Tuesday Tip

Tuesday Tip : Calorie Counting Doesn’t Work…

Tuesday Tip : Calorie Counting Doesn’t Work… 🤔

I hear this a lot – people tell me that calorie counting didn’t work for them and that despite only eating 1000 cals (or whatever value it is) they just didn’t lose weight.

If the goal is to lose weight/fat then the only way to do this is to be in a energy (calorie) deficit. This is a fact and hundreds of studies support this. The means by which you achieve that deficit can obviously vary. It doesn’t mean you HAVE to count calories. But if calorie counting didn’t work for you that means you weren’t in a calorie deficit.

If you thought you were only eating 1000 calories then something is definitely going awry as anyone on that level of calories WILL lose weight.

So if calorie counting doesn’t work for you then these are probably the reasons why.

# 1 Measuring inaccurately

This is the most common issue – not weighing food accurately. If you’re just using MyFitnessPal and finding a rough estimate that you ‘think’ is right then it’s not going to cut it. If you’re guessing weights then you’ll almost certainly be under estimating – again hundreds of studies show this to be the case – even in experienced ‘trackers’. Eyeballing amounts accurately is incredibly hard and unreliable. So get the kitchen scales out – measure in grams and millilitres (not cups and tbsp) and then you’ll have a better level of accuracy.

# 2 Lack of consistency

You feel like you’ve been on track consistently for weeks but in reality those weekends, nights out, or those days when you’ve emotionally eaten have taken you over etc. We’re very good at ‘forgetting’ (unintentionally) all the times we actually don’t stick to the plan. So if you haven’t lost then perhaps it’s because you haven’t been consistent enough?

# 3 Not enough time

Maybe you’ve been trying for a couple of weeks but aren’t seeing the results you want yet. Well that’s probably because you need to do it for longer! It takes weeks and months – not days to see sustainable losses. Remember you didn’t put the weight on in a few days, it’s not going to come off in a few days either. You need consistency over 7 days a week, for weeks and months.

Happy Tuesday 🤗xx

Nutrition and Calorie Tips

What actually happens when you lose weight fast…

What actually happens when you lose weight fast… 📉

We seem to be conditioned into expecting extremely rapid weight loss when we start a new diet or exercise regime. Social media is also full of promises of diets that will help you ‘lose 5kg in a week’. I can see why it’s tempting and I can also see why it’s nice to lose large amounts of scale weight when you start a new diet, and why it’s easy to feel disheartened if you don’t.

First things first, remember weight loss is not the same as fat loss. You’ll see lots of diets promising x kg loss in a week etc. What these diets – be they juice cleanses, ‘detoxes’, 7 day challenges, fasting, keep etc , don’t explain is that if you did indeed see that amount of loss in a week then it wouldn’t be fat loss. The harsh reality is that most of that weight loss is actually water weight, stomach contents, and a fraction of that is also muscle , and only a little bit of actual fat. Plus if it’s a particularly restrictive diet or is using pseudoscience to back it up it can also mess up your relationship with food and mental health.

Weight loss and fat loss are not the same thing. It’s quite easy to manipulate water weight by consuming fewer carbs (as 1g carbs binds approx 3g water), reducing salt intake or using diuretics (which increase the amount of water and salt excreted in the form of urine). This is how some athletes cut a few kg in the week before a competition.

So what should you do?

Do not crash diet – please! Instead try to make sustainable longer term changes to your calorie intake. A moderate calorie deficit will allow you to lose sustainably and steadily (an average of <1% body weight/ week). Shift your expectations away from big scale losses as a measure of success each week and instead look at long term trends and changes in things like clothes size, or measurements or progress photos rather than the scales.

🤗xx

Tuesday Tip

Tuesday tip: Balancing hormones

Tuesday tip: Balancing hormones 🚩 🤔

You will often see fitness or wellness coaches talking about you needing to ‘balance your hormones’ or promising that certain products can do this. This is a huge red flag. Fitness coaches, personal trainers, wellness coaches, life coaches etc should not be talking about hormones in this respect – it falls outside their scope of practice and I’m afraid in most cases they don’t know what they’re talking about. The wellness world is full of this sort or marketing quackery that preys on people – right now the main target is peri menopausal and menopausal women, though often it targets other groups too.

The only person qualified to tell you that you need to ‘balance’ your hormones is an endocrinologist. For example – balancing the levels of thyroid hormones, or the levels of oestrogen and progesterone has real and significant medical implications. Another example is cortisol production – if ‘imbalanced’ through chronic stress it causes oestrogen and androgens to be suppressed. These are facts, based on medical science, not conjecture based on the current social media hype that preys on vulnerable people.

Inevitably you’ll also see that these people talking about a need to balance hormones are also selling programs or supplements which will ‘balance your hormones’ …. Ta da! What a surprise…

There is so much fear and distrust for doctors and the medical community, and none whatsoever for non-regulated, unproven and untested products purchased over the counter or internet. If someone has a real hormone imbalance they need medical care – likely in the form of an endocrinologist but certainly not a collection of random supplements or diets.

Happy Tuesday 🤗

Xx

Nutrition and Calorie Tips

Reverse lent!

Reverse lent! 😇

We may be a week into Lent already but regardless of your beliefs or faith Lent has traditionally become a time when people give up various things they consider ‘bad’. Now whilst there’s absolutely nothing wrong with that at all sometimes it can become more of a negative rather than positive experience.

So how about instead of giving up things, you turned it around and tried taking something up or giving something to others?
You could do some voluntary work, or you could give things to charity. For example, try setting up a box and popping one item of clothing or something you don’t want anymore in it every day for each day of lent, then donate to charity at the end!
You could give your time to someone – it could be something simple like helping a friend or neighbour, or calling someone for a chat. Or you could take up a new hobby or challenge during Lent – try something new like gardening, knitting, drawing, or perhaps a fitness based challenge – trying new classes, walking every day, working out 3 times a week etc.

What do you say? 🤗
How about a reverse lent?
Xx

Tuesday Tip

Tuesday Tip: Hunger Management

Tuesday Tip: Hunger Management 😝

Hunger management plays a crucial role in successful weight loss. People often over restrict and starve themselves which, whilst obviously may work temporarily , usually leads to cravings, binge eating, and hunger. All of which derail progress and of course make it unsustainable.

With a sustainable calorie deficit there will still be some mild hunger. This isn’t a cause for concern and it’s to be expected but it’s helpful to have some strategies to help manage this so you can stay on track. Essentially it comes down to making food choices which maximise feelings of fullness whilst minimising calories. Remember total calories still count when it comes to weight loss so these are all within that context.

Here are a few things that can help:

#1 Higher protein intake may lead to improved feelings of satiety and less cravings. But, if you already eat a high-protein diet (1.6g/kg+) then it won’t make much difference. Also be aware that prioritising protein too much may lead to to eating fewer carbs which you also need and can mean you end up low on energy and more hungry. So don’t remove carbs either!

#2 High fibre foods help by bulking food volume, slowing digestive time and increasing gut fermentation – all

Of which lead to feelings of fullness. Low energy dense high fibre foods like fruit and veg are a great option.

#3 Fats can help with feelings of fullness (especially when combined with protein) but

they may not be the best option for

hunger management, especially if you

have a tight calorie budget. Fat provides more then double the energy of carbs / protein so it easy to eat more cals with a smaller serving of a high-fat food, compared to a high-carb food

# 4 Go for high volume foods or combinations of foods. If you’re having a lower calorie snack bulk it out with things like fruit or veggies, or a zero cal drink (water or soft drink) to help.

#5 include whole , unrefined carbs as they aid in satiety, muscle recovery and training performance /energy levels (and they’re tasty!)

#6 Our beliefs and perceptions impact feelings of fullness. Perceptions of what a ‘normal’ portion size is impacts whether we feel full after eating it. Equally our beliefs about certain foods have the same effect e.g. if you believe a protein in bar is more filling it will feel that way. Increasing knowledge around calorie content can help with this.

Happy Tuesday 🤗

Xx