Fitness expert Anu Yusuf takes you
through the metabolic highs and lows

When it comes to looking slim and svelte, some know the importance
of watching their diet and getting it right with exercise. For others, it is an
ordeal — getting rid of love handles, bat wings or flabby upper
thighs.
It’s not that they don’t want to make time for
keep-fit activities, it’s just that they probably don’t know their
muscle from fat. Or of ways to speed up their metabolism.
Weight-loss programmes offering a quickie are a-plenty — from
the ‘flat-stomach-in-three-weeks programme’ to the
‘bikini-blitz diet’. When these programmes promise weight loss of
around a kg a day, remember, you are not just losing fat, but muscle and water,
too.
While some specialists concentrate on dietary habits, there
are loads who swear by a precisely controlled exercise programme, some who give
tips on organising your life, and yet others who see obesity as a psychological
problem and offer help in this area. However, for successful long-term weight
reduction, a combination of these is recommended.
So, to crunch off
the weight and be a model of fitness, you must turn up your internal energy
thermostat — in short your metabolism.
YOUR METAB
In order to
understand why the body protects itself so strongly against any attack on its
reserves requires some basic knowledge of the metabolic process. Your metabolism
is the sum of the calorie-burning chemical changes that occur all over your body
at any given moment.
In everyday language, metabolism is repeatedly
mentioned in connection with speed: ‘He has a high metabolic rate’,
‘your metabolism will slow down with this medication’, etc. It is
clear that the speed of the chemical processes in our body can vary. The fact
that metabolism is subject to variation like this means that it is somewhat more
difficult to embark on a specific weight-reduction programme.
The logic is clear:
You
absorb more energy-producing calories than needed and your weight increases; you
absorb less and it goes down. But our metabolism also varies from person to
person.
If the energy uptake drops, energy consumption will
automatically slow down after some time and vice versa. But by how much it slows
down or goes up will depend on the individual.
REV UP YOUR
METABOLISM
Since our metabolic rate changes in reaction to our body
weight, we should avoid activities that slow down our metabolism. There are
three practical ways of stimulating the metabolism:
* Muscle
building (hypertrophy)
* Physical activity
* Eating more or eating
more frequently
There are possible signs that tell us that our
metabolic rate has dropped — lethargy, feeling cold, dry skin, a slow
pulse and low blood pressure. And if you feel any of these, don’t consider
extreme options to raise your metabolic rate — like cutting down on your
sleep, exposing yourself to cold, increasing the consumption of coffee and
nicotine, and doping.
While drugs speed up the metabolism by
stimulating the central nervous system, they come with serious side effects. So
keep to these healthy ways to recharge your batteries.
Muscle Building