolic change, Edwards
notes. So if you’re challenging yourself enough to significantly improve your
fitness, fat burning is another one of those things that will largely take care
of itself. Edwards recommends using a heart-rate monitor to make sure you’re
challenging yourself adequately and hitting the right zones of intensity without
overstressing yourself or wasting time and energy. Plan to periodically
review and expand your fitness program as you get stronger, more confident and
more motivated. Once you have a base level of fitness (even a few weeks of
regular activity that gets you breathing harder should do the trick), you can
begin incorporating higher-intensity intervals or sprints into your workout.
(For more on heart-rate-based interval training, see “A Better Way to Burn
Fat” in the January/February 2007 archives.) Above
all, advises Edwards, start thinking about exercise as a tool for better health
and happiness. ”Instead of thinking about how much fat you want to lose,” she
suggests, “start thinking about how healthy and fit you can become. Educate
yourself about how your body works and how you can help it work better.” Even if
exercising seems tough at the start, she notes, remember that it will rapidly
become easier and more rewarding — even downright enjoyable — as your fitness
improves. Don’t be afraid to seek help in designing a fitness routine. And if
you don’t enjoy exercising on your own, find a training group or group activity
that will keep you motivated. Most cities have local running and walking clubs.
(Check out www.americanrunning.org
for more information about clubs in your area.) Your local fitness center may
offer group activities ranging from bike riding to basketball. Monitoring
your exercise activities in a journal or fitness log is a great way to keep
track of your workout habits and progress, including weight loss. But don’t get
obsessive about weighing yourself all the time. Instead, start paying closer
attention to how your body feels and to the changes taking shape beneath the
surface. Fitness: Study-Guide Questions - Have you shifted your exercise approach
away from burning fat and toward building fitness?
- Have you identified a
few different types of activity you enjoy? If working out alone doesn’t appeal
to you, have you connected with a workout buddy or active group?
- Have you
established a realistic workout schedule and made this time “sacred” in your
calendar?
- Do you have access to the resources, expertise, gear and
support you need (books, journal, shoes, heart-rate monitor, coach, etc.) in
order to make progress?
As you put on muscle and lose fat, you will see and feel a positive
difference. And if you don’t? More than likely, something is missing: It could
be a lifestyle or psychological consideration, a food or nutrition component, or
some combination of the above. Start by running through this article’s study
guides, asking yourself questions and looking for things you may have missed.
Still baffled? Consider consulting an appropriate expert who can help illuminate
blind spots, endow you with important skills or pull you out of a downward
spiral. Turn your weight-loss efforts into a learning experiment, the kind
that makes you smarter and stronger. Your weight-loss efforts are bound to feel
a lot less like effort, and a whole lot more like success.
Key Weight Loss 101 Concepts
- Establish a realistic goal: Think about what you want to achieve and why. Set
a positive-minded, health-and-fitness-oriented goal — defined by behaviors
you’re willing to change — that you know you can accomplish. Be specific and
realistic.
- Find a support system: Surround yourself with people who can
help you achieve your weight-loss goal, whether that’s a formal support group, a
class, one-on-one counseling, or your friends and family.
- Think positively:
Dial down destructive thinking and put your energy toward proactive steps that
will take you to your goal. Stop thinking of yourself as fat and start focusing
on how fit you can become.
- Use nutrition as an ally: Emphasize good
nutrition and educate yourself about how it enables your body to control
cravings and regulate its weight through healthy metabolism, hormones and
genetic expression. Remember that you also need good nutrition to support your
mood, immunity and fitness activities.
- Focus on fitness: Make your exercise
less about burning calories than building metabolism and strength, growing your
body confidence, and establishing a healthy lifestyle that includes active fun,
play, challenge and adventure.
- Watch for positive change: But don’t get hung
up on the scale. Pay more attention to how you look and feel — and how your
clothes fit.
- Don’t rush the process: Sustainable and healthy weight loss
isn’t a quick fix. It’s a life shift, one that offers tremendous rewards beyond
weight loss. As your body gets healthier, weight loss will happen and healthy
habits will start to feel automatic.
- Get help when you need it: If you aren’t
making progress, get some expert help. You may have an underlying health
condition or another unaddressed obstacle that requires
attention.
Resources
BOOKS UltraMetabolism: The Simple Plan for Automatic Weight Loss by Mark
Hyman, MD (Scribner, 2006) The 3-Day Solution Plan: Jump-start Lasting Weight
Loss by Turning Off the Drive to Overeat by Laurel Mellin, MA, RD (Ballantine,
2005) Fit and Fat: The 8-Week Heart Zones Program by Sally Edwards, MA, MBA,
and Lorraine Brown (Alpha, 2003) WEB www.ultrawellness.com — Dr.
Mark Hyman’s site addresses the root causes of obesity and disease by
highlighting nutrition and lifestyle solutions. It also offers a blog by Hyman,
links to doctors, message boards and a free sneak peek at the UltraSimple diet,
which is based on detoxifying our bodies and cooling inflammation. www.weightandwellness.com —
Nutritionist Darlene Kvist’s site offers consultations and classes on the
power of nutrition and whole, natural foods to create vitality and
health. www.heartzones.com — Fitness
expert Sally Edwards’s site offers the tools and resources to get started on
heart-rate training, as well as a blog by Edwards. www.solutionmethod.org — Dietary expert
Laurel Mellin’s site helps you lose weight by teaching you how to rewire your
brain from stress to joy and includes a complimentary one-hour session.
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The Smart Way to Weight Loss
Tired of trying and failing to lose weight? Don’t despair! Here’s the study
guide you need to make the weight-loss honor roll once and for all.
By Experience Life Staff | Features, January-February 2009 |
Learning From Mistakes
1. Lifestyle
2. Psychology
3. Nutrition
4. Fitness
Key Weight Loss 101 Concepts
Resources
Back in grade school, even if a given subject didn’t come easily to you,
assuming you gave it your best shot, you could still get an “E” for effort.
Unfortunately, when it comes to weight loss, such consolation prizes offer
little in the way of comfort. If your attempts at weight loss have met
mostly with mixed or temporary successes, don’t despair. Give yourself some
credit for persisting in the face of adversity. And give yourself the benefit of
the doubt, too: If you’re carrying extra weight, it’s not because you’re lazy —
or even unlucky, although your genes may play a role. It’s more likely because
there’s a world of internal and external circumstances working against you.
You can change all that, but first you have to wise up to some basic facts.
The reality is, in this culture of stresses and excesses, maintaining a
healthy weight requires some serious know-how. Trying to lose weight before
you’ve acquired that essential wisdom is a little like ending up in a
graduate-level organic chemistry class without having taken the intro course:
Until you have the big picture and basic skills under your belt, not much is
going to sink in except a maddening sense of frustration. To make sense of
weight loss, you first need to know how it all fits together, what common
mistakes to avoid — and how to use our quick-study guide to coach you through
the core material. So in this article we’ll outline the essential lessons in
four key areas — the ones you most need to master so you can manage your weight
successfully. We won’t suggest that these basic concepts represent the
be-all and end-all compendium of weight-loss knowledge. But once you get these
prerequisites nailed, you’ll experience far fewer setbacks, and you’ll start
building the kind of momentum that may have eluded you in the past.
Learning From Mistakes (Back to Top)
One of the best things you can do before embarking on any
weight-loss program is to look closely at what has and hasn’t worked for you in
the past. Choose to see your past experiences not as failures but as
experiments — all of which are leading you in the direction of a very
valuable discovery. If you’ve tried lots of things and none of them
worked (or haven’t worked for very long), it may be tempting to say, “But I’ve
tried everything!” Keep an open mind: Perhaps you’ve adjusted your eating
without much nutritional know-how. Or you’ve largely neglected exercise. Or
you’ve embarked on a weight-loss plan without considering your schedule and
lifestyle. Or perhaps you’ve done all that stuff right but still found yourself
repeatedly derailed by social and environmental triggers, a
metabolism-disrupting health condition, stress, or some form of self-sabotage.
As long as you can look at this information objectively, it’s potentially
useful to you. At the same time, you may also have to let go of what you
think you know about weight loss — a topic more fraught with myths,
misinformation and oversimplification than virtually any other. Here’s the
truth: Losing unwanted weight and keeping it off really isn’t as simple as
eating less and exercising more. Rather, it requires a variety of thoughtful
life adjustments, and experimentally combining separate-but-intertwining skill
sets in four key areas: lifestyle, psychology, nutrition and fitness. Those
would be the topics you’d see covered in a class called Weight Loss 101, and
that’s precisely what we’ll cover here. So read up, take a few notes, and
complete the extra-credit study questions. You’ll come away with the insights
and wisdom that form the basis of most major weight-loss breakthroughs.
1. Lifestyle (Back to Top)
Most seasoned weight-loss experts agree that people who commit to making
lasting changes in several aspects of their lives — not just isolated changes to
diet and exercise — are the most successful in losing weight and keeping it off.
Change your life, they say, and your body will follow. Start by honestly
assessing any imbalances or trouble spots in your life, and pay attention to the
interactions between various sectors such as work, home, relationships and
money. If one area of your life is distinctly unhappy or out of balance, it will
tend to create problems in other areas of your life that may, in turn, inhibit
weight loss. For example, if you’re working long hours on the job, your
stress level will probably rise, leaving you more vulnerable to cravings for
unhealthy foods. Plus, you’ll be short on time to shop and cook, eat well, and
exercise. If you’re not getting enough sleep, you could throw your metabolic
system out of whack — increasing hormones, like ghrelin, that trigger hunger.
To achieve healthy, sustainable weight loss, you need to address the
underlying patterns and lifestyle behaviors that may have predisposed you to
gaining weight in the first place. Laurel Mellin, MA, RD, director of the
Institute for Health Solutions, and an associate clinical professor of family
and community medicine and pediatrics at the University of California, San
Francisco, suggests taking an inventory to identify areas of your life that are
currently less than healthy. “Most people automatically assess their exercise
and food, which is great,” notes Mellin, “but you also need to look at how you
are getting your pleasure and joy in life.” “Joy,” says Mellin, “is the most
effective appetite suppressant.” And in our time-compressed lives, it’s in
too-short supply. Ask yourself, she suggests: “Am I getting eight to nine hours
of sleep, some time for intimacy, time to restore and time for meaningful
pursuits that fulfill me?” If not, you’re probably looking at some core triggers
for weight gain — and some insidious obstacles to weight loss. A lifestyle in
balance, explains Mellin, “helps turn off the stress hormones that ramp up
appetites and contribute to accumulations of belly fat.” It also gives us more
opportunities to experience surges of feel-good neurotransmitters. “There’s a
whole array of healthy chemicals that are released as we exercise, laugh, play,
dance, sing, pray and cuddle,” says Mellin. At a biochemical level, she notes,
“all these aspects of a healthy, balanced lifestyle encourage activity and
inhibit the drive to overeat.” They also leave us feeling good about ourselves
and, thus, more predisposed to making healthier decisions. Lifestyle: Study-Guide Questions - Are you leading the life of a
healthy, active person? Do you have the interests, priorities and passions of a
healthy person? What positive changes or areas of learning do you think might
make the biggest difference?
- Do you have enough sources of healthy
pleasure, meaning, creativity and joy in your life?
- Are you aware of any
lifestyle habits or addictions (eating, drinking, skipping sleep, overspending,
overworking, watching TV, people-pleasing) that are absorbing your energy or
holding you back? What things are taking up an excess of your time and focus?
- Do you have a variety of fun, relaxing or exciting opportunities to move
and use your body throughout the day and week?
- Are you surrounding
yourself with other healthy and motivated people?
2. Psychology (Back to Top)
Many people draw their mental and emotional commitment to weight loss from
their deep-seated sense of dissatisfaction with themselves — or at least with
their bodies. While this frustration can initially feel like a powerful
motivator, it’s not particularly effective at supporting behavioral change. In
fact, it can easily degenerate into a paralyzing cycle of self-hatred and
self-sabotage.
You can establish a mindset far more conducive to weight loss
by tapping the power of awareness and getting in touch with your deepest
motivations for wanting to live in a healthy, fit body. They could include a
longing to express your true nature, a wish to enjoy life more, a desire to keep
up with your grandchildren, or simply the drive to live in integrity with your
values. Rather than focusing on what you see as wrong with yourself, most
weight-loss experts suggest it is much more effective to let your motivation
come from a sense of how much better your life experience could be if it was
powered by a sense of health, vitality and solid self-esteem. If your temptation
is to be self-punishing (in thought or deed), be aware of those aspects of your
personality and seize every opportunity to be kind and compassionate
instead.
“As long as unconscious internal expectations of self-loathing are
alive and well within [ourselves], it’s reasonable to expect that we will
overeat or find another way to soothe and comfort ourselves,” says Mellin, who
pioneered a behavior-change and self-discovery methodology called The Solution
(www.solutionmethod.org) to help
people rewire their neurology in the direction of health and
happiness.
“Retraining the brain — the unconscious emotional core for
authenticity, balance, security, intimacy, vibrancy and spiritual connection —
turns off the drive to overeat and the drive to regain extra weight,” she says.
“The most effective mindset is built by repeating a basic expectation of your
life, not just your weight, which is: I am creating JOY in my life. That state
of joy is technically called ‘homeostasis,’ in which the stress response is shut
down and neurotransmitters are ramped up. Food becomes just food, and it’s
easier to eat in a healthy way, get off the couch and enjoy our lives.” When
you make any kind of big shift, having some kind of supportive methodology and
community can be invaluable, Mellin notes, because these support systems provide
positive feedback, focus and encouragement while anchoring you in your own
commitment and awareness. The Solution method, for example, integrates
in-person, online and telephone community-support components. Conventional
weight-loss approaches tend to ignore the fact that your body and mind are
inextricably linked: Nutrition and fitness have huge physiological impacts on
your emotional and psychological well-being and your attitude. Meanwhile,
feelings and mental wiring can have a huge effect on both your eating and
activity patterns, and on your metabolism. Weight-loss efforts generally involve
many significant behavior and attitude changes. And for that, you need both your
heart and brain on board.
Psychology: Study-Guide Questions
- Are you approaching
weight loss from an empowered perspective (the desire to reach your greatest
potential and happiness as a person) rather than from a negative one (the
assumption you are not “good enough,” and that only by losing weight can you
become “OK”)?
- Have you explored your motivations and values around losing
weight and articulated them in a clear, powerful way? Have you visualized your
ideal body and your life as a fit, healthy person?
- Are you aware of how
certain aspects of your psychology (belief or value systems, fears, patterns of
negative thinking, assumptions, etc.) might be playing a role in making or
keeping you overweight? Have you embraced a
- protocol for disassembling them
and replacing them with more positive and empowering perspectives?
- Do you
have a solid behavior-change methodology or a support group to help you
become aware of destructive patterns, rewire negative thinking, monitor progress
- and overcome hurdles? Do you keep a journal to help you recognize the
thoughts and feelings connected to your behavior patterns?
3. Nutrition (Back to Top)
One of the biggest mistakes people make is approaching their eating habits as a
diet, relying on reduced-calorie diet foods or highly restrictive eating plans
to help them slim down. This strategy generally backfires because it tends to
reduce metabolism and degrade overall health, crippling the very systems
required to achieve and maintain a healthy weight. It is far more useful to
approach eating as a nourishing and pleasurable activity, the whole point of
which is to provide you with the best health, energy and vitality
possible. When you start thinking of healthy eating as a way of supporting
your body’s natural health and weight-regulating systems (rather than merely as
a way of limiting calories), nutrition becomes a lot more interesting — and a
lot more motivating. Good nutrition from a variety of whole, unprocessed foods
is essential to building healthy metabolism and regulating appetite. It
naturally helps heal the imbalanced biochemistry at the root of most weight
challenges. “Very few people understand that good nutrition makes losing
weight far easier,” says Darlene Kvist, MS, CNS, a licensed nutritionist who
conducts weight-loss classes and counseling at Nutritional Weight and Wellness
in St. Paul, Minn. That’s because proper nutrition helps correct the imbalances
in blood sugar, hormones and neurotransmitters that encourage us to eat
uncontrollably and to feel too fatigued and depressed to want to
exercise. It’s very common, Kvist points out, for people to blame themselves
and their emotional weaknesses for eating behaviors that, in fact, have their
roots in biochemical imbalances. “They may not see that the bagel they are
having for breakfast is setting them up for irresistible sugar cravings and
feelings of depression in the afternoon,” she says, “or that missing out on good
nutrition at lunch is causing them to overeat at night.” The most effective
weight-loss approaches focus on, first and foremost, building metabolism and
improving health. If you restrict caloric intake but fail to properly manage
your blood-sugar levels, identify underlying food intolerances or correct
nutritionally related hormonal imbalances, Kvist explains, you may find that
your body simply adjusts by metabolically slowing down. "Getting an
appropriate balance of protein, carbs and fats is important,” Kvist continues,
“but just as important is monitoring the nutritional character and quality of
those macronutrients.” Striving for good variety and high quality in your food
choices (freshness, wholeness, healthy preparation) is far more important than
achieving some “perfect” mathematical ratio of calories, carbs, fats and
proteins, says Kvist. The advice is what you’ve heard before: Emphasize
whole foods, including plenty of brightly colored vegetables; minimize your
exposure to processed flours, sugars and trans fats; and eat breakfast and
several other small meals throughout the day. But the thinking here is
different: Do all of this not to restrict calories, but to build vitality and
get your body’s natural weight-loss mechanisms on your side. That means,
among other things, minimizing your intake of the artificial sweeteners,
flavorings and other highly processed ingredients on which most diet foods are
based. “The same things that make us sick, make us fat,” says Mark
Hyman, MD, medical director of the UltraWellness Center in Lenox,
Mass., and author of UltraMetabolism: The Simple Plan for Automatic Weight Loss
(Scribner, 2006) and The UltraMind Solution: Fix Your Broken Brain by Healing
Your Body First (Scribner, 2009). He notes that our bodies respond to lackluster
nutrition and toxins (sugary, starchy, processed foods and artificial
ingredients) with irritation, confusion, hunger, low mood and inflammation.
Effectively, our bodies slow down and puff up. Conversely, explains Hyman,
the same things that make us healthy (including whole foods and regular
activity) naturally help moderate our appetite and optimize our
metabolism, inclining us to achieve an ideal weight without our having to try
too hard. They also boost our mood and improve our sleep, both of which bolster
our interest and ability to live a healthy lifestyle. Eating healthy may
require some new skills, acknowledges Hyman: “You need to learn a little about
how your body works. You also have to get organized about eating on a regular
basis and not letting your blood sugar drop too low, because that can very
quickly trigger a starvation response and cause your metabolic rate to drop.”
But most important, says Hyman, know this: “Whole foods provide your body
with more than fuel and basic nutrients. They provide complex information and
metabolic instructions. Give your body the right information, and it will start
solving your weight problems for you.”
Nutrition: Study-Guide Questions - Have you abandoned the “diet
mentality” in favor of a sustainable commitment to healthy eating for life?
- Have you educated yourself about nutrition and built a solid eating plan
around a variety of fresh, whole nutritious foods you enjoy? Have you emphasized
vegetables, fruits and legumes and minimized your intake of processed flours,
sugars and artificial ingredients?
- Have you stocked your shelves and
fridge with a variety of healthy, appealing foods — and learned some basic
food-preparation skills?
- Have you planned your food intake and broken it
into several small meals a day? Are you eating enough, and often enough, to fuel
your activity demands and minimize cravings and hunger? Are you drinking enough
water?
- Have you tracked your food intake in a journal and grown aware of
any undermining eating patterns? Have you identified any food intolerances and
taken note of how certain foods affect your energy levels and well-being?
4. Fitness (Back to Top)
No weight-loss program is complete without an adequate fitness or activity
plan. Working out — whether at a health club, a yoga studio, at home or outdoors
— helps you build your metabolism and develop the lean muscle mass that’s
essential to long-term weight management. It also gives you energy, balances
blood-sugar levels, reduces stress and helps you build self-esteem. And one of
the best parts about improving your fitness is that it makes losing weight
easier and more enjoyable overall. A recent study by Consumer Reports found
that eight out of 10 people who succeeded in losing weight listed exercising
three or more times per week as their No. 1 strategy. One good reason for that:
Exercise increases mitochondrial function, which increases our metabolic rate so
that we burn more calories even while at rest. Exercise also increases our
energy levels and improves mood, which supports a healthy, balanced lifestyle.
An ideal fitness program includes a balance of cardiovascular, strength
and flexibility training. But the most important thing is to pursue activities
you enjoy, that provide some level of challenge and that improve your
fitness level over time. But what about burning fat? “Don’t worry about
it,” says Sally Edwards, MS, a leading fitness expert and heart-rate-training
advocate. “Exercising merely to burn calories and fat rarely holds much appeal,
and it’s not the most effective approach for lasting weight loss.” So what
is? Fitness building. Challenge is what triggers metabolic change, Edwards
notes. So if you’re challenging yourself enough to significantly improve your
fitness, fat burning is another one of those things that will largely take care
of itself. Edwards recommends using a heart-rate monitor to make sure you’re
challenging yourself adequately and hitting the right zones of intensity without
overstressing yourself or wasting time and energy. Plan to periodically
review and expand your fitness program as you get stronger, more confident and
more motivated. Once you have a base level of fitness (even a few weeks of
regular activity that gets you breathing harder should do the trick), you can
begin incorporating higher-intensity intervals or sprints into your workout.
(For more on heart-rate-based interval training, see “A Better Way to Burn
Fat” in the January/February 2007 archives.) Above
all, advises Edwards, start thinking about exercise as a tool for better health
and happiness. ”Instead of thinking about how much fat you want to lose,” she
suggests, “start thinking about how healthy and fit you can become. Educate
yourself about how your body works and how you can help it work better.” Even if
exercising seems tough at the start, she notes, remember that it will rapidly
become easier and more rewarding — even downright enjoyable — as your fitness
improves. Don’t be afraid to seek help in designing a fitness routine. And if
you don’t enjoy exercising on your own, find a training group or group activity
that will keep you motivated. Most cities have local running and walking clubs.
(Check out www.americanrunning.org
for more information about clubs in your area.) Your local fitness center may
offer group activities ranging from bike riding to basketball. Monitoring
your exercise activities in a journal or fitness log is a great way to keep
track of your workout habits and progress, including weight loss. But don’t get
obsessive about weighing yourself all the time. Instead, start paying closer
attention to how your body feels and to the changes taking shape beneath the
surface. Fitness: Study-Guide Questions - Have you shifted your exercise approach
away from burning fat and toward building fitness?
- Have you identified a
few different types of activity you enjoy? If working out alone doesn’t appeal
to you, have you connected with a workout buddy or active group?
- Have you
established a realistic workout schedule and made this time “sacred” in your
calendar?
- Do you have access to the resources, expertise, gear and
support you need (books, journal, shoes, heart-rate monitor, coach, etc.) in
order to make progress?
As you put on muscle and lose fat, you will see and feel a positive
difference. And if you don’t? More than likely, something is missing: It could
be a lifestyle or psychological consideration, a food or nutrition component, or
some combination of the above. Start by running through this article’s study
guides, asking yourself questions and looking for things you may have missed.
Still baffled? Consider consulting an appropriate expert who can help illuminate
blind spots, endow you with important skills or pull you out of a downward
spiral. Turn your weight-loss efforts into a learning experiment, the kind
that makes you smarter and stronger. Your weight-loss efforts are bound to feel
a lot less like effort, and a whole lot more like success.
Key Weight Loss 101 Concepts (Back to Top)
- Establish a realistic goal: Think about what you want to achieve and why. Set
a positive-minded, health-and-fitness-oriented goal — defined by behaviors
you’re willing to change — that you know you can accomplish. Be specific and
realistic.
- Find a support system: Surround yourself with people who can
help you achieve your weight-loss goal, whether that’s a formal support group, a
class, one-on-one counseling, or your friends and family.
- Think positively:
Dial down destructive thinking and put your energy toward proactive steps that
will take you to your goal. Stop thinking of yourself as fat and start focusing
on how fit you can become.
- Use nutrition as an ally: Emphasize good
nutrition and educate yourself about how it enables your body to control
cravings and regulate its weight through healthy metabolism, hormones and
genetic expression. Remember that you also need good nutrition to support your
mood, immunity and fitness activities.
- Focus on fitness: Make your exercise
less about burning calories than building metabolism and strength, growing your
body confidence, and establishing a healthy lifestyle that includes active fun,
play, challenge and adventure.
- Watch for positive change: But don’t get hung
up on the scale. Pay more attention to how you look and feel — and how your
clothes fit.
- Don’t rush the process: Sustainable and healthy weight loss
isn’t a quick fix. It’s a life shift, one that offers tremendous rewards beyond
weight loss. As your body gets healthier, weight loss will happen and healthy
habits will start to feel automatic.
- Get help when you need it: If you aren’t
making progress, get some expert help. You may have an underlying health
condition or another unaddressed obstacle that requires
attention.
Resources (Back to Top)
BOOKS UltraMetabolism: The Simple Plan for Automatic Weight Loss by Mark
Hyman, MD (Scribner, 2006) The 3-Day Solution Plan: Jump-start Lasting Weight
Loss by Turning Off the Drive to Overeat by Laurel Mellin, MA, RD (Ballantine,
2005) Fit and Fat: The 8-Week Heart Zones Program by Sally Edwards, MA, MBA,
and Lorraine Brown (Alpha, 2003) WEB www.ultrawellness.com — Dr.
Mark Hyman’s site addresses the root causes of obesity and disease by
highlighting nutrition and lifestyle solutions. It also offers a blog by Hyman,
links to doctors, message boards and a free sneak peek at the UltraSimple diet,
which is based on detoxifying our bodies and cooling inflammation. www.weightandwellness.com —
Nutritionist Darlene Kvist’s site offers consultations and classes on the
power of nutrition and whole, natural foods to create vitality and
health. www.heartzones.com — Fitness
expert Sally Edwards’s site offers the tools and resources to get started on
heart-rate training, as well as a blog by Edwards. www.solutionmethod.org — Dietary expert
Laurel Mellin’s site helps you lose weight by teaching you how to rewire your
brain from stress to joy and includes a complimentary one-hour session.
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