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Calorie Deficit, Diets, Fat Loss, Tracking, Strategies Adam Berry - The Gym Starter Calorie Deficit, Diets, Fat Loss, Tracking, Strategies Adam Berry - The Gym Starter

7 Practical Tips To Make Counting Calories Easier

 
Easy Ways To Count Calories for beginners
 

One of the most frequent complaints I get from clients on the Strong & Confident Program is that they just don’t have the time to track their food.

Once they have cooked the dinner, eaten the dinner and then washed up after - its either their bedtime or their children’s bedtime…and the act of meticulously going through what they ate that day, and most importantly trying to remember everything they ate that day, is obviously going to be the last thing on their mind - whether they want to achieve their goals or not.

And I get it.

80% of my clients, throughout my career have been busy parents, and realistically you have to look at their lives and question whether tracking their calories is really going to add stress or take the stress away from their life.

And much of the time it will add stress - which will have far more negative repercussions on their fitness than whether they choose to track calories.

About a month ago, I did a Seminar here on the Gold Coast, Australia, all about Tracking your calories, and I wanted to share with you what we all went through on that day.


Table of contents for: 7 Practical Tips To Make Counting Calories Easier

  1. Does Calorie Counting work?

  2. Why should you track your food?

  3. Informed Consent on tracking your calories

  4. 7 Tips to make Counting Calories Easier

  5. How To Be In A Calorie Deficit Without Logging Your Food


There is a quick summary of my 7 Practical Tips on YouTube. But to understand the principles and the whys and wherefores behind counting calories - keep reading!

 


Does Calorie Counting work?

This is a very hotly debated topic.

There are people out there…on the internet…who will tell you that tracking your calories simply doesn’t work…simply because the calorie amounts on packages aren’t accurate.

This study [1] called ‘Food Label Accuracy of Common Snack Foods’ found that:

“Measured energy values exceeded label statements by 8% on average in pre-packaged convenience meals (12), which is slightly higher but consistent with the label disparity of 4.3% in packaged snack foods. Also consistent with this study, most products in our sample fell within the allowable limit of 20% over the label calories per Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regulations”

This is a shocking revelation, but it’s still only 8% out.

The last time I checked, 8% was a pretty small amount. Let me put it to you thus, if I gave you 92% success in your Goals…would you take it?

 

Exactly.

So let me ask again; Does Calorie Counting Work?

And it’s a resounding yes provided you have never had an Eating Disorder.

If you have ever had an Eating Disorder then please don’t engage in Calorie Counting. And if you need help with that please contact the Charity BEAT here [2].

There are issues relating to Calorie Counting, and I go into those later in the article. But the main answer to this question is the following:

Yes. Calorie Counting does work.

This study [3] took participants over one year, and depending on their consistency with dietary tracking, split them into three Groups.

  1. Rare Trackers equalling <33% days tracked (114 days out of 343)

  2. Inconsistent Trackers 33-66% days tracked

  3. Consistent Trackers >66% days tracked (228 days out opf 343)

Please note that consistent trackers qualify at just two-thirds of the time available to them - not 100% of the time available to them.

All participants were asked to:

  • Maintain daily food journals and physical activity records;

  • Reduce portion sizes;

  • Reduce foods high in calories, fat, and simple sugar;

  • Increase consumption of fruits, vegetables, and low-fat dairy products;

and

  • Weigh themselves frequently and at least weekly (more on this here)

They each worked with a Health Coach, and attended interactive sessions designed to educate them on nutrition and exercise adherence.

The results were:

“Only consistent trackers had significant weight loss (-9.99 pounds), following a linear relationship with consistent loss throughout the year. In addition, the weight loss trend for the rare and inconsistent trackers followed a nonlinear path, with the holidays slowing weight loss and the onset of summer increasing weight loss. These results show the importance of frequent dietary tracking for consistent long-term weight loss success”

How to count calories to lose weight
 

It also concluded the following:

“Early in the program weight change of consistent trackers did not differ from rare or inconsistent dietary trackers. However, rare or inconsistent trackers gained weight during the holidays but the consistent trackers' rate of weight loss did not change as they sustained their rate of weight loss from the first quarter. Hence, successful behavioural interventions should emphasize the benefits of consistent dietary tracking for participants, motivating individuals to track for at least 5 days of each week for sustained and clinically significant weight loss"


This study teaches us a lot about weight loss.

The first lesson is that consistency is what matters, and consistency doesn’t mean as much as you think it does. It is simply just two-thirds of your time.

The second lesson is that tracking is a behaviour that supports other behaviours like having a Coach, reducing portion sizes, and eating more fruits and vegetables.

The third lesson is that scientifically 10lbs is a significant amount of weight to lose in a year.


As a coach, my point here is you need to stop comparing yourself to people on Social Media. What you see on there, compared to what real world results truly look like vary greatly.


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Why Should You Track Your Food?

One of the most common occurrences in people who are trying to lose weight and getting frustrated with the outcomes in terms of weight loss is that they often overestimate the calories they are burning and underestimate the calories they are consuming.

As this study concludes:

“The failure of some obese subjects to lose weight while eating a diet they report as low in calories is due to an energy intake substantially higher than reported and an overestimation of physical activity, not to an abnormality in thermogenesis.”

This basically means that it comes down to your Calorie Deficit, rather than there being an issue in the way your body metabolises food.

The hypothesis has been tested in two other ways as well. This study pipped Dieticians against Non-Dieticians and found that even dieticians under-report their energy intake somewhere between 223 and 116 kcal/day, compared with the non-dieticians who underreported between 429 and 142kcal/day.

This just goes to show…that even those who are really well educated on food and nutrition still underestimate the calories they are consuming.

This doesn’t mean that learning about nutrition and your food isn’t worthwhile. The dieticians were still better with an average over-reporting of 169.5kcal/day compared to the non-dieticians which averaged 285.5kcal/day.

And finally,

This study actually paid people to be accurate. They were giving out $50 bonuses to be accurate with their diet recall on four occasions. One group had to be accurate the first two times, the second group accurate the second two times, and one group received no bonus at all.

And guess what happened:

“Energy intake did not differ within or between groups at any time, and the number of under reporters was not associated with group at any time. Overall, the incentive was ineffective.”

So by tracking your food, you reduce the risk of being inaccurate. In fact, tracking your food is the most accurate way to tell if you are or are not in a calorie deficit for that day. We have no other way of knowing this information, and if you want instant feedback about your weight loss day on day - then tracking your food is the best way to go about it.

In terms of overestimating the number of calories, you are burning this comes down to many things. The main one is that we trust our smartwatches to be accurate with this information when this study [5] demonstrates.

 

It found that Smartwatches at their most accurate, in terms of judging energy expenditure are off by between 27% and 93%.

The study also found that they are better at reading heart rates.

Personally, as a Coach, I don’t like clients on my Strong & Confident Program to focus on Calories burned from exercise - because that can destroy your relationship with exercise and create very extreme behaviour that will only lead to failure.

You should focus on eating to your deficit - and exercising to get strong enough to fight a bear in the woods.


Informed Consent when tracking your food

As I mentioned above, you should not track your food if you are recovering from any form of Eating Disorder.

But I also take my responsibility for your Mental Health very seriously so I want to let you know about the drawbacks of tracking your food, before I give you the 7 Practical Tips To Make Counting Calories Easier.

Then you can decide whether or not it is a behaviour you are safe to engage with.

This study [6] analysed 5.5k posts on Community Forums, like MyFitness Pal, and discovered what the practical difficulties are with tracking food.

  • Success is attributed to a “goal weight achievement”

  • Of 94 people, only 22 thought they were empowered enough to no longer need to track their food

  • Can be a tedious practice

  • Not knowing how much of a food to enter

  • Not being able to find foods in the database

  • How do you track restaurants and eating at a friends house?

  • When asked to rate difficulty by meal type, respondents rated packaged food (average: 6.5) and fast food (6.3) as significantly easier to journal than home-cooked meals (4.6), buffet meals (3.7), ethnic food (3.7), restaurant meals (3.6), foods served by friends (3.2), and foods consumed at parties (2.9)

I’d just like to highlight a few points here:

“Success is attributed to a “goal weight achievement” - this is always going to be an issue on an App like MyFitness Pal - because it keeps reminding you how much you will weigh in x amount of days, if you keep up the behaviour you set that day. Although some will find this motivating I am here to tell you that your success is not defined by hitting a weight on the scale. Your success is determined by engaging in behaviours over a consistent period of time. If you set these behaviours and execute you will gain confidence and strength - as a consequence of that you might lose weight.

I think I summed this up best when I said on Instagram:

how to count calories for weight loss
 

“How do you track restaurants and eating at a friends house?” - there are two schools of thought here:

  1. If you don’t eat out too often - mainly if it’s just a special occasion - then you shouldn’t be tracking in the first place, you should be enjoying the moment.

  2. If you eat out more and are worried about the calories, do your best at figuring out what you had when you get home…then add 30% to account for factors of food that are out of your control - like the amount of oil used by the Chef.

The same study [6] then also analysed Mental Health outcomes relating to tracking food and it found:

  • Food journalers report feelings of shame, judgement, or obsession associated with current designs. P6 reported journaling “made me feel guilty sometimes”, while P27 noted a lack of positive feedback: “I always felt guilty when I ate too much, and there wasn't that much pride when I was under my goal.”

  • “Sometimes I feel like not logging things because I know it’s really unhealthy.

  • “It made me too focused and obsessive about what I was eating”

  • “It was more of an on the way to an eating disorder thing than anything else (tried to keep calories extremely low)”

  • “I think I was hesitant to do the logging if not alone”

  • “I had more of a problem with eating out at a friend’s house because I didn’t want to ask for ingredients or mention that I was logging calories”

You should never feel shame around a behaviour you are engaging in and if you are feeling that way then please do not operate in that behaviour.

If what you are doing is not making you feel strong and empowered - then why o why are you doing it?

You shouldn’t have to suffer - and I don’t want you to suffer at all.

In terms of going over your calories sometimes - and that leading to a feeling of failure - please remember that no matter what you do - you can’t fuck this up - because when you engage in a fitness journey - it shouldn’t be defined by an endpoint, it should be a move to building an active lifestyle and pulling yourself into balance.

Therefore, all you have to do is get back on track the very next day.

The human body doesn’t gain weight that quickly, so there really isn’t a need to panic when you go over.


1. Don’t try to be perfect in an imperfect system

The whole system around calories is flawed.

When we establish someone’s Basal Metabolic Rate which is the point upon which we begin to figure out their deficit calories we are making it our “best guess”. This guess is based on years and years of study across millions of people, but it is still a guess.

And the food industry does the same. In 1991 the Australian Food Standards Code used to state:

“That the value shown in a Nutrition Information Panel was deemed to comply if these values (of energy, carbohydrate, starch or fibre) did not vary by more than 20% from those values actually present and 10% variation was permitted for other nutrients”

And although these figures are no longer part of Law they are still regarded as acceptable folklore in the Food Industry.

The current Australia New Zealand Food Standards Code does not permit or mandate any limits on accuracy of the levels of nutrients expressed in Nutrition Information Panels but only requires that these values be ‘average’ values. Maximum and minimum quantities are required in regard to claims for polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fatty acid contents of food.

And in the US a study called “Food Label Accuracy of Common Snack Foods” [7] we have already seen that calories in published are not that reliable.

Being consistent with tracking your food, to get a best guess is good enough, and by doing that you still get results as you will be holding yourself accountable and over time will improve your choices to help you get to your goals.

2. It’s Not A Life Sentence; its a Period of Education

When you approach anything in life with the view of “What can I learn about this?” as opposed to “Can I pass or fail this?” you will automatically improve your relationship with that behaviour.

Tracking your food is no different. You should do it to learn about the energy in food, to learn about how your choices over a day impact your energy and ability to control your stress. Its a way of finding out if your weekends are destroying your progress and what eating in balance really looks like.

You get to decide when that period of education is over and when you feel empowered enough to move away from tracking your calories - because that is the goal here. The goal isn’t to be tied to MyFitness Pal for the rest of your life.

You should want to be educated enough about nutrition so that you never have to open an app ever again.

 

3. There is no right or wrong, just exploration

One of these days I’m going to get this printed on a t-shirt. It’s true of exercise, and it’s true of nutrition.

If you go over your calories, the only person judging you is you.

If you don’t hit your protein target, the only person judging you is you.

Every time something sub-optimal occurs the good news is that you have the opportunity to learn from it, grow from it, and ultimately succeed from those lessons.

You are only every investigating, course correcting and developing - you are not passing or failing.

4. If it’s in a packet: Track it!

This is so simple it hurts. MyFitness Pal and any other tracking app you might use will have what’s called a Barcode Scanner. It will literally take you a matter of seconds to get all of the nutritional information you need about that food by scanning the barcode.

Therefore if you eat something with a barcode. on the packet - which will be a fair 75% of the food you eat - just track it.

5 . Set Up generic value amounts for Fruits and Veggies

Let’s be very clear - no one ever gained weight from eating too many fruits and veggies. Even if you are a Vegetarian, I promise you fruits and vegetables in your diet are not the problem here.

And when it comes to tracking them, they can be really annoying to put into an app accurately.

Therefore you should just set up a generic value for Fruits and Vegetables, save that into your App and just use those every time you have your Veggies at dinner.

Personally I just scan a bag of frozen vegetables set it to 100g and use that every time I have dinner - irrespective of what the Vegetables actually are.

 

6. Eating Out? Add 30% to your meal

I alluded to this earlier in the article - but it’s a strategy that makes everything. more accurate for you when you are trying to track your food.

The best way to track your food when eating out would be the following:

1.  See online if the restaurant publishes their calories

2. In the restaurant take a photo.

3. When at home, best guess the amounts.

4. Add 30% to every amount even if the restaurant does publish their calories

That way you have the bases covered.

And remember if you are out celebrating - celebrate. Don’t worry about the calories on special occasions - just worry about getting back on track the next day.

7. Cook Meals that are already Calorie Tracked

 

This is the one that perplexes me the most when it comes to people who are trying to lose weight and using calorie tracking as a solution to that.

It also perplexes me with clients on my Strong and Confident Program - who are tracking - as they have access to over 250 recipes all with calorie tracked barcodes including vegetarian and vegan options - yet they still say that tracking is too hard for them.

All the hard work has been done for you.

In fact, if you Google “MyFitness Pal Dinner Recipes” you get 688,000 results and the top one is all with the Macros and Calories already figured out for you.

So use that resource.

I guarantee you will be able to find a version of your favourite meal that is now Barcode Scannable or has all of the nutritional information figured out for you. Then you just have to copy and paste.

The brass tax is if you can’t be bothered to copy and paste some information or spend ten minutes finding the information on the internet to be able to track your calories - then engaging in a fitness journey will always be a slog for you.

How To Be In A Calorie Deficit Without Logging Your Food

There are other things you can do to keep your calories in check without necessarily logging your food.

But bear in mind, the only way to truly know if you are in a deficit each day - is to log your foods.

I have two strategies for this.

The first is a three meals, two snacks which I outline here:

This is very simple.

  • Each day you are allowed three meals.

  • Each meal must fit on one plate.

  • Between breakfast and lunch and lunch and dinner you can have a snack.

I have found applying this structure is incredibly effective.

The second strategy is called The Five Awesome Rules For Fat Loss Life.

This is a list of 5 things you need in order to lose weight:

  1. Be in a Calorie Deficit

  2. Three Litres of Water A Day

  3. Protein and Veggies at every meal

  4. 8-10k Steps A Day

  5. 7-8 hours of sleep a night

And if you want help figuring this out then watch this:

 


Did You Find This Useful?

Across this website, I have other Articles all about Tracking your Calories and managing your Calorie Deficit:

Added to that it would be AMAZING if you wanted to become my friend.

As my friend, I will send you some amazing help, like a book called 27 Ways to Faster Fat Loss, workout plans for both the Gym and home workouts, and much more. Just put your email in below:

 
 

References:

  1. Jumpertz R, Venti CA, Le DS, et al. Food label accuracy of common snack foods. Obesity (Silver Spring). 2013;21(1):164-169. doi:10.1002/oby.20185

  2. Beat. 2021. The UK's Eating Disorder Charity - Beat. [online] Available at: <https://www.beateatingdisorders.org.uk/> [Accessed 15 September 2021].

  3. Ingels JS, Misra R, Stewart J, Lucke-Wold B, Shawley-Brzoska S. The Effect of Adherence to Dietary Tracking on Weight Loss: Using HLM to Model Weight Loss over Time. J Diabetes Res. 2017;2017:6951495. doi: 10.1155/2017/6951495. Epub 2017 Aug 9. PMID: 28852651; PMCID: PMC5568610.

  4. Lichtman SW, Pisarska K, Berman ER, Pestone M, Dowling H, Offenbacher E, Weisel H, Heshka S, Matthews DE, Heymsfield SB. Discrepancy between self-reported and actual caloric intake and exercise in obese subjects. N Engl J Med. 1992 Dec 31;327(27):1893-8. doi: 10.1056/NEJM199212313272701. PMID: 1454084.

  5. Shcherbina, A.; Mattsson, C.M.; Waggott, D.; Salisbury, H.; Christle, J.W.; Hastie, T.; Wheeler, M.T.; Ashley, E.A. Accuracy in Wrist-Worn, Sensor-Based Measurements of Heart Rate and Energy Expenditure in a Diverse Cohort. J. Pers. Med. 2017, 7, 3. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm7020003

  6. Cordeiro F, Epstein DA, Thomaz E, Bales E, Jagannathan AK, Abowd GD, Fogarty J. Barriers and Negative Nudges: Exploring Challenges in Food Journaling. Proc SIGCHI Conf Hum Factor Comput Syst. 2015 Apr;2015:1159-1162. doi: 10.1145/2702123.2702155. PMID: 26894233; PMCID: PMC4755274.

  7. Jumpertz R, Venti CA, Le DS, Michaels J, Parrington S, Krakoff J, Votruba S. Food label accuracy of common snack foods. Obesity (Silver Spring). 2013 Jan;21(1):164-9. doi: 10.1002/oby.20185. PMID: 23505182; PMCID: PMC3605747.

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Calorie Deficit, Fat Loss Adam Berry - The Gym Starter Calorie Deficit, Fat Loss Adam Berry - The Gym Starter

What is a Calorie Deficit Diet Plan?

 
What is a Caloire Deficit?

Recently on Instagram, I have been getting this question A LOT. And I mean a lot.

The pattern of behavior is thus: 

I post up a picture asking what do you need help with?

I then get a response from someone saying “How do you lose belly fat?”

I respond with this:

calorie deficit diet calculator1500 calorie diet planeating 1,500 calories a day femalesuper simple 1,500 calorie meal plan1500 calorie diet plan vegetarian1,500 calorie meal plan ukcalorie deficit calculator1,200 calorie deficitcalorie surpluscalor…
 

And I then get a reply to that picture saying:

“Can you please tell me the diet of a Calorie Deficit?”

For a while this would stump me, I’d sit there thinking what do you mean?

There’s no rule of it in terms of a diet. You just have to set yourself up with a Calorie Deficit and away you go. 

Then after this happened maybe 30 times.

I realized something.

Something crucial.

These people believed that a Calorie Deficit is some kind of restrictive diet like a Ketogenic Diet or an Atkins Diet. It finally all clicked together in my mind.

People want me to be able to tell them the ratios of Macros, the foods you should and shouldn’t eat and set them up with a little packaged diet which they pay me upwards of $200 for and away they go. 

And if that's you, I’m sorry. I would love to take your money. But it's just not how weight loss should work. 

You see…the world has hated on you and your struggle with weight so much it has led you to believe there is a secret out there that you can pay someone like me to give you and you will find the answer to your problems. 

It's the world of BoomBod or now worse Skinny Jab. The world of MLMs dominating the past decade with questionable nutrition and awful science all in the name of capitalism. 

And it's got to stop. 

calorie deficit diet calculator1500 calorie diet planeating 1,500 calories a day femalesuper simple 1,500 calorie meal plan1500 calorie diet plan vegetarian1,500 calorie meal plan ukcalorie deficit calculator1,200 calorie deficitcalorie surpluscalor…
 

As always in this article, I am going to take you through the not so magical facts of what the Calorie Deficit is.

So you can understand it, begin to implement it and above all start to really learn the science behind every fat loss diet out there.

Now before we get into this article, I wanted to ask you something.

Do you want to be my friend?

If it is a yes, then it would be wonderful if you got onto my email list.

I’ll email you things. Sometimes they will be educational, sometimes they will be inappropriate, sometimes I might just want to know how you are; either way…it would be delightful to connect with you more.

Just send me a friend request by filling out the form below…

Oh, and I will also send you some free fitness goodies to help start our new friendship off on the best foot possible.



What is a Calorie Deficit Diet Plan?

Principle — What does a Calorie Deficit actually mean?

Calorie Deficit is the term used, to sum up a negative energy balance in the body. 

The energy balance equation is this:

Calories In = Caloires Out = No Weight Change

Caloires In > Calories Out = Weight Gain

Calories In < Calories Out = Weight Loss (A Calorie Deficit) 

Theoretically, I’m sure that makes sense to you, and the next question you may have would be…what actually is a Calorie. 

I’ve said this before…and I will say it again because it cannot be said enough. A Calorie is a Unit of Measurement used to measure the energy in food. 

The actual definition is this:

Calorie: noun

Thermodynamics.

a: Also called gram calorie, small calorie. an amount of heat exactly equal to 4.1840

joules. Abbreviation: cal (usually initial capital letter) kilocalorie. Abbreviation: Cal

Physiology.

a: a unit equal to the kilocalorie, used to express the heat output of an organism and the fuel or energy value of food.

b: a quantity of food capable of producing such an amount of energy.

But think of a Calorie like this: 

A Mile is a unit of measurement of distance. A Calorie is a unit of measurement of food. 

Run 26.2 miles you have run a Marathon. 

Eat an additional 7000kcal in your diet you will gain 1kg.

Eat 7000kcal less in your diet and you will lose 1kg.

That's it.

Now that we understand what a Calorie is. We can begin to see how the manipulation of this can lead to weight gain or weight loss. 

For the purpose of this article…let's continue to look at weight loss. 

A study published in 2011 stated this:

American Dietetic Association (ADA) has noted that achieving a negative energy balance is the most important factor affecting amount and rate of weight loss over time (2)

It also stated this: 

The results of this substudy indicate that increases in fruits, vegetables, and low-fat dairy, as part of a calorie-controlled diet, help both achieve and maintain weight loss (2)

(That second one is just good advice which is why I put it in here)

Combined with always remembering the following quote: 

What is a calorie deficit?
 

Now that you know what a Calorie is, and what the actual definition of a Calorie Deficit is combined with some good old dietary advice we should now begin to look at why you should use a Calorie Deficit if you want to lose weight. 

What is a Calorie Deficit Diet Plan?

Why should you use a Calorie Deficit?

Despite in the previous section of this article I have stated clearly that the only way to lose weight is a Calorie Deficit I feel we need to drill down on the practical and emotional side of it a lot more…and why I believe that operating under the term a Calorie Deficit to lose weight is and will always be your best option of obviously losing weight…but also how you frame your weight loss journey.

Every diet in the world that perpetuates Weight Loss operates a system that is designed to get you into said “Calorie Deficit”.

Make no mistake. Science is clear. The studies are clear. And I cannot be clearer. 

The only way to lose weight is with a Calorie Deficit.

I can hear your brain rattling around these questions as you read:

“So what about Keto? What about Atkins? What about Slimming World? What about MLM Companies? They all tell me I can lose weight and I never hear of them talking about Calories”

They are being disingenuous.

If a company out there is taking your money to help you lose weight and they aren’t telling you this stuff about a Calorie Deficit…they are trying to keep you away from the truth…so that you keep giving them money. 

They are blurring the waters with words like Syns, Points, and No Carbs. They are scared you will figure it out on your own and no longer hand over your cash to them to be shamed in front of a room full of people for gaining some weight.

Which is always going to happen if you only weigh yourself weekly.


Read My Article that has helped 100s of people improve their relationship with the scale right now:

Do You Have Scale Anxiety? Improve Your Relationship with the Scale


But they don’t tell you this.

Because it elevates them in your mind. It doesn’t put them in service to you…it puts you in service to them. Despite the fact most people who run these “groups” have no background in coaching, nutrition or actually helping others…they just got it together themselves and believe its as easy for others as it is for them. 

And that's just being short-sighted. 

By educating yourself on the science, the facts, and what is actually going on when you lose weight you are taking ownership of what you are doing.

You are not giving your power away to someone else.

By calling the method to your Fat Loss what it is…and allying yourself to the concept, science and truth of a Calorie Deficit you will be empowering yourself. 

If you are reading this and you have got this far into the article you have probably experienced feelings of disempowerment before. Something like…

Step 1: Tried a diet, 

Step 2: Got some results, 

Step 3: Had to cease the diet due to its restrictive nature…and well…donuts. 

Step 4: Lost results

Step 5: Felt like a failure.

Step 6: Gave up on yourself 

What Is A Calorie Deficit
 

Yes.

Yes, I did say donuts.

But please stay focussed. 

Now if you have gone through that 6 step process in the past you know what I mean when I say “give away power”. 

And that feeling of powerlessness is horrible. It undermines everything you do and above all how you feel about yourself. 

And that's not good enough. Defining yourself by your diet will lead to failure when you eventually feel the need to change or move away from the said diet. 

And this is the difference between them and I. 

I take you to the root. The root of all Fat Loss/Weight Loss diets. A Calorie Deficit. 

And when you have a trifecta of knowledge, education and power…that's going to make a difference to you. 

All of these diets do one thing. They change how. How you get into a Calorie Deficit. 

Which is the next part of this Article…

You see:

The Ketogenic Diet

Fewer Carbohydrates. When you cut out such a big macronutrient from your diet you will obviously be cutting down on Calories. But it's very restrictive and has many drawbacks.

A Canadian study in 2018 on the Ketogenic Diet has concluded this:

Ketogenic diets can help patients lose about 2 kg more than low-fat diets do at 1 year, but higher-quality studies show no difference. Weight loss peaks at about 5 months but is often not sustained. Individual weight change can vary from losing 30 kg to gaining 10 kg with any diet. (4)

I have a YouTube Video on the Ketogenic Diet if you would like to find out more about it.

 

Slimming World 

Group about 20 calories together and call it a Syn (yup. They actually are going with a word that micro messages the following meaning: “an immoral act considered to be a transgression against divine law” (3)). They also let you eat as many free foods as you want, banking on the fact that “no one has ever got fat from eating too many fruits and vegetables” 

calorie deficit diet calculator1500 calorie diet planeating 1,500 calories a day femalesuper simple 1,500 calorie meal plan1500 calorie diet plan vegetarian1,500 calorie meal plan ukcalorie deficit calculator1,200 calorie deficitcalorie surpluscalor…
 

At this point we should mention the following statement:

“You don’t have to count calories but all calories count” — Jordan Syatt

A study in 2015 had this to say about Slimming World: 

“In the present audit mean weight loss was 3.9 kg, 37.7 % of the whole population and 75.7 % of the higher attendees lost ≥5 % during the first 3 months of their engagement in a commercial weight management programme. . These data show that by supporting citizens in the self-management of their weight, commercial weight management programmes have the potential to help decrease the prevalence of obesity and incidence of its costly co-morbidities, improving citizen health and helping to reduce the burden on national health care systems.” (5)

This study was also funded by Slimming World and only focusses on the first 3 months of someone's journey. 

When you expand to a 12-month look at the results, from an independent source: The British Journal Of General Practice, they state this:

“In the short term all commercial weight-loss programmes appear to result in similar weight loss but the NHS alternative appears to produce less weight loss. At 12 months Slimming World led to greater weight loss but the differences between commercial programmes was small and of minor clinical importance.” (6)

Weight Watchers: 

Very similar to Slimming World. They group calories together and allot your points based on your physiological factors. If you go over your points you are being incorrect. If you stay under you are being correct. 

Interestingly of the same study cited above, Weight Watchers is the most effective Commercial Weight Loss system over 3 months. But the same conclusion is drawn over 12 months:

“The differences between commercial programmes was small and of minor clinical importance.” (6)

Juicing

Well when all you are doing is drinking juice…I think we can clearly see a Calorie Reduction at work here.

MLMs: 

Getting you to drink super blends of Protein Shakes so you don't eat meals but rather drink them and surprise surprise…they have fewer calories in them than actual food.

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I could go on.

But all of these diets manipulate the “How” of getting into a Calorie Deficit.

Without telling you that's what you are doing to lose weight, which is why they get short term results. But when you don’t know what you are doing and life gets on top of you, and you then have to stop attending weekly meetings, you can see how you will then regain weight after. 

Depending on how these diets manipulate one aspect of a Diet, usually by restricting certain Macronutrients, depends on how restrictive and unsustainable it becomes. 

In my experience, the Ketogenic Diet is far far far too restrictive and therefore has a high rate of success followed by failure. 

My Calorie Deficit approach gives you flexibility. 

Flexibility for a number of things:

  1. Party Time

  2. Dinners Out

  3. Weddings

  4. Holidays

  5. Birthdays

  6. Your favorite foods

It doesn’t give you a free pass. But it does give you the flexibility to be able to incorporate all of this into your life. Because a lot of those things will be and should be important to you.

calorie deficit diet calculator1500 calorie diet planeating 1,500 calories a day femalesuper simple 1,500 calorie meal plan1500 calorie diet plan vegetarian1,500 calorie meal plan ukcalorie deficit calculator1,200 calorie deficitcalorie surpluscalor…
 

What is a Calorie Deficit Diet Plan?

How do you set yourself up on a Calorie Deficit?

Now that you have a fantastic understanding of what is at play here…

It would be remiss of me to not leave you with some actionable advice. 

Now if you want to start this Calorie Deficit thing. I refuse to call it a Diet…because I think we can both agree it is all diets. 

Then you need to know how to do it. 

Its a numbers game…and simply put I like to use this method to help you calculate how many calories you can have in a day. 

Take your Goal Bodyweight (GBW) in LBS and then x12

For example: 150lbs x 12 = 1800kcal a day

Simple? You may be looking at that figure and thinking that's way too high, no diet has ever recommended I eat that much and still lose weight. 

I use this figure as your “Upper Window” for your Deficit. 

You can use your Basal Metabolic Rate as your “Lower Window” for your deficit. 

I am giving you the gift of time. There should be no rush with you losing weight. Surely changing habits, changing lifestyles, and understanding how your food affects your weight and how you can be in control of that relationship is more important.

Here's a YouTube Video I have done explaining all of this a lot more clearly: 

 

If you would like a Free Calorie and Macro Calculator PLUS a whole Weight Loss Bundle sent straight to your email then click here:

GET YOUR FREE FITNESS GOODIES

I would then follow this up with implementing my Five Awesome Rules For Fat Loss Life as a great place to start for getting yourself into a Calorie Deficit.

 

Now you just have to be patient. 

A colleague of mine called Martin Macdonald once said this: 

“A Calorie Deficit is a simple as “Calories in vs Calories Out”, the thing is Calories In vs Calories Out just isn’t that simple” 

And he's right. There are so many factors that go into the food we eat. 

Emotional Factors, Economical Factors, Ethical Factors, and figuring out where we stand on such fluid things can be hard. 

One day you may well feel amazing and be able to stick within your numbers wonderfully. On other days you won’t, and you need to understand that navigating and understanding all of this is not as simple as sticking to Syns or counting your food as Points. 

It’s not a Diet like what you are used to seeing. It’s not a diet that has any other parameter other than making sure you are in your numbers. 

That’s the magic. 

Do I want you to eat fruits and vegetables? Yes. 

Do I want you to eat protein with every meal? Yes.

Do I want you to also be able to enjoy some time off and have social occasions? Yes. 

Do I want you to be able to eat Pizza? Yes.

You see…what I have described above is how you fit a diet into a balanced well-rounded life. 

And that's what you should want for yourself…really. 

What is a Calorie Deficit Diet Plan?

Conclusions

Now I have spent a fair amount of time in this article trying to put a Calorie Deficit into perspective for you. 

But the truth is this. 

If you want to lose weight and you want to go forth with a Ketogenic Diet then do that. 

Or Slimming World. Or Weight Watchers. 

But promise me one thing. 

You will only continue to follow these plans if they make you happy. If you aren’t happy then please stop.

Happiness will lead to enjoyment, which will lead to adherence which will lead to results which will lead to motivation. 

That's a good train to be on. 

It's my belief that only focussing on the term Calorie Deficit for your weight loss will make you happy, because you have the power, knowledge and education behind what you are doing. 

But if being in a Calorie Deficit isn’t bringing you results, and isn’t making you happy then stop doing that too. 

Because life is too short for you to not be happy. 

A Calorie Deficit is and will always be the only way to lose body fat. How you get into that…is up to you as long as….

…..say it with me… 

It makes you happy. 

Did you find this useful?

I have plenty more articles about weight loss within this website.

Here is a selection I think would make great further reading for you:

  1. 5 Easy Ways To Do A Calorie Deficit without Working Out

  2. 7 Things Stopping Your Calorie Deficit

  3. Why I can’t lose weight no matter what I Do?

 
calorie deficit diet calculator1500 calorie diet planeating 1,500 calories a day femalesuper simple 1,500 calorie meal plan1500 calorie diet plan vegetarian1,500 calorie meal plan ukcalorie deficit calculator1,200 calorie deficitcalorie surpluscalor…
 

You are also invited to get a bundle of Weight Loss Goodies from me and send me a friend request…

Get yourself a free month of workouts (Home and Gym-based options)

Get yourself a free copy of my e-book ”27 Ways To Faster Fast Loss”

Get yourself a free customized Calorie Calculator

Straight to your Inbox

And as I mentioned before….it would be awesome to chat further as friends…

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References:

  1. www.dictionary.com. 2020. Definition Of Calorie | Dictionary.Com. [online] Available at: <https://www.dictionary.com/browse/calorie> [Accessed 11 June 2020].

  2. Champagne, Catherine M et al. “Dietary intakes associated with successful weight loss and maintenance during the Weight Loss Maintenance trial.” Journal of the American Dietetic Association vol. 111,12 (2011): 1826–35. doi:10.1016/j.jada.2011.09.014

  3. www.dictionary.com. 2020. Definition Of Sin | Dictionary.Com. [online] Available at: <https://www.dictionary.com/browse/sin?s=t> [Accessed 11 June 2020].

  4. Ting R, Dugré N, Allan GM, Lindblad AJ. Ketogenic diet for weight loss. Can Fam Physician. 2018;64(12):906.

  5. Stubbs RJ, Morris L, Pallister C, Horgan G, Lavin JH. Weight outcomes audit in 1.3 million adults during their first 3 months’ attendance in a commercial weight management programme. BMC Public Health. 2015;15:882. Published 2015 Sep 10. doi:10.1186/s12889–015–2225–0

  6. Madigan, Claire D et al. “Which weight-loss programmes are as effective as Weight Watchers(R)?: non-inferiority analysis.” The British journal of general practice : the journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners vol. 64,620 (2014): e128–36. doi:10.3399/bjgp14X677491

 
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