Nine Cold, Hard Weight-Loss Truths

By: Brie Cadman (View Profile)


2. A half-hour walk doesn’t equal a brownie.
I remember going out to eat with some friends after a bike ride. Someone commented on how we deserved dessert because we had just spent the day exercising; in fact, we had taken a leisurely twenty-minute ride through the park. This probably burned the calories in a slice of our French bread, but definitely not those in the caramel fudge brownie dessert. Bummer.

And while it’s easy to underestimate how many calories something has, it’s also easy to overestimate how many calories we burn while exercising. Double bummer.

Even if you exercise a fair amount, it’s not carte blanche to eat whatever you want. (Unless you exercise a ton, have the metabolism of a sixteen-year-old boy, and really can eat whatever you want). A report investigating the commonly-held beliefs about exercising, published in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association, concludes that although exercise does burn calories during and after exercise, for overweight persons, “excessive caloric expenditure has limited implications for substantially reducing body weight independent of nutritional modifications.” In other words, to lose weight, you have to cut calories and increase exercise.

3. You have time to exercise.
If you have time to check email, watch a sitcom or two, surf the internet, have drinks/coffee/dinner with friends, go clothes shopping, and on and on, then you have time to exercise. Yes, sometimes you have to sacrifice sleep, TV, or leisure time to fit it in. Yes, sometimes you have to prioritize your exercise time over other things. But your health and the feeling you get after having worked out is well worth it.

4. Eating more of something won’t help you lose weight.
The food industry is keen to latch onto weight loss research and spin it for their sales purposes. A prime example is the widespread claim that eating more dairy products will help you lose weight. However, a recent review of forty-nine clinical trials from 1966 to 2007 showed that “neither dairy nor calcium supplements helped people lose weight.”

This idea—that eating more of a certain type of product will help you lose weight—is constantly regurgitated on supermarket shelves (think low-fat cake, low-carb crackers, high in whole grain cookies, and trans fat-free chips), but is in direct opposition to the basic idea behind weight loss—that we have to eat less, not more.

90 readers liked this story.
bookmarks
Comments
posted: 01.06.2009
Dave
So true, kick off the "new year's resolution" and make a permanent change. Most people don't get past February with the diet and fitness changes. One hour of hard core work with your body will incur changes. You can walk all the stairs, shovel all the snow you want but unless you are doing this for at least twenty minutes you will not begin to burn the fat stores in your body. Greater than twenty minutes (ie one hour) will challenge you but with time it will show results. Start slow (twenty minutes for the firtst month), then add ten minutes a month until you get to sixty minutes of taking moderate to severe effort exercise. As always check with your Doctor first before starting any exercise program. Do it on the daily or at a minimum five days a week. It takes time to gain weight so to lose it takes time as well. And remember if you grind it out you will be happy with the results.
posted: 12.27.2008
Uneeka King
This is a great article! And so very true! A friend once told me that I will lose the weight when I commit to losing it. Simply put.
posted: 12.22.2008
PatriciaAnne
I have followed a lifestyle similar to the one listed in this article. I have successfullly lost 30 pounds without paying for any special foods/supplements or gym membership. I have maintained a healthy weight for 5 years. However, there is no easy path. Just look at Oprah and her recent weight gain. All her fame, paid trainers and paid chefs could not prevent her from food choices and behaviors that caused her to regain weight - again. You just have to commit to being healthy and get back on the road towards health if you stray off the path, just like Oprah.
posted: 11.30.2008
momthegreat
Very good article indeed! I liked it! It's different from all the rest- tips to remain fit, reduce weight etc etc....... To stay fit and reduce the extra flesh is not so east task, neither a few days' gain. This piece of information is very good. Eat onion & garlic (uncooked) as daily intake, that never lets you be fat, bulky!
posted: 11.28.2008
Carole
Wow, what a discouraging article. Without taking the time to rebuke every discouraging point - If you eat fresh food that you make yourself - get out of the fast and packaged food habit - you'll have already come a long way. Get rid of pop. 1 can a day is 10 pounds a year. Spread your eating out throughout the day - don't eat the bulk of your calories at night when you won't burn them. Get your 5-9 servings of vegetables and fruits everyday. Clean the house, walk the dog, play with your kids, walk the mall. It's not that hard to get moving at least an hour a day. Don't be discouraged. It's not that hard. You can do it. Don't fall for all the bull.
It feels good to write.

Your stories, musings, and advice are welcome here. We know you've got something to share, so jump in—maybe get a little famous. And don't worry—you can save a draft!

most liked
Loader_buff
Other topics you might appreciate
Career & Money Neighborhood & World Parenting