Wednesday, May 24, 2006

How To Calculate How Fast You Can (Really) Lose Weight

How To Calculate How Fast You Can (Really) Lose Weight
By: Anderson A. Anonymous, M.D., Ph.D.


Fat is what you want to lose. Not water, not muscle, and not bone mass.

Despite what you read in supermarket magazines, and despite decades of very sophisticated attempts by medical researchers to find one, there simply isn't any known way for your body to "flush out fat" without burning it, or to "burn it off" without first needing the energy to keep you alive and move you around. (We can dream about finding some such method, but so far liposuction is the only thing that's even close.)

A pound of fat stores 3500 Calories of energy. You can lose that pound only by using-up 3500 Calories more than you eat. For example, if you eat food every day that has only 2000 Calories in it and at the same time use up 2500 Calories living, working, playing, and "running-around" -- and you can do this every day for seven days, you'll lose one pound of fat.

How can you do this?

First, you need a food & nutrition technique that lets you really control the number of Calories you eat -- nothing else works if you can't do that. The method has to eliminate hunger as well as Calories, because no one can stay on a diet that keeps them constantly fighting hunger for long enough to lose enough weight. (Giving you such a method is what this website is all about.)

Second, you need to know how many Calories your body will burn if you don't exercise, and how many more Calories you can burn if you do exercise. (Preview: It's not that much -- see below.)

From this you can calculate about how fast you'll really be able to burn fat.

For the rest of this article, we'll assume you have already read the articles on this site that explain how you can really control the amount of food you eat.

Finding out how many Calories you can burn off in an average day and how much control of this you really have is a three step process:

Here's an example.

1. Calories Used to Just Stay Alive

If you are female, age 30, weigh 200 pounds, and spend the whole day lying down quietly in a warm room, your body will burn about 1850 Calories. (You have no practical control over this calorie-burn rate.)

This is called your Resting Energy Expenditure (REE). It is the minimum amount of energy your body needs in a day.

Note: To recalculate the above example for your own gender, age, & weight, use the method starting on this page. [Use browser "back button" to return here.]

2. Calories Used to Move Around Doing Normal Things

In addition to this REE, add the Calories you'll burn at your normal activity level.

If the same 30 year-old, 200-lb female has an activity level at a basic "office work" level (very light), she will use about 550 additional Calories per day moving around and doing things.

This is called your Activity Energy Expenditure (AEE). It is the amount of energy your body needs to move you around in your normal activities for a day.

This means that her normal daily activities will burn a total of about 2400 Calories daily.

3. Calories Used for Exercise

How many additional Calories can you burn by exercising? (Preview: It's significant, but not earth-shattering.)

It is very unlikely that a normal person can regularly spend more than about one hour per day exercising. (You have a job, probably a family, and certainly quite a few other demands on your time, energy, and commitment.)

(We've heard that there is a "one-in-a-thousand" person who can regularly do two, three, even four hours of voluntary additional exercise daily; but we've never actually met that person and aren't sure he/she really exists. )

If our 200-lb female simply walks briskly outside for one hour every day, She will burn an extra 435-545 Calories. (As her weight drops from 200 pounds, she will burn less because she won't have as much weight to carry.)

Use this table to calculate about how much you would lose at your weight by walking or doing other activities.

This means that our 200-lb, 30 year-old, female office worker can reasonably expect to be able to use up a total of about 2900 Calories every day.

How much weight she will lose, and how fast, will depend on how successful she is at controlling her Calories from food.

For example, if she has an effective technique for controlling food, she will probably be able to eat about 1500 Calories per day indefinitely (meaning with no hunger or food cravings that erode will-power.)

This means she can reasonably create a 1400 Calorie per day deficit; which works out to 2.8 pounds of fat lost per week. ((1400 x 7)/3500) = 2.8)

This is the reasonable rate of weight loss.




About the Author
Anderson A. Anonymous, M.D., Ph.D. is the author of The 2004 Multi-Diet: Taming The Food Beast! He is also the person most responsible for presenting the details of the Threshold Theory approach to weight loss that is the basis of most of the information & recommendations on http://www.multidiet.com.

Other Articles by Anderson A. Anonymous, M.D., Ph.D. »

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