Why You
Can't Lose Weight Even On a Starvation Diet, and Beating Yourself Up
with Exercise ...
The
Fabulous, Fantastic, Great NEW News about Overweight! (Read the PS's
below to see the result of following this new scientific research.)
Here I
am the owner
of a weight loss site and a clinical researcher, someone who for over a
decade has been helping
people lose weight and keep it off, and yet for the last 5 years
I’ve been suffering from slowly increasing weight, until I
stood
at 68 kg, a whole 19 kg over my normal, healthy weight for my short and
slim frame.
At
first I blamed
the trauma of nearly dying twice after a medical emergency. I developed
sick euthyroid syndrome and my whole endocrine system crashed. It was a
lousy time and I put on weight despite a loss of appetite, as well as
suffering a pile of other distressing symptoms.
Then
menopause
dropped in on top of that, and it made sense to blame hormones for a
further drop in metabolic rate, and even more of those cruddy symptoms.
The
fabulous
“ageLOC Vitality” supplement gave me my life back,
and 6
months later HRT solved all the menopause symptoms except for heat
intolerance.
I was
feeling pretty good, but I
was still fat
and very physically uncomfortable.
So
being in the
fortunate position of having absolutely zero food cravings, and having
no unhealthy food in my diet whatsoever, and having portion sizes that
met guidelines, I decided I simply needed to reduce what I ate, in line
with advice from so-called experts that as the metabolic rate declines
with age, we need to eat less.
So I
cut my meal
size by about a third. Nothing happened for 3 weeks. So I cut my meal
size again, cut out milk and sugar in my tea and coffee, and cut out
all alcohol, all while continuing to play competitive tennis 2 or 3
times a week. I gained weight and my energy level took a dive, along
with my sleep quality. A further 3 weeks and I was beside myself.
At
this point the
scientist in me screamed “enough is enough!” and I
went
looking for answers. I believe I have found them, and certainly if you
Google to identify the latest research projects around obesity and
overweight, you’ll see that scientists are actually moving in
this direction. All I can say is “Thank God”.
We now
have pretty
conclusive proof that the weight gain of middle age is NOT related to
over-eating or not getting enough exercise. This may be hard to believe
but do read on and I think you'll be convinced, as I now am, that the
true story makes a lot more sense.
Previously
I've
made the statement that the reason for middle-aged women's inability to
lose weight was that they'd "stuffed up their metabolic rate" by yo yo
dieting. After these long months of tracking a particular research
trail, I've come to see that this is not the whole story.
It
turns out that
from middle age the weight difference between thin people and
obese/overweight people does NOT correlate with the number of calories
eaten, or the amount of exercise taken. And yes, while muscle mass does
increase metabolic rate, even that is NOT enough to account for the
disparity in weight gain between individuals.
The
factor which
DOES correlate with weight gain, is reduced fecal fat. I
never
thought I’d be so delighted talking about fecal fat! The fact
is
that skinny people excrete a lot more fat in their poos, while fat
people retain fat.
Now if
you’re
thinking “Chitosan” think again. Studies show
clearly that
supplements like Chitosan have NO EFFECT on fecal fat. The idea that
this type of supplement will bind to fat and keep it from being
retained in the body turns out to be a load of bunkem.
So why
is it that
we lose the ability to shed fat via the faeces? Is it that this is
genetic and we can’t do anything about it, or is it that
we’ve been tricked into diets that prevent fat excretion?
Well
it’s most likely a bit of both. The genetic problem
is well
along the way to being solved, so look out in 2013 or 2014 for
commercialization of a product that will do exactly that.
Meantime, luckily, there is a WHOLE LOT we can do right now to get fat
excretion happening and improve our nutrition and quality of life at
the same time.
I’m
so
excited about this new direction that obesity research is taking
– finally we middle-aged women have an answer to why we
couldn’t lose weight even on starvation diets and beating
ourselves up with excessive exercise! Yahoooooo!
Here
is what you can do, very easily in your own home, without any cost
whatsoever, to get your body working properly again:
1.
If you’ve cut full fat dairy from your diet, put it
back.
Research clearly shows that a diet which is 30% fat is actually good
for us, and substantially increases fecal fat, so that we’re
excreting fat instead of storing it. Of course you want quality fat,
not fast-food junk fat! Eat yoghurt and cheese, oily fish, good-quality
red meat with a decent amount of marbling, olive oil in your cooking,
and yes, even CREAM in your sauces!
2.
Vitamin K binds to fat so that it is excreted instead of
being
stored. You can get your entire day’s requirement of Vitamin
K
from 2 cups of black coffee (white coffee destroys the Vitamin K, so
leave out the milk and don’t have your black coffee along
with
any meals that include milk). You also get Vitamin K from
leafy
green veggies, and from cruciferous veggies. People on blood thinning
medication still need Vitamin K, but need to be VERY careful that they
get a regular supply, and definitely do not get heaps of Vitamin K one
day and little the next. That would disrupt that life-or-death specific
window on their coagulation rate.
3.
Cut out excess salt. You might want to add salt in SOME
cooking,
but definitely stop shaking it over your food. Salt leads to water
retention, particularly in the abdominal cavity and in veins and
tissue. A LOT of excess weight is actually excess water.
4.
Drink more water, a couple of litres a day, and more if
you’re an elite athlete or an ordinary athlete sweating like
a
pig in the sun. A good way to get more water is to eat water-rich fruit
like apples, pears, oranges, and watermelon.
5.
Get more sleep. We’re so often made to feel guilty
or lazy
for sleeping, and yet particularly in the years where our hormones are
taking a nose dive, we usually need a lot more. Get to bed earlier,
sleep in later and tell anyone who criticizes you to take a flying leap.
6.
Be active, but make it fun. If it ain’t fun,
don’t do
it. Demand your play time, with great friends, and do it as often as
you can.
7.
If you need HRT, don’t suffer, with your doctor
find one
that actually assists you to lose weight. That will DEFINITELY have
progesterone in it and WILL NOT be estrogen only.
There
are other
things you can do as well, like dealing with the things that have been
causing you stress, improving the quality of your relationships and
your sex life, having an active brain, being creative and learning new
things, etc etc.
Finally,
to have
more physical energy and be incredibly fatigue resistant, to regain
your sharp mind with the power to concentrate, think clearly and make
decisions, and to get your libido humming again, consider doing what I
did and get hold of ageLOC Vitality supplement. That stuff
saved
my life and I literally cannot recommend it enough.
Your
friend
Christine
Sutherland
PS:
Of course if you're obviously over-eating like crazy, or you
don't realise that you're getting way too many calories, or you have an
addiction to any food and can't control your eating, or if you're
pretty much sedentary, those things are going to cause overweight!
PPS:
Since adding dairy back into my diet, going black on my tea
and coffee, adding back the booze, increasing my portion sizes back to
guidelines, and eating a banana a day so my body can use the potassium
instead of water-hugging sodium, I have dropped 2 kg. And I'm
feeling great with it.
info@lifeworks-group.com.au