Don't Be A Big Loser - Why You Should Say No To Quick Weight Loss
Author: Tom Venuto, CSCS, NSCA-CPT, author of the #1 best-selling e-book Burn
The Fat, Feed The Muscle
Patience. Its the one thing you never seem to have when youve got
a body fat problem. You want the fat gone and you want it gone now! And why
not? It seems so do-able. Everywhere you look, you read and hear promises of
quick weight loss and you even see people losing weight quickly. We have reality
TV shows that actually encourage people to attempt extreme body
makeovers or see who can lose weight the fastest, and the winners (or shall
we say, the losers), are rewarded generously with fortune, fame and congratulations.
Lets face it. Everyone wants to get the fat off as quickly as possible
- and having that desire is not wrong its simply human nature.
However, you must become aware of some serious problems that can occur if you
try to force it and lose weight too quickly. The faster you lose weight, the
more muscle you will lose with the fat, and that can really mess up your metabolism.
An even bigger problem with fast weight loss is that the loss just wont
last. The faster you lose, the more likely you are to gain it back. Think about
it: We dont have a weight loss problem today, we have a keeping
the weight off problem.
Weight loss will be the healthiest, safest and most likely to be permanent
if you set your goal for about two pounds per week (and even if you lose only
a single pound each week, that is healthy progress). This is the recommendation
of almost every legitimate and respected dietician, nutritionist, exercise physiologist
and personal trainer, as well as exercise organizations such as the American
College of Sports Medicine and the American Dietetic Association.
Are there any exceptions to this rule? Is it ever okay to lose more than two
pounds per week? The answer is yes. It may be ok to lose slightly more than
two pounds per week if you have a lot of weight to lose because the rate of
weight loss tends to be relative to your total starting body weight. Generally
the rule is that its safe to lose up to 1% of your total body weight per
week, so if you weigh 300 lbs to start, then 3 lbs a week is a reasonable goal.
But there IS a catch.
What really matters is not how much weight you lose, but how much FAT you lose.
Where did your weight loss come from? Did you lose body fat or lean body mass?
"Weight" is not the same as "fat." Weight includes muscle,
bone, internal organs as well as lots and lots of water. What you really want
is fat loss, not weight loss. If you only wanted weight loss, I could show you
an easy way to lose 20 or 25 pounds in about 5 minutes. Just come over to my
house. I have a really sharp hacksaw in my garage, and well just slice
off one of your legs, after all its just extra weight right?
Lets look at an example with some numbers so you can really grasp this
concept of weight versus fat and then you can see, clearly illustrated, what
will happen when you lose weight too quickly (because I know you probably dont
believe me and you STILL want to lose weight as fast as possible
read
on and it will all become clear to you).
As an example, lets take a 260 pound man who has a lot of body fat to
lose - lets call it 32%. With 32% fat, a 260 pounder has 83.2 pounds of
body fat and 176.8 pounds of lean mass. Using this example, lets look
at a few possible scenarios with losses ranging from two to four pounds per
week.
Weight Loss Scenario 1:
Suppose our 260 pound subject loses four full pounds instead of the recommended
two pounds per week. Is this bad? Well, lets see:
If he loses a half a percent of body fat, here are his body composition results:
256 lbs
31.5% body fat
80.6 lbs fat
175.4 lbs lean body mass
Out of the four pounds lost, 2.8 pounds were fat and 1.2 were lean mass. Not
a disaster, but not good either. Thirty percent of the weight lost was lean
tissue.
Weight Loss Scenario 2:
If he loses a half a percent of body fat and only three pounds, here are his
results:
257 lbs
31.5% body fat
80.9 lbs fat
176.1 lbs lean body mass
These results are better. Although he lost less body weight than scenario one,
in this instance, 2.3 pounds of fat and only 0.7 lbs of lean mass were lost.
Weight Loss Scenario 3:
What if he only lost two pounds? Here are the results:
258 lbs
31.5% body fat
81.2 lbs fat
176.8 lbs lean body mass
These results are perfect. Even though our subject has only lost two pounds,
which seems slow, 100% of the two pound weight loss came from fat.
Weight Loss Scenario 4:
Now lets suppose he loses three pounds but he loses more body fat: .8%
257 lbs
31.2% body fat
80.2 lbs fat
176.8 lbs lean body mass
These are the best results of all. When the weekly fat loss is .8%, 100% of
the three pounds lost is fat.
So the answer to the question is yes - its safe to lose more than two
pounds per week
but only if the weight is all fat or at least mostly fat
with minimal lean mass losses.
If you take example one with thirty percent lean tissue loss and compound
that over a few months, youre talking about a massive muscle tissue loss
which can dramatically slow down your metabolism and turn you into nothing more
than a skinny fat person (a person with low body weight because
they lost so much muscle, but still holding stubborn body fat because they shut
down their metabolism).
One thing you should know is that water weight losses sometimes distort the
numbers, especially when you first begin a new nutrition and training program.
Its very common to lose 3 - 5 pounds in the first week on nearly any diet
and exercise program and often even more on low carb diets. Just remember, its
NOT all fat - WATER LOSS IS NOT FAT LOSS!
The best advice I can give you is to focus on losing fat, not losing weight.
If you lose three to five pounds per week, and you know its all fat, and
not lean tissue, then more power to you!
Of course the only way to know this is with body composition testing. For home
body fat self-testing, I recommend the Accu-Measure skinfold caliper as first
choice. Even better, get a multi site skinfold caliper test from an experienced
tester at a health club, or even a water (hydrostatic) or air (bod pod) displacement
test.
From literally hundreds of client case studies, I can confirm that its
rare to lose more than 1.5 - 2.0 lbs of weight per week without losing some
muscle along with it. If you exceed 2.0 to 3.0 pounds per week, the probability
of losing muscle is extremely high. If you lose muscle, you are damaging your
metabolism and this will lead to a plateau and ultimately to relapse.
Lack of patience is one of the biggest mistakes people make when it comes to
losing body fat. If you want to lose FAT, not muscle and you want to keep the
fat off for good, then you have to take off the pounds slowly.
This is one of the toughest lessons that overweight men and women have to learn
- and they can be very hard learners. They fight kicking and screaming, insisting
that they CAN and they MUST lose it faster.
Then you have these TV shows that encourage the masses that rapid, crash weight
loss is okay. To the producers of these shows, I say SHAME ON YOU! To the personal
trainers, registered dieticians and medical doctors who are associated with
these programs, I say DOUBLE SHAME ON YOU, because you of all people should
know better.
The rapid weight loss being promoted today by the media for the sake of ratings
and by the weight loss companies for the sake of profits makes it even harder
for those of us who are legitimate fitness and nutrition professionals because
our clients say, But look at so and so on TV - he lost 26 pounds in a
week!
Sure, but 26 pounds of WHAT - and do you have any idea what the long term consequences
are?
Short term thinking, folks
foolish. There are hundreds of ways to lose
weight quickly, but only one way to lose fat and keep it off in the long term.
Do it the right way. Take off the pounds slowly, steadily and sensibly with
an intelligent nutrition and exercise program, measure your body fat, not just
your body weight, and make this a new lifestyle, not a race, and you will never
have to take the pounds off again because they will be gone forever the first
time. No more yo-yoing.
If youre interested in the healthy, sensible way to take off the fat,
while keeping all your muscle and actually increasing your metabolism in the
process, then my Burn the Fat, Feed The Muscle program can teach you how. No
gimmicks or false promises. Just the truth - you have to work at it and you
have to be patient. For more information, www.burnthefat.com
About the Author
Tom Venuto is a lifetime natural bodybuilderan NSCA-certified personal trainer
(CPT), certified strength & conditioning specialist (CSCS), and author of
the #1 best-selling e-book, Burn
the Fat, Feed The Muscle Tom has written more than 200 articles and has
been featured in print magazines such as IRONMAN, Australian IRONMAN, Natural
Bodybuilding, Muscular Development, Exercise for Men and Mens Exercise,
as well as on hundreds of websites worldwide. For information on Tom's Fat Loss
program, visit: www.burnthefat.com
Other Articles by Tom Venuto
|