Cerwin Vega
Master Don Juan
1. Eat less than your what body needs.
2. Stay persistent with step 1.
It all comes up to this. Any sort of diet, meal plan, or lifestyle will try to achieve is this: CICO (calories in/calories out) below 1.0. Everything expensive diet or technique built around this idea, and tbh, they're just clutches that limit your results.
In the grand scheme of things, it doesn't matter what you eat. You will always lose weight if you eat less than your total daily expenditure. If you're a low-activity, healthy male, we're talking 2000-2300kcal/day. Your body can live for weeks without eating anything, so 1500kcal/day is more than enough to sustain it.
Now, that doesn't mean you can stuff your face with 13 twinkies/day to fulfill your daily needs -- you will still lose weight, but you'll also lose muscle, and feel like **** 24/7.
You have to learn how to manipulate your body to satiety, which means that you need high-volume, low-calorie foods such as vegetables. You also need building blocks such as protein, vitamins, minerals, and fatty acids, but that's for my next post.
So...how do you start?
-Cut down on the portions
-Replace calorie-dense foods with low-calorie foods (big bowl of vegetables instead of pasta/rice)
-Eat MORE MEAT, EGGS AND FISH. It's packed full of protein.
-Go COLD TURKEY on foods which trigger binging. For me, that's sweets. I can't hold myself around them, so I stopped buying them
Do all the above while monitoring your calorie intake, and slowly go down to 2000->1750->1500kcal/day.
This applies to the average male; if you're >6ft and muscular, increase these numbers by 10-15%.
Now, here's the important part. Don't forget step #2. You must do it persistently for at least 6 months if you're >10kg overweight, and I guarantee that you'll see the results.
This will not only help you look more attractive, but also reduce your mortality, and even make you feel better. Obesity is an epidemic. I've seen plenty of 30-year-old patients with occluded coronaries, and kids as young as 12 starting on antidiabetics and antihypertensives...it's not fun, and in many cases it's irreversible.
2. Stay persistent with step 1.
It all comes up to this. Any sort of diet, meal plan, or lifestyle will try to achieve is this: CICO (calories in/calories out) below 1.0. Everything expensive diet or technique built around this idea, and tbh, they're just clutches that limit your results.
In the grand scheme of things, it doesn't matter what you eat. You will always lose weight if you eat less than your total daily expenditure. If you're a low-activity, healthy male, we're talking 2000-2300kcal/day. Your body can live for weeks without eating anything, so 1500kcal/day is more than enough to sustain it.
Now, that doesn't mean you can stuff your face with 13 twinkies/day to fulfill your daily needs -- you will still lose weight, but you'll also lose muscle, and feel like **** 24/7.
You have to learn how to manipulate your body to satiety, which means that you need high-volume, low-calorie foods such as vegetables. You also need building blocks such as protein, vitamins, minerals, and fatty acids, but that's for my next post.
So...how do you start?
-Cut down on the portions
-Replace calorie-dense foods with low-calorie foods (big bowl of vegetables instead of pasta/rice)
-Eat MORE MEAT, EGGS AND FISH. It's packed full of protein.
-Go COLD TURKEY on foods which trigger binging. For me, that's sweets. I can't hold myself around them, so I stopped buying them
Do all the above while monitoring your calorie intake, and slowly go down to 2000->1750->1500kcal/day.
This applies to the average male; if you're >6ft and muscular, increase these numbers by 10-15%.
Now, here's the important part. Don't forget step #2. You must do it persistently for at least 6 months if you're >10kg overweight, and I guarantee that you'll see the results.
This will not only help you look more attractive, but also reduce your mortality, and even make you feel better. Obesity is an epidemic. I've seen plenty of 30-year-old patients with occluded coronaries, and kids as young as 12 starting on antidiabetics and antihypertensives...it's not fun, and in many cases it's irreversible.