Monday 1 October 2007

You Are What You Eat!

By Alex Gold

I do a lot of good stuff when training people. I get them stronger, get them in better shape, fix postural problems, cure little niggling aches and pains and much more. But when it comes to body composition/fat loss results, most of the results are out of my hands. The training certainly gives you the gun and even loads it for you, but you have to hit the target yourself!

Why You Must Eat Right


You have heard the phrase, “You are what you eat” before, I am sure. The fact that is undeniable is that if you eating more calories than you require, you will be putting on weight. The correlation tends to be that bad food is more calorie dense than good food, so ‘eat bad – look bad’. No matter how hard you train you cannot train around a bad diet. Yes, you will get stronger. Yes, you will get fitter. You may even gain some muscle (those extra calories don’t have to be stored as fat), but it will be highly unlikely that you will lose fat.

Sometimes it is hard to get good food in – you have a busy week at work and find yourself grabbing food on the go, trying to make ‘good’ choices from what is available, but generally not eating in a way that is going to change your body for the better. This is understandable, and occurs all too frequently in today’s on-the-go society. However, ‘understandable’ does not mean ‘excusable’. Sometimes, if you wish to achieve the results you deserve, you will have to put a little work in.

Fail To Prepare, Prepare To Fail


There are a few little things that can help your chances of staying on track so much easier. If you have to decide when you are hungry what you will eat next, you have very little chance of succeeding long-term, no matter how good your intentions are. Therefore, you can do some or all of these tips to save time during busy times:

 Chop large quantities of vegetables at once, store in containers
 Pre-cook meats (chicken breast etc.)
 Make batches of stir-fry and chili to reheat when needed
 Buy a cool bag and carry food with you where possible
 Find healthy meals you can eat in restaurants
 Find ‘emergency’ solutions
 Ensure you have good food in the fridge when possible

By simply doing these little things, some of which require a little one-off research (what food can I have in Subway?) and some that you may have to do on a bi-weekly basis (chopping vegetables, cooking meat), you can take a lot of the pressure off when it comes to eating time. Rather than spending ten minutes every time you plan to eat preparing, it can be done in one go, saving huge amounts of time later.

This little tip is one of the most important variables for me between success and failure. When I am carrying healthy food with me, I no longer have the choice of, “what shall I eat next?” every time I feel hungry. In fact, if I make a bad choice, it will be even more highlighted by the fact I will come home still carrying healthy food. In this way, it is more effort to not eat well, which is exactly the kind of situation that will lead to success in the long term.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Many people concentrate on exercise and not enough on their diet, a healthy diet enables us to get fit to do the exercise we require to suit our indiviual needs. Once a healthy diet is applied it becomes a natural habit that then becomes part of our everyday lives. Eating healthy food should not be a seperate issue that becomes an obstacle. Combining diet and exercise together giving both the respect they deserve leads to positivity, strength and determination in our mind body and soul. Personal trainers may be our first educators in nutrition and we can learn a lot from them, but at the end of the day it's up to us how we digest the imformation and put it into practise. Many thanks Alex for the inspiring news letter.
Sandra