The 2 Pounds Per Week
Rule and How to Burn Fat Faster
Why do you always hear that 2
pounds per week is the maximum amount of fat you should safely
lose? If you train really hard while watching calories closely
shouldn’t you be able to lose more fat without losing muscle or
damaging your health? What if you want to lose fat faster? How
do you explain the fast weight losses on The Biggest Loser?
These are all good questions that I’ve been asked many times.
With the diet marketplace being flooded every day with rapid
weight loss claims, these questions desperately need and
deserve some honest answers. Want to know where that 2 pounds
per week rule comes from and what it really takes to burn more
than 2 pounds of fat per week? Read on.
Why Only 2 Pounds Per
Week?
The truth is, two pounds is not the
maximum amount you can safely lose in a week. That’s only a
general recommendation and a good benchmark for setting weekly
goals. It’s also sensible and realistic because it’s based on
average or typical results.
The actual amount of fat you can
lose depends on many factors. For example, weight losses tend
to be relative to body size. The more body fat you carry, the
more likely you’ll be able to safely lose more than two pounds
per week. Therefore, we could individualize our weekly
guideline a bit by recommending a goal of 1-2 lbs of fat loss
per week or up to 1% of your total weight. If you weighed 300
lbs, that would be 3 lbs per week.
Body Weight Vs Body
Composition
Weight loss is somewhat meaningless
unless you also talk about body composition; the fat to muscle
ratio, as well as water weight. Ask any wrestler about fast
weight loss and he’ll tell you things like, “I cut 10 lbs
overnight to make a weight class. It was easy - I just sweated
it off.”
You’ve also probably seen people
that went on some extreme induction program or a lemon juice
and water fast for the first week and dropped an enormous
amount of weight. But once again, you can bet that a lot of
that weight was water and lean tissue and in both cases, you
can bet that those people put the weight right back on.
The main potential advantage of any
type of induction period for rapid weight loss in the first
week is that a large drop on the scale is a motivational boost
for many people (even if it is mostly water weight).
Why do you hear so many diet and
fitness professionals insist on 2 lbs a week max? Where does
that number come from? Well, aside from the fact that it’s a
recommendation in government health guidelines and in position
statements of most nutrition and exercise organizations, it’s
just math. The math is based on what’s practical given the
number of calories an average person burns in a day and how
much food someone can reasonably cut in a day.
How Do You Lose More Than 2
Pounds Per Week?
Can you lose more than 2 lbs of
pure fat in a week? Yes, although it’s easier in the beginning.
It gets harder as your diet progresses. How do you do it? My
rule is, extraordinary results require extraordinary
efforts. An extraordinary effort means a particularly
strict diet, as well as burning more calories through training
because you can only cut your calories so far from food before
you’re starving and suffering from severe hunger.
Simply put, you need a bigger
calorie deficit.
If you have a 2500 calorie daily
maintenance level, and you want to drop 3 lbs of fat per week
withe diet alone, you’d need a huge daily deficit of 1500
calories, which would equate to eating 1000 calories per day.
You would lose weight rapidly for as long as you could maintain
that deficit (although it would slow down over time). Most
people aren’t going to last long on so little food and they
often end with a period of binge eating. It’s not practical (or
fun) to cut calories so much and in some cases it could be
unhealthy.
The other alternative is to train
for hours and hours a day, literally. People ask me all the
time, “Tom, how is it possible for the Biggest Loser
contestants to lose so much weight? Well first of all they’re
not measuring body fat, only body weight. Then you have the
high starting body weights and the large water weight loss in
the beginning. After that, just do the math – they’re training
hours a day so they’re creating a huge calorie deficit.
But without that team of trainers,
dieticians, teammates, a national audience and all that prize
money, do you think they’d be motivated and accountable enough
to do anywhere near that amount and intensity of exercise in
the real world? Would it even be possible if they had a job and
family? Not likely, is it? It’s not practical to do that much
exercise, and it’s not practical to cut your calories below a
1000 a day and remain compliant. If you manage to achieve the
latter, it’s very difficult not to rebound and regain the
weight afterwards for a variety of physiological and
psychological reasons.
For Fast Fat Loss: Less Food Or
Harder Training?
Trainers are becoming more
inventive these days in coming up with high intensity workouts
that burn a large amount of calories and really give the
metabolism a boost. This can help speed up the fat loss within
a given amount of time. But as you begin to utilize higher
intensity workouts, you have to start being on guard for
overtraining or overuse injuries.That’s why strict nutrition
with an aggressive calorie deficit is going to have to be a
major part of any fast fat loss strategy. Unfortunately, very
low calorie dieting has its own risks in the way of lean tissue
loss, slower metabolism, extreme hunger, and greater chance of
weight re-gain.
My approach to long term weight
control is to lose weight slowly and patiently and follow a
nutrition plan that is well balanced between lean protein,
healthy fats and natural carbs and doesn’t demonize any entire
food group. To lose fat, you simply create a caloric deficit by
burning more and eating less (keeping the nutrient density of
those calories as high as possible, of course).
But to achieve the extraordinary
goals such as photo-shoot-ready, super-low body fat or simply
faster than average fat loss, while minimizing the risks, I
often turn to a stricter cyclical low carb diet for brief
“peaking” programs. I explain this method in chapter 12 of my
e-book Burn The Fat, Feed The
Muscle (it’s my “phase III” or “competition” diet).
The cyclical aspect of the diet
means that after three to six days of an aggressive calorie
deficit and strict diet, you take a high calorie / high carb
day to re-feed the body and re-stimulate the metabolism.
Essentially, this helps reduce the starvation signals your body
is receiving. It’s also a psychological break from the
deprivation which helps improve compliance and prevent
relapse.
The higher protein intake can help
prevent lean tissue loss and curb the hunger. A high protein diet also helps by ramping
up dietary thermogenesis. A high intake of greens, fibrous
vegetables and low calorie fruits can help tip the energy
balance equation in your favor as fibrous veggies are very low
in calorie density and some of the calories in the fiber are
not metabolizable. Healthy fats are added in adequate
quantities, while the calorie-dense simple sugars and starchy
carbs are kept to a minimum except on refeed days and after (or
around) intense workouts.
There’s No Magic, Just
Math
In my experience, a high protein,
reduced carb approach in conjunction with weights and cardio
can help maximize fat loss – both in terms of increasing speed
of fat loss and particularly for getting rid of the last of the
stubborn fat. It helps with appetite control too. But always
bear in mind that the faster fat loss occurs primarily as a
result of the larger calorie deficit (which is easily achieved
with sugars and starches minimized), not some type of “low carb
magic.” If your diet were high in natural carbs but you were
able to diligently maintain the same large calorie deficit, the
results would be similar.
I’m seeing more and more
advertisements that not only promise rapid weight loss, but go
so far as saying that you’re doing it wrong if you’re losing
“only” two pounds per week. “Why settle” for slow weight loss,
they insist. Well, it’s certainly possible to lose more than
two pounds per week, but it’s critically important to
understand that there’s a world of difference between rapid
weight loss and permanent fat loss.
It’s also vital to know that
there’s no magic in faster fat loss, just math. All the
new-fangled dietary manipulations and high intensity training
programs that really do help increase the speed of fat loss all
come full circle to the calorie balance equation in the end,
even if they claim their method works for other reasons and
they don’t mention calories burned or consumed at all.
Beware of The Quick Fix
Faster fat loss IS
possible. My question is, are you willing to tolerate the
hunger, low calories and high intensity exercise for that kind
of deficit? Do you have the work ethic? Do you have the supreme
level of dietary restraint necessary to stop yourself from
bingeing and putting the weight right back on when that
aggressive diet is over? Or would you rather do it in a more
moderate way where you’re not killing yourself, but instead are
making slow and steady lifestyle changes and taking off 1-2 lbs
of pure fat per week, while keeping all your hard-earned
muscle?
Remember, 1-2 pounds per week is
50-100 pounds in a year. Is that really so slow or is that an
astounding transformation? You don’t gain 50-100 pounds over
night, so why should anyone expect to take it off overnight?
Personally, I think short-term thinking and the pursuit of
quick fixes are the worst diseases of our generation.
If you want to be one of those
“results not typical” fat loss transformations, it can be done
and it may be a perfectly appropriate short-term goal for the
savvy and sophisticated fitness enthusiast. It’s your call. But
when you set your goals, it might be wise to remember that old
fable of the tortoise and the hare, and buyer beware if you go
shopping for a fast weight loss program in today’s shady
marketplace.
Train hard and expect success,
Tom Venuto
Fat Loss Coach
www.BurnTheFat.com
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