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Everyone reaches the point in a diet where they hit a
wall. Weight loss impetuously stops. According to dietician, Julie
Meyer, R.D., weight loss peaks at six months and is quite normal.
Once the body is acclimated to a specific fitness routine, it
develops an efficient way to perform exercise without expending
fewer calories. Missing
a work-out for a week would not hurt your program in this case.
In fact, it’s what the body may need to nudge it back into fitness
reality. During your hiatus from the fitness club, be sure to
job in place – just a little. The short vacation should wake
up your body to return to weight loss.
At
the same token, individuals who championed weight loss are sometimes
prone to fall prey to a minor relapse. What transpires after
someone has lost weight is an overwhelming feeling of confidence
or invincibility that they have captured the secret to weight
loss. Although, the successful dieter may adopt new healthy
lifestyle patterns (nutritional eating and regular exercise),
it is easy to slip back into former eating habits.
Work
and home responsibilities make it easy rely on fast food. To
maintain your motivation to lose weight and stay in shape devise
a reward system. For instance after a year of weight loss, you
may treat yourself to a day at the spa or a brand new summer
wardrobe.
Nevertheless,
achieving one’s weight loss objectives has its rewards. For
starters, people who reach their goals and maintain their eating
habits for a year subsequent to the weight loss are more apt
to keep a thinner, sylphlike and healthier shape. Based on a
report released by the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition,
people who keep a consistent diet through each week for two
years are 50 percent less apt to yo-yo weight gain. |