Lose 30 pounds in 30 days! Lose
weight without
effort! Eat anything you want, and still lose weight! Everywhere you look – magazine covers, print ads, radio, TV infomercials,
internet – headlines like those above, promoting
latest weight loss sensation, abound. They are impossible to avoid. Whether it is for
latest diet craze, magic pill, or infomercial gadget, we are inundated with a large daily dose of weight-loss-made-easy promises. And these ads obviously work, as
American Obesity Association estimates that American consumers spend over $30 billion per year trying to lose weight. Some estimates even put
figure higher, at over $50 billion.
Every day, in
quest to achieve
results claimed in
ads, people question which of these diets, supplements, or gadgets really work
best. It is a question that can best be answered with another question: If any of these products or diets really worked, why is it that, according to
Center for Disease Control, currently 65% of adults in this country are overweight? The truth is, while
ads work wonderfully,
products do not. Let’s face it, if any of them did what
ads claim, nobody would be fat! We would all just pop a pill, or stop eating bagels, or use Suzanne Somers’ latest gizmo for just 7 minutes a day, then run out and buy smaller clothes. Have you ever stopped to wonder why all of
“After” pictures in those ads have “Results not typical” stamped on them in really small print?
If these products do not work, why do we spend billions of dollars on them every year? There are a number of reasons, and some of
main reasons combine to create a very compelling force which drives people to make emotional spending decisions, when logic would dictate that they should know better.
* Overweight people have often tried dozens of different weight loss programs and some become desperate for a solution. * People want to hear that there is hope. * Very clever marketing, often disguised as science, reaches these people with
offer of that hope. * Given that most people do not understand
science behind how
body works, they are willing to believe that this deceptive marketing actually is based in science, and
hope they desire can be theirs for just 3 easy payments of $39.95.
We are a society that wants instant gratification, and with a simple phone call and our credit card number, that weight loss is just a new, exciting miracle pill or best-selling diet book away.
Sadly,
only thing consumers are losing is money. Let’s focus on
myriad of fad diets out there. Many of you will think I am crazy for saying this, but for
vast majority of people looking for long term fat loss, health, and fitness, diets simply do not work. Regardless of which book you run out and buy, in most cases calorie restricted diets, while showing short term weight loss on
bathroom scale, in
long term will lead to a slower metabolism and greater body fat than
dieter started with.
Think about it. We all know someone on a diet. How many of those people are dieting for
first time? Probably very few. Who doesn’t know a dieter who can list all of
‘great’ diets he has been on? “Oh, in ’89 I lost 23 pounds on
Cambridge Diet, then in ’92 I lost 27 pounds on
Scarsdale Diet, in ’95 I lost 30 pounds on that grapefruit diet, I did The Zone in 2000 and lost 16 pounds, then in ’02 I did great and lost 24 pounds on Atkins, but now I think I’m going to do
South Beach Diet because I need to lose some weight.”
One more diet and this person should weigh about 34 pounds. The unfortunate truth is that just about every time someone attempts weight loss with a diet based on calorie deprivation, they will end up gaining back
weight they lost, and then some. Low carb, low fat, nothing but grapefruit…. It does not matter what kind of diet you choose, because behind
marketing hype, they generally all have one thing in common: The dieter is restricting calorie intake. A quick science lesson is needed to understand how our bodies react to a calorie restricted diet. First, when a dieter severely cuts back on their caloric intake, especially by cutting out carbs, they will quickly deplete their glycogen stores. What is glycogen? Well, when carbohydrates are ingested, they break down into sugars that are transported by
bloodstream and stored in
muscles and liver as glycogen. Glycogen is one of
main energy sources used by our bodies. An important fact to know is that every gram of glycogen stored in our muscles stores approximately 2.4 grams of water with it. So, by restricting carbs and depleting muscle glycogen,
dieter also releases a lot of water. This is one of
main reasons
scale will show a large loss of weight when one initially goes on a diet. Unfortunately,
goal should be to lose fat, not water which
body needs.