When I was a kid, my dad was talking about trying to lose weight. My flip response as a high-school student was “Dude, just eat less and exercise more”. While that’s true, I’ve learned there’s a “most effective” way to lose weight… and that most other ways are much less effective.
The more I eat right, the more I read, the more I listen, the more I exercise, the more I realize there are just a few basic rules to almost all diets. These nearly-universal principles form the backbone of the easiest way to lose weight for almost everybody, except perhaps people on dialysis. If you follow them, even without a strict plan, you’ll win.
- Eat six to eight small meals a day.
- Include a serving of protein in every meal. Eating plenty of protein is the only way to spare muscle while losing weight. Eat at least 60g/day for a woman* and 100g/day for a man.*
- Closely monitor your serving sizes. Once doled out on your plate, a serving of vegetables is around the size of your open hand; a serving of carbohydrates is around the size of your fist; a serving of protein is around the size of your palm.
- Cut out all foods from your diet which have sugar, high-fructose corn syrup, white flour, white (polished) rice,
- Take baseline measurements and photos of yourself, and compare them every week or month so you can remind and motivate yourself with your progress.
- Don’t eat carbohydrates near bedtime; they’ll just turn to fat.
- The principal purpose of cardio is to accelerate your metabolism. The amount of calories burned during the exercise itself is only a fraction of the amount burned due to a faster metabolism. The timing of your cardio doesn’t matter much; just do it 3-5 times per week.
- Dietary supplementation is important when you’re on a restricted diet of any sort. Figure out your nutritional deficiencies — if any — and come up with a supplementation plan to address them.
- Don’t make your program too complicated.
- Plan “time off” your program regularly. Maybe it’s one meal a week, or the weekend, or once a month. Whatever it is, plan for the time off so that you can re-start shortly thereafter if you fall off your program. Long dietary marathons are difficult, and not having a plan to get back on the horse if you fall off is discouraging.
I got one part of the formula back in high school wrong. I realize now it should be “Eat more often. Eat less food. Exercise more.” Sure, you can have just one meal a day and still lose weight, but it’s a lot harder than a lot of small meals.
* If you are extraordinarily short, tall, or muscular, this number will vary substantially. Also, this number can be adjusted downward once you have achieved your target weight.