5 Secrets
to Keeping the Weight Off for
Good
Tom
Venuto
I have very little interest these days in
all the media-hyped stories of dramatic, rapid losses of body
weight. “Big losers” don’t impress me, for numerous reasons.
For example, weight is not fat. “Weight” could be composed of
mostly lean tissue, or it could be mostly water weight. In
fact, I would go a step further and point out that rapid loss
of bodyweight correlates very highly with a greater chance of
relapse, weight re-gain and long term failure.
So what does impress me? What gets my
attention?
I pay attention to what the “long term
maintainers” have to say - those are the people who have
maintained an ideal weight for over a year… preferably even 2-5
years or more.
The difference between losers
and maintainers
As I was researching the subject of long
term weight maintenance recently, I was surprised at the huge
amount of research that's already been done in this
area.
One paper that caught my interest was
published by Judy Kruger and colleagues in the International
Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity,
titled,
“Dietary and physical activity behaviors
among adults successful at weight loss maintenance.”
This was not an experimental study, but a
compilation of data from the “Styles Survey” which was
representative of the U.S. population and asked respondants
questions about strategies to aid with maintaining an ideal
weight.
In this particular survey, only one-third
(30.96%) of the respondents said they were successful at
keeping their weight off. The researchers wanted to know the
difference between the small group that was successful and the
majority that were not.
Both groups reduced the amount of food
they consumed, they ate smaller portions, more fruits and
vegetables, fewer fatty foods and fewer sweetened
beverages.
Not really any surprises there, but what
we want to know most is not what losers and maintainers have in
common, but what the maintainers did that the losers
didn't.
Some major differences emerged between
losers and maintainers:
First, a significantly higher proportion
of successful maintainers reported exercising 30 minutes or
more daily, and they also reported adding other physical
activity to their daily schedules (recreation, sports, physical
work, etc). In addition, more of the successful maintainers
included weight training in their exercise regimens than did
the losers.
Reducing sedentary activities (TV
watching, etc) was also a significant difference between those
who successfully maintained and those who did not.
The next big difference that separated
the successful maintainers from the unsuccessful was in their
“self-monitoring behaviors” including:
- tracking calories
- tracking body weight
- planning meals
- tracking fat
- measuring the amount of food on
their plate
Unfortunately, these types of
self-monitoring behaviors, especially weighing and measuring
food and counting calories, are among the most avoided and even
criticized weight control techniques. Some weight loss
“experts” even claim that it's detrimental to count calories,
weigh yourself or measure and weigh your food.
However, these self monitoring behaviors
are being identified more and more frequently in the research
as part of “the difference that makes the difference.” I agree,
and they have always played a major role in my own
Burn The Fat
program.
A final difference was that people who
reported self-perceived “barriers” to their success were 48-76%
less likely to be a successful maintainer.
For example, they said they had no time
to exercise, they were too tired to exercise or it was too hard
to maintain an exercise routine. I interpret this as: the
unsuccessful losers were excuse makers!
THE
TOP 5 STRATEGIES TO BE A SUCCESSFUL
MAINTAINER
So let’s recap and turn these research
findings into some practical action steps you can apply
today.
- Increase your total daily activity
level, including formal exercise as well as sports,
physical work or recreational activity. Exercise improves
weight loss, but more importantly, it is critical for
weight maintenance.
- Decrease sedentary recreational
activities by cutting back on TV watching, computer games
and web surfing. Take up physical recreation such as
sports, boating, biking, walking, hiking, gardening,
physical hobbies and playing with your kids, if you have
them.
- Include weight training as part of
your formal exercise program, throughout the fat loss phase
and even more seriously during maintenance.
- Track and monitor everything! Count
calories and nutrients, measure your portion sizes, weigh
your food, plan your menus in writing and monitor your body
weight and body fat percentage.
- Avoid excuses and maintain positive
beliefs and attitudes towards your environment and what you
perceive as “barriers.” For example, say, “I can always
make time for what is most important to me” instead of, “I
don't have time to exercise.”
If you're currently on a fat loss
journey, and you want to know how good your odds are for being
a successful maintainer, it's pretty easy to predict using
these 5 strategies. If you're not using all 5 of them yet, then
when would be a good time to start today?
There are limitations to survey results
such as these, including the fact that they are cross
sectional, and therefore cannot prove causality. However, I
believe these findings are important and
significant.
Not only do they confirm previous similar
studies and agree with the findings of other groups of
successful maintainers (such as the National Weight Control
Registry), I found that these results match precisely what I've
seen among my most successful “Burn
The Fat” clients.
THIS is the type of advice I'd suggest
you listen to the most: Advice about how to lose body FAT, not
body WEIGHT, and how to maintain an ideal bodyweight and body
composition over the long haul, not how to lose weight as fast
as possible.
Your friend and coach,
Tom Venuto
Fat Loss Coach
www.BurnTheFat.com
P.S. There was one more “difference that
made the difference,” in this study, and this one may surprise
you (although it didn’t surprise me). Successful maintainers
were LESS likely to take over the counter diet products (pills,
etc).

About the Author:
Tom Venuto is an NSCA-certified personal
trainer, lifetime natural bodybuilder, certified strength &
conditioning specialist (CSCS), and author of the #1 best
selling diet e-book, "Burn The Fat,
Feed The Muscle." Tom has written hundreds of articles and
has been featured in IRONMAN, Natural Bodybuilding, Muscular
Development, Exercise for Men and Men's Exercise. To contact
Tom or get information on his e-book, visit www.BurnTheFat.com
|