5 Reasons Your Diet Is Slowing Down Your Progress – Nutrition Kitchen SG
5 Reasons Your Diet Is Slowing Down Your Progress

5 Reasons Your Diet Is Slowing Down Your Progress

Anyone who understands dieting knows that to lose body fat, you have to burn more calories than you eat. Which is why it seems like common sense that eating less or burning more calories everyday would allow us to lose body fat.

Unfortunately, our bodies and brains are far more complex. Dieting and restricting food intake can make life difficult to the point where we complicate food and cause issues in our health and exercise regimens. This is mainly because eating is essential to human survival and we are unable to go against our natural instincts for too long.

This news shouldn’t discourage you from dieting but instead inspire you to explore the idea of what it means to eat in a healthy way to help you manage your weight and your hunger. You don’t have to deprive yourself; however, you do have to develop and maintain healthy habits that make losing body fat achievable and sustainable.

Reason 1: you lose sight of what really matters to achieve sustainable fat loss

Dieting makes people stress most of the time. They worry about everything from whether their food is organic, gluten and GMO-free, to what kind of water they drink, to precise meal timing. That’s not to say that those things don’t matter, but only in certain instances.

The solution? Focus on the things that really matter to achieve fat loss including:

  • Eating high-quality food that allows you to satisfy your hunger and enjoy meals without overeating
  • Getting plenty of sleep and manage stress through meditation, yoga etc
  • Avoiding major nutrient deficiencies like vitamin D, B vitamins, and magnesium
  • Being consistent with your workouts and nutrition
  • Lifting weights in a way that overloads the body so that you gain muscle and lose fat
  • Being more active and less sedentary

Once you have all of these habits cemented naturally into your lifestyle, it makes sense to pay attention to the details that matter to you. The biggest challenge is to make these habits second nature, meaning try not to get sidetracked.

Reason 2: you become unable to truly recognise when you’re hungry and when you’re full

A diet requires you to restrict food intake and ignore hunger. This leads to changes in the brain and a drop in leptin, the metabolic hormone that signals energy availability from bodyfat, which can lead to overeating until the lost body fat is replaced.  This can lead to a vicious rebound weight gain once you have dieted hard to achieve a low bodyfat.

The solution? Resetting your brain to recognise hunger and fullness isn’t easy but a few things can help:

  • Be dedicated to avoiding highly processed foods in favour of whole foods
  • Focus on internal cues (hunger and satiety) for periods of time versus tracking macros (external cue)
  • Eat a higher protein diet that includes healthy fats while getting majority of carbs from complex sources
  • Eat plenty of vegetables and lots of fiber
  • Get enough sleep as a lack of sleep directly affects metabolic hormones like leptin and ghrelin that affect hunger and satiety.

Reason 3: your willpower is easily exhausted, causing you to overeat

Willpower is a limited resource. Therefore, when you use it all day long to control your eating along with other activities that require effort like working at your job or exercising, it easily runs out. One reason is that self-control requires a lot of mental energy.

Dieting almost has a twofold effect on willpower since you have to use it to control your eating but you’re also restricting calories, so your energy supply will be limited. People often find that their willpower runs out in the evening. This inevitably ends up in a binge of chips, ice cream, cake or even “healthy” foods like peanut butter, nuts, yogurt or dark chocolate.

The solution? Adopt a way of eating that avoids hunger and leads to steady, even blood sugar to provide a consistent energy source for the brain. Many people find that eating small frequent meals that are high in protein, healthy fats and complex carbs will do the trick.

Reason 4: It’s stressful

When trying to lose fat, you quickly have to learn how to avoid giving into stress and reaching out for calorie-laden delights any time the going gets tough. This is because when you feel stressed, the hormone cortisol is elevated. High cortisol is well known for triggering food intake, specifically of refined foods high in carbs and fats.

On top of this, restricting calories in order to lose body fat is an inherently anxiety-producing and stressful activity, meaning you feel burdened with hunger and craving all the time.

The solution? figure out an effective stress management plan that focuses on exercise and recovery, sleep, fun, and some sort of mind-body activity like meditation or deep breathing.

Reason 5: it’s not sustainable 

Most people approach fat loss diets with the mindset that hopefully in the future they’ll be able to stop eating in a way that they hate.

Dieting isn’t sustainable. Once you return to your so-so diet habits, you’ll regain any fat you lose and you’ll actually cause severe hormonal changes to your body that it won’t recover from. This is called weight cycling and it’s a horrible reality that plagues dieters because it makes it harder to lose body fat in the future and causes inflammation which can lead to disease.

The solution? if you hate your exercise program, you’ve simply got to find a way to be active that you enjoy a little bit and can keep doing for the long run. Don’t try to go it alone and reach out to a nutritionist, psychological counselor or coach who can help you.

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