If you want to do this it is for life so you need to totally change your way of eating and exercising. This is not a diet rather than a healthy eating plan for life. So no more talking diet cause it means time limit.
Here are the golden rules:
Initially cut down to 1200 (women) - 1500 (men) calories.
Exercise 6 times per week for 1 hours a day. Do three weight sessions and three cardio sessions. No gym involved if you don't have the access.
Don't eat carbs after 4pm, never eat carbs within 2 hours of exercise or within 1 hour of exercise.
Drink 3 litres of water per day. You can have a green tea at the end of the day.
Limit your fruit in take to 2 pieces per day.
Never eat dinner after 6pm.
Adopt of low GI eating plan this is sustainable for life!
Make low fat dairy choices
Follow this menu plan as a suggestion:
Breakfast 7am - 1 cup hot water w lemon
20 minutes later have a bowel of oats w water (no honey) OR
fruit salad w low GI soy yogurt
Snack 10am - pear or apple (both low GI)
Lunch 12.30pm - muligrain sandwich w 50g tuna & salad (no butter)
Snack 3pm - low GI yogurt OR skim berry smoothie (no honey or banana) plenty of ice, 1/2 cup skim milk & 1/4 cup yogurt
Dinner 5.30pm - 120g grilled lean meat/fish/prawns/tofu patties (not fried) w spinach salad & mixed vegies (no whites, carbs) OR 3 egg white/soy omlette with ham, cheese and tomato
Snack - 1 scoop of low cal low fat ice cream (if hungry)
Exercise is must be intense. Refer to www.bodybuilding.com for your weights routine. Never do weights two consecutive days have a cardio day in between.
Cardio needs to include running, go hard up stair wells and cycling. If you have access to a gym include boxing and spin classes as well. You get the most benefits from exercise when your body is totally fatigued and this is when you see changes.
To maintain you can increase calories to 1500 (women) - 1800 (men) and reduce exercise sessions to 3-4 times per week. If weight creeps up again due to holiday period etc.. go back to 1200 (women) - 1500 (men) cal and 6 sessions again.
Good luck it worked for me it can work for anyone.
2006-06-29 00:14:29
·
answer #1
·
answered by debrock16 5
·
0⤊
0⤋
Be your own trainer and nutritionist, the basic rules to losing weight are no soda, no fast food, lots of chicken, fish, fresh (not canned that’s bad) fruits and vegies, whole wheat stuff, yogurt. Not so many cakes and donuts and cookies. Basic common sense for eating, you just need to enforce it. Get all the bad stuff out of the house right away, just toss it or give it away while your still motivated. No alcohol and no smoking if that applies. Lots of water, 3-4 liters a day, not all at once, but spread it out. Its really easy to down a liter or two while your watching tv or on the computer. Also drink some after you eat the bigger meals of the day, it helps your body pick out the nutrients in food when your food is more spread apart. Don’t think that sports drinks can replace water, the only time you need to drink them right after a workout, besides that just stick with water. These rules may be hard to adapt to at first so start with cutting out the things you know you can live without. Then work from there. Remember these are perfect eating habits, it can take you a while to work into it. If you know you can’t live without your one treat a day, don’t fight it by trying to eat something else, just eat it and make sure that’s the only one you cheat on a day. Otherwise you’ll get depressed and quit. Another important point is getting the right amount of sleep every night. You need 8-9 hours of sleep each night for your body to function correctly. This is an important factor of losing weight. Set up a routine for yourself and go to bed at about the same time each night.
As for exercise, lots of cardio. Find something you like. If you have never exercised much before, start with walking 30 minutes a day at a brisk pace. Move on to different terrains that include hills and increase the time spent. After a week or two, try jogging the route. No matter what find an activity you enjoy. Walking to jogging is just an example, try hiking, rollerblading, biking. Once you get into a regular routine, if your not happy with the level of difficulty, try signing up with a gym. Spinning, pilates or kickboxing classes are great. It will also introduce you to working with weights. Talk to a trainer for instruction before using any weights. A cheap investment is a balance ball, it works you stomach while your just sitting on it, like at your computer and its great for posture. There are hundreds of exercises you can use it for for your entire body. I can give you some ideas if you want, just email me. Also for more info on the benefits of water go to www.watercure.com Good Luck! Honestly if you need anything else don't hesitate to IM me, krista_girl86 even if you don't pick me as best answer, i'd be happy to help. Also check out the website for the tv show The Biggest Loser on NBC. There are many, many helpful facts on there.
2006-07-05 15:52:06
·
answer #2
·
answered by Krista 5
·
0⤊
0⤋
Krista says: "Lots of water, 3-4 liters a day, not all at once, but spread it out. Its really easy to down a liter or two while your watching tv or on the computer. Also drink some after you eat the bigger meals of the day, it helps your body pick out the nutrients in food when your food is more spread apart. "
ROTFLMAO!!
There's no proof that anyone needs that much water. NONE. Just folklore, urban myth, old wives' tale. (See references) And the belief that "it helps your body pick out the nutrients" is just plain unfounded. Your body does a fine job "picking out" nutrients with or without excess fluids.
Bottom line: Drink when you're thirsty. Period. Do not obsess over or worry about getting some arbitrary amount of water as a daily "goal". You already get most of the water your body needs from the food you consume. The rest of Krista's advice is reasonable. But she's got some crazy ideas about physiology.
2006-07-05 16:24:05
·
answer #3
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
Number 1 rule - be realistic and don't obsess.
Make every bite count and go back to the basics. Food closer to its' original form is so much better for you so avoid the empty calorie items. They may be convenient, but they don't pay off in the long run. Take time to treat yourself right and stay out of those fast food lines.
Eating healthy means getting the essentials every day like water, fruits and veggies, whole grains, proteins, healthy fats, vitamins, dairy and watching the junk food intake.
One day at a time - you are worth it!
2006-06-29 00:24:18
·
answer #4
·
answered by Mystique148 1
·
0⤊
0⤋
Try this website: www.mypyramid.gov there you can find all the latest information about what you need to include for a healthy diet. Including exercise tips. There is also a "My Pyramid Tracker" on the site. It's great! I use it everyday! You enter in the foods you eat each day and it compares what you're eating to what your pyramid recommends for you! It's so easy to see where you need to cut back, and where you need to add stuff to your diet! They also have an "Exercise Tracker" that helps you to calculate the total number of calories you've burned in a day! Compare that to what you consume... and you've got yourself a great tool for losing weight!
2006-06-29 00:13:49
·
answer #5
·
answered by rocknrobin21 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
Try to go off sugar as much as possible. Sodas have a ton of sugar in then and even diet sodas are bad for you. Try eating wheat bread (if you don't already) instead of white bread cause white bread is really bad for you. Spending fifteen minutes of your day doing a good excersice movie also helps. If you have a ton of money (because good quality means good money) try:
2006-06-29 00:18:23
·
answer #6
·
answered by d@c 1
·
0⤊
0⤋
Eat several (5-6) small meals a day...your body will burn calories faster and build your metabolism in a short period of time.
(eat about every 2 hours)
The first 8-10 pounds you shed is water.
Meal suggestions:
1st: piece of fruit
2nd: string cheese, summer sausage, cottage cheese/yogurt
3rd: bowl of cereal
4th: soup/sandwich
5th: a good dinner-meat, potatoes/pasta/rice, veggie...your body needs carbs, protein and vitamins to stay healthy
6th: salad/raw veggies
Drink plenty of water
Drink milk or juice/water with every meal (no soda pop)
Stay away from munchies, fried & fatty foods.
Do simple exercise like walking/hiking...swimming and biking are low impact, playing games like basketball, baseball, volleyball will tone your body and you'll have fun doing it.
2006-06-29 00:11:52
·
answer #7
·
answered by sadie_oyes 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
Try to eat low fat, low suger, but much whole grain products, fruits and vegetables.
There is an intersting new theorie which claims you shouldn't eat inbetween the 3 meals, to burn your fat. It has to do with insulin levels.
According to this new therorie you should leave 4-6 hours between meals.
But this is mainly for those who have an insulin resistence. (and many overweight people have an insulin resistance)
Personally, I don't think it's bad to eat siomething inbetween when you experience hunger (try to eat something healthy then), but as long you're not hungry, try not to eat in between the meals
2006-06-29 00:25:55
·
answer #8
·
answered by WiseDragonGirl 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
A slow and persistant lifestyle change programme works the best. I am a health and weight management consultant situated in New Delhi and with leading doctors nutritioist have developed a scitific programme called "lean for life".Which helps you losse weight naturally.( PLease dont consume any pills or artificial things)
i may be able to help anybody who is in INDIA
2006-07-04 10:25:55
·
answer #9
·
answered by abhishek m 1
·
0⤊
0⤋
Stand up and walk atleast 5 mins after evry 2 hours while working
2016-07-07 03:38:46
·
answer #10
·
answered by ? 5
·
0⤊
0⤋