If
you go online you can find many metabolic rate calculators that will estimate
the number of calories you will burn in a day. This however becomes abstract
and doesn’t seem to feel real to many people. I suggest that we look at our
daily energy needs on an hourly basis instead of on a daily basis.
For
example: I went online and found a few metabolic rate calculators and
determined that my estimated daily energy burn is approximately 1920 calories
per day, or 80 per hour.
If
I eat something that has 80 cals in it then I know it takes my body 1 hour to
burn that off. This seems to be a simpler way to view energy burning and
eating. This also makes it more real.
If
I have something to eat that has 500 cals in it I know that it will take my
body over 6 hours to burn that off. You can see that it doesn’t take long to
fill up an entire days worth of energy burning in just a few small meals.
If
you want to eat a big dinner you have to budget for it by not eating much before
and/or after that dinner. This way you’ve taken some calories out of your
energy bank knowing that you will put them back in during the big dinner. This
is the only way that weight loss really works.
Eating
a big dinner and telling yourself that you’ll work it off at a later date will
never work. It’s no different than maxing out your credit card and telling
yourself that you’ll pay it all off next month. This never happens.
Instead
you end up paying the minimum balance of interest off forever and never manage
to reduce the principle balance of the credit card.
This
is the exact same situation with weight gain and weight loss. Let’s say you
gain 10 pounds and tell yourself you’ll diet and exercise it off later. The 10
pounds represents the maxed out credit card. Now if you eat at your BMR you
won’t lose any weight, you will simply maintain your weight with the added 10
pounds. In order to get rid of your extra weight you need to make an even
bigger payment of your weight debt my under eating long enough to allow your
body to burn the 10 pounds off.
This
is why it seems so impossible to lose weight or pay off a credit card.
Making
the minimum payment on a credit card will never reduce the balance and just
covers the interest.
Eating
just enough to match your BMR on a daily basis will keep you at your current
weight and never allow your body to burn the extra calories needed to get rid
of the stored fat.
It’s
a bit ironic that the two things in your life that require a budget (money and
calories) are the two things that most people in North America are terrible at
managing.
Losing
weight is no different than getting out of debt. You have to ‘budget’ your
calories just like your money. If you never pay off the credit cards you’ll
never be out of debt. Likewise if you never pay off your calorie debt you’ll
never lose weight.
The
trick is finding a way to budget calories and pay off your calorie debt quickly
and easily.
John
Barban is the Author of the Adonis Index Workout, a specific method for building
a guy’s body into its most attractive shape: the shape women find attractive
and that creates social dominance with men.
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