Fat Around the Middle
Introduction
If you’re apple rather than pear shaped, with a tendency to gather fat around your waist, you’ll know how difficult it is to keep slim. What you may not know is how dangerous the fat around your middle really is (more so than fat on your thighs or bottom), increasing your risk of diabetes, heart disease, stroke, high blood pressure and certain cancers.
Because of where the fat sits on your body, normal diets, even rigorous exercise regimes rarely work. However I have devised a simple lifestyle plan that does.
My recommendations will not only help you get rid of fat around your middle, but you will also be doing the best you possibly can to prevent health problems in the future. Short term, you get to look better. Long term? You live longer. It’s as simple as that.
How?
The aim is to change your body’s underlying biochemistry so that it gets
the message that it is OK to let go of the fat it is choosing to store around
the middle of your body.
What’s the cause?
The main reason some people gather more fat around their middle than others
is specifically because of the action of the stress hormone cortisol.
Millions of years ago, our bodies were designed to react quickly to danger.
Like wild animals we were on constant alert so we could run or fight if threatened.
When your brain thinks your life is in danger it stimulates the release of
adrenaline and cortisol.
This fight or flight response is incredibly clever and thoroughly efficient. It provides instant energy for 5-10 minutes allowing you to react swiftly to dangerous situations.
These days, many of us live under chronic stress. But our bodies can’t distinguish between late trains, missed appointments, spiralling debt, infuriating work colleagues, family disputes and the truly life-threatening stress it gears up to challenge. So it reacts exactly the same as it’s always done.
The problem with many modern lifestyles is that stress (our ‘perceived threat’) is almost continuous and comes without the natural release that either fighting or fleeing might provide. Unless you do something physical (as your body is expecting you to) all that extra energy, in the form of fat and glucose, has nowhere to go. It must be simply re-deposited as fat.
Food cravings you can’t control
After a stressful event cortisol levels in the blood often remain high for a
while, effectively increasing your appetite because your body thinks you should
refuel after all this fighting or fleeing. This means people under constant stress
quite often feel constantly hungry. Worse, their body urges them to stock up
on the foods it thinks will be most useful after all that ‘activity’ – carbohydrates
(like sugar) and fats.
It’s just the sort high-sugar, high-fat comfort and convenience food many people crave.
The fat around the middle connection
If you don’t fight or flee when your body expects you to, the fat and
glucose swimming around your system get deposited as fat – around the
middle of your body. And if you eat something sugary or fatty as a consequence
of the post-stress appetite surge, any weight you gain as a result, will be
around your middle too.
The reason fat targets the middle is because it is close to the liver where it can most quickly be converted back into energy if needed. There it provides the body with protection ready for the next stress attack.
Your body is only trying to help. To continue providing the energy it thinks you need, it tries to keep a convenient fat store ready for constant use and creates cravings and increases appetite to ensure good supplies of necessary fuel.
Are you stressed?
If you can see yourself in the list below, your cortisol levels are likely
to be high:
A tendency to gain fat around your tummy,
chest, back and hips
Increased appetite
Increased cravings for chocolate, sweets, breads, cakes, caffeine and alcohol
(particularly any combination of carbohydrates and fats, such as chocolate
and cakes because they are particularly high in calories)
Your immune system is low (you get frequent colds and infections)
Headaches
Nail biting
Teeth grinding
High cholesterol (if you don’t know, get it checked)
Blood sugar swings
Digestive problems (such as bloating and flatulence)
Chest pains - (you must see your doctor if you are getting chest pains but
the effects of the stress hormones can mimic heart problems)
Muscle aches and pains
Shoulder and neck pain (stress hormones will keep certain muscles tense ready
for fight or flight)
Hair loss
Irregular periods or no
Difficulty in concentrating or forgetfulness
Depression
Increased premenstrual symptoms (PMS)
Slower metabolism (which makes it harder to lose weight in general)
Low sex drive
Tiredness but an inability to sleep well
Tendency to get a second wind in the evening
Waking up in the middle of the night, finding it hard to get back to sleep
and then desperately want to continue sleeping in the morning when you should
be getting up.
For the purposes of measuring fat around the middle, BMI (body mass index) isn’t the best test, nor is a measure of body fat percentage. The best test is the difference in size between your hips and your waist (your ‘hip to waist ratio’). This is the true measure of fat around the middle and the best indicator of whether or not you are going to be vulnerable to all the health risks associated with it.
Just get a tape measure and compare your waist measurement (at the narrowest point) with your hip measurement (at the widest point). Divide your hip figure by your waist figure to get what is known as your waist–hip ratio.
For example: 86cm (34in) waist divided by 94cm (37in) hip = 0.9
If your calculation gives a figure greater than 0.8 you are officially apple shaped and you need to take action. For men the danger zone is above 0.95.
Menopausal?
If you are going into the menopause, your body
will be extremely reluctant to let go of the fat around
your middle. This is because fat is a manufacturing plant
for oestrogen which will help protect your bones from
osteoporosis. It’s a very clever system, designed
to protect you, but it helps explain why mere diet and
exercise alone will rarely shift that stubborn fat. The
combined effect of female hormonal changes, slower metabolism
and stress with high cortisol levels create a bigger
likelihood of fat around the middle.
Why tummy fat is bad for you
Not all fat in the body behaves the same. Fat around the middle of the body
that is the most likely to have a mind of its own. This “toxic fat” is
far more metabolically active than fat elsewhere because it increases the
risk of heart disease, high blood pressure, stroke, cancer and diabetes.
One of the biggest problems it causes is insulin resistance.
Insulin resistance
When blood sugar increases (a result of the stress response or from what you
have eaten), your body releases insulin to help move the glucose out of your
blood and into the cells to actually provide them with energy. But if you
don’t need that energy (you don’t fight or flee) the default
mechanism is to store the glucose as fat. If the stress continues (it usually
does) cortisol levels remain high, so the body triggers the breakdown of
sugar stores in the liver and muscles to provide further fuel. Out comes
more insulin to deal with the extra blood glucose.
Overtime, the body simply can’t respond to insulin the same way it used to. You can become intolerant to insulin – or insulin resistant.
So what can you do to get rid of
the fat around your middle?
I have devised a four pronged approach to getting rid of this dangerous and
unsightly fat. It comprises simple changes to the way you:
1) eat
2) take supplements
3) approach stress
4) take exercise
If you follow my recommendations closely for three months I am convinced you
will see a significant change to your body shape, and as a consequence, will
dramatically improve your long term health.
Eating healthily – NOT dieting!
There is a chance that your pattern of eating is subconsciously telling your
body that it is under stress. If you restrict your diet or cut calories your
body inevitably thinks there is a famine out there and that causes stress.
It will slow down your metabolism to hold on to your precious fat stores.
Furthermore, if your blood sugar levels fluctuate (as they do for most women),
your body will be releasing adrenaline which is the same hormone it releases
when you are under stress. Once more it encourages your body to store fat.
The solution is to find a way of eating that tells your body all is well –and reassure it that is not under stress.
Aim to stick to the eating plan 80% of the time and allow yourself a 20% off for good behaviour (and human fallibilities!) and don’t talk about ‘good’ and ‘bad’ foods (it induces guilt). Instead try to think of foods as junk (unhealthy) and healthy foods.
Try to stick to these simple rules:
1) Stop dieting
Stop dieting (yes, really!) and don’t count calories, otherwise your
body will think there’s a famine and raises stress levels (which contribute
to fat storage)
2) Eat little and often
Try to keep your blood sugar levels and energy levels stable by eating something
every three hours. Just eat breakfast, lunch and dinner plus a snack mid
morning and one mid afternoon, with no longer than three hours between. Oh,
and try not to eat carbohydrates after 6pm.
This will stop those roller-coaster highs and cravings for sweet foods. Because
your blood sugar isn’t allowed to drop, your body will no longer have
to ask you for a quick fix. As the blood sugar steadies, so will the mood swings.
As your cortisol levels reduce you will automatically start to happier and
calmer inside.
3) Don’t skip breakfast
If you miss breakfast completely your body immediately registers famine and
hangs on tight to your ample stores of fat.
4) Eliminate all sugar and refined carbohydrates
Avoid any foods that make your blood sugar rise quickly because as blood sugar
drops again your body releases adrenaline and cortisol to stabilise it once
more. Swap to whole grain alternatives.
5) Add protein to each meal
Protein slows down the rate the stomach processes food and slows the passage
of the carbohydrates with it. As soon as you add a protein (be it animal
or vegetable) to a carbohydrate you change it into a slower releasing carbohydrate,
which is a very good thing.
Protein helps in the control of insulin because it slows the rate of digestion.
It also encourages the production of glucagon which works in the opposite way
to insulin, increasing blood glucose by encouraging the body to burn fat for
energy.
6) Eat essential fats
A lifelong dependency on low fat diets might mean you’re consuming less
saturated fat, but most people today have unwittingly made themselves deficient
in the good fats – essential fatty acids. As the name implies these essential
fatty acids (EFAs) are essential and you can only get them from your diet.
Your body cannot manufacture them so you have to eat them.
Essential fats are so important as that they help you in a number of ways:
* They slow down the rate at which the
stomach empties, so making carbohydrates even more slow-releasing
* They boost your metabolism
* They make you less insulin resistant
* They reduce inflammation
7) Don’t eat on the run
It gives your body the message that time is scarce, you are under pressure
and stressed. Furthermore, your digestive system will be less efficient.
Make a point of sitting down and eating your food as calmly as possible.
8) Watch what you drink
Cut out all caffeine and sugary drinks and significantly reduce alcohol intake
(cut it out completely for a month if you can).
9) Change the way you think about food
If you’re really serious about changing your body shape you need to think
about food and eating as a way of life so that healthy, enjoyable eating becomes
a habit, something you do everyday without even thinking about it, just like
cleaning your teeth.
(For a much more detailed breakdown of an altogether healthier way to eat, you should read the book Fat Around the Middle , or an abridged ebook at www.naturalhealthpractice.com/Fat_Around_Middle_P1038.cfm
Supplements
Because your body has been under this constant stress for so long it will usually
need a bit of extra help to get its functioning back to normal, and to reassure
it completely that it’s not under constant attack. You can get this extra
help in the form of supplements and herbs.
When you are continually stressed, the body becomes increasingly nutritionally deficient. The main vitamins and minerals affected are the B vitamins, vitamin C, magnesium and zinc. So it’s important you take these in supplement form for three months to correct any basic deficiencies.
In addition, you can benefit from the following:
• Chromium
• Vitamin E
• Co-enzyme Q10
• Magnesium
• Zinc
• Siberian ginseng
• B vitamins
• Alpha lipoic acid
• Amino acids
The supplement programme below should be taken for at least three months in order to see results.
Your supplement plan:
| Nutrients | Amounts |
| Chromium | 200mcg |
| Zinc | 15mg |
| Vitamin E | 300ius |
| Manganese | 5mg |
| Magnesium citrate | 300mg |
| Vitamin B1 | 25mg |
| Vitamin B2 | 25mg |
| Vitamin B3 | 25mg |
| Vitamin B12 | 25mcg |
Biotin |
35mcg |
| Folic acid | 200mcg |
| Vitamin B5 | 50mg |
| Vitamin B6 (as pyridoxal-5-phosphate) | 25mg |
| Siberian ginseng | 100mg |
| Vitamin C | 100mg |
| Co-enzyme Q10 | 25mg |
| Alpha-lipoic acid | 100mg |
| Green tea extract | 50mg |
| Amino Acids | Amounts |
| N-acetyl cysteine | 500mg |
| L-carnitine | 200mg |
| L-tyrosine | 200mg |
| L-arginine | 200mg |
| L-glutamine | 200mg |
| Isoleucine | 100mg |
| Leucine | 100mg |
| Valine | 100mg |
To avoid having to purchase single supplements for all of the above and to make the process easier, I have formulated two supplements that contain all of the most important nutrients for losing that fat around the middle. They are called Lose Your Belly Nutri Plus and Lose Your Belly Amino Plus. For more information click Lose Your Belly Supplements
EXERCISE
Exercise or physical activity has never been more important. If you have fat around the middle of your body caused, in part, by the activity of your stress hormones, exercise MUST become one of your priorities. By simply making time for exercise in your life, you can control the potentially damaging fight or flight response.
Build muscle
Muscle is metabolically active. This means it requires fuel in the form of
calories just to maintain it even when you are sitting doing nothing. So
the more muscle you have, the more calories you consume, and, if you don’t
overeat, the more fat you will burn.
500g (1lb) of muscle burns 75 calories
a day
500g (1lb) of fat burns 8 calories a day
This is one of the infuriating reasons why men tend to find it easier to lose weight than women - they generally have more muscle than women.
Weight gain with age
It is sad, but true that we all tend to gain weight as we get older. One of
the main reasons is that we lose muscle. After the age of 40, women can start
to lose about 230g (½lb) of muscle a year. Inactive women over the
age of 40 lose muscle mass twice as fast as inactive men. So over ten years
between 40 and 50, most of us will have lost 5lbs of muscle. As muscle mass
decreases, our metabolism become increasingly sluggish. Let’s face
it; we all also tend to get less active as we get older so this inactivity
will only add to the problem. With less muscle and less activity weight is
likely to pile on as fat.
What kind of exercise is best?
In order to lose that fat around the middle, you need to do a combination of
cardiovascular (getting you puffed) and resistance training (with weights
or bands to build muscles). The aim is to use exercise to help burn off fat
AND to build muscle which helps you burn off even more fat faster.
Keep on your toes
Your body is very clever. In the same way it adapts to any restriction in food
by slowing the metabolism it also adapts to exercise. So after about four
weeks of doing one sort of activity it becomes more efficient and uses less
energy to perform the same exercise. To achieve the same fat-burning impact
you have to continually change the exercise (walking to running, then cycling,
then rowing etc) and increasing the intensity to trick your body out of its
normal patterns. Alternatively, try interval training (walk a certain distance,
then jog to the next lamppost, walk again to catch your breath, then run
fast for 50 metres etc).
STRESS
One of the most surprising ways to slim the fat around your middle, is to cut
back on the stress in your life, because that will help reduce cortisol levels,
and – when combined with diet, exercise and supplements – will
train your body to stop storing fat around your middle.
Either bite the bullet and make a few really big changes so you no longer have
to juggle so many plates (put the aged relative in a nursing home, cut your
working hours, go to bed earlier and get up earlier in the morning so you’re
not so rushed) or learn a few coping strategies to help you change the way
you handle stress, and lessen its physical impact.
If you take control of your time, you’ll be much better at avoiding falling
into yet another stress trap, running late, missing appointments, eating on
the run and never quite making time for yourself.
How to reduce stress
1)
|
prioritise |
2)
|
delegate |
3)
|
put yourself first |
4)
|
learn some relaxation techniques |
5)
|
put things in perspective |
6)
|
take time to eat |
7)
|
take time to go to the toilet (yes! Really) |
8)
|
take regular exercise |
9)
|
spend time with your friends |
10)
|
have a cuddle |
11)
|
laugh |
12)
|
get enough sleep |
TESTS
There are a number of tests which I think are very useful in the diagnosis and treatment of fat around the middle.
- Adrenal Stress Test: four saliva samples are collected in a kit at home over the course of one day and the samples are then sent back to the lab for analysis. The test also measures your DHEA (dehydroepiandrosterone) which is the hormone that works to balance many of the negative effects of cortisol and helps you cope with stress.
- Insulin Resistance Test: This is a fasting blood test, which means that you have the blood taken first thing in the morning without eating or drink and a kit can be sent to you which you can then take to your local practice nurse or doctor so they can take a small quantity of blood.
- Food Allergy Test: The test measures your reaction to 233 different foods, seasonings, colourings, additives and drinks from one single blood sample which can be taken by your practice nurse or doctor.
- Yeast and Parasite Test: These can be tested for using a stool sample which is collected at home and then sent back to the laboratory in the kit provided.
- Genetic tests: these give us information about the best diet for any individual. The results can pinpoint, the foods they’d be better off avoiding, the foods they’d do well to eat more of, and the supplements especially useful for them because of their genetic make-up.
For more information on these tests go to www.naturalhealthpractice.com/FAM_Recommended_tests.cfm
Go for it!
Changing the way you eat, adding supplements and an exercise regime AND trying
to cut back on the stress in your life isn’t going to seem easy for the
first few weeks. The four-point-plan is going to represent quite a significant
life change for many of you. But please do persevere. In less than a month
you will start to notice a few changes. The fat at the top of your belly often
goes first, then lower down, then across your back. And before you know it,
your clothes will start to feel lose.
This is, after all, only a three month programme. It’s not a life sentence as dieting might be (or might already have been). I’m willing to bet that once you reach your goal, once you’ve got your old figure and old spirit back, you’ll want to keep up with a few of the changes. Scientists say it takes 10 days to break a habit. So after three months some of these changes will be so much a part of your life you’ll want to stay with them forever.
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