Are You Battling COVID-15? You Know What I Mean!

 By Joan Pagano

The tell-tale symptoms of COVID-15, a/k/a/the Quarantine 15: Tight jeans! According to a new survey by Weight Watchers, 36% of Americans have gained an average of 12.5 pounds during the pandemic—10.7 for women and 15.1 for men.

Make a plan. If you are one of these people—commit to making a plan to reverse the weight gain. The game plan includes your goals and the timeline for achieving them. Think short, medium and long term targets. Say your goal is to lose the average 10 pounds that women have gained. We know that successful weight loss based upon behavioral modification is 1.5 to 2 pounds a week. At that rate, it will take approximately 5 to 6 weeks to lose the weight. Your short term goal is to lose 1.5 to 2 pounds every week. Your intermediate term goal is to lost 5 pounds in 3 weeks. Your long term goal is to lose the entire 10 pounds in 6 weeks. Create realistic goals plotted over time.

Get a baseline and decide how to measure your progress. Using scale weights, as in the above example, is a guaranteed measure of success. Personally, I rely on the scale to track my weight and keep it in a close range, but some women steadfastly avoid weighing themselves. If you prefer not to, then use a favorite piece of clothing—jeans, or pants or a skirt with a waistline. This is a slightly less reliable way to chart your progress, but you will know if the fit is getting looser.

It is a numbers game. To lose 1 pound a week. you need to account for a deficit of 500 calories every day, for a weekly total of 3500 deficit calories. That means creating daily objectives to reduce caloric intake by 250 calories and increase caloric expenditure by 250 calories. What extra snacks, food types, or portions can you cut to reduce your calories? How can you increase your activity level to burn more calories every day? Remember that your long term success is based upon your day-to-day activities—every day you should eat and exercise in such a way that you develop habits that will serve you for life.

Start with cardio exercise. Weight loss from exercise is primarily fat loss. As your exercise regularly, you will reduce fat stores from the whole body and develop leaner, toned muscles instead. The gain in lean muscle tissue and loss of excess fat will result in trimmer contours and smaller circumferences, regardless of the number of pounds lost. Research shows that exercise prevents fat from being stored in the organs and muscles. It also reduces the size of fat cells in the belly more effectively than dieting alone.

Add strength training. While it is true that aerobic exercise burns calories, it is only part of the equation. Weight training develops your muscles and increases lean body mass (muscle, bones, organs and fluids) which is metabolically more active than fat. As you develop more lean body mass, you raise your resting metabolic rate, the number of calories you burn at rest. A lean body is more power-hungry, burning more calories just to breathe, circulate blood, digest food and even sleep!

Practice resilience. Coping with roadblocks, and finding ways to move forward, require a resilient spirit. A clear purpose and an effective coping mechanismwill allow you to stay on course. Keep your eye on your goal and be flexible. Modify your plan when life intervenes. A combination of discipline. flexibility and perseverance works every time, for every goal.

For expert guidance on strength training techniques, step by step photos depicting how to perform exercise, and a selection of well-rounded workouts, please check out Joan’s book, Strength Training Exercises for Women. Joan also offers an online fitness and nutrition course, “Beat Belly Fat, Bloating, Bone Loss and the Blues.” The course includes a module on exercise for posture and alignment.

(c) Copyright - Joan L. Pagano. All Rights Reserved Worldwide.

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