Table of Contents

Why Under Eating Works Against Weight Loss

My first instinct when I was new to health and fitness was to cut back on as many calories as I could and this would work for the first week or so. Than the inevitable would happen. Cheat days would turn into cheat weeks because my body would be so deprived of nutrients and energy. In the end I would gain more fat than I started with. Don't have my mistake. It's very important for your weight loss efforts that you are suppling your body with the energy it needs to function.

Why Under Eating Works Against Weight Loss

Every day, your body needs a wide range of nutrients to help it function, including not just vitamins and minerals, but also calories, from carbohydrate (the preferred source of fuel for your brain and muscles), as well as protein and fat (which are used to repair and heal your body’s cells). Unfortunately stored fat alone can’t take the place of these essential nutrients, so if you stop eating, or stop eating enough, the jobs these nutrients do don’t get done, and the side effects are serious.

In order to lose weight, you do need to cut calories, and that will allow your body to pull some fat out of storage (you fat cells) and burn it off. But you still need to eat enough food, in the right balance, to support the other parts of your body you want to keep strong and healthy, namely your organs, muscle, bone, immune system, hormones, etc. Under eating essentially means that you starve these systems in your body and they’ll become run down, damaged or stop working properly.

Why Under Eating Works Against Weight Loss? When I first became a nutritionist, I worked at a university and the campus doctors referred a lot of college students to me because their bodies were showing the signs of too little nutrition, such as missed periods, anemia, injuries that didn’t heal, a weak immune system (e.g. catching every cold and flu bug that comes around), thinning hair and dry skin. I still frequently see clients who chronically under eat, usually because they’re trying to lose weight, and they often panic at the thought of eating more. But the truth is, eating less than it takes to support your body’s healthy tissue can actually cause you to hang onto body fat for two key reasons. First, healthy tissue (muscle, bone, etc.) burns calories by just being on your body. Every bit you lose causes your metabolism to slow down, even if you work out more. Second, too little nutrition triggers your body to go into conservation mode and you guessed it, burn fewer calories. Historically this is how we survived times of famine – when a smaller amount food was available, we adapted by expending less.

So, how do you know if you’ve cut your calories too low? I have three tell tale signs:

Use a “quick and dirty” formula. Without any activity, your body needs at least 10 calories per pound of your ideal weight. For example, let’s say you weigh 150 but your weight goal is 125. You shouldn’t eat less than 1,250 calories for an extended period of time. But remember, that’s a sedentary formula (e.g. sitting at a desk or on the couch all day and night). If you have an active job or work out, you need extra calories to fuel your activity.

Tune into your body. How do you feel? You can certainly be well-nourished while you’re losing weight. If you feel lethargic, have trouble concentrating, need caffeine in order to function or exercise, feel irritable, moody, or have intense food cravings, you’re not eating enough. Short-term strict plans or “cleanses” are OK for jump-starting a new healthy eating plan, but long-term (more than a week), eating enough to nurture your body is essential for both health and weight loss. Why Under Eating Works Against Weight Loss?

Heed the warnings. If you follow an inadequate diet for too long, you’ll start to see the ramifications. I’ve mentioned a few, such as hair loss, missed periods and getting sick often. I hope you won’t have to experience any kind of unusual physical side effects, but if you do, please know that your diet can be the culprit. I’ve counseling many people who’ve attributed such side effects to genetics or stress when in reality, under eating was the offender.

As a nutritionist and registered dietitian, I want to help you lose weight (or keep it off) safely, healthfully, in a way that allows you to feel great in mind, body and spirit. Losing weight at the expense of your health is never a worthwhile trade off!"

Make sure you are not under eating. Your body needs nutrients and the right nutrients will help you lose weight! Got some tips of your own? Comment below!Source Article

Posted 
December 27, 2020
 in 
Weight Loss
 category
Updated  
December 25, 2020

Share your comments & questions!

More from 

Weight Loss

 category

View All

Join Our Newsletter and Get the Latest
Posts to Your Inbox

No spam ever. Read our Privacy Policy
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.