When it comes to losing weight, the details don't matter much. It's the principles that count.
Every
legitimate nutrition expert, whether a popular diet guru or a
representative of the medical nutrition establishment, agrees that
there are some fundamental principles of healthy weight loss that apply
to everyone. No matter how much they are disguised, these principles
are at the core of every good diet plan, be it a dietician’s plan or a
bestseller’s. And nobody achieves permanent weight loss and optimal
health without obeying these principles, consciously or unconsciously.
While there appears to be no single right way to eat for health and
weight loss (on the level of details), you need to be aware of the
basic principles. This will help you avoid those diet plans that do in
fact break them and choose the specific plan that is best for you.
“It’s the people who understand the principles who do well long-term,” says Arthur Agatston.
1. Balance
Critics of popular diets frequently claim that such diets encourage
unbalanced eating by declaring certain foods and even whole food groups
off-limits. The example they almost invariably point to is the infamous
cabbage soup diet. But that’s a pretty extreme example.
What the critics overlook is the fact that the average American diet is
rather unbalanced to begin with: heavy on animal foods, processed
foods, fried foods, and sweets and light on fruits, vegetables and
whole grains. It’s hard to find a popular diet that doesn’t encourage
dieters to consume a variety of fresh, natural plant foods, and thereby
support, if not a perfectly balanced diet, then at least a more
balanced one.
In Cracking the Metabolic Code, James LaValle, a pharmacist and
naturopathic physician based in Cincinnati, OH, explains how nutrient
imbalances of various sorts can lead to weight gain, and conversely,
how improving nutrient balance can facilitate weight loss.
To give one example, an underactive thyroid gland is a common cause of
slow metabolism and, consequently, weight gain. Among the many factors
that can lower thyroid function are high levels of adrenal stress
hormones such as cortisol, and as LaValle points out, “Eating a lot of
sugar triggers the release of adrenal hormones.” The average American
diet comprises 18% sugar. The average popular diet most certainly does
not!
2. Nutrient Timing
A spate of recent research has shown that when we eat is almost as
important as what we eat with respect to optimizing our body
composition. “We’ve learned that it’s essential to coordinate energy
intake with energy expenditure,” explains John Ivy, Ph.D. and coauthor
of Nutrient Timing (Basic Health, 2004). “Calories are put to their
best possible use when they are consumed at times when there is a
strong demand for them in the body.”
Morning is a time of relatively high caloric demand. Calories consumed
in the morning are more likely than calories consumed later in the day
to be used for energy than stored as fat. In fact, a study from the
University of Massachusetts found that those who regularly skip
breakfast are 4.5 times more likely to be overweight than those who eat
it most mornings.
Eating smaller meals more frequently (five or six times a day) is
another proven way to better coordinate food intake with energy needs.
According to statistical data, the average American eats three large
meals per day.
3. Self-Monitoring
Research has shown that simply paying attention to what you eat is one
of the more effective ways to reduce your caloric intake.
Self-monitoring strategies are a key habit among members of the
National Weight Control Registry, a research pool comprising several
thousand men and women who have lost an average of 66 pounds apiece and
kept the weight off an average of 6 years. “They’re very conscious of
their eating,” says Suzanne Phelan, Ph.D., a spokesperson for the NWCR.
“About half of them report that they are still counting calories and
fat grams.”
Another useful self-monitoring habit that is common among both the NWCR
subjects and those pursuing weight loss on popular diets is weighing.
According to Phelan, this habit allows the subjects of her study to
avoid the insidious upward creep that is the undoing of many initially
successful diets. “Because they are weighing themselves as often as
they do, they can catch these slips,” she says. “If they do something
about it right away, they’re much more likely to be successful in the
long term.”
4. Selective Restrictions
Just about every popular diet has a “forbidden foods” list. The
specific foods and food types that make the list and how strictly they
are forbidden differ from one program to the next. The Atkins diet
forbids virtually all high-carbohydrate foods. The Ornish diet forbids
animal foods. Peter D’Adamo’s blood type diet forbids a long laundry
list of seemingly unrelated foods for each of the four basic bloods
types.
No weight loss diet can succeed without restriction of the foods that
are most responsible for creating large body fat stores. A majority of
mainstream nutrition experts agree that the “bad fats” found in many
processed foods and animal foods and the “bad carbs” in sweets and
processed foods are the primary culprits. Interestingly, nearly all of
the members of the NWCR choose to restrict intake of high-fat foods.
“Only seven percent are on a low-carb diet,” says Phelan.
Mainstream nutrition experts warn against taking food restrictions too
far, however. “To eliminate specific foods and food groups, especially
those people enjoy, is a recipe for disaster and can lead to feelings
of deprivation, not to mention nutritional imbalances,” says Elisa
Zied, M.S., R.D., a spokesperson for the American Dietetic Association.
James LaValle prescribes only “soft” restrictions to his clients and in
the many nutrition books he’s written. “You get gurus who say, ‘You can
never eat another dessert again,’” he says. “That sets up a guilt
complex in people.” When the options are all or nothing, there is no
happy medium between being on the diet and miserable and being off it
completely.
5. Low Caloric Density
The concept of caloric density, or energy density, refers to the number
of calories per unit volume in a given food. A food that packs a lot of
calories in a small area is said to have high caloric density. Because
water and dietary fiber are non-caloric, foods that contain a lot of
water and/or fiber tend to have low caloric density. Generally
speaking, processed foods are calorically dense, while fruits and
vegetables, with their high water and fiber content, are less dense.
Caloric density is important for those seeking to lose weight because
research has shown that people tend to eat a consistent volume of food
regardless of the number of calories it contains. In a Penn State
study, women were fed either a high-density, medium-density, or
low-density meal three times a day. The subjects in all three groups
ate the same weight of food, but the women eating the high-density
meals took in 30% more calories than the women eating the low-density
meals.
6. Consistency
Healthy eating is not like a vaccine: one shot and you’re covered for
life. Instead it requires a daily, lifelong commitment. There is
growing evidence that the more consistent you are in your wholesome
eating habits, the greater your chances of maintaining a healthy body
weight.
Again, the members of the National Weight Control Registry set an
example. “One of our most recent findings is that they do maintain a
very consistent eating pattern,” says Phelan. “Unlike many dieters,
they tend to eat the same during the week as on the weekends. The same
holds for the holidays versus the rest of the year. They tend to have a
consistent eating pattern throughout the year.”
A persistent myth of dieting is that those who achieve long-term
success start off with a more moderate, slow-and-steady approach than
the crash dieters who take on severe restrictions only to bail out
after a few weeks or months and regain their weight. According to
Phelan, there is no evidence that the long-term successes start off
differently. The real difference is that they simply keep doing what
they started doing!
7. Motivation
Why are some dieters able to maintain their healthy new lifestyle
indefinitely while most others peter out after a few weeks or months?
This is currently one of the hottest questions in weight loss research.
As yet there is no definitive answer, but there are indications that
it’s mostly about motivation.
Certain types of triggers for weight loss diets are more likely to
yield long-term success than others. For example, “One thing we’ve
found is that people who have medical triggers for their weight loss
are more successful in the long term than people who don’t,” says
Phelan. There’s nothing like a near-death experience to keep you on the
straight and narrow path of healthy eating!
More evidence for the motivation explanation comes from the fact that just about every other explanation can be eliminated.
It is often assumed that successful dieters have more inherent
willpower. However, most members of the NWCR actually failed in several
weight loss initiatives before they finally succeeded, indicating that
something about their circumstances rather than their psychological
makeup was the key.
“Bad genes” that resist weight loss are also frequently blamed. And
yet, says Phelan, “Many of [the NWCR members] have parents who were
overweight or were overweight themselves as children, which suggests
they may have a genetic predisposition to obesity, but they still
manage to lose weight.”
Finding the Perfect Fit
Each of us is unique – metabolically, psychologically, and
circumstantially. For this reason, there’s no single diet plan that
works well for everyone. “Each person needs to find what works for him-
or herself,” says Zied. But there are underlying principles of healthy
nutrition and dieting that do apply universally. Understanding these
principles is essential to finding the right plan for you.
Nutrition article courtesy of PacificHealth Laboratories, makers
of nutrition tools such as Accelerade, Accel Gel, Endurox R4, Endurox
Excel and much more. For product information or to purchase products,
please visit www.pacifichealthlabs.com.