Tuesday 18 June 2013

Understanding your body| The best way to lose weight

Understanding your body| The best way to lose weight

By Azeez Shukurat


We eat in response to hunger signals generated in our brain.  Your body needs energy - pure "raw calories" and specific micro-nutrient, such as a vitamin or mineral. You experience an emotional trigger for "comfort food", which is usually a conditioned stress response
 It is crucial to know that all factors that triggers hunger pang are regulated by your body's autonomic nervous system - your subconscious mind. Subconscious mind are outside your conscious control Yet, most diet or weight loss programs specifically ignore this fact and want you to use brute force willpower -- through counting calories, exercise, or other means -- to overcome your body's subconscious control mechanisms. Eventual failure is virtually guaranteed.
   There are three types of fat, just as there are different types of nutritional fats we can eat, each of which has different effects on our bodies, once there are also different types of fats stored in our body, each with different functions. The type of fat you have will determine how easy it is for you to lose it, even whether or not you can lose it, and how long it will stay off or how fast you gain it back when your "diet program" is complete. We actually have three different types of fat in our bodies.

Your Three Types of Fat

One of the classic mistakes made by virtually every weight loss program on the market is that it treats all fat in your body the same. This is a huge mistake! Just as there are different types of nutritional fats we can eat, each of which has different effects on our bodies, once there are also different types of fats stored in our body, each with different functions. The type of fat you have will determine how easy it is for you to lose it, even whether or not you can lose it, and how long it will stay off or how fast you gain it back when your "diet program" is complete. We actually have three different types of fat in our bodies.
Normal Fat Reserves(superficial fat): These fat deposits exist mainly as a layer of fat under our skin and above the muscles. It provides a reserve of energy for short-term interruptions in the food supply, and also as insulation for helping keep warm.
Structural Fats/visceral fat these types of fat are deposited around internal organ like the kidney, the heart and the liver structural/visceral fat are a connective tissue that serves primarily as a shock absorber.
Long Term Fat deposits, also called Brown Fat. This fat differs in its chemical structure from normal fat. Once the body is signaled to create long term fat deposits through a complex system of hormones and neurotransmitters, they only are released during long-term extreme starvation, or during pregnancy.

How Does Body Produced And Store Fat

 The human body needs foods to function. For the body to function optimally, the level of food intake must be within a safety range depends on age, sex, level of mental and physical activities. Physical activities include all our day to day activities like sweeping, reading, walking, dancing, and cooking in fact all activities which involve the movement of body part. The brain cell utilizes 20% of the body glucose. So, engaging in mental activities like reading, thinking can help reduced great amount of fat.
 There are six classes of food that we must provide the body, these are: carbohydrate, proteins, fat and oil, mineral acids, vitamins, and water.
Carbohydrate are required by the body to produced energy,
  The carbohydrate, proteins, and fat and oil we take are metabolized by our body to produce the need calories/energy which the body need for our daily activities.  At any point in time when our intake of these food classes exceed the body requirements for them or their metabolism is reduce than necessary, the excess of it is converted into fat and stored in our body around internal organ and beneath the skin.
 Remember that it is not only fat foods that are stored as fat, the end excess carbohydrate and proteins are also stored as fat.
  The region/ areas of fat storage are controlled by genes and is different from person to person. The body fat storage also varies with age, sex, and race.
  The body need of calorie varies with age, sex, level physical activities and mental activities. Physical activities include all our day to day activities like sweeping, reading, walking, dancing, and cooking in fact all activities which involve the movement of body part. The brain cell utilizes 20% of the body glucose, so engaging in mental activities like reading, thinking can help reduced great amount of fat.
Your individual body chemistry must be taken into account in order for you to lose weight. Before on any diet or weight loss program, you first need to know  what foods are compatible with your body's chemistry and immune system.  Stress stimulates the production of a hormone called cortisol, The presence of cortisol causes an increase in your blood sugar. This is an important adaptation during life threatening situation. However, during daily activities, it causes insulin production and result in your body being more prone to storing fat, another long-term survival adaptation. If this stress response pattern becomes more frequent, you are more likely to store this fat as Long Term Brown Fat.

 Long term, frequent stress can cause your body to lower your metabolism and produces a phenomenon called Functional Hypothyroidism. Your body behaves as if it is hypothyroid, even though your thyroid is fine. Long term stress can also burn out your Adrenal glands and reduce your ability to respond to stress.

How to Boost your metabolic rate

There are a number of ways you can boost your metabolic rate. Exercise, diet and lifestyle are all important areas in which you can make changes and increase your metabolism. Exercise is a great way to boost your metabolism because it burns calories both immediately and also keeps burning them in the long term. The actual act of exercising will burn calories and over time your body will adapt to your exercise regime and burn an increased number of calories overall. Regular, moderate physical exercise is good for the body, mind, and spirit. For those with MS, exercise is an important tool to help maintain function, mobility, and help manage symptoms such as depression, fatigue, and anger. Regular exercise can improve a loss of fitness caused by a sedentary lifestyle and be therapeutic for such MS-related problems as spasticity and poor balance.Exercise also builds a reserve of muscle strength and cardiovascular function. Then, if an attack or exacerbation of MS calls for a time-out from physical activity, the reserve is available. When the symptoms subside and the person is able to go back to a more normal life, there is a better foundation on which to rebuild. Addressing the symptoms of MS with regular exercise may help to slow the progression of the disease as one maintains or even gains more mobility.

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