Healthy Diet Plan for Weight Loss
Healthy Diet Plan for Weight Loss
Achieving a healthy diet plan for weight loss can be very tiring and stressful to follow. To some, you need to make enormous sacrifice, to others they have to go completely out of their routine. My thought today will demystify all this and present you with an option that will be very easy to implement and won’t demand any of the myths to achieve your desired goal. Give me a few minutes to show you a way you can eat that not only helps you lost fat fast, but does so in a way where you don’t need to ban any of your favorite foods. As you might have guessed from earlier, we want a sustainable, healthy, tasty approach to dieting, and one that doesn’t lead to extreme hunger or binge eating.
Despite what you’ve been told about cutting carbs, banning gluten, dairy products and sugar, or even adopting a raw food approach, there is a way to get the body of your dreams with virtually no sacrifice. I had to add ‘virtually’ in there as obviously I can’t say you won’t have to make any effort whatsoever, but I can guarantee this will be the easiest diet with the best results you’ve ever had.
The way we’ll do this is by following a scientific, evidence-based method of eating, and healthy diet plan for weight loss.
Calories: The Basis of Weight Loss
We ran through calories earlier, but let’s go even more in depth. Calories are the main factor in whether you lose or gain weight and fat. If you eat fewer than you burn, you’ll lose weight. And if you eat more than you burn, you’ll gain weight. Therefore, before considering anything else, you need to work out how many calories you should be consuming. This isn’t nearly as difficult as you might have been lead to believe
However, All you need to do is take your bodyweight in pounds, and multiply it by between 10 and 12. This is known as your activity factor. Highly active people should pick the number 12. If you train 5 or 6 times a week, then this is you. You’ll also be a 12 if you train 3 to 4 times, but have a job where you’re on your feet all day, or you’re just busy and rushing round in general, with little time to sit down. If you train 4 to 5 times a week, or you train 2 to 3 times and have an active lifestyle, you’ll be an 11.
For those of you who only train a couple of times every week, you’ll be a 10. Once you’ve worked out your activity factor, you then multiply your body weight in pounds by it. Got that? We’ll run through some examples in a little while when we’ve gone through a bit more information. Hope you are getting along with a healthy plan for weight loss?
The Power of Protein
After calories, protein is the next critical component you must understand. The reason why protein matters so much is because it’s essential for building and maintaining muscle. Again, while building muscle and getting bigger won’t necessarily be your aim, having a little more lean mass is such a huge help for speeding up your fat loss, and also ensures you don’t look skinny and drawn out when you diet down and lose body fat. Protein’s second benefit is its thermogenic effect. Protein digests fairly slowly, which means that it keeps you feeling fuller for longer, and also burns extra calories during the digestion process.
Ideally, your daily protein intake should be around 1 gram per pound. However, if you’re not used to eating a higher protein intake, then you may wish to start a little lower, at around 0.7 grams per pound.
The typical Western diet is low in protein, and so jumping straight to 1 gram per pound could be a tall order, so aim for 0.7 grams per pound, but feel free to go up to the magical 1 gram per pound mark if you’re able to. There’s a big myth circulating that says protein will make people big and bulky, but working out where this misinformation came from is as confusing as the myth itself. Protein on its own won’t make you bulk up, and even when combined with lifting weights, there’s no need to worry about getting huge, purely for the fact that to get ‘bodybuilder big’ you’d need to be training specifically to look like that, as well as eating a very high calorie intake, and potentially taking performance-enhancing drugs too.
You might have also heard that too much protein is bad for your liver, your kidneys, or just your general health. Again, there’s very little in this. All the studies that have shown this to be the case have been performed in people who’ve already had issues with their organs, and actually, a slightly higher protein intake can be beneficial for bone growth, preventing osteoporosis and aiding general health, as well as muscle repair, fat burning and blunting your hunger.
Carbohydrate and Fats is not Your Enemy
Carbohydrates and fats have got a bad rap recently. If the media and magazines haven’t been demonizing one, it’s been the other. Thing is, you need both carbs and fats to diet effectively, lose fat quickly, and protect your energy levels and your health. Despite the negative name, fats have an important role, as they aid your body with producing hormones, so you need enough fat to support this. Carbs are your body’s main source of energy, and while you don’t want to go overboard with your carbohydrate intake, there’s no need to go super low either. Doing so can actually massively increase cravings and have you feeling tired, lethargic and irritable, so keep those carbs in. To work out how much fat and carbohydrate you need, we’ve actually got to do some math.
Work out your Daily Calorie Need.
Let’s say you’re moderately active and weigh 135 pounds: 135 x 11 = 1,485
Protein is at 0.7 grams per pound, so 135 x 0.7 = 94.5g (We’ll round this to 95)
There are 4 calories per gram of protein, and 95 x 4 = 380. This means 380 of your calories per day are going to protein. If we take that 380 away from 1,485, you get 1,105. This is the number of calories you should be getting per day from carbs and fats.
How you divide this up is entirely your call, but with the method I’ll outline for you in a moment, you’ll see that you don’t necessarily need to decide exactly how much to have of each, provided you hit roughly the right calorie amounts.
First up though, I wanted to show you a couple more examples:
Example 1 – Highly active man weighing 120 pounds: 120 x 12 = 1440
Protein = 120 x 0.7 = 84, Protein calories = 84 x 4 = 336, 1440 – 336 = 1,104, Calories from carbs and fat = 1,104
Example 2 – Sedentary woman weighing 175 pounds: 175 x 10 = 1750
Protein = 175 x 0.7 = 122.5 (rounded to 123), Protein calories = 123 x 4 = 492, 1750 – 492 = 1258
Calories from carbs and fat = 1,258
How to Actually Count
So far I’ve just thrown some numbers at you, which I know makes everything super confusing, but here’s where the magic happens. Many people think that counting calories takes hours every day, or is a massive constraint on their time, but it absolutely isn’t. In fact, it can take as little as 2 minutes per day using an app on your phone.
The most popular app (meaning it’s among the most user-friendly and has the biggest database) is My Fitness Pal, so it would make sense for you to use that, though if you’ve experimented with others and preferred those, that’s fine too. Now, whenever you eat something, you need to put it into My Fitness Pal. This might sound like it takes an age, but it doesn’t. Let’s say your breakfast was 2 poached eggs on a slice of whole-grain toast, with ½ an avocado and a medium non-fat latte. You’d just search for these in the app, input the amounts of the foods you had, and you’d see a running total of your day’s calories and macronutrients (protein, carbohydrate and fat) so far. Clearly, by the end of the day, your goal is to hit your protein intake and your calorie intake as you worked out above. I’d suggest for the first few weeks, you plan your day’s eating the night before if possible, just so you don’t get to the evening and either see that you have loads of food to eat, or that you’ve already gone over and are still hungry.
How Close is Close Enough?
A common question is how close you need to be to making a healthy diet plan for weight loss? After all, 96 grams of protein, or 1,511 calories can seem pretty specific. You need to be accurate, but there’s no need to be perfect. Ideally you’ll
Hit at least 0.7 grams of protein per pound, if not 1 gram per pound, and get within 5% of your desired calorie intake. That means if you’re shooting for, say, 1,420 then anywhere from around 1350 and 1490 is acceptable. That should make it a lot easier.