Binging, Skipping Meals and Diet Pills

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ronadams52
ronadams52 Posts: 176 Member
edited November 2024 in Health and Weight Loss
Binging, Skipping Meals and Diet Pills

I would like to begin by saying that most of us ended up arriving here because of past behaviors. These behaviors may have consisted of sedentary work place environment, lack of exercise, starvation, over eating (bingeing), under eating, bulimia, anorexia or just bad food choices. This website was designed to help us get a handle on how to achieve our weight loss goals in a healthy manner by consuming a proper amount of calories and making sure we have a balanced diet. So what do we need to do? Number 1 - Avoid old behaviors which led us here in the first place.

Skipping a meal is like holding your breath: once you breathe in again, you gasp for air- and plenty of it!

In order to understand the short and long-term impact of binging, skipping meals, using diet pills and/or going on and off restrictive diets, we must first understand how our bodies respond to calories, or the lack thereof. Our bodies are designed to ensure survival during times of famine. To do this, our bodies store up calories that may be needed later when food supplies, and therefore calories, are low.

While we do not experience the same type of famine today that our ancestors once did, we provide our bodies with the modern day equivalent of a famine: the infamous “diet,” otherwise known as self-inflicted food deprivation.

Our bodies, not knowing the difference between involuntary starvation and voluntary caloric restriction, believe there is a famine and go into survival mode.

Survival mode means that every calorie is a precious resource- possibly the difference between life and death. As such, our bodies go to great lengths to hold on to every calorie, including sending “storage mode” signals to fat cells and by slowing our metabolism so we burn even fewer calories than before the caloric restriction.

Additionally, our bodies know that muscle burns more calories than fat, and in its sophisticated and stubborn attempts at ensuring our survival, the body will consume muscle mass for fuel so that precious stored (fat) calories do not need to be burned. This results in a loss of muscle and an even slower metabolism.

What this ultimately means for us is that when we go on calorie- restrictive diets, the weight we lose isn’t all fat weight; it’s also muscle weight. As if all of this news wasn’t bad enough, there’s more: Once the famine/diet is over and we return to our old eating habits, our bodies don’t return to their old fat burning habits.

Our metabolisms don’t automatically speed up again just because we have resumed consumption of a calorie rich diet. The body has learned its lesson- there are famines out there and it’s all about survival. This is why it is easier to gain the weight back after a diet than it was to gain it the first time around.

Throw in the effects of reduced muscle mass and slower metabolism, and you have the ingredients for fat disaster. Imagine the results after your body has been through several cycles of famine! If you are like most people, you have been on several calorie restricting diets over the years. Don’t panic. There is a solution to this madness.

Just as the car is designed to function with gasoline and the computer is designed to function with electricity, our bodies are designed to function with nutrients derived from food. We must feed our bodies the nutrients they need if we expect them to function at peak level. If we do not give our bodies the proper nutrients in sufficient quantities, our bodies will not be able to fight off illness, recover from a workout, supply our brains with “brain power,” or burn fat. This means we will not see the results we are working so hard for.

Supplying our bodies with the proper nutrients will boost our energy level, speed our workout recovery time, reduce illness, aid in fat loss and help to increase the metabolic rate.

If you are still not convinced that starving yourself is counterproductive, read on. Skipping meals and/or starving yourself can lead to strong cravings, especially for sweets, because your body is calling out for a shot of quick energy that is found in simple carbohydrates like sugar. In addition, you may overcompensate for your hunger by eating a larger portion than you would have, had you not allowed your body to get so hungry in the first place.

Thinking of using a supplement to curb those cravings? You’re not alone. Diet pills, fat blockers, and appetite suppressants can be overwhelmingly enticing to many would-be dieters. Advertisers use emotion to sell their products and they know that hope is a strong emotion. They want you to believe that a pill will solve your problems and answer your prayers.

The truth is, using these products will not only make you vulnerable to missing out on much needed nutrients, but will also put you in jeopardy of potential sleep disturbances, psychological dependence, allergic reactions, dangerous interactions with other medications, depression, mental illness, heart disease, kidney disease, epilepsy, high blood pressure, irritability, diabetes, and a host of other medical and psychological problems.

Is it worth the risk?

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