Posts Tagged ‘ Fatter ’

Are you Losing Weight and Getting Fatter?

September 10, 2010
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Are you Losing Weight and Getting Fatter?Enlarge Image

Your Can Turn Fat into Muscle……

Fact or Fiction???

Completely False!!!!

First of all Fat and Muscle are two completely different tissues in the body. Unfortunately we see people transform themselves from FAT to FIT and it almost looks like the FAT just morphed itself into bulging muscles of steel.

In Reality, the only way anybody ever turned FAT into Six Pack Abs is by losing fat (Reducing their Body Fat %) and building muscle that was lying beneath the layers of FAT.

Your Best overall strategy for doing just that is: A high-protein, low fat, good quality carbohydrate healthy eating plan, a solid strength training and exercise program that includes hi intensity training, and interval hi intensity cardio workouts.

That is the Triple Threat in converting FAT into MUSCLE….

So make sure you maximize your FAT LOSS and MUSCLE Gain by using the Body Perfect Fitness Factors: @ My Online Personal Trainer

Healthy Eating Plan- Refuels your workouts and helps burn FAT

Strength Training- Hi intensity – Burns FAT/Builds Muscles in the afterburn mode

Cardio Training- Interval Training – Helps support tremendous FAT Loss

Rest and Recovery- Builds Muscles while Recovering

Seek the help and guidance of a professional Personal Trainer or Fitness Coach.

I promise you you will see the FAT disappear and the Muscle take its place. And you will have a more Energetic, Leaner, and Fitter YOU!!!!

Body Perfect Fitness
My Online Personal Trainer and Fitness Training Resource

US Gets Fatter – and Faster Than Ever

May 13, 2010
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Americans are getting fatter at a pace never seen before while government-led attempts to hold in bulging waistlines are doomed to failure, a report claimed yesterday.

More than 119 million people, 64.5% of the US population, are now considered overweight or obese, according to the Trust for Americans’ Health, an independent advocacy group that says the nation has been let down by ineffective anti-obesity policies.

Experts are just as concerned at the escalating rate of the weight gain. Childhood obesity has doubled in 20 years and almost three-quarters of American adults could be overweight in less than three years’ time.

“The numbers are pretty staggering,” said Michael Earls, one of the report’s authors. “The implications for the country are huge in terms of the financial cost and the toll on people’s health.”

Among the more significant findings of the report, based on figures from the US government’s Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, is the rise in states that consider more than 20% of their population to be obese. In 1985 it was none; this year it is 40.

America’s fattest state is Mississippi, where 29.5% of adults are obese, followed by Alabama (28.9%) and West Virginia (27.6%). Eighteen million adults in the US have diabetes, and more than 9 million children are overweight or obese, twice as many as in 1980.

Sixteen per cent of active duty US military personnel are also obese, and it is the biggest reason for the discharge of soldiers.

Efforts to tackle the “twin epidemic” of obesity and diabetes have failed miserably, the trust’s executive director, Shelley Hearne, said. “We are in a state of policy paralysis in regards to obesity. We have a crisis of poor nutrition and physical inactivity and it’s time we dealt with it.”

The group acknowledges that some improvements have been made, with many schools replacing crisps and soft drinks in vending machines with healthier options such as yoghurts and low-fat snacks.

“These efforts are commendable but they are mere drops in a bucket,” Mr Earls said.

Health officials also want the public to curb spending on fast food, which has risen from $16.1bn in 1975 to $153.1bn last year, according to the Harvard School of Public Health.

The Fat Get Fatter

January 21, 2010
By
The Fat Get Fatter

I have a (wholly unsurprising, considering my profession) confession to make, dear readers: I’m overweight. Not alarmingly so, like the rotund McDonalds victims we see on television or the huge guy creating his own Lake Mead of sweat next to you on an airplane, but I do have a belly on me. And unfortunately it’s only getting bigger.

But hey, I’m not alone! A striking 67 percent of Americans are currently overweight, and of those people almost half are obese—that is, their Body Mass Index is over 30. We’re all aware by now of the dangers inherent in obesity: high blood pressure, heart disease, depression, and other general nastiness; according to the U.S. Surgeon General, it kills 300,000 people per year. To put those numbers into perspective, cigarettes kill between 400-500,000 Americans per year. When our eating habits are killing us almost as much as tobacco, it’s time to think about our lives.

And while other countries are having this problem, too, they’re nowhere near as bad off as the US of A. Why? Why us? Of course names like “McDonalds” and “Burger King” immediately come to mind, but fast food is only one part of a much larger collection of problems; everything from our biological wiring to the size of our country itself factor in, creating one big overweight whole.

Biology.
This one isn’t unique to America, but it is especially problematic in the industrial First World. Human beings just aren’t wired to consume as few calories as possible; epochs of evolution have conspired to make us awesome at saving calories and lousy at losing them. It’s much easier, after all, to eat 100 calories than it is to burn them off. It may be a curse now, but if you’re a starving hunter-gatherer and there’s no commercially-available food for another several thousand years, you want every bit of nutrition you can glean from your dinner. The human body can survive for 8 days without any food; imagine how long you can go on a little. And in America especially, a little is never enough.

Solution:
There isn’t one, really. You can’t change millions of years of evolution with willpower alone. What you can do is restrict your calorie intake and increase your calorie use, making this little biological stumbling block irrelevant.

Transportation.
The world’s love affair with cars has plenty of detrimental environmental effects, but as it turns out there are some physical problems, too. Americans especially drive everywhere, foregoing bicycles or their legs in favor of shorter trips to the store or to work. The Surgeon General’s office recommends 30 minutes of intensive exercise at least three times a week or 20 minutes of moderate exercise daily, and in the Information Age most of us rarely walk farther than the space between our parking spots and our chairs. It’s not entirely our fault; while smaller European cities make walking everywhere easier, an American in, say, Phoenix may find geography working against him. Who has time to spend an hour walking to and from the grocery store these days?

Solution:
We all need to drive at some point, but take a long, hard look at your daily commute and determine when a car is truly necessary and when you’re just being lazy. If the store’s a couple miles away, ride a bike. If it’s a mile or less away, walk—this goes double for folks in the warmer areas. A Minneapolis resident in winter has an excuse to drive that short hop to the store; a Boca Raton resident does not. And while you’re at it—take a brisk walk a few times each week anyway!

Portion size.
Ideally, dinner should be the lightest meal of the day, as the human body stores calories more efficiently at night (energy burns faster earlier in the day). However, while most Americans eat minimal breakfasts and often small lunches, dinner is usually a smorgasboard, particularly when we dine out. And we’re dining out a lot. Everywhere around the country, people are hitting up restaurants more than ever before. Increasing culinary sophistication and an ever-growing group of foodies are both factors, but as usual it all boils down to time. Americans are busier than ever; many families dine out or order in up to three times per week rather than slaving away in the kitchen for hours after work.

Solution:
For starters, follow your mom’s advice and chew your food. We’ve all heard it a dozen times, but it bears repeating: your body doesn’t automatically know when it’s full. It takes the brain a good ten minutes to send the “stop eating” signal, and you can scarf a lot more strip steak in ten minutes. On the same track, drink plenty of water. Good-old H20 takes up a lot of space in your belly, meaning the “I’m full” response will hit you quicker.

And finally, if it applies: stop dining out so much. You’ll feel less compelled to eat everything in sight when you didn’t pay someone else to make it for you. On that note, here are some delicious, healthy, and quick recipes to ease the restaurant withdrawal!

Chicken Mediterranean Salad
Encrusted Walnut Chicken
Broiled Lemon Fish Fillets
Cream of Roasted Walnut Soup
Bean and Cheese Enchiladas
Barbecue Pork Skillet

Armed with these recipes and more from our Quick & Easy and Healthy sections, take a crack at our nation’s obesity problem–whether you do it by shedding some pounds yourself, or helping out someone else you know. If you’re concerned about your health, check your Body Mass Index. After that–maybe I’ll see you at the gym!

Sources:

http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/1006/p01s01-usec.html

http://healthlink.mcw.edu/article/1031002183.html

http://www.time.com/time/specials/2007/article/0,28804,1626795_1627112_1626670,00.html

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