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Maximum Fat Loss: You Don't Have a Weight Problem! It's Much Simpler Than That.
Maximum Fat Loss: You Don't Have a Weight Problem! It's Much Simpler Than That.
Maximum Fat Loss: You Don't Have a Weight Problem! It's Much Simpler Than That.
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Maximum Fat Loss: You Don't Have a Weight Problem! It's Much Simpler Than That.

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Many experts agree that a high-carbohydrate, low-fat diet should be an effective way to gain control of weight problems. But statistics show that though we are consuming less fat, Americans are actually becoming fatter, not "fitter." Ted Broer challenges traditional thinking and offers a healthy alternative that reveals new findings in biochemistry. Maximum Fat Loss shows readers why high-carb/low-fat diets don't work-and what does. Readers will learn how to maintain muscle mass and increase their metabolism while losing body fat. They'll discover why carbohydrates increase body fat, how hormones control weight loss and gain, genetic predisposition for fat gain, what foods to eat and what foods to avoid, what supplements produce healthy results, and much, much more. Maximum Fat Loss takes advantage of the latest research to bring a better solution to the problem of weight gain.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherThomas Nelson
Release dateJan 7, 2001
ISBN9781418557690
Maximum Fat Loss: You Don't Have a Weight Problem! It's Much Simpler Than That.

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    Book preview

    Maximum Fat Loss - Ted Broer

    MAXIMUM

    FAT LOSS

    MAXIMUM

    FAT LOSS

    TED BROER

    Maximum_Fat_Loss_Book_final_0003_001

    Copyright @ 2001 by Ted Broer

    All rights reserved. Written permission must be secured from the publisher to use or reproduce any part of this book, except for brief quotations in critical reviews or articles.

    Published in Nashville, Tennessee, by Thomas Nelson, Inc.

    Scripture quotations are from THE NEW KING JAMES VERSION. Copyright © 1979, 1980, 1982, Thomas Nelson, Inc., Publishers.

    Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

    Broer, Ted.

       Maximum fat loss : you don’t have a weight problem! It’s much simpler than that / Ted Broer.

         p. cm.

       ISBN 0-7852-6711-5

       1. Weight loss. I. Title.

       RM222.2.B7815 2001

       613.7—dc21

    00-066839

    CIP

    Printed in the United States of America

    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 BVG 05 04 03 02 01

    CONTENTS

    Introduction: Fat . . . And Getting Fatter and Sicker

    The Twelve Vital Keys to Maximum Fat Loss

    1 Face Up to Those Fat Cells

    2 If Your Old Attitudes and Ideas

    Haven’t Worked . . . Trade Them In!

    3 Just How Fat Are You?—Comparing What Is with What Should Be

    4 Set a Target You Can and Want to Hit

    5 Feed Your Body Healthy Meals—Often and Well

    6 You Really Are What You Eat

    7 Get Thermodynamics on Your Side

    8 Dump Out That Sugar Bowl

    9 Five Foods to Avoid the Rest of Your Life

    10 Coping with the Cravings

    11 Tips for Shopping, Cooking, and Eating Out

    12 What You Drink Can Be Just as Important as What You Eat

    13 Surprise—Not All Diet Foods Are Good for You!

    14 Fiber—the Key to Transporting Fat Out of Your Body

    15 Not All Fats Are Bad—Some Are Essential

    16 Keep Moving!

    17 The Supplements You Need to Fight the Fat War

    18 The Real Scoop on Cellulite

    19 A Plea for Our Children

    20 Surgical Options for Cutting Fat

    21 Choose to Be Lean and Fit All Your Life

    Conclusion

    Bibliography

    Notes

    Introduction

    FAT . . . AND GETTING

    FATTER AND SICKER

    Americans are the fattest people on earth. No nation on earth is more preoccupied with dieting than the United States. Even so, there are no people on earth who are as fat as we are.

    A third of us are at least 20 percent overweight and about three-quarters of us are heavier than our optimal weight. We’ve gained a whopping twelve pounds per person, on the average, in just the last decade.¹

    At least that’s what the statisticians tell us. I believe these figures are low. Just watch the people walk by on a beach or in a busy airport and mentally calculate the percentage of people who are carrying around excess fat. I think you’ll agree with me that the percentage is about 50 to 60 percent. Sadly, about a third of our children are also obese.

    One of the amazing facts to me is that given the mass media onslaught against fat and the many exercise programs available to the public, we don’t seem to care that we are fat. At least we don’t seem to care enough to do anything about it. All around me I see signs that people celebrate the fact that they are overweight, declaring that big is beautiful and advocating fat acceptance. There’s even a National Association for the Advancement of Fat Acceptance, which declares that an obsession with thinness is basically a prejudice against fat people.

    The science of weight management, however, says otherwise. Obesity is a serious physical ailment.

    In my work with thousands of clients through the years, helping them to implement health and fitness programs, I have found that few people really know just how harmful their excess fat can be. Let me share with you some scientifically based facts.

    OBESITY LEADS TO SERIOUS HEALTH PROBLEMS

    Obese people tend to develop cancer more than lean people. The American Cancer Society has published a study in which they found cancer deaths overall were 33 percent higher for men and 53 percent higher for women whose weight was 40 percent or more above average.²

    Overweight men have a much higher chance of dying of colon, rectal, and prostate cancer.

    Overweight women have higher rates of endometrial, gallbladder, cervical, ovarian, and breast cancer. In breast cancer, obesity is double trouble: Overweight women have an increased risk of getting the disease and a greater likelihood of fatality because fat makes it harder to detect tumors early. A Nurses’ Health Study found that women who are forty-four pounds overweight doubled their risk of breast cancer, and a Yale study found that severely obese women were more than three times as likely to be diagnosed late.³

    High levels of insulin in the bloodstream, a common occurrence among the obese, tends to cause a constant detrimental change in genetic expression, increasing the risk of cancer. In addition, insulin causes too much sodium to be reabsorbed, thereby potentially increasing blood pressure. (There’s more on these insulin effects later in this book.)

    Both men and women who are overweight often die prematurely, primarily through heart disease, but also through stroke and diabetes— both of which are impacted negatively by excess fat. Obesity puts a person at a much higher risk for developing coronary artery disease, gallbladder disease, kidney disease, liver damage, and other serious health problems—the kind that lead to premature death.

    Complications of pregnancy are also more common in overweight individuals. Obese women are less fertile and twice as likely to give birth to babies with spina bifida.

    Obesity has been linked to arthritis, gout, and even cataracts.

    More General Sickness, Colds, and Flu

    Even if you claim not to fear developing a major disease or ailment as a result of obesity, you should know that excess weight greatly impacts a person’s immune system. Obesity increases the body’s resistance to insulin and its susceptibility to infection. The result is plain and simple: Obese people get sick more often than thin people. If for no other reason, choose to lose the excess fat in your body so you can enjoy more days of good health a year. I promise you will be glad you did!

    Overweight people statistically suffer from more colds and infections than lean people. One of the reasons for suppressed immunity in larger people is that the two major organs of the immune system, the thymus and the spleen, are often smaller in the morbidly obese. When the spleen and thymus are too small for the body, the immune system suffers. Immune cells are initially produced in bone marrow and released into the bloodstream. When some of these unspecialized immune cells find their way to the thymus, they mature into specialized T cells. These cells are then programmed to attack substances that are foreign to the body. Other unspecified cells find their way to the spleen, where they develop into macrophages. As the blood filters through the spleen, macrophages literally engulf and digest viruses and bacteria.

    Obese people tend to have excess levels of glucose, insulin, adrenocorticotropin ACTH, and corticosterone, and lower levels of growth hormone in their bloodstream. These out-of-whack levels inhibit young unspecified immunity cells from developing into mature macrophages, which again decreases the efficiency of the immune system. Needless to say, sickness and disease are the byproducts of a chronically fatigued immune system.

    More Pain

    I have yet to see a person who weighs three hundred pounds who does not have joint, ligament, or general body-organ problems. Most complain of ongoing back and knee problems. Obesity—even moderate obesity—puts undue stress on the legs, back, and internal organs. These structural and internal problems compromise a person’s mobility and flexibility. In a word, obesity results in pain. It limits human motion and the quality of life a person enjoys.

    A Serious Identity Hit

    And finally, obesity can have negative psychological consequences because our society—whether right or not—tends to equate beauty, intelligence, sociability, and even success with thinness. The general prevailing opinion of our society is that those who are obese are undisciplined, unmotivated, and in some way out of control. It is not surprising that employers tend to hire those who are thin at rates higher than they hire those who are not. The hidden opinion that is rarely expressed seems to be, If this person can’t control his food intake, why should I trust him with my business?

    CONSIDER FAT TO BE ENEMY NUMBER ONE

    Fat is an enemy to your health, to your quality of life, and to your success in society.

    Note specifically that I said fat. Not weight.

    Overall body weight is determined by muscle, bone, water, and fat. It is excess fat that is the culprit associated with health problems. It is the percentage of fat in your body, not the overall weight number you see on the scale, that should become your targeted enemy.

    The distinction between fat and weight is critical. Most diet plans on the market today are aimed at overall weight loss, not necessarily fat loss. There’s a huge difference. Weight loss can occur with loss of water from the body, loss of muscle mass, and loss of vital-organ tissue! Fat loss must become your goal.

    Let’s face it. Most weight-loss programs don’t work—at least not over the long haul. If you are like many of the clients I see, you’ve already tried one or more diet plans and the net result was that you may have lost some weight temporarily, but you are likely fatter today than the day you started each of those plans. Yo-yo dieting and periodic crash-dieting programs simply don’t work as a life plan.

    National surveys estimate that at any given time, from one-quarter to one-half of all adult Americans are on some sort of diet. As a nation we spend more than thirty billion dollars each year on diet aids and remedies, and that number is also rising. The statistics also tell us that 60 percent of those who lose weight regain the pounds they have lost within three to five years, and a high percentage of those people actually gain back more weight.

    Permanent fat loss is what this book is all about. Not a temporary fix. Not something you can accomplish in a couple of weeks. Not something that is necessarily the easy way out. But definitely a program that works—works for virtually all people and works for a lifetime!

    HOW FAT IS OBESE?

    Obesity is, very simply, defined medically as an excess of body fat. Usually, however, obesity is a term that applies to those who are 20 percent over the normal weight for their age, sex, build, and height. Again, that’s at least one in three of us and the ranks are growing all the time in spite of the so-called fitness craze that has gripped our nation in recent decades.

    The Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, also takes into consideration the distribution of weight and whether it places the person at increased risk for certain diseases, and considers whether the person has a medical problem for which a physician recommends weight loss. The conclusion that is nearly always drawn, however, is that those who are more than 20 percent overweight tend to have a distribution of weight that puts excess pressure on the heart and abdominal organs.

    And what is the weight that is subject to distribution? The organs of the body and the muscles of the body are fixed in place. It is fat that is stashed away in various lumps and cavities of the body. It is fat that gives a unique distribution of weight.

    Again, it is excess fat that makes us unhealthy, not necessarily excess weight. So how much excess fat results in obesity?

    For healthy women, fat should not exceed 25 percent of body weight—for men that percentage is 17. (God seemed to design women’s bodies to carry a higher percentage of fat tissue to ensure that the body has plenty of fuel for pregnancy and nursing, even if food is scarce. In addition, female fat distribution is designed to help cushion a fetus on impact during pregnancy. That is why the hips and abdominal area enlarge when a woman is pregnant.)

    Female reader, if more than 25 percent of your body weight is fat, you are overfat.

    Male reader, if more than 17 percent of your body weight is fat, you are overfat.

    Rather than assume at this point that you are not overfat because you don’t know your body’s fat percentage, I suggest you assume that you are overfat. And if you aren’t, there’s a huge likelihood that someone you know and love is.

    You should also assume that even if you don’t have a fat problem today, you may very well develop one as you grow older.

    Get armed with the facts about fat and fat-loss. Get motivated to fight the war against your own excess fat. And get ready for a new way of living that can result in better health, not only in the very near future, but every year for the rest of your life.

    HOW THIS PROGRAM DIFFERS FROM ALL OTHERS

    This program is not like anything else you have read.

    First, it has been proven over a period of more than thirty years of implementation. It isn’t something dreamed up, schemed up, or drummed up.

    Second, it is based on genuine scientific and medical research. My academic background is in science—biology, chemistry, biochemistry, and psychology. My clinical background is in nutrition and exercise physiology. You may not read all the references in the notes at the end of this book, but you can trust the fact that these are only selected references from thousands I could have chosen and they reflect sound scientific and medical research.

    Most of the diet plans that have been published—even the official government position of pushing a high-carbohydrate, low-fat diet—are based on selected pieces of the nutritional puzzle rather than the whole picture of what makes a person healthy. Two of the most important missing pieces of that puzzle involve basal metabolic rate and the two key hormones that govern the way the human body burns calories and stores fat. This program takes into account all the pieces of the fat-loss puzzle.

    Third, this program reflects a comprehensive plan that you can live with the rest of your life.

    Most weight-loss plans focus on a particular food group, or a particular supplement, or on one or two quick-fix ideas that seem catchy. This program deals with what you eat and when, what you drink, what you refuse to eat and drink, how you exercise and when, how often you eat, and which nutritional supplements work best.

    One of the things I’ve discovered, and most of my clients have also discovered, is that good habits tend to build on one another. There’s a synergistic effect. If I work out regularly, I tend to eat right, I work more efficiently, my schedule flows better, and I sleep well. If I eat right, of course, I have more energy for my physical workouts and my business work. If I do all things in sync, it is easier to lose the fat and keep it off.

    All of which is to say you will experience the maximum benefit of the fat-loss program outlined in this book when you do all the facets of it simultaneously as a total program.

    And doesn’t that make sense?

    Being overfat is something that impacts all facets of your life. Being lean also impacts all facets of your life. Getting from overfat to lean requires twelve key changes that encompass all facets of your life.

    Are you ready to get started on those changes? The choice to say yes is an important one.

    CHOICES AND CONSEQUENCES

    As a biochemist and nutritionist, I have a very strong conviction: We live our lives one choice at a time. Every good choice we make helps build a foundation for a good life tomorrow, next year, a decade from now, and perhaps several decades from now.

    We each must take responsibility for the choices we make regarding our health. The pursuit of maximum fat loss is a choice—a very personal and critically important choice.

    I’ll never forget the day in tenth grade when it dawned on me that I could look better and feel better than I did. I certainly didn’t know what I know today about fat loss, good nutrition, or a healthy way of living, but I did know enough to know that I needed to take personal responsibility for my health and dietary choices.

    Years later, in the aftermath of a nearly fatal heart condition, I made more choices about how to regain my health. In the decades that have followed, I have continued to make choices, based on ever-increasing research into nutrition, exercise, and the overall keys to good health. I don’t expect my doctor to tell me how to achieve good health. Most physicians are trained in the treatment of disease, only a few are trained in the prevention of disease. Very few people are academically trained to tell people how to achieve the greatest health. Very few understand the body’s systems and how they respond to nutritional factors and biochemical influences. I am grateful for every personal discovery I make in this field, and even more importantly, I choose to apply what I know works based on scientific evidence.

    Many people know some of the basics of good nutrition and a healthy lifestyle. Far fewer actually put into practice what they know. Choose to be a person who will apply the information in this book. Make a choice to become personally informed and personally responsible for the best possible health you can achieve.

    Knowledge converts to wisdom with repeated application. The truly wise people in this world are those who develop good habits based upon the best possible knowledge.

    I hope you are at the point where you will do whatever it takes to lose the excess fat you have stored in your body, because ultimately, maximum fat loss is a personal choice you make. I will give you the basics in this book. You must choose to apply them. I hope you will make that choice today.

    And if you really are ready to begin, then the place to begin, as with most things in life, is in the mind.

    THE TWELVE VITAL KEYS TO MAXIMUM FAT LOSS

    KEY #1:

    Develop a deep desire to do whatever it takes to lose your excess fat.

    1

    FACE UP TO

    THOSE FAT CELLS

    Ahigh school friend of mine went to both my church and school and we were in athletics together. We were both strong and in great shape. Ironically, both of his parents were morbidly obese. I often wondered how he could be in such good shape when his parents were not.

    Twenty years passed between our graduation from high school and our next meeting. The man I saw twenty years later was not the teenager I knew. He was as obese as his parents had been, with a belly just as large as the ones they had when we were boys.

    He was not the only one. I was shocked at the number of people in my graduating class who had become overweight even though they were thin in high school. Many of those who had been moderately overweight in high school had become morbidly obese!

    I can almost hear some of you saying, It’s genetics! He couldn’t help it. Your other friends couldn’t help it. It’s genetics!

    Here’s the reality. Only 20 percent of our body weight is determined by genetics. The remaining 80 percent is determined by our diet and lifestyle choices.

    Parents teach their children how and what to eat, not necessarily by direct teaching methods, but by the example they themselves set.

    My friend’s youthful levels of testosterone and his high metabolism born of his athletic activities had kept him thin. But he had learned to eat at his parents’ table. As an adult he continued to eat the way he had been taught to eat, and that eating pattern was conducive to massive fat gain.

    My friend Zig Ziglar tells the story of a woman who grew up cutting off a narrow slice from the end of her pot roast before she put the roast in the oven. The slice of meat was just tossed away. Her daughter grew up and when she cooked a pot roast, she did the same thing. One day the daughter asked her mother, Mom, why do we cut off this perfectly good piece of meat at the end of the pot roast before we put the pan in the oven?

    The mother replied, Well, that’s the way Grandma does it.

    The daughter asked, Why does Grandma do that?

    The mother said, I really have no idea. Let’s call her and find out. When they got Grandma on the line this was her explanation: Oh, I cut off that narrow strip of the pot roast because my roasting pan was too small for the whole piece of meat!

    This family had wasted pounds and pounds of perfectly good beef through the years because of Grandma’s undersized roasting pan! Dietary and cooking habits are taught to us as children. That is why it is so important for you to teach your children proper habits.

    Do you automatically bread meat before frying it? Do you smother every casserole with cheese? Do you think a person doesn’t like what you have cooked if he or she fails to take a second helping? Do you think of the ideal breakfast as bacon and eggs with buttered and jellied white-bread toast? Do you think a meal is incomplete without a piece of pie or cake or a serving of ice cream? Do you drink a large glass of whole milk at every meal?

    These are only a few of the many common habits of families that have eaten the same way through the generations . . . and in the process, have eaten their way to obesity.

    I’ve also noticed through the years that obese people tend to have obese cats and dogs as pets. Trust me, there is absolutely no genetic tie-in there. When cats and dogs eat according to the patterns of their obese owners—in quantities that are too large and items that are fattening— they become obese, too.

    Now I’m not saying that some people are not predisposed to put on more weight than others. Researchers at Rockefeller University in New York discovered a gene in mice that, if defective, leads to obesity. When activated, this gene apparently produces a hormonelike protein that is secreted by the fat cells into the bloodstream. The mouse gene in which this was found is said to be 85 percent like its human counterpart gene. This discovery may eventually lead to the development of a drug to battle obesity, and it does lend some credence to the theory that some people are more predisposed to put on weight than others.

    However—and this is a huge however—the effects of this genetic predisposition can be counteracted by behavior. Even if you have this gene in your body, you can choose not to be obese. Remember, as I mentioned earlier, 80 percent of the way genes are expressed is owed to environmental variables! All of us have predispositions to one thing or another; some things are just built into us as human beings. Our behavior, including the acts related to what we put into our mouths and how we choose to exercise, are subject to the human will and to the development of physical habits.

    Rather than give in to a genetic predisposition and shrug your shoulders and say, Well, that’s just the way I am, choose to fight this predisposition and say, This is not the way God originally intended the human body to function and I’m going to make wise choices that give me control over this gene, rather than have this gene control me.

    Let me give you a good example related to this.

    Many people seem to feel they need something sweet after a meal. I call this the dessert syndrome. There’s no genetic predisposition at work in this syndrome. This syndrome is acquired through years of having dessert and of being told that dessert is good after every meal. In many cultures around the world, sweet foods are reserved for rare special occasions, and even then, they tend to be less sweet-tasting that many of the foods Americans gorge themselves on every day.

    To break the dessert syndrome, you simply need to say, "I’m going to do something else at the conclusion of a meal in place of dessert." Find a new behavior—develop a new after-dinner habit. It may be lingering over a

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