Nutrition's ~ Nation 3: Best Way To Achieve Your Fitness Goals

Sunday, December 04, 2022

Best Way To Achieve Your Fitness Goals

Best Way To Achieve Your Fitness Goals
The holiday season plays a big role in our weight calculations, Guest Posting with many of us often already packing extra weight -overeating in the final week of the year before resolving to lose all the excess weight in the new year.

The smarter decision is to start your weight loss journey a couple of months before the holiday season allowing you to take in a cheat day or two over the holidays.

The best part of this strategy? You will start the new year with your fitness goals already achieved, and that locked-in success will give you the confidence to tackle all your other goals with focus and the certainty that comes from achieving success.

In the rest of this article, we look at a few simple steps you can take to gradually, safely, and successfully lose weight over two months. This is a much better approach than trying to force yourself to lose a lot of weight over a short period.

So let’s start with a quick review of what are you doing less of. Before you start, it’s essential to understand that while some basic principles apply across the board, everyone is unique in terms of how well they are doing certain things.

Sleep & Recovery:
Are you getting enough good-quality sleep? If it is consistently less than six hours a day, you need to push this to a minimum of seven hours. Losing sleep will waste all your other efforts (calorie restriction, exercise). The same applies to stress reduction if your work is stressful, work in a couple of five-minute de-stress breaks during your day to practice mindfulness.
If you are already training hard, look at how to master your breathing in your post-workout cooldown (you are warming up before and cooling down after working out, yes?) to optimize recovery.

Eating Habits:
The most important factor after recovery (sleep, stress, training) is how much you eat (and what you eat). Whatever diet you want to follow –paleo, OMAD (one meal a day), intermittent fasting, keto, low-carb, flexible macros, or anything else you will need to master two things.

Consistency:
Follow the protocol with 90% accuracy for the duration of the next two months. For example, if you are practising intermittent fasting, I would want you to spend the first week practising IF at a 16:8 protocol before switching to 18:6 in the second week.

From the third week onwards, I would ask you to experiment with a 24-hour fast once a week with a weekly cheat meal thrown in to build on the discipline as well as allow for periodic rewards and opportunities to jolt the metabolism.

Meal Selection:
Speaking of simplicity, the secret to losing weight is replacing choice with satisfaction. The surest way to lose weight is to remove the decision-making process in what you eat. Pick a few healthy meals (per meal time) from what you really like to eat and just replicate them week in, week out. No need to decide between options you don’t like – pick foods you could eat three/four times a week. A few repeatable meals could be the difference this year in meeting your goals or losing out to paralysis by analysis.

Caloric Deficit:
And in all of this, the underlying principle will be maintaining a caloric deficit. For a gradual two-month program I usually recommend starting off with a slight deficit maybe 250 calories/day at most – to allow your body to easily stick to it in the beginning. A higher deficit is possible (and we will move to it later on) but starting small will help you build discipline.

After the first few weeks, you can increase the deficit to 500 calories/day (depending on whether you’re seeing results or not) but the key is always going to be maintaining consistency throughout the two months. Caloric restriction is a lot easier than you think.

If you take two cappuccinos a day, switch to black coffee for a 200+ caloric deficit.

If you enjoy two 16 oz cans of soda, switching to sugar-free soda will take you to a 300-calorie deficit.

A regular snacker? Dropping your snacks will often give you a 200-400 calorie deficit depending on how heavy a snacker you are. Reducing a meal by 25% could give you an easy 100-200 caloric deficit.

As you go further – you’ll understand that a 250-500 caloric deficit can be really easy to build into your eating habits without making things very difficult for yourself.

After the first few weeks, you can practice moving from a 250-calorie deficit to a 500-calorie deficit but play with this number within that range to see what suits you best.

Exercise:
If you are already exercising, that’s great – we can look at ways to improve on it. If you are sedentary, adding 15-30 minutes of movement daily, coupled with the caloric deficit prescribed above, will give you a great boost in helping your weight loss journey.

With exercise, consistency and simplicity matter – do activities you enjoy and that you can do regularly (preferably daily) for a minimum of 15 minutes (and up to 30/60/120 minutes a day). There’s no real upper limit except for what you have time for. And you really don’t need to run two hours a day unless you’re training for a sport.

Here’s a handy list of exercises that burn a lot of calories per minute – pick a few you like (and can learn/handle) and you can alternate them or do them together daily.

At this stage, don’t fall into the trap of taking off’ days' exercise – you can change the activity but you will rarely need to take a ‘break’. If all else fails, a 30-minute walk will work just as well as 5-10 minutes of jumping rope – if only in terms of helping you stay consistent.

What you will notice from reading the calories burned by exercises above is that exercise will only help you burn an extra 150-300 calories in most cases, or maybe 400-600 if you are going all out for an hour.

In contrast, eating 300 or 600 calories doesn’t take that much time or effort.
Use exercise as a boost, not as a replacement for your weight loss.

What To Expect:
Following the principles listed above, you could easily lose half a pound to a full pound per week. Weight loss may be quicker early on before tapering off, or it may be slow in the beginning and then accelerate later on. What matters is that you are consistent in working towards your goal – and pretty soon you’ll be able to enjoy the holidays and end up in the new year much closer to, or having hit your fitness goals.

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