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Why You Should Burn Body Fat
By: Terje Ellingsen
Are you overweight? Then you probably want
to lose some weight. It is obvious that
you’ll burn body fat by increasing your
metabolism. But be sure that what you burn
is fat, not muscles.
Some Statistics
After age 25, the average person in America
gains one pound or more a year, which means
at the age of 50 an average person is 25
pounds or more heavier than he or she was 25
years ago.
As you age your metabolism is slowing down,
causing your body to burn less fat.
Without exercising regularly, the average
American loses a pound of muscle each year.
A minority of Americans exercise in a
significant way, which means less than 50
minutes of exercise per week. Two out of
five Americans do not exercise at all.
Motivations for
weight loss
Most people's primary motivation for weight
loss is to improve their appearance.
Other motivational factors are the many
health benefits of proper nutrition and
regular exercise.
Why obesity is dangerous
Reduction of excess body fat plays a vital
role in maintaining good health and avoiding
disease.
Medical evidence shows that obesity poses a
significant threat to health as well as to
longevity:. Excess body fat is connected to:
heart disease
cancer
diabetes
gall bladder disease
gastro-intestinal disease
sexual dysfunction
osteoarthritis
stroke
Why is excess body fat linked to heart
disease?
About 4/5’s of deaths caused by heart
disease and cancer, are linked to life-style
factors, inactivity included.
Your heart has to work harder to pump blood
to the lungs and to the extra fat throughout
your body. Therefore it takes more energy
for you to breathe. This extra workload
might cause your heart to become enlarged
and high blood pressure and life-threatening
erratic heartbeats might be the
consequences.
Overweight people often also have high
cholesterol levels, making them more likely
to develop arteriosclerosis. When blood
vessels are so narrow that vital organs like
the heart, kidneys or brain don’t get enough
blood, this becomes life-threatening.
It might go without saying, but the narrower
the blood vessels become, the harder your
heart has to pump, which results in
increased blood pressure... High blood
pressure itself poses several health risks,
like heart attack, stroke and kidney
problems.
Does excess body fat cause cancer?
In general, research has linked
cancer-causing chemicals (carcinogens) to
excess, actually as a storage place for
these.
Excess fat has been linked to a higher rate
of breast and uterine cancer for women
Excess fat has been linked to colon and
prostate cancer for men.
How is excess body fat related to
diabetes?
There is a delicate balance between the
relative amount of body fat, the level of
blood sugar and the hormone we call insulin.
Excess blood sugar is stored in the liver
and other vital organs, and converted to fat
as soon as these organs have got what they
need of it.
The pancreas of overweight people often
produces more and more insulin. The problem
is however, that the body is not able to
utilize this to regulate it’s blood sugar
levels.
This poor regulation of blood sugar and
insulin causes an inbalance in the system,
which results in diabetes. This disease may
in it’s turn cause heart disease, kidney
failure, blindness, amputation, and death.
How Reducing Body Fat Reduces Disease
Risk
At an American University, researchers
studied a sample of people following a
certain weight management program. This
study showed
decreased HDL cholesterol levels
decreased triglyceride levels,
decreased blood pressure.
increased waist-to-hip ratio,
an active lifestyle can slow or stop the
disease process for most people, even those
with a history of heart disease in the
family.
Other studies have shown that programs that
includes
regular physical activity,
low-fat diets
stress reduction
reverse heart disease processes.
while other studies shows that reducing body
fat through an active lifestyle and low fat
diets mean reduced risk for
prostate cancers for men,
breast and uterine cancers for women
non-insulin dependent diabetes for both
genders.
So, what shall I do?
You have to change to a new lifestyle, by
committing yourself to a long term process
that gradually will lead you to a healthier
life. This process requires persistence and
patience, especially in the beginning. If
you stay persistent, your new lifestyle will
automatically take over, and it will become
natural for you. This process will contain
moderate, long term fat loss
aerobic exercise
strength exercise
Here is the benefits 90 percent of
overweight people following this advice has
gained:
improved heart function,
improved blood pressure,
improved glucose tolerance,
improved cholesterol levels,
lowering requirements for medication,
eight times less likely to die from cancer
than the unfit,
53 percent less likely to die from other
diseases than the unfit
eight times less likely to die from heart
disease than the unfit people.
But, how can I get started?
The first phase in such a process has shown
to be the hardest – it is here most people
drop out. The longer you stay in the
process, the more likely you are to succeed.
And trust me; after you - by means of
persistency and patience - have passed this
critical start phase, the fun and excitement
you gradually will experience will make the
change well worth the effort.
You must make the decision to commit to this
lifestyle changing process.
If you ever feel tempted to skip it for a
day or even give up, confront yourself with
your commitment, and go on.
How to stay motivated?
Allow plenty of time for the changes. You
should give yourself several years for the
changes to take place. If you do so, your
body will adjust comfortably and the
probability of maintaining this healthy
lifestyle permanently, will be higher.
About the Author:
Terje Brooks Ellingsen
is a writer and internet marketer. He runs
the website
http://www.11-weight-loss.net. Terje
enjoys to give advice and help people with
rapid weight loss, see
http://www.11-weight-loss.net/rapid_weight_loss.htm
with negative calorie food, see
http://www.11-weight-loss.net/negative_calorie_food.htm
and low carb diets.
Article Source: www.iSnare.com
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