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2 Reasons "The Biggest Losers" Can't Stay Winners
By Shane "The People's Chemist" Ellison
All Rights Reserved (C)
www.thepeopleschemist.com
January 10, 2010
I have my own set of "fat and after" photos. And, if you're carrying
some "extra junk-in-the-trunk," so can you, if you want. I like to look
at my "fat and after" pictures frequently. To me, they reflect more than
a radical physical transformation. They reflect a life change and serve
as a reminder of my hostage situation.
When I was fat, I lived life on life's terms. I ate what life served,
usually meatball subs and Oatmeal Cream Pies (in moderation - I
rationalized). I drank what life poured, usually liquid blubber
masquerading as diet soda. And I exercised when life allowed, usually a
few reps of bench press twice a week.
To me, life was like the proverbial pusher, always tempting me with its
malignant, short term pleasures. And every time I gave in, I traded one
of life's simple and forgotten long-term treasures - like keeping the
same belt size, chasing my kids endlessly in the park, and making love
to my wife without gasping for air at the 4-minute mark.
As life's malignancies caught up to me, I decided to live life on my
terms. And my "after" photo shows how my body responded: It shed the fat
that was holding me back from living young.
We know fat kills. Some people make excuses not to shed it, while others
risk it all to get their own "fat and after" photos. Nothing reflects
this better than the hit show, "The Biggest Loser." Unfortunately, very
few Biggest Losers remain winners.
Ryan Benson lost 122 lbs to win the first season but regained 32 lbs
within five days simply by drinking water.
Contestant Kai Hibbard, 28, spent the night before her final weigh-in
crawling in and out of a sauna for six hours, consuming only sugar-free
Jell-O for a week and sucking down natural diuretics.
Clearly, these are signs that The Biggest Losers aren't winners. Even
the most successful biggest loser reflects this. As the historic Biggest
Loser, EriK Chopin lost over 200lbs. Under all that junk was a shining,
handsome man, with decades of living young added to his lifespan. But it
didn't last either. He quickly rebounded and gained back over 100lbs.
Life's malignant pleasures dealt him type II diabetes, which eliminates
an estimated 11 to 20 years of life.
Today, Erik travels the country encouraging early diabetic testing. On
the verge of giving pharmaceutical fellatio, his fat loss message is
pushed aside for a more marketable, warm and fuzzy message of, "We all
need a stronger relationship with our pharmacists." (I had to bite my
black leather wristband when I heard that.)
Do I still need to say it? No. But I want to...
The Biggest Loser has inherent flaws, at best.
At worst, it's nothing more than a profitable way to exploit obese
people by using the antiquated fat loss tricks of a weak high school
wrestling team. In the long run, contestants are better off following
the gluttonous antics of Adam Richman in "Man vs. Food."
2 Reasons The Biggest Losers Can't Stay Winners
They Don't Count the "Right" Calories
Like drug reps who moonlight as doctors, Biggest Loser personal trainers
moonlight as nutritionists. They're often heard parroting "calories in
calories out" and insist that all candidates simply count calories. It's
wrong - mostly.
When you don't know how to pick the right calories, counting calories is
as senseless as drinking wine to suck down the over-hyped resveratrol to
extend longevity, or eating Oatmeal Cream Pies "in moderation."
Not all calories are created equal. Some get stored as fat regardless of
physical activity and caloric intake. These include the low fat foods
pushed on "biggest losers" like "fat free Jell-O" and lots more - even
fruit. The more of these low/wrong calorie foods they eat, the more
their brain screams more, more, more and their brain yells eat, eat,
eat. Count these calories, and your weight plummets, but comes back with
a vengeance once you can no longer ignore the physiological voices (the
same ones that have Oprah convinced that she has a "food addiction.")
On the flip side of fat storing calories, another type gets used very
efficiently to fuel bodily functions and are easily shed via your
metabolism. This efficiency of the "right" calories stems from their
"behavioral" differences in the "Kreb's cycle."
Bad calories barely produce enough energy to optimize "hormonal
intelligence" and thus get stored as junk. As highlighted in my book,
Over-The-Counter Natural Cures, the right ones blaze through this cycle
and optimize hormonal intelligence, allowing excess energy to get used
and burned, not stored.
Contestants need to count and eat this type of calorie if they are to
lose weight for life. And believe it or not, these are the
"high-calorie" foods from grass fed beef, whole eggs, butter, avocados,
seeds, nuts and coconut oil.
Continued from Newsletter
In sum, the higher calorie content ultimately makes us feel satisfied
for longer periods, and is used by the body more efficiently. If any
calories are left over, they don't get pushed in as "junk-in-the-trunk."
Instead, like excess heat from a hot spring resting near a cold mountain
stream, the right calories are dissipated by the metabolism. Count these
calories and you can count on being satisfied at meal time, but more
importantly, you can count on remaining a Biggest Loser winner for life.
The New York Times highlighted this paradoxical phenomenon when
writing about high fat diets stating, "...the diet appears to work by
throwing the body into ketosis, forcing it to burn fat rather than sugar
for energy."
Biggest Losers are slaves to the exercise gods
Face it, the popularity in The Biggest Loser rests in watching obese
people exercise themselves to near death. It's like a UFC cage fight,
someone could die at any moment. It's a lot of fun to watch, but you'd
never want to do it yourself.
If exercise worked, Erik "The Rebounder" Chopin would benefit every day
from carrying the excess 100lbs back and forth from his diabetes tour
bus into the grocery store. It's not working.
Exercise is only one part of a fat loss plan. If you treat it as the God
of fat loss, you lose. That's because it's most efficient at building
muscle, not burning fat.
To shed the weight with exercise, you need to combine it with eating the
"right calories." And when you do, the muscles from exercise become a
fat burning furnace and the junk in-the-trunk dissipates - so does the
worry of losing 11 to 20 years of lifespan from diabetes.
Life is all about long term pleasures. And since most of us aren't being
shanked by The Biggest Loser's antiquated fat loss tricks, we can all be
winners - as evidenced by your very own "fat and after" photos that
arise from ignoring Hollywood hype.
About the Author
Shane Ellison holds a masters degree in organic chemistry and is the
author of the controversial Over-The-Counter Natural Cures. He is a
two-time recipient of the prestigious Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Research Grant and has been quoted by USA Today, Shape, Woman's World,
and has served as guest speaker for large corporations like BP and also
appeared on Fox News as a natural medicine advocate. He is the
originator of The AM-PM Fat Loss Discovery, which helps people get their
physique back in 90 days, at any age - see the shocking photos at
http://www.ampmfatloss.com
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2010 U.S. Wellness Meats. All rights reserved.
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