Tag Archives: diet

How to use tracking to design your personal weight loss plan, based on 1000’s of successful patients’ experiences.

  1. Find a tracking method that you will use– that is most likely the simplest. You can use an app, your smartphone camera, a computer spreadsheet, a notebook or scrap paper. You can change it in the future, so don’t worry if you choose to just write it down on paper.
  2. What should you track? When starting out, track the times that you eat or drink anything, even if it is a sip or just a lick to taste something. Include the tic tacs too. This gives an idea about the signaling patterns your body is used to right now. Also, next to the times, you should track what it is that you eat or drink.
    • Including the date and day of the week is useful because it may help you identify patterns in the future.
    • Including location is also helpful if you travel or have some days eating at home and some at school or work because that clarifies where the biggest challenges will be.
    • Quantities are less important, you don’t need those just yet.
  3. What do you do with the information? Track for at least 3 days and then review your data. See how you did by answering the questions below. You can see the goals for each of these to compare where you are.
    • What is the longest time you go without eating or drinking anything other than water, black coffee or unsweet tea? That’s your fasting window.
      • Your goal: Fasting window of 12 or more hours on most days. If not, you may want to work up to 12 hours.
    • What time you first start eating or drinking any calories or sweetened beverages and when you last have any calories or sweetened beverages? That’s your eating window.
      • Your goal: Eating window of less than 12 hours out of 24 hours. Contain your eating in 12 or less hours per day.
    • Count the number of times you consume sugar in each day, even if it is only a small amount. Notice the first time in the day that you consume sugar on most days. The earlier in the day you have sugar, the less time you get to be in fat burning mode because the sugar turns off fat burning for most people, unless regularly working out or active.
      • Your goal: Get the sugar consumption frequency as close to zero as possible so your body can burn fat, create more energy and your liver is protected. Also, if you are going to have anything with sugar, postpone it so you get the longest time of fat burning before you turn it off.
    • Make sure you are getting enough* protein most days to maintain optimal health including muscle, hormones and immune system. There are many kinds of protein (eggs, yogurt, cottage cheese, soy products like tofu and tempeh, seafood, poultry like chicken and turkey, pork, beef, lamb, legumes like chick peas, lentils, and black beans, etc.). Everyone has their favorites. That’s fine.
      • Your goal: *Get 3-4 servings of proteins per day. If you are working out, older age, frail or vegan, aim for 4 servings of protein. Otherwise, you may be fine with 3 servings. You probably want to include protein every time you eat. Hint: One serving for you is about the size of your palm – think hands without fingers or thumb.
    • Look for the times you drink your calories. IF you are working to lose weight, it is best not to drink your calories unless it is a savory soup or broth. That includes sweet creamers in coffee, sweet tea, smoothies, juice, soda, alcohol.
      • Your goal: Limit the number of times in a week you drink your calories unless it is bone broth or other savory soup. Drink enough water so that your urine is mostly clear or a pale yellow and you have to go roughly every 3-4 hours while awake. Unsweet sparkling and flavored waters, unsweet tea and coffee are also fine. Try herbs, berries, lemon or lime or cucumbers in your water. A pinch of salt is fine too.
    • Make sure you get some fermented foods to feed your gut microbiome. Eating some of these foods daily may help your digestive system, your immune system and even your mental health.
      • Your goal: Consider adding fermented food like kefir, yogurt, pickles and fermented vegetables, kimchi, olives, miso, tempeh, sauerkraut, etc. to your diet on most days. You may find some favorites at your local grocery store or farmer’s market or find a subscription service like this one (I have no relationship with this company other than I order from them).
    • Check to confirm you have enough plant diversity in your diet so your gut is healthy and happy with soluble and insoluble fibers and so that you get all the vitamins and minerals you need.
      • Your goal: A minimum of 2 handfuls of leafy greens PLUS at least 1 handful of another vegetable daily. You can eat them any way.
    • Make sure your food log include omegas 3’s in your diet as a supplement or as food. There is evidence supporting their use for heart health, enhancing and improving mental health and cognition, helping wounds heal, reducing inflammation and supporting joints and even prenatal development.
      • Your goal: if you are eating fish like wild salmon (NOT farmed or Atlantic salmon), mackerel, sardines, herring, then you should be fine with 1-2 times weekly “doses.” If you are supplementing or getting a plant-based source like in chia, flax or hemp seeds and algae oil, best to take daily.
  4. Now you get to take make the tweaks necessary to optimize your nutrition to support your body’s best health and the weight follows as a side effect of getting metabolically healthier. With this new knowledge, continue to track and learn your patterns and where you have the greatest challenges. You can use your tracking data and work to achieve the goals listed for each item above. Rather than working on all of them at once, simplify it for easier and faster mastery by focusing on only one at a time starting at the top.
  5. Share your journey with a friend or group. When you have others to talk about your experiences, share recipes and favorite products and you cheer each other on, it’s super fun and a great way to bring people together around common goals no matter what else is going on in your life. Nutrition is one area you get to be in control most of the time and it directly impacts all the other things in life. Watch the weight respond over time, naturally. Watch the ripple effect. When your body feels great, you have the energy and confidence to live a fuller life! Enjoy and drop me a line.

Healthier Together Series: 7A. Nutrition – The importance of calories in

hessam-hojati-M4hazNIyTsk-unsplashWe’ve heard that weight is all about the calories we consume. In fact, someone recently shared with me that she felt betrayed. She had been successfully losing weight eating very low carb, and had not been counting or restricting calories. She had been feeling so happy about her progress and how easy it was and how she had so much more energy that she had now been regularly working out for over 2 years. However, she recently heard that eating very low carb or “keto” was effective for weight loss because it cuts calories. This whole time, she thought it was being low carb that worked, not the calorie restriction. She felt “tricked.” Have you heard this too?

Allow me to clarify. If you are eating carbohydrates and your waistline is enlarging or you are gaining excess weight or you have prediabetes or diabetes or PCOS or metabolic syndrome, you have insulin resistance. Insulin resistance means that your body produces excessive amounts of insulin for the same amount of carbohydrates you consume. So, if you eat carbs, your body dumps too much insulin into your blood stream.

High levels of insulin prevent your body from being able to access your back up fuel source – your fat cells. You will not be able to get fuel from your fat cells. This means that when you need fuel, you will need to provide fuel, to run your body, by eating or drinking it. You know the feeling- you will be hungry or get the munchies when your fuel in your blood stream starts dropping low. Again, you have to eat or drink calories the have the fuel to continue to run your body. If you don’t eat and your insulin level is high, you don’t have access to your back up fuel source, so your cells begin to panic. You get hungry, ravenous and feel your blood sugar dropping and feel very unwell. Eating or drinking carbs (including sugars) is the fastest way to “feel better” in this scenario.

Now, let’s go on the “common” diet of cutting calories or portion size. If you started out eating a standard American diet with lots of carbohydrates and then begin calorie restriction, or cutting calories or eating smaller portions, it usually means you cut back on the fats and eat mostly carbohydrates. Carbs spike insulin. This means you keep insulin pretty high and as a result, you starve those poor cells in your body. Your body doesn’t like starving, so it adapts and starts to cut back on its activities and slows your metabolism to “conserve” your limited energy. With this method of weight loss, weight loss is very difficult to maintain unless you continue to add more exercise and/or continue to cut calories. There’s a limit to how far you can go with this.

When someone pursues a very low carb or ketogenic diet, your body adapts to running on the ketones produced from burning your fat stores (it continues to make glucose too). Good news, ketones act as a natural appetite suppressant- so you don’t need to eat as much or as often. You just aren’t that hungry because with this method, your insulin levels stay lower. When insulin is lower, your body can burn fat for fuel when it needs fuel (burning fat for fuel instead of requiring eating for chronic re-fueling). Also, by eating a very low carb or ketogenic diet, your brain and gut can receive the signals that you are “full” when you eat fat and protein.

Ultimately, by keeping insulin levels in the naturally lower range, when you need fuel, you can easily burn fat for fuel, your appetite is decreased overall, and your brain and gut can receive signals and know when to stop eating. Voila! Less calories in, but it is because you don’t need or want them- NOT because you artificially put your body into a starving panic mode. VERY different reason for less calories in. VERY different body response to less calories in. Long term weight loss and weight loss maintenance is achievable. Pretty cool, right?