I bet you’ve heard this one before – a calorie is a calorie. So eating 100 calories worth of Cheezy Poofs is the same as eating a half-cup of cottage cheese, because they are both roughly 100 calories, according to this logic. Well, as I have mentioned before, nothing could be further from the truth.
In a 1957 (!) study, three groups of people were put on low calorie (1000 calorie) diets. The first group ate 90% of their calories in fat, the second group ate 90% of their calories in protein, the third group ate 90% of their calories in carbs. Guess which group actually gained weight, despite only taking in 1000 calories per day? Yep, the carb group. The other two groups lost between 0.5 to 1.0 pound per day!
Several studies have been done since, all coming to the same conclusion – low carbohydrate diets result in significantly greater fat loss than low fat or low calorie diets. In fact, in several of the studies, the low carb groups were consuming more overall calories than the high carb groups and losing more fat.
So low carb diets become the next entry on the list that we started last time of most effective fat burning techniques:
- Eating more often (shooting for 6 small meals per day)
- Resistance training
- Interval cardio
- Low carbohydrate diets
One last item on the list to be added next time…
Recently, someone asked me for my views about the amount of daily calories they should consume, and whether a 800-1000 calories’ intake can help to speed up their weight loss.
I thought this is something you’d be interested in, so I’m going to share my thoughts with you as well.
You’ve probably heard this many times: consuming too many calories makes us overweight. Of course, this is TRUE…
Both eating less or exercising more will most definitely result in weight loss.
It’s a simple matter of arithmetic — if your “calories out” is more than your “calories in”, you will lose weight.
Thus, it becomes very natural of us to think that if cutting calories is such a good thing, then the more you cut, the better, right? Doesn’t this mean that we’ll lose the excess weight faster?
In reality, it is not so.
Making a too-drastic cut in your caloric intake is a very, very bad idea.
If you have been dieting for a while, you would notice that the extremely low-calorie diets have been around for the longest time. But interestingly, most of the time they don’t lead to permanent weight loss.
Nonetheless, I’ve heard people discussing diets that recommend as low as 800 calories a day! I’m here to tell you that these low levels are downright dangerous for your health.
According to weight loss experts, cutting your intake down to, or under, 1000 calories per day sets you up for an inevitable failure.
Why?
Because when you reduce your caloric intake down to this low, you are actually sending your body into “starvation mode” by eating far too little.
In simple terms, your body will start to think that there is a famine. And in order to maintain your weight while it “thinks” you are starving, your body’s metabolism rate will actually slow down. And your body will then start to store the calories into your fat cells instead.
If you want to prevent yourself from falling into this starvation mode “trap”, you must first know how many
calories your body requires everyday to maintain itself. There are several tools available on the Internet to give you an estimate, or you can check with a dietitian or nutritionist.
Whenever you restrict calories below the level that you body needs to function, your body senses starvation and switches into the “conservation” mode. The more you restrict calories and the longer you diet, your metabolism will slow down further and the more your fat cells will fight back. Don’t forget, you need your metabolism to burn your fat into energy for your body to function properly.
Besides, there is another reason why extreme low-cal diets won’t work — it is not an easy feat to stay on it for long. Dieters who have gone on these extreme low-cal diets would also experience unfavorable side effects such as headaches, weakness, light-headedness and a reduction in their levels of concentration.
Finally, when you experience extreme hunger, the next thing you’ll tend to do is to “binge eat”. And guess what? In the end, after all the initial effort you’ve put into losing the weight, you will actually gain back more weight than you had lost during the diet.
And the worst thing is: The next time you try to go on a diet again, your body gets smarter and the fat cells will expand more to store more calories as they are getting ready to go through another “famine”. Your metabolism will also be reduced tremendously. You’ll find that you are not able to lose the weight as fast or as easy as the previous time. And you’ll get frustrated because you’ve had to deprive yourself of your favorite foods. So what do you do next? You overeat again.
So, stay away from these low-cal diets. They aren’t worth your time!
Instead, try this “diet” to help you lose weight now
Besides burning calories, exercise helps your brain stick to a diet. Researchers at the University of Pittsburgh studies overweight adults for two years, and found that the participants who didn’t follow a 3-hour-per-week exercise plan ate more than the 1,500 calories per day the study allotted. The reverse was also true – sneaking in extra snacks sabotaged their workouts. You need diet AND exercise to maintain long-term weight loss. Both actions serve as reminders to stay the course, reinforcing your fat loss goals and drive.











