The Atkins Diet
Overcoming plateaus on the Atkins diet
If you are experiencing a stall or plateau in your Atkins
weight loss efforts, you are not alone. This occurs from time
to time. However, you first must make sure that you have
actually reached a plateau point.
A plateau means that you have gone an extended period of
time without losing weight or inches. It’s important to take
your measurements before you start your weight loss plan, in
addition to your weight. On some weeks it may not seem like you
are losing any at all on the scale. But a quick look at your
measurements will prove otherwise.
On the Atkins diet you are replacing fat with muscle, which
is denser and heavier. You might actually gain a little weight
because you are building muscle to replace your fat. The result
will be an increase on the scale, but a decrease in your
inches. Your body will be smaller and leaner, but you may weigh
the same.
Before you start your program, measure your chest, waist,
hips, upper arms, thighs and calves. You never know where you
may be losing inches, so it’s important to have these
comprehensive measurements to refer to. It is normal to go
through periods where you body is readjusting. Remember that
you are reforming the composition of your body and this process
will take some time. Check your measurements once a week, just
like your weight, and you can track your overall progress.
There may be periods of 3 to 4 weeks where you have a stall
in weight loss, but a loss in inches. Or vice versa. Using both
methods to track your fat loss is the best assurance for an
accurate measure of your progress. These stall periods are not
a reason to quit or to give up. They are natural parts of the
weight loss process.
Stalls may occur more frequently if you are 5 to 10 pounds
away from being at your goal weight. By following a low-carb,
high-protein way of eating you have created a lot more muscle
in your body. Your muscle-to-fat ratio is higher than ever
before, so your body might be resisting losing anymore fat. It
may be time to rethink your goal weight. Perhaps your body is
trying to tell you something and its time to start maintaining
your weight loss rather than trying to lose more.
There are some other possible causes of stalls and plateaus
on the road to weight loss. If you’ve gone four weeks with no
change in weight or measurements and you are nowhere near your
goal weight, you can try a few different methods to get
yourself out of the rut. First, make sure your carbohydrate
level is in check. If you are eating too many carbohydrate
grams per day, your weight loss will stall. Look for hidden
carbohydrates in packaged foods, dressings and sauces to make
sure they aren’t the culprits in your plateau.
Check your daily water intake. When you are dehydrated, your
body will retain water and that can mimic a plateau. Water will
also help flush ketones from your system and make more room for
new fat burning ketones.
Undereating can also be a cause for weight loss plateaus.
Make sure not to let yourself go hungry and eat smaller, more
frequent meals. Remember, you are on a carbohydrate-restricted
diet, not a calorie-restricted diet. Make sure to have some
protein with every meal and snack. Never go more than 5 hours
without eating something (except overnight of course). Also,
eat freely from the acceptable foods. Don’t try to count
calories or restrict your calorie intake. When your body gets
too few calories, it goes into starvation mode and will hold
onto fat cells.
Increasing your exercise level can help get you through a
plateau as well. As your muscles get used to working out at a
certain level, you’ll have to increase the duration or the
intensity in order to keep challenging your body. Add a new
exercise into the mix, or try increasing weight in resistance
training.
Trying one of these methods will most likely get your weight
loss back on track. Remember that occasional stalls are normal,
but they do not have to last.
(word count 702)
|