Most fitness goals include weight loss, or the reduction of fat
content, in one way or another. Whether we want to lose a couple pounds,
change a clothing size, or gain muscle mass, loss and control of our
fat content is usually part of the plan.
Just as it is necessary
to know what steps to take to meet your individual fitness goals, it is
just as important to know what not to do. Avoid the following top ten
mistakes that are sure to ruin your fitness efforts:
1. Fail to Plan.
It's
been said over and over: "If you fail to plan, you plan to fail."
Working out without a pre-determined workout regime is similar to going
on a trip without directions; most likely you'll end up getting lost.
Don't make this common mistake. Enlist the aid of a qualified personal
trainer to design a proper resistance training and aerobic program.
Purchase one of the many guides to fitness programming and educate
yourself on the basics.
2. Compare yourself to others.
Go
into any gym and you're sure to see grunting exercisers muscling their
way through workouts. Meanwhile, the group fitness studio is filled with
twirling, panting, leaping students who look more like they're
auditioning for a music video than participating in an aerobics class.
Don't even think about trying to emulate them. At the very least you'll
get discouraged that you can't keep up; at the worst you'll get hurt.
Keep
your expectations realistic. A beginning expecting to bench 300 pounds
in the first month is doomed to failure. Better to increase strength
incrementally over time. Likewise, presuming that you'll lose 100 pounds
of bodyfat on a new diet in three months will never happen. Set
realistic goals that will keep you motivated and concentrate on
yourself, not others, throughout the process.
3. Too little exercise.
Contrary
to what popular exercise programs would have us believe, it is simply
not enough to put in three or four exercise sessions per week and expect
major results. Weight loss and body composition changes are results of
cumulative lifestyle choices, not just exercise in the gym. There are
168 hours in a week; expecting to lose weight by just spending 1% of our
available time being active is ridiculous.
This doesn't mean you
need to spend your entire day chained to a barbell, but make sure that
you are active in some fashion every day. In addition to workouts,
increase lower level activity by walking or bike riding to work, choose
the parking space furthest away from the grocery store's door, or get
out and play with your kids. The point is to be active and keep the body
in motion on a regular basis.
4. Too much exercise.
On the
other hand, don't become obsessed with exercise that it begins to rule
your life. Over-training is as detrimental to achieving fitness goals as
doing nothing at all.
Common signs of over-training include
overuse injuries, insomnia, fatigue, prolonged recovery from workouts,
and general disinterest in exercise. Rest and recovery are vital for
achieving gains and preventing burnout.
5. Never change your workout routine.
Nothing
is as boring as the same routine over and over again. Not only will you
get bored, your muscles will adapt and quit responding. Change your
exercises, the order you do them, the number of sets and reps, and vary
the weights. Variety is necessary or progress will stop. Make every
workout different in some way.
6. Starving to lose weight.
The
usual American diet consists of a quick (usually missed) breakfast,
lunch on the run and then a huge feast for dinner. Unfortunately, this
is the worst eating plan for weight loss because it slows down the
metabolism. When the body is not fed consistently, it flips into
starvation mode developed through evolution and hangs onto fat content
for survival.
Research supports that the production of thyroid
hormones can be negatively affected by repeated bouts of dieting and
calorie restriction. Five or six smaller meals spaced evenly from 2.5 to
3 hours make it easier for the body to digest throughout the day and
increase metabolism over the long term. It may sound counterintuitive,
but in order to burn fat you need to eat. Instead of reducing the amount
of meals, care should be taken in controlling portion sizes.
7. Underestimating alcohol consumption.
Just
as portion sizes need to be controlled, alcohol consumption must be
limited, if not eliminated. Not only does alcohol have calories; it is
actually metabolized more like fat than carbohydrates. Unlike fat or
carbohydrates, alcohol has no nutritional value whatsoever. Drinking a
glass of wine or having that martini may feel good but adds no benefit
whatsoever to weight loss and muscle growth. The empty calories of those
"liquid lunches" just add up too quick.
8. Relying on fast food.
In
the New York Times Bestseller Fast Food Nation: The Dark Side of the
All-American Meal, Eric Schlosser gives a convincing interpretation of
how the rise of the multi-billion dollar fast food industry correlates
with what we now see to be epidemic obesity in the U.S. Instead of
spending time planning and preparing meals, it is far easier to grab the
burger/fry/shake combo or a deluxe pizza on the way home from work.
The
problem with regularly eating out is that despite how careful we may
think we are, we truly don't know the makeup of most of the food that is
being served to us. Even with fast food stores attempting to offer
"healthier" choices, preparation of mass-produced meals relies on use of
less than optimum ingredients and typically laden in fat. The only way
we can be sure of knowing what we are consuming is to prepare food
ourselves. Consuming less processed food is not always the easiest thing
to do if we're used to it, but it is a major lifestyle choice that
needs to be changed. Besides, is it just a coincidence that we call it
"junk food"?
9. Avoiding of weight training.
An important
concern for weight loss is increasing the body's metabolism so caloric
expenditure is increased throughout the day. As stated above, one way to
do this is to make sure that the appropriate number of meals is
consumed. Another way is to increase the percentage of muscle mass. The
more muscle we carry on our frames, the higher the caloric expenditure
required. Weight training is necessary to increase muscle mass.
A
common belief among beginning fitness enthusiasts is the need for hours
and hours of high intensity aerobic exercise for fat loss. The reality
is just the opposite. Aerobic exercise certainly helps to burn fat, but
does relatively little to increase overall metabolic rate in comparison
with muscular gain due to a consistent resistance training program. A
concern for increasing muscle mass is imperative for successful loss of
fat content.
10. Looking for the "easy way out."
Whether
it's winning the lottery or having the perfect body, we all want
something for nothing. One look at late-night infomercials and you can
see all the bogus advertisements that promise weight loss by either
popping a pill, drinking a shake, or buying some revolutionary new piece
of equipment. Even factions of the medical community have jumped on the
bandwagon in recent years, promising the body of our dreams through a
variety of surgical procedures.
The main concept of weight loss,
calories in vs. calories out, is simple but far from easy. Only with
dedication, work, and healthy lifestyle changes are results going to
happen. And FORGET the quick fixes. They don't exist. Cher said it best
in a fitness commercial back in the 80's: "If it came in a bottle, we'd
all have a beautiful body."
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