The Little Green
Book...
by Chris Brewer
Low carb, high carb, Cave Man, grapefruit,
- diet, diet, diet - sheesh! If you're like me, you know that
you need to lose some weight, and you want some solid common
sense guidance to help you get there that works within your busy
lifestyle. Well, I am not a nutritionist but I think I stayed
in at least one Holiday Inn at some point in my life, and therefore
I think I can help...
Let's get down to basics: I'm gonna assume you are 1]
fairly intelligent and 2] eat fairly healthy - if you
don't, you should. What's "fairly healthy"? You're
not sucking down Mickie D's for breakfast, lunch and dinner -
you know what foods are generally good for you and while you
may drop the occasional splurge on your system, you try to do
your best regularly, OK? Yet despite all of this and your cycling
/ whatever exercise program, you're not seeing the results you
want, and you're frustrated - why won't the damn weight come
off and stay off? I believe that for most of us it's simple math:
calories in vs. calories out. And if calories out is greater
than calories in, you'll lose weight over time - and I think
we can do some things so that this miracle of modern math works
sensibly for you. Here's the formula we'll work with:
Calories In - Calories Required
- Calories Expended = Caloric Deficit or Caloric Surplus
*** My disclaimer: I don't recommend
undertaking any new exercise or diet program without getting
solid medical advice. While what I am going to tell you will
probably come under the heading of "Duh - common sense",
if you know or even suspect you have unique circumstances, don't
do it unless you talk to your doc first, OK? That said...
Calories Required - Make no mistake, we need calories. These
are the energy units we get from food that fuels our body to
do everything from typing on a computer keyboard to winning the
Tour de France. That's the good part - the "bad" part
is that our body is smart - when it gets more calories than it
requires it doesn't just waste them away (you wish) - it stores
them, yep, in fat, for later use (or to fill out your cycling
shorts). So now the dilemma - how many calories do you need to
intake for your lifestyle? That's important to know because recall
we're doing math here, and we need to know what we can shove
in our Pie Hole just to do our normal daily thing - breathing,
walking to and from the couch, etc.
For this I'll actually refer to a more creditable resource than
moi' - check out the page HERE to estimate
your BMR (Basal Metabolic Rate). Enter your age, height, and
weight info and you'll get a pretty good baseline of what it
takes to keep you sucking air day in and day out - for me it's
around 2050 calories a day.
*Interesting TdF note: riders in "Le Tour" intake 9,000-10,000
calories per day
- and lose 4-7 pounds over the course of the race!
Calories In
- Now here comes "The Little Green Book". I was talking
to LA's coach Chris Carmichael about diet one day, and he recommended
keeping a journal of everything that I ate. Seeing as I had several
pocket sized (and green) notebooks laying around the house, I
used them - your color may vary. But the big thing that was important
in the first few days was: don't change a thing in the way you
eat or drink! Starting on Thu morning and through Sunday night
(or Sat morning through Tue night), write it all down and live
your life just as you would normally. It's kinda important to
use these days initially so you'll be able to get a sense of
your normal weekday routine - as well as that weekend that kicks
your butt, too.
So what'd you eat, calorie-wise? With most packaging today, it's
as simple as reading the label to figure out what went in, making
sure that you understand the portion size it lists (ex: if you
slam two twinkies and it says "portions per pack: 2, calories
per portion 500, you just got 1,000 down the throat - got it?)
But then there are some times when we're not sure what our calories
in was 'cause the apple / pork chop / beer didn't have a label
on it - no worries, we're here to help! Click HERE and you'll
find over 4500 items with their basic caloric values. You can
also surf over to something like Amazon.com and get a handy book
with even more stuff - one example is "The All in One Calorie
Counter", it's got over 10,000 items listed and costs around
$5... either way, you'll need a good reference to know what's
what.
Now for the moment of truth - compiling the calories item by
item, and honestly. You're not hurting me to write down you had
three beers Friday night when it was closer to five - and that
bowl of ice cream, one serving, or more like three? First go
back and tally up those 4 "free" days and get a feel
for your usual Calories In. I'll bet you can immediately see
some areas of questionable value, right? Compare this to your
BMR caloric level you calculated and take stock of how close
you are to it. But in all fairness, we're still missing one part
of the equation before we can make an overall assessment.
Calories Out - The other daily entry you need to make in
your LGB is any exercise you did. Figuring out calories burned
per hour is a bit of a guesstimate - there's a decent calculator
HERE, but for the
most part I use around 700 per hour for moderate exercise (like
light jogging) and 1,000 per hour for more vigorous sessions,
like our Tuesday Nighter barn burner local cycling race. If I
have to err, I'd rather be conservative than thinking I am doing
more than I really am.
Now what? - it's time for math - simple math. Let's use
some actual data from my LGB on Thu:
- Breakfast - 530, Lunch - 570/1100,
Dinner - 910/2300 calories in
(Note the running subtotal so I know where I am throughout the
day)
- Cb's BMR: 2050 calories
- Exercise - 60 minutes of moderate
cardio (estimate 700 calories expended)
Formula: 2300 (In) - 2050 (BMR) - 700 (Exercise) = 450 calorie
deficit
Did I lose weight that day? Technically yes - but was I ready
to go out and buy new jeans? Nope. In reality, some real nutrition
folks might tell you I didn't take in enough calories that day,
and while they are probably right, I didn't feel hungry and I
was able to perform at the level I wanted to.
The all important question and answer:
How much does it take to lose
1 pound of fat?
A calorie deficit of 3500.
So doing more (simple) math,
if you get an average deficit of 250 calories per day, it will
take 14 days to drop one pound. Note I do not recommend severe
calorie deficit diets - it's not healthy and you're not going
to be able to live this way realistically, right? So now you
have the weapons at hand to make some sound decisions in your
life: you know what your body needs, you know what you took in,
and you know what you put out. You can now plan out a sensible
program to either maintain the weight you're at, or drop those
pounds that are holding you back.
Just in the way we live our lives, we know we're gonna have highs
and lows - the important part is that you are now hopefully more
aware of what's going on over the long term, and if you make
the effort to eat right and limit your calories to what you need
(or in order to lose weight, a little less than what you need!),
you'll be further down the the road to that body condition you
want.
Hope this has helped, ride hard and start packing those LGBs!
- Cb...
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