14-Day Rapid Soup Diet Review
keep
in mind that many experts say it’s best to lose weight gradually.
It’s more likely to stay off. If you shed pounds too fast, you’ll lose
muscle, bone, and water instead of fat, says the Academy of Nutrition and
Dietetics. The academy’s advice: Aim to lose 1-2 pounds per week, and
avoid fad diets or products that make promises that sound too
good to be true. It’s best to base your weight loss on changes you can stick
with over time.
Our
conventional ideas about weight loss – eat less, move more – require a lot of
willpower. Counting calories, exercising for hours every day and trying to
ignore your hunger? At DietDoctor, we believe that’s needless suffering, and
likely a waste of your time and precious energy. Eventually people often give
up. An excessive focus on counting calories has certainly not done much to
reverse our current obesity epidemic. The bottom line? Calories are not the
only things that count in weight loss. Your weight is also hormonally
regulated. If you reduce your hunger and the levels of your fat-storing
hormone, insulin, you’ll likely have an easier time losing excess weight.
If
you want to lose weight, consider starting by avoiding sugar and starch (like
bread, pasta and potatoes). This is an old idea: for 150 years or
more there have been a huge number of weight-loss diets based on eating
fewer carbs. What’s new is that dozens of modern scientific studies have proven
that, yes, on average low carb can be the most effective way to lose
weight. Obviously, it’s still possible to lose weight on any diet – just eat
fewer calories than you burn, right? The problem with this simplistic advice is
that it ignores the elephant in the room: hunger. Most people don’t like to “just
eat less,” as it may result in having to go hungry forever. Sooner or later,
many will likely give up and eat, hence the prevalence of “yo-yo dieting.”
While it should be possible to lose weight on any diet, some appear to make it
easier and some to make it much harder. The main advantage of the low-carb diet
is that it may cause you to want to eat less. Even without counting
calories, overweight people tend to eat fewer calories on low carb.
Sugar
and starch may increase your hunger, while avoiding them may decrease your
appetite to a more manageable level. If your body wants to have an appropriate
number of calories, you don’t need to bother counting them. Thus, calories
count, but you don’t need to count them. A 2012 study also showed that people
who had lost weight experienced far less reduction in total energy
expenditure (the number of calories burned within a 24-hour period) when they
followed a low-carb diet compared to a low-fat diet during weight maintenance —
a 300-calorie difference, in fact.
According
to one of the Harvard professors behind the study, this advantage “would
equal the number of calories typically burned in an hour of moderate-intensity
physical activity.” Imagine that: an entire bonus hour of exercise every
day, without actually exercising. Recently, an even larger and more carefully
conducted study confirmed this metabolism-sparing effect, with different groups
of people who had lost weight burning an average of between 200 and almost 500
extra calories per day on a low-carb maintenance diet compared to a high-carb
or moderate-carb diet.
https://ipsnews.net/business/2021/01/06/14-day-rapid-soup-diet-reviews-does-its-really-helps-you/
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