The New Year brings with it another opportunity to resolve to lose weight and get back the body image of past years or maybe even get into the best shape of one’s life. Conceptually, the possibility exists – roughly 40% of outcome is genetic dependent, while the rest is shear desire, effort, commitment and some knowledge of what to do. Therefore, with a new year and a reasonable gene pool it is not unreasonable to think those weight loss goals can become a reality this time. The real challenge is what is necessary to actually shed stored energy and the time it takes when one acts sensibly. Sure low carb diets can deplete glycogen stores releasing metabolic water making it look like one is losing fat weight and significant caloric restriction can certainly stimulate catabolism as the body’s starvation defense kicks the adrenal glands on to spare sugar, but why go down those paths again?
If one particular “diet” strategy 
actually worked there would exist no other, and all the self- proclaimed
 fitness gurus, celebrity personal trainers, and diet of the week 
                               books would go away. What this means to 
the annually motivated, is the commitment to New Year weight loss goals 
will require swallowing the reality pill and analyzing proven 
                               methodology for long-term weight loss. 
Ironically, we once again return to the words no one wants to hear – 
caloric control, moderation, fruits and vegetables, and of course 
exercise. 
                               Clinical trials have demonstrated 
moderately paced adjustments in commitment to the aforementioned equates
 to long-term goal attainment.
The word pace suggests taking appropriate
 steps at a reasonably progressive rate so one can accommodate the 
change physiologically, psychologically, and socially, and actually 
adopt 
                               new behavior patterns, hopefully for a 
lifetime. The fat-club shows on television take this concept and put it 
on steroids, engulfing volunteers with stringent daily behaviors under 
                               the close eye of scrutinizers, 
antagonizers, and of course America – sure it’s motivational, but 
completely unrealistic for the rest of the country that has to go to 
work, tend to 
                               their children and who do not have the 
resources for a live-in trainer, nutritionist, and behavior counselor. 
Therefore we’re back to the same place, reducing calories while 
exercising 
                               to keep the metabolic flame burning. The 
evidence is strong, reliable, and factual so the ultimate decision is 
actual commitment to weight loss or another acute effort with no real 
care 
                               for the eventual outcome.
- A negative caloric balance is necessary for weight loss regardless of the type of calories
- Dramatic change in caloric intake often causes loss of protein sparing mechanism leading to reduced metabolic activity and stimulates dysfunction in neurochemical activity often leading to increased appetite
- Dietary change without physical activity has less than a 2% success rate for long term weight loss
- Aggressive change rarely can be maintained as a lifestyle habit
- The total calories and intensity of the exercise are the most important emphasis for negative caloric balance
- Weight loss without resistance training does not yield optimal body composition changes
- Fruits, vegetables and fiber rich whole grains are all carbohydrates and key elements to weight loss and the maintenance of a healthy diet, not protein content
- High protein intake causes an acute metabolic adjustment and weight loss is more associated with controlled caloric intake rather than preferential lipolysis are not healthy
- Long-term high protein diets will damage the kidneys and are unrealistic
- Building up to 300 kcal a day of physical activity yields the greatest health benefits
The above facts certainly create the 
foundation for weight management strategies but again reality must be 
considered. Most Americans are not physically active and present 
physical capabilities that can not tolerate 300 kcal of exercise 
                               most days of the week. Additionally, the 
average American diet is low in fruits and vegetables, high in processed
 sugars and grains, high in saturated fat and total fat and well above 
the daily needs of the body based on voluntary caloric 
                               expenditure and resting metabolic rate. 
It is the job of the fitness professional to premeditate a plan that 
allows for improvements, at again a reasonable rate, while managing the 
perception of tolerable change on one’s quality of life. 
                               A person who feels the change is making 
them less happy than they were before they started a new program will 
most likely give up. The building block approach warrants balancing 
exercise and behavior change tolerance and identifying the 
                               most easily controllable factors to start
 the process.
Consider this example: a middle-aged 
female who weighs 150 lbs burns, during the first four hours at her desk
 job, about 428 calories assuming she reaches an average MET intensity 
of 1.5. Now if she goes to Subway as her dietary restraint 
                               strategy for lunch and consumes a turkey 
wrap, small berry smoothie, and chocolate chip cookie she will consume 
760 kcal for lunch (most people exceed 1000 kcal). Assuming she did not 
eat breakfast (obviously not recommended) and was at 
                               work 2 hours after waking up she is still
 in a slight positive caloric balance (MET intensity for morning 
activities accounted for). This suggests that even the right steps may 
not be enough because sedentary living yields very little energy 
demands. 
Now assume the same woman is new to 
working out but commits to exercise as part of her New Year’s weight 
loss strategy. The South Beach Diet book suggests walking is a good 
weight loss activity. With a starting VO2max of 35 ml kg min this 
                               previously sedentary individual would 
likely tolerate up to 60% intensity.  Exercising at an intensity of 6 
METs would yield her a caloric expenditure of 214 calories for her 30 
minute walk. People who are not fit, but participate in exercise, 
                               do not burn large amounts of calories 
because they train at such low intensities. Certainly the low exercise 
intensity puts her in the “Fat-burning Zone”, but again a high 
percentage of a low number is an even lower number and weight loss is a 
number’s game. 
                               The benefit though is significant. 
Compare the caloric expenditure of working at a desk for 4 hours (428 
kcal or 1.78 kcal/min) with something as trivial as walking for ½ hour 
(214 kcal or 7 kcal/min) and the difference is obvious. To attain weight
 loss, 
                               activity must be a regular part of one’s 
life. Likewise, calorie control must also be a constant. Someone who 
consumes 2400 kcals but burns 1879, or even 2000, kcal per day through 
all metabolic processes will not lose weight.
The aforementioned suggests a reverse 
approach can be used to establish goal attainment. The intended weight 
loss goal, as one would expect, comes first and should be based on 
individual factors including current body mass, the ratio of mass, 
                               relative desires and realistic 
achievements. Once this value is identified, attainable short-term goals
 and resultant objectives can be established. For instance if the weight
 loss goal is 20 lbs. (-70,000 kcals or about 25 marathons) and the 
                               client is deconditioned it is reasonable 
to assume they will not be losing this weight in three weeks. Most 
people can expect to burn 150-250 calories a day from physical activity 
and assuming they can reduce their caloric intake to a negative 250-350 
kcals, 
                               the weight loss goal of 20 lbs can be 
accomplished in approximately 20 weeks. Therefore each week’s goal is a 
negative 3500 kcal and each daily objective is a negative 500 kcal from 
diet and exercise adjustments. If the person cannot comply with the 
daily objective, 
                               than the short-term goal can not be 
reached and without the short-term goal a long-term goal is trivial.
Obviously other sub-strategies can be 
used to help with these objectives. A person who is willing to commit to
 smaller meals throughout the day will better regulate their blood 
glucose and hunger-appetite conversion – a culprit in overeating. Many 
people believe 
                               increasing meal frequency increases 
metabolism via the thermic effect of food, but this is false. The 
calories still need to be accounted for each day. Another sub-strategy 
is to use resistance training as part of the weekly physical activity 
objectives. 
                               In doing so, body composition is better 
managed and cellular proteins are maintained. Although it is possible to
 add some muscle mass with appropriate volume and resistance, lower 
level resistance training often used for initial weight loss objectives 
has 
                               minimal impact on hypertrophy. If muscle 
is added from chronic adaptations, the metabolism is further charged by 
approximately 11-15 kcal a day. It may not sound like much, but multiply
 that by 365 days and you’ll get over a pound of fat, calorically.
The reality is for long-term weight loss a
 person must commit to a healthier lifestyle overall and over a 
lifespan. For most people this is not a reasonable expectation, but any 
effort toward weight management and physical activity is better than 
none. 
                               A valuable point to make is exercise, 
even if one is fat, is a positive stress that yields positive outcomes 
such as reduced risk for disease and an increased quality of life. Once a
 person gets beyond the fantasy and illusion created by television, and 
                               becomes educated to these facts they can 
make an informed and accountability-based decision to do these things or
 not.



.jpg)