Intermittent Fasting For Dummies. Janet Bond Brill

Intermittent Fasting For Dummies - Janet Bond Brill


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carry most of your extra weight in your hips, upper thighs, and buttocks. Pear-shaped people are significantly healthier than those people with apple-shaped bodies. Fat deposited on the hips is less likely to travel around the body, reducing the risk of diabetes and heart disease.

      A waist circumference measurement is a simple screening technique to determine what your shape is. If you fall into this increased health risk category (unhealthy BMI and an apple shape), then following an intermittent fasting plan is a wonderful way to help you lose that stubborn belly fat.

      

The following waist measurements are red flags, suggesting that you carry fat around the abdominal area:

       Women 18 and older: Waist of 35 inches or more

       Men 18 and older: Waist of 40 inches or more

      

Follow these steps to accurately measure your waist with a tape measure:

      1 Relax and stand.With a tape measure, start at the top of your hip bone and then bring the tape measure all the way around your body, raising the tape until it’s at a level slightly above your belly button.

      2 Make sure the tape isn’t too tight and that it’s straight, even on your back. Don’t hold your breath while measuring because doing so can affect the results.

      3 Check the number on the tape measure right after you exhale.When you place the tape over the skin, do so just to make contact but don’t compress the skin in any way.

      4 Take all measurements twice and average them.Taking the measurements twice, consecutively, and then averaging the results ensures greater accuracy.

      5 Record to the nearest half-inch.

      You can repeat this measurement every few months and record the number in your journal. Tracking all your numbers in your journal, over time, gives you a motivation-boosting visual and a reward for all your hard work.

      Determining what a healthy percentage of body fat is for you

      Weight alone isn’t a clear indicator of your health because it doesn’t distinguish between pounds that come from body fat and those that come from muscle. Excess body fat is the culprit when promoting disease, so knowing what your percentage of body fat is important. The most reliable method of figuring out how much fat is in your body is to use measurements of body composition.

      You can refer to professionals to measure your body fat or you can do it yourself. The following two sections examine these options in greater detail.

      Seeking pros to measure your body composition

      You can get reasonably accurate results from fitness centers or universities where specially trained fitness professionals use valid tools ranging from simple measurements to expensive tests to measure your body fat. Some of these techniques include skin fold calipers, underwater weighing tanks, air displacement plethysmography (Bod Pods), and bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) equipment.

      

If you try several of these methods, you may receive different measurements. You basically get what you pay for. Obtaining an estimate of your body fat from unscientific methods (such as scales and untrained fitness professionals) produces notoriously erroneous results. Underwater weighing, magnetic resonance imaging, computerized tomography (CT) scans, and air displacement plethysmography are the most accurate, but they’re also the costliest, unless insurance covers them. If you’re able to use more than one tool, be sure to keep track of changes in your body fat over time in your journal to keep you motivated.

      Some people think that the lower the amount of fat in the body, the better. However, that’s not true, because the body needs a minimum percentage of fat, called essential fat that is lower in men (3 percent) and greater for women (12 to 15 percent) for good health. (Only elite athletes ever come close to these extremely low body fat numbers.)

      Doing it yourself

      You can also estimate your percent body fat yourself using a tape measure. Just follow these easy steps to get your percent body fat estimate:

      1 Measure the circumference of your waist (at the narrowest point), hips (at the widest point) and neck (at the narrowest point).

      2 Take the measurements twice and follow the same guidelines that I discuss in the “Gauging your inches to link your weight and health” for measuring your waist.

      3 To calculate your body fat percentage, go to the online calculator (http://fitness.bizcalcs.com/Calculator.asp?Calc=Body-Fat-Navy), enter your gender, weight, height, and your measurements.Voila. Your percent body fat estimate.

      Here is an example using Debbie from the earlier “Guesstimating accurately” section:

      If you determine that you’re not happy with the category you’re in, then you can use that info as another means to motivate yourself to exercise and stick to your intermittent fasting plan.

An illustration of the percent body fat categories.

      © John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

      FIGURE 2-2: Percent body fat categories.

      Verifying Calories As Your Last Resort

      IN THIS CHAPTER

      

Scrutinizing your intermittent fasting progress

      

Considering calories

      

Figuring out your calorie math

      

Deciphering your calories in

      

Coming to terms with your calories out

      Calories … you hate them, you don’t want to hear about them, and you certainly don’t want to count them. You may even be a bit taken aback by a discussion of calories when you thought intermittent fasting didn’t count calories. After all, intermittent fasting is about when you eat, not so much about what you eat, right? Yes and no. The beauty and simplicity of intermittent fasting plans lie in the focus more on timing rather than the nuisance of counting calories.

      It’s up to you: You can immediately skip this chapter, or you can instead use this chapter


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