It is true that in order to lose weight -- and more specifically, fat -- you do need to have a caloric deficit. But a low-calorie diet does not lead to a balanced and stable metabolism. In fact, it leads to the reverse.
Taking a calorie-first approach by following the "eat less, exercise more" dogma, which has a long-term success rate of 5 percent, changes hormonal chemistry in a way that leads to compensatory hunger, unrelenting cravings, and unstable energy. Sometimes it also leads to weight loss, and if you are lucky, you will lose fat as well. But using willpower to fight your natural physiological urges is like playing with a boomerang: The more force you apply, the quicker and harder it flies back at you. When this happens to the metabolism, it means yo-yo weight regain.
There is another way to achieve a caloric deficit. If you take a hormones-first approach, you can keep hunger at bay, diminish cravings and stabilize energy. Doing things this way causes the body to eat less, naturally, which allows us to make new changes to our lifestyle without relying solely on willpower.
So how in the world do you control hormones?
First, you don't need fancy lab testing machines. Sleep, hunger, mood, energy, and cravings (SHMEC) are hormonal sensations. The main hormones that influence hunger are insulin, leptin, and ghrelin. The hormones that impact cravings are ghrelin, cortisol, and the brain hormones dopamine, serotonin and GABA. Energy is managed by insulin, cortisol, thyroid hormones and the catecholamines. Sleep and mood are controlled by all of the above plus hormones like melatonin. These sensations are biofeedback clues. I say "clues" because when dealing with hormones, you need to stop being a dieter and start being a detective. Your goal is to eat -- and exercise -- in a way that stabilizes SHMEC (say it like "shmeck). The right diet for you should keep your SHMEC in check.
For a more definitive guide to all the biofeedback sensations, SEE THIS BLOG.
Next, you need to measure fat loss, not weight loss. The easiest way to do this is to measure your weight and your waist. If your weight and waist are dropping, you are losing mostly fat. If your weight goes up and your waist goes down, you are losing almost all fat. If your weight goes down, but the waist goes up or stays the same, you are losing weight, but that weight is not fat, it is water -- or worse, muscle. Your goal is a stable SHMEC and a smaller waist. Accomplish that, and you have just introduced yourself to hormonal fat loss.
Psychology research says humans crave certainty above almost all else, which goes a long way in explaining why humans continue to do the same things over and over, expecting a different result. You have been led to believe that weight loss is linear, predictable, and "one-size-fits-all." Our desire for certainty makes it so that you want me to give you meal plans and a food list with recipes. But body change does not work that way. It is an up and down, two-steps-forward-one-step-back process, and it is different for everyone.
So, I am going to give you the basics, and then it is up to you to do the detective work required to uncover your metabolic formula. And then practice, practice, practice. Like anything else you have mastered in life, this is a journey, not a destination. Body change is a process, not a protocol.
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