Weight management is such a complex subject. To merely say eat less and you lose weight or eat more and you will gain weight ( assuming the same level of exercise) is far too simplistic. There are other factors to take into consideration. I know people who are as thin as a rake and eat like a horse regardless what level of exercise they do or do not do...................I was one of them until I got to about my mid 30s. My natural body shape is ectomorph and it appears in general that people with that body conformation do nto put on weight easily........but also find it difficult to lose weight. Those with mesomorph conformation are largely exactly the opposite. As I mentioned age also has an impact. Men begin losing muscle mass at quite an alarming rate beyond middle age.......which can be delayed with the right sort of exercise ( or a manual job!). Lifestyle is of course also factor. A job that is largely sedentary and indoors, plus potentially stressful and long hours is a recipe for disaster both from the fitness point of view and general health.
I retired at 55 and decided after spending a long career managing complex problems and projects for an employer, my project was then going to be me! I used all the same techniques I employed at work.
So here are some things that often suffer from the shortcut route to just deciding on a specific diet or doing Yoga etc!!
1. Spend time doing research. I researched food types, body chemistry, exercise regimes, supplements etc.............only using peer reviewed medical journal research papers...............not YT rubbish!!
2. Based on that I devised a draft plan which included targets, recording methods, time management..........rewards.
3. I then analysed what would nullify the plan............potential obstacles etc.................these are some of things I came up with:-
a) If I was to commit to any form of exercise it had to be convenient and readilly accessible..........Gyms for example were out because it would take up too much time getting ready, driving there, showering, getting back etc!
b) whatever dietary rules I decided to follow would have to be supported by my wife
c) the entire plan ( diet exercise etc) had to be tenable as a lifetime change......not just until a weight goal was reached for example.........and no excuses.
d) as far as exercise was concerned it had to be time scheduled in my daily diary...........nothing else to take precedence.
I will not go into the totality of the conclusions I drew from my research but a brief summary of my diet/exercise/supplement regime would be
No saturated fat...............cheese, red meat etc
No alcohol ( I drink Cranberry Juice, mixed red fruits, or water)
Supplements are Vit D and Whey Protein powder shakes ( the latter after exercise only)
Exercise is 6 routines on a multigym...strictly timed for reps and rests.........I bought a multigym..its in the garage. A full session takes 30 minutes.........3 times a week winter months only.
Medicine ball floor exercises......4 off.......reps and rests timed.........3 times a week ( alternates with weights)......again takes 30 minutes ...again winter months only.
I windsurf and mtb.........they provide plenty of exercise in spring/summer/autumn together with DIY, gardening etc.
I walk the dogs every day of the year come hail or shine.....4 miles.
When I retired I weighed 85kg ( I am 183cm). I reduced to 75kg. I relaxed some aspects of my diet after 5 years to include for example cheese and occasional red meat ( not lamb or pork though) and my weight settled to 78kg and had stayed just about there give or take 1 kg.
Note I did not include any cardio type exercise other than what comes as part of my sports. My research showed that calorie counting and cardio vascular exercise is largely a waste of time for weight loss, or for maintaining muscle mass and flexibility. Using weights, dead weights or heavy medicine ball exercise done correctly to the point of muscle exhaustion per rep then rest and repeat, forces muscles to seek protein and carbs from the blood stream and fat reserves. In effect your muscles eat your available fat!!.....and that increases your metabolic rate.
I retired at 55 and decided after spending a long career managing complex problems and projects for an employer, my project was then going to be me! I used all the same techniques I employed at work.
So here are some things that often suffer from the shortcut route to just deciding on a specific diet or doing Yoga etc!!
1. Spend time doing research. I researched food types, body chemistry, exercise regimes, supplements etc.............only using peer reviewed medical journal research papers...............not YT rubbish!!
2. Based on that I devised a draft plan which included targets, recording methods, time management..........rewards.
3. I then analysed what would nullify the plan............potential obstacles etc.................these are some of things I came up with:-
a) If I was to commit to any form of exercise it had to be convenient and readilly accessible..........Gyms for example were out because it would take up too much time getting ready, driving there, showering, getting back etc!
b) whatever dietary rules I decided to follow would have to be supported by my wife
c) the entire plan ( diet exercise etc) had to be tenable as a lifetime change......not just until a weight goal was reached for example.........and no excuses.
d) as far as exercise was concerned it had to be time scheduled in my daily diary...........nothing else to take precedence.
I will not go into the totality of the conclusions I drew from my research but a brief summary of my diet/exercise/supplement regime would be
No saturated fat...............cheese, red meat etc
No alcohol ( I drink Cranberry Juice, mixed red fruits, or water)
Supplements are Vit D and Whey Protein powder shakes ( the latter after exercise only)
Exercise is 6 routines on a multigym...strictly timed for reps and rests.........I bought a multigym..its in the garage. A full session takes 30 minutes.........3 times a week winter months only.
Medicine ball floor exercises......4 off.......reps and rests timed.........3 times a week ( alternates with weights)......again takes 30 minutes ...again winter months only.
I windsurf and mtb.........they provide plenty of exercise in spring/summer/autumn together with DIY, gardening etc.
I walk the dogs every day of the year come hail or shine.....4 miles.
When I retired I weighed 85kg ( I am 183cm). I reduced to 75kg. I relaxed some aspects of my diet after 5 years to include for example cheese and occasional red meat ( not lamb or pork though) and my weight settled to 78kg and had stayed just about there give or take 1 kg.
Note I did not include any cardio type exercise other than what comes as part of my sports. My research showed that calorie counting and cardio vascular exercise is largely a waste of time for weight loss, or for maintaining muscle mass and flexibility. Using weights, dead weights or heavy medicine ball exercise done correctly to the point of muscle exhaustion per rep then rest and repeat, forces muscles to seek protein and carbs from the blood stream and fat reserves. In effect your muscles eat your available fat!!.....and that increases your metabolic rate.