Top tips to circumvent a weight loss plateau:
- Try using a food diary
to keep track of your calorie intake. You may have been more careful
when you started your diet – weighing and measuring everything that
passed your lips – but you might not be as accurate as you once were.
Being more consistent with your journal can help get you off the weight
loss plateau and back on track.
- Replace
two meals a day with a protein shake to help you stay within your
calorie limit. When you make your shake, you know exactly what goes
into it – and how many calories are in the protein powder, the milk and
the fruit – so it takes the guesswork out of calorie counting. Use the
shake for two meals a day, have a healthy third meal, and fill in with
snacks of low fat protein foods, veggies and fruits.
- Try
to dine out less often. This one may be hard to do, but it can make a
difference. No matter how careful you think you are when you go to a
restaurant, it’s usually difficult to accurately estimate how many
calories you’re eating, because it’s often hard to tell exactly how
foods are prepared – extra fats and calories are often lurking. If
you’ve been eating out more often than usual, try to cut back for a
couple of weeks to see if it helps get your weight moving again.
- Step up your activity, particularly strength training.
As you build muscle, your resting metabolic rate goes up. If you’ve
been working out for a while, you might also be in better shape – and
that means that if you haven’t increased the intensity of your activity,
you might not be burning as many calories as you used to. Add some new
moves to your exercise routine, increase the intensity, and pump some
iron.
- Consider
that you might actually have reached an appropriate weight. If you
can, get your body composition checked. Muscle is ‘denser’ and takes up
less space than body fat – so if you are carrying more muscle than the
average person, you might weigh more than you think you should. If your
body fat is within normal range, then you may not have much – if any –
additional weight to lose. Written by Susan Bowerman, MS, RD, CSSD.
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