Know the best way to lose weight fast

We have already passed by the first month of 2019, and for some it seems that their New Year’s Resolutions have not yielded any successful results. One resolution that always makes the list is losing weight in the New Year, but this is easier said than done. In this article, we will speak about a strategic way through which you could lose those extra pounds and stay healthy

We all know that sticking to a strict calorie controlled diet is not an easy task in modern setting, where tasty and high energy foods are attractive and ubiquitously available.

This is made even more difficult due to our body’s natural rapid response to decreases in food intake. And also an opposing lack of response to overeating.

This is experience by most of the people who have recently started dieting

Most people will also have experienced this know how easy it is to overeat during holiday periods or other occasions.

Why is overeating not detected by our bodies

Our recent research has shown that overeating is poorly detected in humans, even when energy intake is increased to provide an excess of more than 1,000 calories per day.

In this study, overeating with 150 percent of the required daily calories did not change the appetite of participants.

Participants were tested on their appetite ratings and levels of specific hormones known to regulate appetite, as well as checking the food intake of participants during the next day.

The findings showed how the body fails to adjust to account for these additional calories.

This makes sense from an evolutionary perspective because in environments with limited access to food, overeating when food was available to our ancestors would increase their chances of survival by keeping them fuelled until food was available again.

This shows that being aware of calorie intakes is important because short periods of accidental overeating can be sufficient to cause weight gain or impair weight loss.

Evidence suggests that increases in body weight during the festive period are maintained throughout the rest of the year. Similarly, overeating on a weekend can easily cancel out a strict diet that is maintained on weekdays.

But understanding how easy it is to overeat does not mean that weight loss can’t be achieved.

In fact, knowing this can help with weight loss, by being more aware of dietary choices.

Need for exercise

Despite our body’s biological bias for weight gain, correct diet and lifestyle changes will produce and maintain weight loss if this is the desired aim.

Exercise may often be overlooked as people seek ‘the best diet for weight loss.’

But being physically active still remains important if you want to lose weight, and especially for maintaining weight loss over prolonged periods of time.

Exercise can complement dietary changes and help to minimise the increases in hunger experienced from dieting alone.

This is because exercise does not cause an increase in hunger to the same extent as dieting, despite also creating an energy deficit for weight loss.

 

In fact, hunger is reduced when exercising intensely, which may help to stave off hunger pangs while increasing the energy deficit.

Flexibility is the key to sustain weight loss

Regardless of which dieting approach you choose, it is likely you will need a degree of flexibility, as most diets will require some compromise.

For example, you are invited to attend a meal at a restaurant for a special occasion or there is a holiday celebration involving additional eating.

Being aware that your body is not likely to respond to the increased calorie intake means that you can adjust your behaviour to avoid or compensate for any overeating, for example by being more mindful of food choices in the days, before or after an occasion, or increasing your exercise levels to counter any excesses.

What all this shows is that ultimately we should not rely on feedback signals from our body to detect levels of calorie  intakes. Instead, conscious monitoring of diet and lifestyle behaviours is more than sufficient to counter our body’s natural bias for weight gain.

And by appreciating this need for conscious monitoring, it may help you to achieve any desired weight loss goals over the year ahead.

The author is a Reader in Nutrition and Metabolism at Leeds Beckett University in the United Kingdom

Source: The Conversation

Also Read :- Habit change is key to success for weight loss, finds study