Natural Weight Loss Archives

Eating A Raw Food Diet

Editor’s note : You may be wondering about Raw Food Diet, how it works, its benefits, and why you should eat raw food. In this article, Yuri Elkaim, BPHE, CK, RHN, a holistic holistic nutrition and health experts, provide brief explanation on how you can lose weight naturally with Raw Food Diet. He also shares his own raw food experience. Losing weight is not that hard, you just need to know how and has strong willing to achieve your weight goal.

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rawfooddietEating a raw food diet is essentially a way of eating that does not involve the heating of foods. Part of the premise lies in the fact that heating foods above 118 degrees fahrenheit destroys their inherent food enzymes, a vast majority of vitamins, minerals, phytonutrients, and their all important life force.

Chemical Changes in Cooked Foods

Heating foods radically changes their chemical properties making them less "recognizable" in once ingested. For instance, heating an egg renders into a solid mass whereas it began in a liquid, gelatinous. This occurs because the heat of frying or boiling denatures the protein structure within the egg, essentially making it more solid. As a result, this heated egg is now much more difficult for the human digestive tract to break down.

Another process that occurs with cooking foods is known as glycosylation. This is when sugar literally attaches to protein molecule. Glycosylation has been linked to the premature breakdown of the body's cell and many other undesirable health conditions.

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How Water Help to Lose Weight

The question remains: what does the water do to help you in reducing weight?

waterhelptoloseweightAs you might say, water blocks out hunger more similar to ephedrine, the substance in fat reduction pills that makes the person curb her appetite by being able to repress the urge to eat. However, water works in a different way. Water does not curb your appetite alone instead, it satisfies your hunger, deceiving it to feel that it's already stuffed. This is known to bury a person's pressing need to eat.

Water, in fact, is a key component in a popular 3-day diet plan circulating on the internet, where the person will be required to fasting in 3 days, taking in nothing but water during that period. Water is expected to supply the nutrients that the person should receive, at least for the 3 days involved in the program.

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Speed Eating and Fat Loss

Speed Eating and Fat Loss: Diet Advice Your Mom Was Right About All Along

By Tom Venuto, NSCA-CPT, CSCS
www.BurnTheFat.com

Editor's noteTom Venuto wrote interesting topic about the correlation between speed eating and fat loss that we often do not aware of when we try to lose weight. With a little bit of works of chewing and choosing the right food, you can reduce the calories intake. Less calories intake =  fat loss...

A new study just published in a recent issue of the journal Obesity has revealed that thin people eat very differently than heavy people at all-you-can-eat buffet restaurants.

eating behaviour - fat lossResearcher Brian Wansink and his team from the Cornell University Food and Brand Laboratory observed diners at 11 different Chinese buffet restaurants across the United States.

Their goal was to find out whether the eating behaviors of people at all-you-can-eat buffets varied based on their body mass.

Trained observers recorded the height, weight, gender, age, and behavior of 213 patrons. The various seating, serving and eating behaviors were then compared across BMI levels.

The heavier (higher BMI) patrons:

  • ate more quickly
  • chewed more food per bite
  • used forks
  • sat facing the food buffet

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How Your Metabolism Works

967651_diet_tomatoesYou may ever wonder why your friend eats same portion of meals as you a day but stays slim, while you gain weight fast? It is the metabolism in your body that makes the difference.  Metabolism is measured by metabolic rate, the rate at which we ‘burn up’ our food, and by increasing this rate, we can lose weight more quickly, easily, and safely. Increase the metabolism is a way to lose weight.

If we go on a diet by decreasing calorie intake too drastically, it can cause our metabolism to slow down, hence it makes progressively more difficult for us to lose weight. That is why most diets fail, yet we continue to try one after another, always hoping that each new regime will provide the ‘magic’ solution. Sounds like your problem?  There may be a simple answer. Let’s look at why most diets fail, and how strength training, combined with a healthy food intake can speed up your metabolism, making it easy for you to lose weight.

When we drastically cut our food intake, our body’s natural instinct is to switch to a ‘starvation response.' The fewer calories we consume, the more our bodies become efficient at using these calories - leading to slower weight loss. This was once a useful mechanism for our ancestors when food supplies were less predictable, but this ’vicious circle’ can make life almost impossible for the modern dieter.


When the body is persistently kept short of calories, it breaks down muscle tissue to use as fuel. Our body, using water from our tissue cells, quickly washes this away causing an instant reduction in weight through water loss. However, this weight loss will be short lived, and will quickly be regained when we take in water and the muscle we have lost will slow down our metabolism in the long term.

The reason for this is that each pound of muscle requires a certain number of calories each day just to maintain it. Therefore, the more muscle you have, the more calories you burn even when you’re doing nothing, even while you are sleeping. If you lose muscle, then your daily calorie requirement becomes less. For example, imagine a dieter loses 10 pounds of muscle (along with maybe 20 lbs. of fat) on a strict diet. Now suppose that each pound of muscle had been burning 50 calories a day. Together, those 10 pounds of muscle had been burning 500 calories a day. With this muscle tissue gone, the dieter must now consume 500 less calories a day in order to maintain that weight-loss.

However, of course people do not stick to their diets forever and when they return to their old eating habits, the weight that they have lost, invariably comes piling back on. Unfortunately, whilst they lost both muscle and fat during the diet, all the weight they regained was fat. So, even though they may weigh the same as they did when they started, they now have a lot more fat and a lot less muscle than they did before the diet. Therefore, their metabolism is slower and their calorie requirements are less. Even if they return to their pre-diet eating habits, they still require 500 fewer calories a day due to the muscle loss. That’s one reason dieters are prone to regaining all of the lost weight, and conversely sometimes even gain weight afterwards.

A good solution is an active lifestyle that includes aerobic exercise, a good weight-training program, and a healthy diet containing fresh fruits and vegetables, whole grain cereals and plenty of lean protein. It is a good idea to eat ‘little and often’ – keeping your metabolism in high gear by eating 4 to 6 small meals a day, rather than one or two larger ones. No food is forbidden, but sweets and high fat junk food are eaten less often, and in smaller quantities. A healthy diet is a realistic and permanent way of eating – not a diet that you suffer through for a week or two and then give up!

The goal is to consume as many calories as you can, while still losing body fat and maintaining or adding lean muscle at the same time through regular exercise. If your calories are already below normal, don’t restrict them further. Instead, maintain your current amount and instead try to become stronger and more active, so you can gradually increase your calories to a normal healthy level. If your calorie intake is already in a healthy range, decrease it only slightly, if necessary. A small reduction of about 250 calories a day, or 10-15 percent less than usual, is more likely to protect your lean muscle, and less likely to trigger a go-slow in your metabolism.

If you follow this type of routine, it’s possible to gain about one pound of muscle per week and lose about one pound of fat per week. The end result is that the number on the scale might not move much at all, it may even go up. Your clothes will feel looser, and you’ll feel great. Yet the numbers on the scale won't move!  It's at this point that a lot of people give up the weight training because they don't understand what's happening.

The truth is that when you're strength training it's possible to get smaller and heavier at the same time, as muscle is a much denser tissue than fat. The fat takes up more space on your body. At this point, it's best to ignore the bathroom scales and rely on the way you look and the way your clothes fit.

After all, by avoiding the conventional way of dieting with the constant cycle of starvation and weight gain is a way by increase your metabolism. Follow these easy steps above, you can easily reach your goal - the slim, strong, healthy body of a naturally lean person who can enjoy their food without guilt!

The information provided on this site is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should not use this information to diagnose or treat a health problem or disease without consulting with a qualified healthcare provider. Please consult your healthcare provider with any questions or concerns you may have regarding your condition.

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