Tag Archives: lifestyle changes

Still More Answers From A Nutritionist

Did you read what Mary Schreiner had to say about protein, carbs and ‘mixing it up’ the other day?  And about metabolism?

Mary Schreiner, MPH (Masters in Public Health) has worked in the weight management arena since 1990 with both the American Heart Association and the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center. Besides teaching weight loss classes, she’s been involved in several Low-Carb vs Low-Calorie studies. Since she was overweight into young adulthood, she knows how difficult the struggle with weight control can be. It’s more than just eating less and exercising more. She speaks on several health related topics like:

~ Nutrition and Diet in Disease Prevention: Heart Disease, Diabetes, Alzheimer’s

~ Weight Loss Tips and Tricks

~ Women and Heart Disease

~ Exercise – The Fountain of Youth!

Here is another question I asked her.

• If you’re trying to keep your calories in check so you can lose or maintain your weight, how do you know how many calories you should be eating every day?

When trying to lose weight, I often advise people to find out their Resting Metabolic Rate (RMR) and use that number as the number of calories you should be eating each day. Then, the more you move = the more calories you burn = the quicker you will lose weight.

We all would love to lose 30 pounds in a week and never have to diet again. However, our bodies do not work like that. It is better to lose slowly (1 pound a week equals 52 pounds in a year!). And if done in a slow fashion, that usually indicates a person is:

1 – eating enough calories each day so they do not get too hungry

2 – are possibly making some lifestyle changes (choosing leaner protein, using low fat items, eating more fruits and veg for snacks) that they will continue after the diet

3 – getting added activity most days, even if just a 10-minute walk at lunch time and parking farther away from the office or store.

4 – has created an eating plan that includes a mid-morning and a mid-afternoon snack

Mary has generously offered to review one lucky reader’s food journal so tell me why you’d like feedback on your diet, either by leaving a comment or privately through the ‘Contact Me’ page. Creativity counts, as would tugging at my heartstrings and/or making me laugh. You’d have to do a few days of writing down EXACTLY what you eat — including quantities — so Mary can give you good feedback. I’ll also want to post the journal and the feedback so that others might learn, too. I don’t have to post your name, though.

Let the commenting begin! *insert royal sweeping arm motion here*

I’ll have more questions for Mary in the future, but what about you? What do you want to ask a nutritionist? Do you do the four things to lose weight slowly? Do you want your food journal studied?

3500 Calories

Bummer. Just when I think I know stuff, I find out I don’t.

You know how it’s The Law that to lose a pound you need to run a 3,500-calorie deficit? Now they’re saying that may not be the case over the long haul.

On a short-term basis, yes, those little, painless changes help us lose weight and can keep it off. But now the researchers are finding that the weight lost in this manner doesn’t continue forever. Eventually, your body adjusts to these changes, which I think is why so many of us have difficulty losing those last five or ten pounds.

When you lose weight, your body doesn’t need as much fuel and it creates changes in hormones, your nervous system and your muscles. Your body always strives for efficiency.

Plus, it’s human nature that when we’ve lost weight, we slowly slide back into the habits that got us overweight in the first place. (Another reason diets don’t work … only true changes to your lifestyle will cause permanent weight loss. Is this news to anyone?)

How many of you woke up one day and had the epiphany, “Hey! I’m fat!”

A mathematical model in the Journal of the American Medical Association showed how complacency pushes us over that cliff. It’s not just a joke that men gain weight when they get married.  Over 28 years, a typical man increased his caloric intake by 680 calories a day, putting him into the obese category.

Look at your man. Now back at your computer. Now back at your man. Now back at your computer. Is he on a horse? Does he have tickets to that thing you love? No, but he probably weighs more — possibly lots more —than he did when you got married.

Now look in the mirror. Back at your computer. Back at the mirror. Back at your computer.

If we want bigger changes and longer-term changes in our weight, it seems we need to make bigger changes as time goes on.

It makes sense to me that if we continue to make those painless changes in our quest for good health, then the pounds will take care of themselves. Up to a point. And then we must kick it up a notch. Start running if we’ve only been walking … sprinting if we’ve only been jogging … add in (or change to) a kickboxing class … continue to eat cleaner and better food … make sure we haven’t slowly, accidentally increased our portions due to inattention and, ahem, laziness.

It’s not just calories in, calories out. It’s the quality of those calories, too. Eating 1,000 calories of grass-and-grain-fed beef and fresh vegetables isn’t the same as eating ten 100-calorie bags of processed food. Thar’s chemicals in them thar foods!

But you know, all this will be so much easier when the scientists discover how to shut off the Human Denial Gene.

Are you having trouble with your last 5 pounds? Do you believe that if you make small changes you can change your lifestyle completely? Do you love the Old Spice Guy as much as I do? (My fantasy family includes him and the eTrade babies.) What are you in denial about?