Friday, April 3, 2009

How to Lose Weight Safely

By Richard Black

There are thousands of different pieces of advice on how to lose weight, and many people believe that they know the correct answer. Avoiding the argument about what makes a good diet (which arguably differs greatly depending on how your body processes foods), many people choose to do terrible things to their body in an effort to lose weight.

Weight loss, in general, is about your metabolism burning away fat and calories. Yet for some reason a number of people starve themselves in an effort to lose weight. People believe that by not eating as much they will start to shed pounds, but the truth about failing to eat is that it actually slows your metabolism - thus although you may experience some weight loss in the beginning, your body is soon going to have a problem processing foods, and it will take even less food to cause you to lose weight until you are extremely unhealthy and growing hair all over your body.

Starving yourself makes it so that eating a regular diet actually can make you fatter, simply because your metabolism has slowed to the point of not being able to process even a small amount of food. It is the worst thing you can do to your body, and certainly not a way to lose weight safely.

Metabolism

The best way to lose weight safely is to increase your metabolism, and the way to do that is to increase your muscle mass. The more energy your muscles need to keep their strength, the more calories you will burn through, resulting in significant weight loss. It begins as a slightly slower process (you will not lose too much weight right away) but as you continue to exercise you will find that once your muscles grow stronger and stronger, the weight will come off faster and faster.

Any muscle building exercises have the potential to increase your metabolism, so consider that the more muscle mass you can gain, the faster your metabolism will work. Be sure and do cardio workouts as well - not just because these exercises burn a lot of calories but also because your heart muscle itself requires a great deal of energy when it gets stronger.

Measuring Weight Loss

However, one thing you must remember - and this is crucial - is that you need to measure weight loss in changes to your body shape and not in terms of how the scale reads. If you are significantly overweight, the scale is a good judge of how well your workout is working, but if you are simply trying to lose some excess weight even though you generally look thin and fit, then you may not notice your weight loss if you look at the scale.

Muscle mass weighs more than fat, and many people with psychological issues about their body (people who believe that they are larger than they are) use the scale to show how they are gaining weight as an excuse to eat less and starve themselves. But visually it is clear that they have lost weight, they have just gained lean muscle mass that has caused the scale to appear as though they are the same size, even though reality shows that they have lost several inches.

As long as you are willing to look at the results rather than at the scale, you are going to see your metabolism increase. And when your metabolism increases, you are going to see a great deal of weight loss, all without negatively affecting your health.

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