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Making It Over the Weight-Loss Plateau

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Tracy - 30 Jan 2007 12:27 GMT
URL:
http://health.msn.com/guides/weightloss/articlepage.aspx?cp-documentid=1000
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Making It Over the Weight-Loss Plateau
by Susan Woodward for MSN Health & Fitness
Freelance

Know this scenario? You're in a great dieting rhythm, shedding fat as
perfectly as it falls from frying bacon, when the weight loss suddenly
stops.

Just like that.

Your mind reels and demands to know, what's going on? Control your panic,
say experts, you've hit a well-known and very common phenomenon called the
weight loss plateau.

"A plateau is almost always when people give up," warns clinical
psychologist Dr. Jeff Wilbert, author of Fattitudes. "If you can make it
through a plateau it's really a tribute to your determination."

Here's some advice for enduring a plateau and getting back to paring
pounds.

Expect it
Anticipate a plateau and prepare your mind for the challenge. "People have
to realize that everybody goes through it and this, too, shall pass," says
Ann Louise Gittleman, author of The Fat Flush Plan.

Be honest with yourself
Are you sure you're not cheating? (Not even a little?)

Make adjustments
OK, you haven't slackened on the food or exercise front. So look for
inventive ways to budge your butt off the plateau.

"Often it's a good time to see if there's something you can tweak,"
suggests dietician and iVillage columnist Lynn Grieger. "Maybe it's time to
start lifting weights, walk longer than 30 minutes, or stop drinking wine
with dinner."

Up your metabolism
Dieting is a double-edged sword: You modify your food intake to lose
weight, but losing weight slows your metabolism, the very thing that burns
calories.

Increasing exercise is the most obvious way to speed up your metabolism.
Gittleman contends your weight loss may also resume if you eat an extra
four to six ounces of protein per day. "Protein has the ability to increase
metabolism by up to 30 percent," she says.

Balance your brain chemicals
Also according to Gittleman, you can eat an additional serving of healthy,
high-fiber carbohydrates every two days while you're on a plateau. These
"friendly carbs" balance serotonin, the brain chemical that soothes and
satiates the body. Free of irritation, you're less likely to make poor food
choices that will bust your diet, she says.

Dump toxins
Eat high fiber foods (such as flaxseed crackers) or high fiber supplements
to spark internal cleansing, too, Gittleman says. "It helps to release
toxin-laden fluids and waste, which can sometimes allow you to lose another
two to three pounds."

Try a magic bullet?
Conjugated linoleic acid, or CLA, is a supplement that proponents claim
burns fat and enhances muscle growth. One gram, three times a day,
recommends Gittleman.

Ask for help
Turn to support and motivation wherever you can find it during your slump.
If it isn't forthcoming from family and friends, consider reaching out to a
virtual community.

When all else fails
"People can try things, but sometimes the body just needs to adapt for a
period of time," says Grieger. In other words, you may stay on your plateau
for weeks, even months.

Or – the really bad news – perhaps you've lost as much weight as you're
ever going to.

Whatever the case, a plateau is an excellent time to reflect on your goals.
If you've achieved the other important objectives of your diet, such as
lowered blood pressure, you may have to be OK with wherever your body
settles.
RCE - 30 Jan 2007 12:44 GMT
> URL:
> http://health.msn.com/guides/weightloss/articlepage.aspx?cp-documentid=1000
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> by Susan Woodward for MSN Health & Fitness
> Freelance

FWIW:

I've hit three significant plateaus on the voyage from 260 to 211 (currently
in one now).

At the suggestion of someone here in this NG, here's what I do to "shake
things up" when I see three or four consecutive days of no loss (or even a
small gain) even though the daily calorie deficit and exercise routine
remains basically the same:

1. Add about 25% to the calorie intake a day to the diet.
2. Include brief but very intense "spurts" to the exercise routine, i.e.  up
the treadmill speed to a
   fast jog for a few minutes during each workout .... increase the incline
.... same thing on the
   elliptical. Do this three or four times during each workout.

Once I see the weight starting to drop again, I go back to the original diet
mode calorie intake.
Each time I've done this, the plateau has only lasted for about 7-8 days.

Not scientific by any means, but it's worked so far.   Of course, the
plateaus may have ended on their own also .... I have no way of knowing.

RCE
Edna Pearl - 30 Jan 2007 19:35 GMT
>> URL:
>> http://health.msn.com/guides/weightloss/articlepage.aspx?cp-documentid=1000
[quoted text clipped - 27 lines]
> Not scientific by any means, but it's worked so far.   Of course, the
> plateaus may have ended on their own also .... I have no way of knowing.

Whatever works, right?  :-) Your approach is a perfectly sensible one that
probably helps and certainly can't hurt.

ep
 
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