Beware of the Atkins Diet!
The short name for the Atkins nutritional approach is the Atkins diet, which was the brainchild of the doctor named Robert Atkins. He had gained a lot of weight in medical school. He read concerning this diet in the medical journal and decided to improve it and release it under his name. For all kinds of additional information about Atkins you can click over to Fat Loss for Idiots.
Atkins, in his Atkins Diet, believed prevailing theories about weight gain were all wrong. First, he dismissed the idea that saturated fats were bad. Instead it was carbohydrates that led to the weight problems Americans have. Atkins held that our obsession with fat actually worsened the problem. He pointed to all the low-fat foods that were high in carbohydrates. That meant people on a diet regularly ate foods that were of poorer quality than they usually ate.
The Atkins diet shifts the focus. By cutting out carbohydrates people would burn stored body fats. Lose the fat lose the weight. It’s not just a matter of eating less. Dr. Atkins held that your diet could actually help you burn calories. The Atkins diet allegedly burned an extra 950 calories daily. But the claims were not true. For some good information about burning calories visit Fat Loss for Idiots.
Dr. Atkins also touted the positive influence this Atkins diet could have on people with type 2 diabetes. As contrasting to type 1 diabetes, type 2 is repeatedly closely associated with diet and people who weigh too much. So in general any diet that helps decrease weight will help address type 2 diabetes. Nevertheless the Atkins diet is also low in carbohydrates, which must be avoided with type 2 diabetes anyway of caloric intake, so by means of this feature of the diet Atkins claimed those who suffer type 2 diabetes would no longer need medication such as insulin. The medical world, in general, disagrees with Atkins on this point. They agree lower carbohydrates help with type 2 diabetes, but there is no proof that carbohydrates cause the disease.
What steps does one take to follow the Atkins diet? It follows four phases – induction, ongoing weight loss, pre-maintenance and lifetime maintenance. Here is an overview of the most important phase – Induction.
The Induction phase is the most difficult phase of the Atkins diet. Atkins is flexible as to the time period – but recommends two weeks. During this phase carbohydrates are severely limited – only up to 20 grams per day. The goal is to enter a fat burning metabolic phase called ketosis when the body, starved of glucose, will begin converting stored fat into fatty acids needed to power the body. Weight loss during this phase can be extreme – some Atkins followers reported losses of 5-10 pounds a week.
Learning the ideal carbohydrate levels for weight losing and for day to day intake after the weight loss ends are the purposes of the final three phases in the Atkins diet. Millions of people are still losing weight on this diet – but beware the dangers of taking in too much fat. For additional information please visit Fat Loss for Idiots.
Jack LaLanne – Fitness GURU Can Still Kick My Butt
Jack LaLanne – Be Happy!
Do any of you remember Jack LaLane? He’s gotta be about 112 years old by now, but he’s still kicking butt and taking names.
I remember when I was a little kid seeing my mom watch him on tv and do workouts to lose weight. For crying out loud, I think I remember him pulling a semi or something ridiculous.
He was fabulous in his stereotypical 60’s fitness jumpsuit. I am amazed he’s still going strong. It just shows what hard work and a great attitude can accomplish.
I can’t help but compare him to Michael Jackson, with his oxygen chamber, clean air mask to avoid germs at all costs and claims of being able to live to be 150. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not bagging on Michael……his life story and struggles with personal demons is truly a tragedy.
I’m just trying to make a point …..taking a passive interest as opposed to an active interest in our own personal health. The old school, tried and true methods of days gone by sometimes outperform the latest, greatest miracle breakthroughs that are on the cutting edge.
Thank God for men and women like Jack LaLanne that are willing to defy the convention of their time and push forward for the benefit of the rest of us.
I’m all for the latest technologies, they’re a blast. I love the latest scientific breakthroughs and the dreams they allow us to have. I just don’t want to be guilty of tossing aside something that’s been proven to work for almost a century just because it’s not “hip” at the moment.
If you’re overweight, obese or even borderline obese and are wanting to burn fat and lose inches while you build muscle, nothing beats old school principles.
There are no quick fixes, it takes hard work and dedication. You have to embrace the right kind of fitness training exercises, but most importantly, you need a little Jack LaLanne attitude in you.
I’ve worked out before with little or no results and it wasn’t until I changed my workout attitude that my fitness level started turning around.
I give credit to P90X training DVD’s for reducing my body fat, but in all fairness I have to give some props to Jack LaLanne and my early childhood memories of him amazing all of us with his feats of strength.
Tim Pannell – Big Fat Mama’s Boy!
So I’m working out in public the other day and some guy yells out the window as he drives by…..”Hey FLABZILLA!” After I showed him he was “#1″ in my book………I started thinking.Why should anybody listen to me about getting in shape? I’m still 60 lbs. overweight at the moment. Why listen to me?
I’ve actually seen this weight issue from both sides of the fence. I’ve been 185 lbs., with 6% body fat with washboard abs. I could eat anything and everything and not gain an ounce, even when I wanted to.
I’ve also weighed as much as 310 with 48% body fat with no abs in sight. I couldn’t lose weight no matter how little I ate or how much I exercised.
I know the frustrations caused by excess weight as well as the major roadblocks that keep someone in that forever heavy “state of mind.”
What was the main difference between the healthy me and the heavy me? It was attitude and expectations.
When I was fit I worked out because it was fun. I just flat out enjoyed it. No pressure, no life or death struggle, just the enjoyment of sweating and straining and trying to get stronger and faster.
When I got heavy it was a slow downward spiral that got more and more out of control as time went on. My attitude changed. I turned working out into a life or death struggle
I was easily frustrated when I didn’t see immediate results and that caused me to slide backwards more often than not. My self image took a beating. I was negative more often than I was positive.
I stopped believing in myself and got to a point where I actually reveled in my own grand mal sense of imminent failure. Let me tell ya, this is no place to find yourself.
What turned things around? I guess it came down to waking up one day and insisting that this just wasn’t good enough for me. I did a lot of soul searching about who I am, not what I looked like.
I’m more than just my weight or body fat %. I have an amazing life, a great wife, 5 amazing kids, a great mother and sister. I’ve had a storybook career where I’ve met and worked with some absolutely amazing people.
I have great friends whom I love that actually care about me. There is, quite frankly much more to me than this stupid weight issue I’ve been playing around with for the last couple of decades.
I have turned a corner in my life. I have turned a corner with my health and fitness as well. I am no longer allowing my weight to define me as a person.
I am working out once again because it’s fun, not because I have to. It’s made all the difference in the world.
I’ve dropped over 8% body fat in the last 6 weeks, that’s over 26 lbs. of fat that I’ve dropped. I’m training my body to burn fat more efficiently for fuel. I’m eating healthier more organic meals. Life is good.
Today I rode the bike for half an hour and followed it up with the P90X workout. I held my own pretty well today. It’s a great improvement over 6 weeks ago when I was struggling to just breath.
Sure there are still days that I can get frustrated when the numbers on the scale don’t correspond with the effort I put in the previous day, but I’m no longer working out just to hit certain numbers.
I’m in this for the long haul. I’m not just feeling stronger, I’m getting stronger and I have more energy than I did just a few short weeks ago. It’s a fun ride and I’m enjoying every minute of it.
Thank you condron.us and everybody else for your support over these last several weeks, it has made all the difference in the world, you’re great friends!

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