Monday, May 17, 2010

Dieting 2.0


We've all tried to lose a few pound by starving ourselves. Admit it - everyone's guilty of that crime. The constant song that's sung by doctors and physicians for us to lose weight and the pressure we persistently face from our friends and family drive us INSANE to just shed those pounds ASAP.

The truth? The acronym "ASAP" doesn't really make sense in the normal and effective dieting person's dictionary. Why?

Dieting's a process.

A process is something that you need to integrate with your lifestyle, not a quick conversion done to satisfy the irritating songs sung by your friends and family.

When going on a diet, do some research. It's ludicrous to go from eating high-fat, high-sugar foods to consuming no sugar, no carbs, and no fat for the next two weeks. That kind of "dieting" (if you can even call it that) is dangerous. Why? People who go on crash diets show an irrevocable trend to relapse, eating the same high-sugar, high-carb food that they used to eat. And can you blame them? If I loved to sit on chairs and you took away all of my chairs for the rest of my life so I had to stand up for even the most mundane of tasks, I'd go insane. Or worse, I'd find a chair.

The thing to keep in mind, therefore, is to TAKE IT EASY. Dieting is meant to be a tough process to get used to, but you eventually have to get used to it. It isn't meant to be tedious FOREVER - just for a few days until you get adjusted to your new lifestyle. Lifestyle - that's an important word. When you embark on a diet, it's not a simple addition to your existing routine of doing things - it's a complete change of HOW you do those things.

Going back to the entire concept of losing weight itself - people tend to forget that dieting alone does nothing for a person. You need to, as the cliche goes, find the right balance between exercise and dieting. Think about it - if you eat nothing but vegetables for the next 2 weeks and you don't get up from your couch from the next two weeks, you'll starve, relapse, and eventually go back to exactly where you started. The trick here is to eat SMART foods that enable you to eat foods that you like, but are burnt off with the right amount of exercise. If you can strike a balance between those two components, be prepared for awesome, effective, and efficient results.

Remember - don't call dieting, "dieting" - it's a processed lifestyle change that takes time to get used to and can provide you with results if you don't take it for granted.

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