Weight Loss Information

How to Lose Weight: Food for Thought


When it comes to weight loss, most of us would like to engage in what psychologists call "magical thinking." We'd like to believe that some easy trick or ritual would allow us to shed pounds while eating anything we liked. Wouldn't it be nice if consuming all our food before 6 p.m., doing yoga, or hopping on one foot for five minutes would allow us to chow down with all our favorite goodies and still lose weight?

Unfortunately, despite what legions of people with a book or a product to sell might claim, it's just not so. Yet it really is possible to come up with a system for losing weight. The real secret is this: It's all about the calories.

Most of us have heard that sensible weight loss involves some combination of diet and exercise. As a physician, I'm surely not going to tell people to avoid exercise. For most people, exercise is a very healthy thing to do. But when it comes to losing weight, unless we're training for the Olympics, the effect of exercise is minor. What matters most is how many calories go down the hatch.

This bears explaining. Our bodies use the calories we consume to fuel our basic life-processes. The heart needs lots of fuel (calories) to beat its usual 100,000 times in 24 hours. The brain, liver and kidneys also require lots of fuel to perform their many chemical reactions and metabolic tasks. Most of the calories we burn in 24 hours (about 1500 for women and 1800 for men) we would still burn even if we were in a coma.

It's true that working the muscles in our arms, legs and trunk requires fuel (calories) as well, but you'd be amazed how long you would have to row, jog, swim or walk to burn off the calories in one slice of cherry pie. (Answer: In order to burn the 486 calories in a slice of cherry pie a 175-pound person would need to row for 35 minutes, jog for 37 minutes, swim for 41 minutes or walk briskly for 63 minutes.) For most of us it would be more practical to just not eat the pie.

Each of us has a calories-per-day figure for maintaining body weight. If, on the average, we eat that many calories, then we will maintain body weight, neither gaining nor losing. If we consistently eat more calories than our break-even number, then we will gain weight. The unused calories have to be stored somewhere, and will probably go into our body's fat cells. If we consistently eat fewer than our break-even number of calories, then we will lose weight. The body will get its fuel somewhere, and will burn off calories that have been put into storage in fat cells.

This is how it is. We just can't get around the basic biology and physics.

So, if we're trying to lose weight, how do we choose what we do or don't eat? Well, sometimes, our choices are haphazard. A useful analogy concerns shopping. How in the world could we do a good job of shopping without knowing the prices of the items we're putting in our shopping carts? Without knowledge of the prices our choices in merchandise could easily exceed our budgets.

The same holds true when it comes to eating. If we wanted to budget our calories, how in the world could we make good choices if we didn't know the calorie count of the foods we eat? We just couldn't do a good job. Our calorie intake per day would probably exceed our break-even point for maintaining body weight, and we would gain.

So, in order to make sensible choices, it's crucial to know the approximate number of calories in the foods we eat. An easy way to do that is to buy a paperback book in the check-out line of your grocery store that lists the calorie content of usual portions of commonly consumed food and beverages. (Or look them up online.) We don't necessarily need to check the list each time we sit down to eat, but knowing typical figures for our favorite foods will enable us to know if we're keeping or exceeding our daily calorie budget.

This is not as awful as it sounds. In fact, there can be pleasant surprises. Suppose I typically get the munchies in the evening, and I roam the house in search of goodies to snack upon. Here is where knowledge of calorie contents can pay off. If I satisfy my munchies by eating cookies, French fries, potato chips or candies, then I'll blow my daily food-budget in just one sitting. But what if I substitute pretzels or unbuttered popcorn? They might be just as satisfying, yet contain fewer calories. So these alternative choices might spare my daily calorie budget at no loss of satisfaction.

As a physician I often encourage my patients to lose weight. Being overweight can increase blood pressure and cholesterol which, in turn, increase the likelihoods of heart attacks and strokes. Heart attacks and strokes are the number one and number three causes of death in the U.S., respectively, and strokes are the number one cause of disability. So we're talking about real conditions that afflict real people. Moreover, our overweight bodies put more stress and strain on our spines and our knees, making them wear out earlier, hurt more, and interfere with quality of life.

Some patients with whom I have this conversation look at me like I'm crazy. They're eating barely enough food to keep a small bird warm, they say. The problem-or the solution-couldn't possibly lie with the food they eat.

The incentives are clear. The choices are ours to make. We shouldn't blame our metabolism. And we shouldn't delude ourselves that we consume barely enough to keep ourselves alive, and yet still, unaccountably, gain weight. We need to take our health into our own hands and start making choices that increase the quality and quantity of our remaining years.

(C) 2005 by Gary Cordingley

Gary Cordingley, MD, PhD, is a clinical neurologist, teacher and researcher. For more health-related articles see his website at: http://www.cordingleyneurology.com


MORE RESOURCES:

Call 4 Action: Marketing Of 'Weight Loss' Berry Drawing Fire
MSNBC - 13 hours ago
Dietician Lesli Bonci said there are no studies to back up any weight loss claims of the berries. They actually have fewer cancer-fighting particles than ...
Warning issued about diet supplements ABC7Chicago.com
Acai Promoters Targeted by BBB, Arizona Natural Products Marketplace
all 58 news articles


San Francisco Chronicle

Judd Signs on For Weight Loss Brand
San Francisco Chronicle,  USA - 7 hours ago
Country singer Wynonna Judd is getting in shape for 2009 as the new face of a weight-loss product. The star, 44, will front slimming pills Alli, ...
Wynonna Partners With Weight Loss Aid Country Weekly
GSK Signs Wynonna Judd to Endorse Alli, Its Flagging Weight Loss Drug BNET
Credit: Arnold Turner/WireImage People Magazine
PR Newswire (press release) - Radar Online
all 34 news articles


BBC News

Steve Jobs' weight loss may be linked to his earlier cancer ...
San Jose Mercury News,  USA - Jan 5, 2009
(MARIA J. AVILA/MERCURY NEWS) Apple CEO Steve Jobs' recent weight loss may be linked to his prior surgery for pancreatic cancer and is likely treatable, ...
Video: Steve Jobs Weight Loss Due to Hormone Imbalance AssociatedPress
Steve Jobs Says Hormone Imbalance Caused Weight Loss Bloomberg
Apple's Jobs Blames Weight Loss on Hormones PC Magazine
Taipei Times - Computerworld
all 2,651 news articles


Washington Times

Researchers question whether physical activity contributes to ...
Austin American-Statesman, TX - 10 hours ago
A study, led by a team at Loyola University in Maywood, Ill., questions whether physical activity is important for weight loss. The study compared African ...
Activity Shown To Be Less Important for Weight Loss Than Food eMaxHealth.com
all 13 news articles


USA Today

Weight loss tip of 2008: 'The Write Diet'
Examiner.com - 16 hours ago
University-based weight-loss experts and a handful of smaller research studies also have verified that writing down the food and calories you eat each day ...
The key to weight loss: portion control Globe and Mail
EAT THIS, NOT THAT! SUPERMARKET SURVIVAL GUIDE The No-Diet Weight ... Earthtimes (press release)
Eat less, add flavor, lose the weight Boston Globe
WISC - Liberty Tribune
all 26 news articles


A look at weight-loss spokeswomen
Chicago Tribune, United States - 21 hours ago
The actress will continue as a spokeswoman for the weight-loss chain, People.com reports, noting that Latifah, 38, shed 20 pounds in 2008 while maintaining ...


PR Web (press release)

Food Banks to Benefit from Weight Loss Challenge
Promo Magazine, NY - 15 hours ago
General Mills, NBC’s “Biggest Loser” and Feeding America are collaborating on a weight loss challenge that will deliver a pound of groceries to local food ...
Weight loss program benefits Winchester News Gazette
Let the weight loss begin Martinsburg Journal
'The Biggest Loser: Couples' cuts nine contestants in opening twist Reality TV World
Zap2it.com - Entertainment Weekly
all 83 news articles


Contactmusic.com

Actor talks about wife's weight loss
KOKI FOX 23, OK - 2 hours ago
... Paul Bettany has been forced to go public with a family tragedy in an effort to stop the media commenting on his wife Jennifer Connelly's weight loss. ...
Paul Bettany Talks Wife’s Weight Loss Just Jared
Husband Explains Jennifer Connelly's Dramatic Weight Loss Hollyscoop
Stress to Blame for Jennifer Connelly's Weight Loss OK! Magazine
Celebuzz - X17 Online
all 39 news articles


Weight loss puts area resident in national spotlight
Keokuk Gate City Daily, IA - 13 hours ago
By Robin Delaney/MVM News Network NAUVOO, Ill. - Losing 45 pounds in six months has many rewards (a lot of positive attention, a new wardrobe of a much ...
Tri-state resident featured in People ConnectTriStates.com powered by KHQA
all 2 news articles


E Canada Now

Two FDA-Approved Drugs May Spark Weight Loss, Fight Obesity
dBTechno, MA - 16 hours ago
... published this week in the journal Cell Metabolism has revealed that two FDA-approved drugs may be able to actually spark weight loss and fight obesity. ...
Drugs trigger dramatic weight loss in fat mice Scientific American
Study raises hope for obesity treatment Reuters
New hope for failed obesity drug Boston Globe
Science Daily (press release) - I Really Should Study
all 92 news articles

Weight-Loss - Google News

home | site map
© 2006