The law of calorie balance says:
To maintain your weight, you must consume the same number
of calories you burn. To gain weight, you must consume more
calories than you burn. To lose weight, you must consume
fewer calories than you burn.
If you only count portions or if you haven't the slightest
clue how many calories you're eating, it's a lot more likely
that you'll eat more than you realize. (Or you might take
in fewer calories than you should, which triggers your body's
"starvation mode" and causes your metabolism to
shut down).
So how do you balance practicality and realistic expectations
with a nutrition program that gets results? Here's a solution
that's a happy medium between strict calorie counting and
just guessing:
Create a menu using an EXCEL spreadsheet or your favorite
nutrition software. Crunch all the numbers including calories,
protein, carbs and fats. Once you have your daily menu,
print it, stick it on your refrigerator (and/or in your
daily planner) and you now have an eating "goal"
for the day, including a caloric target.
That is my definition of "counting calories"
-- creating a menu plan you can use as a daily guide, not
necessarily writing down every morsel of food you eat for
the rest of your life. If you're really ambitious, keeping
a nutrition journal for at least 4-12 weeks is a great idea
and an incredible learning experience, but all you really
need to get started on the road to a better body is one
good menu on paper. If you get bored eating the same thing
every day, you can create multiple menus, or just exchange
foods using your one menu as a template.
Using this method, you really only need to count calories
once when you create your menus. After you've got a knack
for calories from this initial discipline of menu planning,
then you can estimate portions in the future and get a pretty
good (and more educated) ballpark figure.
So what's the bottom line? Is it really necessary to count
every calorie to lose weight? No. But it IS necessary to
eat fewer calories then you burn. Whether you count calories
and eat less than you burn, or you don't count calories
and eat less than you burn, the end result is the same -
you lose weight. Which would you rather do: Take a wild
guess, or increase your chance for success with some simple
menu planning? I think the right choice is obvious.
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Click here for Tom's Burn the Fat Feed the Muscle program
About the Author
Tom Venuto is an NSCA-certified personal trainer, certified
strength and conditioning specialist, lifetime natural bodybuilder,
and author of the #1 best-selling e-book "Burn the
Fat, Feed The Muscle" (BFFM). Tom has written over
170 articles and has been featured in IRONMAN Magazine,
Natural Bodybuilding, Muscular Development, Muscle-Zine,
Olympian’s News (in Italian), Exercise for Men and
Men’s Exercise. For information on Tom's "Burn
The Fa Feed the Musclet" e-book, click
here
>>
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