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The Diet Pills
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Diet plan and low carb weight loss truths
www.droppingthefat.com View to find out about free imformation on weightloss plans and low carb diets. Also how to survive diining out on low carb diet and look at protein powers Dr Mike Eades
Test Drive your Diet Plan Over the Holidays
You wouldn’t a new car without taking it for a test drive. Then why commit to a diet plan without testing it first?
Think about it.
You test-drive a car to make sure you’ll enjoy a smooth, comfortable ride. And most importantly, you want to know the car will take you to your destination.
If it doesn’t, you won’t that car. Or if you’ve been duped and got stuck with a “lemon,” you’ll trade the car for one that works.
Then why don’t we hold our diet plans to the same standards?
We’ve been so conditioned to suffer when we lose weight that we’ve come to expect – and accept – a bumpy ride in the form of hunger, deprivation and unappetizing food.
And how many times has your diet plan or weight loss program failed to get you to your destination, otherwise known as your target weight?
You deserve to know if your weight loss program will work in any situation at any time of the year.
So take your diet plan for a test drive. And if it doesn’t work, don’t make excuses for it… don’t beat yourself up like it’s your fault… just dump it.
The hardest tests for any diet plan happen during the holidays because they’re a source of endless temptation.
Many of these holiday tests occur in social situations. Which makes sense because other people often put intense pressure on us to cheat on our diets.
So unless you intend to become a hermit or a martyr, make sure your diet plan gives you a smooth, comfortable ride past these 7 holiday tests:
1. Holiday Dinners.
The biggest one in the U.S. is Thanksgiving. But each holiday presents its own eating challenges.
Are you going to miss all the pleasures of holiday dinners – including the social aspects of sharing traditional foods – just because you need to lose weight?
There will always be special occasions like holiday dinners, birthdays and weddings that won’t fit into a stringent diet.
So choose a weight loss program that can handle these special occasions realistically and let you enjoy life.
2. The Big Game.
In the U.S., it’s the Super Bowl.
But there are many sporting events throughout the year where food plays a big role. Are you really going to nibble celery and carrot sticks when everyone else is enjoying pizza and beer?
Or will you simply skip any event that threatens your weight loss success?
That’s no way to live.
You don’t have to eat everything in sight. But you should find a diet plan that will let you socialize at sporting events without feeling like an outcast.
3. Holiday Parties.
One of the biggest social tests for any diet plan is a holiday party. But parties can occur throughout the year.
Whether it’s with a group of friends or professional colleagues, there’s a lot of pressure to join in the fun – and that includes eating and drinking.
Make sure your diet plan provides effective strategies for dealing with drinks and party snacks.
4. Restaurants and Dining Out.
This test can happen throughout the year, but never more intensely than during the holiday season.
Can your weight loss program handle it or will it be a diet killer?
5. The Office.
Your office can cause any number of diet disasters.
Candy jars, morning doughnut surprises, birthday parties, retirement parties, client lunches, client dinners, and of course, holiday office parties.
With candy jars, you can graciously decline to snack. It’s just a matter of willpower.
But with client dinners and holiday office parties, you’d better show up or it could cost you your job. So if you want to lose weight, you have to be able to work these situations into your diet plan.
More eating temptations occur at the office during the holidays than at any other time. So if your diet plan works then, you should be safe throughout the year.
6. Holiday Desserts.
Sweet temptations abound over the holidays – whether you’re at social gatherings or home alone trying to resist leftover desserts. Can you work these sweets into your diet from time to time?
If you can, you should be able to successfully handle any cravings for sweets during the rest of the year.
7. No Time To Exercise.
Even though exercise is good for your health, exercise programs often become the first casualty of the busy holiday season.
But problems with exercise can occur at any time during the year. Suppose you’re injured in an accident. Or work or family problems take up so much time, you can’t exercise.
It’s best to choose a diet plan that will work with or without regular exercise. The weight loss benefits of exercise should be a bonus, not a necessity.
*****
These are the 7 hardest holiday tests. But there’s another reason to make sure your diet plan will survive the holidays: they come around every year.
You don’t want to reach your target weight during the off-season only to regain your extra pounds over the holidays.
So test-drive your diet plan this holiday season.
If you can enjoy a smooth, comfortable ride and reach your destination (or at least come closer to it), then you can be reasonably confident that your weight loss program will work throughout the year.
Important Disclaimer: This information is presented for educational purposes only. This isn’t medical advice and it’s not a substitute for any advice or treatment from your physician. You should always see your doctor before starting any new diet.
Will your diet plan survive a holiday test drive? Debbie Fontana believes in the I Love to Cheat Lifestyle Diet so much, she’ll not only let you take a risk-free test drive, she’ll also send you 5 Special Reports and a subscription to her Gold Rewards Newsletter just for trying the diet. Click below to find out how to
Evaluating and Choosing the Best Diet Plans
There are so many diet plans available today that it could make your head spin trying to figure out which are the best diet plans to follow. Diet plans that promise quick weight loss or require you to avoid certain foods should be avoided like the plague.
When evaluating and choosing the best diet plans, look for those plans that include these four elements:
1. Avoiding food cravings
2. Avoiding hunger
3. Increased activity level
4. A plan you can live with for a lifetime – not just a few weeks
Avoid Food Cravings
Any diet plan that requires you to avoid certain foods will ultimately lead to food cravings and will be unsustainable in the long run. A craving is when you desire a certain food even when you’re not hungry. When you finally cave into this desire you will likely overeat, and consequently pack on more weight.
Cravings are caused by your body’s needs for the six essential food ingredients: carbohydrates, fat, protein, vitamins, minerals, and water. When a diet plan requires you to strictly avoid one of these ingredients, your cravings will only increase because you’re denying your body something it wants. The best diet plans will not only give you the flexibility to include all six ingredients in your diet, they’ll require it.
Avoid Hunger
Hunger is different than cravings in that your body desires not just one of the six ingredients, but all of them at the same time. In other words, it just wants food – any food! If a diet plan causes you to be hungry all the time, you will inevitably overeat. To avoid this, the best diet plans will help you curb your appetite.
The best way to curb your appetite and avoid hunger is to keep your stomach full. The best diet plans will encourage you to eat 5-6 smaller meals throughout the day instead of 3 larger meals. Those meals should consist of fruits and vegetables, which have fiber, along with foods with protein and good fats. Each meal should be well-balanced and include as many of the six ingredients as possible.
Protein and fats are especially effective in suppressing appetite. The best diet plans will not require you to avoid fats. All fats are not the same. There are good and bad fats, and it’s the good fats that your body needs. The good fats are monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats. Keep your intake of saturated fats to a minimum.
Increase Activity Level
You need to exercise to lose weight. When you exercise, you increase your metabolic rate, which is the rate at which you burn calories. You cannot achieve long term weight loss success without exercise. Any diet plan that claims you can lose weight simply by changing your diet alone or popping a weight loss pill should be avoided at all costs. The best diet plans will stress the importance of diet AND exercise. You need them both for sustained, long term weight loss.
A Plan You Can Live With For a Lifetime
This is probably the most overlooked element by dieters as they look for the best diet plans, yet it is one of the most important elements. If you cannot live with a diet for life, you simply will not be able to keep the weight off over the long term. It’s that simple. Talk to any elderly person who has managed to stay fit all their life and ask them what kind of diet they’ve had over their lifetime. You can bet they will not say Atkins, Negative-Calorie, or some other short-term fad diet.
The best diet plans will encourage a balanced diet that includes all the six ingredients. You’ve heard of the phrase, “all things in moderation,” and it especially holds true when it comes to a life-long diet. Those fad diets will work in the short term, but if your goal is to keep the weight off for good, then avoid them all together.
Looking for a diet plan you can live with for life? Check out some of the at Travis Van Slooten’s site at http://www.mens-total-fitness.com
Beware Bogus Diet Plans
tinfoilchef.com I found a recipe for salmon patty burgers that I’m going to be trying (and changing to suit me of course) today, if it turns out as good as it sounds I’ll be doing a video on how to make it soon. I’m also working on a new episode of “Points of View” that will be going up on my “Iamnotahamster” channel either tonight or tomorrow. Why is it that most people vlogging about weight loss are women and most (not all) of the guys doing videos about it are actually just selling something? The main thing I’m talking about today is those seeming miracle weight loss plans like one called “fatloss4idiots”. In my opinion this plan and plans like it are designed mainly to separate idiots from their money. In exchange for a purchase price and a “continuity program” (translate that $30, $40 or more per month) you get access to a meal plan generator. You pick a certain number of foods from a list of 40 or so items and it generates a plan based on those choices. You’re allowed to eat as much as you want but only from those foods. Then after 9 to 11 or so days of this you get three or four days off from the plan during which you can eat as much of anything you want. It typically promises that you’ll lose 9 or 11 pounds in like a week and a half or so. The problem is that because of how it’s made you’ll lose the weight alright… over and over and over again. The food list is low glycemic index foods, which basically puts you on a low carb type diet [NOTE: There’s nothing …
Dangers of Obesity
Increased Health Risk of Premature Death
According to CDC researchers, an estimated 300,000 American deaths a year are related to obesity, but see note, below. The risk of premature death rises with increasing weight. Even moderate weight gain (10 to 20 pounds for a person of average height) increases the risk of death, particularly among adults aged 30 to 64 years. Individuals who are obese (BMI greater than 30) have a 50 to 100 percent increased risk of premature death from all causes, compared to individuals with a healthy weight.
Increased Health Risk of Heart Disease
The risk of heart attack, congestive heart failure, sudden cardiac death, angina or chest pain is increased in persons who are overweight or obese. High blood pressure is twice as common in adults who are obese than in those who are at a healthy weight. Obesity is associated with high triglycerides and decreased HDL cholesterol.
Increased Health Risk of Stroke
Atherosclerosis, or narrowing of the arteries, which may lead to the formation of an arterial blood clot, is an important pre-condition of many strokes. Atherosclerosis is accelerated by high blood pressure, smoking, high cholesterol and lack of exercise. Obesity, especially morbid obesity is frequently associated with a high-fat diet, raised blood pressure and lack of exercise. Thus obesity is now considered an important secondary risk factor for strokes.
Increased High Blood Pressure
This may then also lead to:
Headaches
Ear noise & buzzing
Tiredness
Shortness of breath
Excessive sweating
Confusion
Vision changes
Nose bleeds
Blood in urine
Kidney damage / failure
Strokes
Increased Health Risk of Type 2 Diabetes
A weight increase of 11-18 pounds raises a person’s risk of developing type 2 diabetes to twice that of individuals who have not gained weight. Over 80 percent of people with diabetes are overweight or obese. This may account for the newly invented word, “diabesity”®, which signifies the close association between obesity and diabetes.
Increased Health Risk of Cancers
Obesity is associated with an increased risk for some types of cancer including endometrial (cancer of the lining of the uterus), colon, gall bladder, prostate, kidney, and post-menopausal breast cancer. Women gaining more than 20 pounds from age 18 to midlife double their risk of post-menopausal breast cancer, compared to women whose weight remains stable.
Increased risk of Erectile Dysfunction
This stressful disorder is often linked to Insulin Resistance, an imbalance in blood glucose and insulin levels associated with excess weight and obesity. Being overweight can place extra strain on the cardiovascular system and disrupt the delicate balance required to achieve an erection and, therefore, cause ED.
Excess insulin created by Insulin Resistance is implicated in ED because it damages the endothelium of cardiovascular vessels. The endothelium is the layer on the inside of the vessel which secretes chemical mediators that instruct the vessel to contract or relax. To achieve an erection, a release of nitric oxide from the endothelium creates vascular dilation, which allows vessels to fill with blood. This influx of blood is necessary to achieve an erection. Any decrease in nitric oxide supply to the penis caused by the insulin-damaged endothelium lessens or prevents vascular dilation and contributes to erectile dysfunction.
If neglected, excess weight gain can also lead to other conditions linked to ED like the cluster of increased risk factors for cardiovascular disease called Metabolic Syndrome (Syndrome X) as well as Pre-Diabetes, which, if neglected, can lead to irreversible Type 2 Diabetes. Between 35-50% of men with Diabetes experience ED because the disease can damage nerves and arteries, making it difficult to achieve an erection. However, major weight loss can be achieved can by reversing Insulin Resistance, thus removing major factors in the onset of ED.
As many as 70% of ED cases are caused by cardiovascular diseases such as atherosclerosis. This disorder is a type of hardening of the arteries in which cholesterol, fat and other blood components build up in artery walls via poor diet and lack of regular exercise resulting in excess weight gain.
As the condition progresses, the arteries to the heart may narrow, reducing the flow of oxygen-rich blood and nutrients to the heart and brain. This restriction can also reduce blood flow to the tissues of the penis, causing ED.
Other excess weight and obesity-linked cardiovascular diseases that can cause ED are hypertension (high blood pressure) and high levels of triglycerides and LDL “bad” cholesterol in combination with low levels of HDL “good” cholesterol – all factors in reversible Metabolic Syndrome.
Increased Health Risk of Fatty Liver Disease
The main cause of non alcoholic fatty liver disease is insulin resistance, a metabolic disorder in which cells become insensitive to the effect of insulin. One of the most common risk factors for insulin resistance is obesity, especially central abdominal obesity. Studies indicate a correlation between body mass index (BMI) and the degree of liver damage. The higher the BMI the worse the liver disease.
Obesity is a Risk Factor for Chronic Venous Insufficiency
Although obesity is not a direct cause of chronic venous insufficiency, it is an important risk factor. This is because obesity, especially morbid obesity, leads to raised blood pressure, a sedentary lifestyle and musculoskeletal problems (hampering mobility and use of leg muscles), all of which are contributory factors in the development of chronic venous insufficiency. Obese patients also have an increased health risk of other vascular disorders (eg. lower-limb ischemia), caused by inadequate blood flow to the extremities.
Increased Health Risk of Gallbladder Disease
The risk of gallstones is approximately 3 times greater for obese patients than in non-obese people. Indeed, the risk of symptomatic gallstones appears to correlate with a rise in body mass index (BMI).
Increased Health Risk of Breathing Problems
Obstructive sleep apnea (that is, interrupted breathing during sleeping) is more common in obese persons. Obesity is associated with a higher prevalence of asthma and severe bronchitis, as well as obesity hypoventilation syndrome and respiratory insufficiency.
Obesity and Deep Vein Thrombosis
Risk factors for deep vein thrombosis include prior history of the disease, vascular damage, hypertension and predisposition to blood clotting. Although obesity (BMI 30+) has traditionally been recognized as a risk factor for deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism, experts now consider that the evidence supporting this association is inadequate, as much depends on other factors such as history, illness, immobility, and age.
Increased Health Risk of Arthritis
Musculoskeletal disorders, including osteoarthritis, are much more prevalent among obese patients, especially patients diagnosed with severe clinical or morbid obesity. Health studies show that obesity is a strong predictor for symptoms of osteoarthritis, especially in the knees. The risk of osteoarthritis increases with every 2-pound gain in weight.
Increased Health Risks for Expectant Mother and Baby
Obesity has a strong detrimental effect on the health of both mother and new-born baby, both during and after pregnancy. Obesity while pregnant is associated with a higher risk of death in both the baby and the mother. It also raises the risk of high blood pressure in the Mom, by 10 times. Obesity during pregnancy is also associated with an increased risk of birth defects, such as spina bifida. Obesity-related health problems occurring after childbirth include higher risk of wound and endometrial infection, endometritis and urinary tract infection.
Psychological and Social Effects of Obesity
Emotional suffering may be one of the most painful parts of obesity. American society emphasizes physical appearance and often equates attractiveness with slimness, especially for women. Such messages make overweight people feel unattractive.
Other Risks:
- Elevated serum cholesterol levels
- Elevated LDL (“bad” cholesterol) levels
- Decreased HDL (“good” cholesterol) levels
- Elevated triglyceride levels
- Decreased blood oxygen
- Decreased testosterone levels
- Irregular menstrual cycles
- Incontinence
- Increased surgical risks
- Tinnitus
- Reduced immune function
- Swollen joints / fluid retention
- Muscular aches and pains, particularly:
Neck
Shoulders
Chest
- Biomechanical injuries & faults, including:
Sunken arches / flat foot
Heel spurs
Plantar fasciitis
Shin soreness
Creaking knees
Achilles tendonitis
Calcific tendonopathy
Sprained ankles
Bone chips
- Impotence
- Infertility
- Loss of libido
Health Improvements after Weight Reduction
The good news is that losing a small amount of weight can reduce your chances of developing heart disease or a stroke. Reducing your weight by 10 percent can decrease your chance of developing heart disease by improving how your heart works, blood pressure, and levels of blood cholesterol and triglycerides. Studies show that you can improve your health by losing as little as 10 to 20 pounds.
Tze Khit is one of the directors and also a personal trainer from Personal Trainers Singapore (http://www.pt.com.sg), the LARGEST & most POPULAR personal training company in Singapore.