234250
234854
FIT Talk With Tania  

Stop counting calories!

One of the most common ways people use to try to lose weight is counting calories.

We've been led to believe that by simply taking in fewer calories than we burn off, those unwanted pounds will fall away and be gone forever. 

On paper and in our heads this makes sense. After all, if you normally consume 2,000 calories a day and then drop down to 1,500 calories per day, the math supports that you should lose weight. 

And you will. At first.

Like many other diets, this “calories in vs calories out” is based solely on numbers without taking into account things like nutrition, health, fitness goals, etc. 

It's possible to hit your number target for the day in any number of unhealthy ways, many of which actually work against the way the body was designed to function, resulting in a slower metabolism and even compromised immune function. 

Restricting or cutting out entire food groups, excessive exercise, consuming pre-packaged, low-calorie meals, skipping meals in order to “save” those calories to be consumed at a later date, all focus on one thing, calories. 

How to keep them from entering the body, and/or how to burn off as many as possible of the ones that got in. Sound exhausting? 

In order to lose just one pound, the body has to either burn off or create a deficit of 3,500 calories. That's a big number. And focusing on that number – counting, doing the math, buying low-cal packaged foods, working out like a crazy person, checking FitBit or Apple Watch hoping to hit those targets is work. 

A lot of work. And like I said earlier, you can get results doing this. But for most people, it's short lived. No wonder statistics say that less than one percent of people can maintain a diet for life. 

Aside from the obvious stress of counting calories and the pressure to be perfect in order to achieve results, this approach doesn't address any of the six components of health: 

  • Stress
  • Sleep
  • Water
  • Nutrition
  • Exercise
  • Supplements. 

All it does is really just create more stress from trying to be perfect and get those numbers to line up, and physically due to the lack of attention paid to creating health. 

On the flip side, when we focus on building up the body and doing things that create health, making our calories count, rather than counting the calories, great things begin to happen. 

The only time I look at calorie consumption with my clients is if they aren't eating enough. 

Yep, that's right. More often than not the people I work with are not eating enough. They come from that place of restriction and are afraid that if they eat more they will gain weight when in fact their bodies are not taking in enough nutrients to get the job done. 

Not providing your body enough nutrients causes the body to go into starvation mode, saving and storing almost everything it does get, as fat. Once they understand this and start giving their bodies what it needs, it's amazing the wonderful things that begin to happen in very short order.

Choose whole, single-ingredient foods, put together in a way that stabilizes blood sugar. Drink lots of clean water, get out and moving every day, reduce stress, get enough sleep so that you feel rested in the morning, and use quality supplements to fill the gaps in meals, nutrition and nutrients. 

Repeat daily for best results.

In doing so, you're creating healthy habits that, when maintained consistently over time, will help you to not only look and feel better, burn fat, lose weight and turn on metabolism, but will also help balance your hormones, reverse disease, increase energy, improve concentration and focus, and strengthen your immune system. 

Pretty cool list of side effects, yes or yes?

As you think about your next meal, snack, grocery shop or dinner out, focus on the food rather than the number of calories. 

Because when you buy, prepare, serve and order more whole, single-ingredient foods, your meals will naturally be higher in vitamins, minerals, phytonutrients, and fibre while at the same time contain far less sugar, no additives or preservatives, and yes, also a lot few calories. 

Naturally. 

If you're looking for more ways to make your calories count and take back control of your health, join the
8 Weeks is All it Takes! group on Facebook. 

This article is written by or on behalf of an outsourced columnist and does not necessarily reflect the views of Castanet.



More FIT Talk With Tania articles

229791
About the Author

Nutritionist Tania Gustafson, owner of FIT Nutrition, has been active in the health and fitness industry since 1986 when she entered as a fitness instructor and trainer.

In 2011, Tania partnered with internationally renowned nutrition and fitness expert Mark Macdonald, and in 2017 officially earned the title of Master Nutrition Coach in conjunction with Venice Nutrition and the International Board of Nutrition and Fitness Coaches (IBNFC).

Tania is one of only five health professionals licensed and certified in Canada to deliver this proven, three-phase program of blood sugar stabilization, not dieting.Tania is committed to ending the dieting madness both locally and globally and educates her clients on how to increase health with age.

Tania is able to work with clients across Canada, the U.S. and U.K. to restore health and achieve their weight loss goals.Tania is a wife, mother of three adult children, global entrepreneur, speaker, workshop facilitator, writer, blogger, podcast host, travel junkie and self-proclaimed gym rat.

For more information and to book your complimentary health assessment go to www.fuelignitethrive.com. Check https://www.facebook.com/fuelignitethrive/  and https://www.facebook.com/groups/8weeksisallittakes/



234249
The views expressed are strictly those of the author and not necessarily those of Castanet. Castanet does not warrant the contents.

Previous Stories



233111


235995