Fitness Wisdom: 5 Pounds

Fitness Wisdom

Editor’s Note: This column is sponsored by FitnessWise (4801-B Montgomery Lane). Visit their Facebook page for more.

Well, summer is in full swing now. Maybe you’re headed to the beach or on some other vacation and you’ve got to wear that bathing suit, pair of shorts or tank top.

Did you reach your goal that you set after our Spring Resolution piece?

If you didn’t, all is not lost. As they say, fitness is not a destination, but a journey. There will be roadblocks and stumbles, but as long as you keep your goal in front of you and work on it consistently, you will make progress.

For many people, progress means weight loss or weight management.

Someone asked me today if it’s possible to lose five pounds in one week. This individual was very fit, works out regularly and has run several marathons, but has gained some body fat in undesirable areas over the past couple of years.

So my first question was, “Why do you want to lose five pounds?” then, “Why do you want to lose five pounds in a week?”

These questions can lead to some complicated issues surrounding weight loss, which drives many of us to the gym.

1. Let’s be clear: You can lose five pounds in a week, but it won’t be the kind of weight that you want to lose.

A pound of fat is the equivalent of 3,500 calories. So five pounds would be 17,500 calories. In my high-intensity circuit workout this morning, one of my male clients burned approximately 950 calories in one hour.

That would mean he would need to do about 19 of those workouts in a week to lose five pounds of fat (given that his caloric intake stays the same). The bottom line is that it takes time to lose fat. The American College of Sports Medicine recommends that 1-2 pounds of weight loss per week is safe and effective. Anything faster than that is most likely loss of water weight (which can easily be regained) or loss of muscle mass (which slows your metabolism, making it easier to regain fat and harder to take it off).

Don’t set yourself up for failure! And don’t succumb to society’s penchant for instant gratification.

2. Get rid of your scale!

Or at least don’t get on it so often.

If you were trying to improve the time it takes you to run a mile, and you ran a mile for time every day, you probably wouldn’t see that much of a difference. In fact, you’ll probably run slower than your fastest time most of the time.

If you weigh yourself everyday, you are focusing on the outcome instead of the long-term behavior modifications that need to happen to see a noticeable difference. Besides, your scale weight can fluctuate based on water intake, sodium intake, the time of the month and a host of other factors — but that doesn’t mean you gained or lost weight. If you are an avid scale watcher, you may even modify your food intake based on what the scale says (for example, skipping breakfast because the scale says that you are a pound heavier than yesterday).

This can be dangerous because you start to tinker with your metabolism in a negative way.

Only weigh yourself once a week, if that. Weigh yourself at the same time, under the same conditions each time. And be aware that your scale weight only tells a small piece of the story of the changes that occur in your body composition when you combine exercise and nutritional modifications.

To create long-term changes and effectively manage weight loss, one must maintain or increase lean muscle mass. About 70 percent of your daily metabolism comes from muscle. But this poses a problem to your scale because muscle is heavy.

So this means that you can decrease your body fat percentage, decrease your risk for many diseases, be stronger, be smaller, look leaner, increase your metabolism and actually WEIGH MORE than you do now.

3. Why did you gain the five pounds in the first place?

Many times weight gain is due to lifestyle changes. It can be stress, a change in job or commute, getting married, having children, a new restaurant opening, menopause or other factors. If any of these things affect your weekly activity level and/or caloric intake negatively, you will gain weight.

If you start exercising without mitigating the external factors that caused the weight gain, then do not expect to lose weight. (That doesn’t mean that you shouldn’t exercise because there are many other reasons to exercise.)

This step may be the hardest for many people. But realizing where the lifestyle change occurred may help in developing strategies to combat it or work around it.

4. Drink more and eat more (often).

I am not a nutritionist. But I tell all my clients the two biggest changes they can make in their nutrition is to drink more water and eat more frequently, making sure to start with a good breakfast. Doing those two things will correct many other nutrition problems.

For example, if you are drinking more water and staying hydrated, you won’t drink as much soda, juice, Gatorade, coffee, tea and other sources of empty liquid calories. As a result, you’ll effectively decrease your caloric intake. If you have eaten a snack between lunch and dinner, then you will be less likely to make bad food choices for dinner, overeat, and want dessert afterward. In addition, by the time you feel like you are hungry, your body has already gone into a catabolic state, which means that your lean muscle mass (which you worked so hard in the gym to gain) will be broken down to be used as energy. And remember, less muscle means slower metabolism.

So don’t get thirsty and don’t get hungry — by eating healthy foods every 2-3 hours.

5. Stay away from cardio (as you know it).

Cardiovascular exercise has long been a staple of weight loss programs. Any trainer would say that you must do cardio to burn calories, and many (myself included) have prescribed 30-60 minutes of aerobic activity 3-5 times per week.

But what if I told you that you could get better results in terms of improved VO2 max (more endurance), improved anaerobic power, and more fat loss in just 4 minutes of cardio 5 times per week?

We’ll talk about interval training in detail in the next edition of Fitness Wisdom.

Community discussion guidelines: Our sponsored columns are written by members of the local business community. While we encourage a robust and open discussion, we ask that all reviews of the businesses — good or bad — be directed to another venue, like Yelp. The comments section is intended for a conversation about the topic of the article.

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