Tuesday, April 3, 2012

{Food For Thought Tuesday: Weight vs. Inches}

As I’m saying this to you – I’m screaming at the top of my lungs to myself trying to get it sink in that I shouldn’t worry about my weight, but instead of the inches and fat that I’ve gotten rid of. Because so many of us want to lose weight, at any given moment, most of us know how much we weigh. Most of us even have a favorite scale, the favorite being the one that gives us the lowest number possible. We talk about weight, think about weight and, sometimes, lie about weight, but how often do we think about what that number means?

For too many of us, weight isn't just a number but something that can actually change how we feel about ourselves. But, what does your weight really mean and how useful is it when it comes to tracking weight loss progress?

When you talk about losing weight, what you usually mean is slimming down. But slimming down doesn't always mean losing weight. It may sound odd, but it's possible to get thinner without actually seeing a change in your weight. This happens when you lose body fat while gaining muscle. Your weight may stay the same, even as you lose inches, a sign that you're moving in the right direction. But, if the scale doesn't change, you may not even be aware that you're getting real results. Knowing the difference between losing weight and losing body fat can change how you get results and may even change how you look at your own body.
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You now know that focusing on fat loss is much more important than focusing on your weight. When you lose body fat, you're making permanent changes in your body, shifting your body composition so that you have less fat and more muscle.

When you first start a program, you may need extra encouragement to keep going, proof that what you're doing is working and the scale may not give you that. Other ways the scale can work against you:

It measures everything: The number on the scale includes everything - muscles, fat, bones, organs, fat, food and water. For that reason, your scale weight can be a deceptive number.

It doesn't reflect the changes happening in your body: If you're doing cardio and strength training, you may build lean muscle tissue at the same time you're losing fat. In that case, the scale may not change even though you're getting leaner and slimmer.

It doesn't reflect your health: As mentioned above, the scale can't tell the difference between fat and muscle. That means a person can have a low body weight, but still have unhealthy levels of body fat.

It isn't always a positive motivator: If you step on the scale and you're unhappy with what you see, how does that make you feel? You may question everything you're doing, wondering why you even bother at all. Focusing on weight may overshadow the positive results you're getting such as fat loss, more endurance and higher energy levels.

Even if you're not ready to stop weighing yourself entirely, using other ways to measure progress can keep you motivated and help you realize that you are making changes, no matter what the scale says.

Go by how your clothes fit. If they fit more loosely, you know you're on the right track 

Take your measurements to see if you're losing inches 

Get your body fat tested 

Set performance goals. Instead of worrying about weight loss or fat loss, focus on completing a certain number of workouts each week or competing in a race.

If the scale is making you crazy, taking a break from weighing yourself may just open your eyes to other possibilities. Your weight isn't the only measure of your success. Put away the scale and you may just see how far you've really come. Do you hear that Jessica???
Jessica Signature

2 comments:

  1. Totally needed to read this today! You are in my head. I had gotten hurt and my 3 mile running regime was decimated, I couldn't run for 3 months, which eliminated all my hard work so at the end of February I started my running program over. I weighed myself just to give me an idea of where of was, my eating habits helped, dropped 5 pounds. Great, right? I didn't check the scale again until this morning...NOTHING lost, nothing gained according to my scale. I wanted to cry. I wanted to scream and throw something, but I was like my legs are getting toned though, I can see my stomach is a bit flatter...what gives? Reading your post today was PERFECT! I have to keep these things in mind and keep it positive! Thanks Jessica!

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  2. I'm sooo happy that this post was right on time for you...as it was for me! This journey of living a healthy life in return of transforming my body is definitely not an easy one. It almost makes me resent the weight loss shows on TV as they make it look so easy. Then again I think, if all I did was workout all day and had a personal chef, and trainer knocking on my door daily, I too would drop lbs like crazy. However, since we live in the real world - focusing on inches down, fat lost, and how we steadily are getting stronger, is what's going to help us reach our ultimate goal. And how sweet it's gonna be! :-)

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