Burn The Fat, Feed The Muscle
Reprintable Articles
Banking
Calories - Eat Less Now To Pig Out Later?
Affiliate instructions: You
have permission to publish this article in your e-zine, on your
website, on your blog or on your forum, provided the entire article is
unaltered and the bio/about the author box is included in its entirety.
All you need to do is copy and paste. You may of course, replace all
www.burnthefat.com links with your affiliate hoplink. I recommend
including the burnthefat.com website link at the top and bottom of the
article: Once underneath the author by-line at the top and again in the
author bio/resource box at the bottom, which gives the reader more than
one place to click through. It's also a great idea to include a
clickable book
cover graphic and or an author photo
with each article you print.
Title: Banking Calories - Eat
Less Now To Pig Out Later?
By line: By Tom Venuto, CSCS, NSCA-CPT
URL: www.burnthefat.com (replace with
your clickbank affiliate hoplink - click on "hoplink instructions in
navigation links to your left if you need help)
Word count: 702 words
Related keywords:calories, calorie
counting, bingeing, skipping meals, dieting, weight loss, fat loss
Banking Calories -
Eat Less Now To Pig Out Later?
By Tom Venuto, NSCA-CPT, CSCS
www.burnthefat.com
Suppose you’re on a diet and you have a
banquet or a holiday party coming up. You’re expecting a big
meal to be served for dinner, and there will be open bar with lots and
lots of “party snacks.” You’re not sure
if there will be any healthy food there, but you are sure that
you’re going to be in a festive, partying mood! What should
you do? Should you cut back on your food earlier in the day to make
room for the big feast?
What I’ve just described is commonly
known as "banking calories," which is analogous to saving calories like
money because you're going to consume more later, and it’s a
very common practice among dieters. If you’re really serious
about your diet and fitness goals however, then the answer is no, you
should NOT “bank calories! Here's why and here's what you
should do instead:
First of all, if you're being really honest with
yourself, you have to agree that there's almost always something
healthy to eat at any gathering. You know those tables you see at
holiday parties that are covered with yards of chips, dips, pretzels,
cookies, salami, candies, cheese, punch, liquor, and a seemingly
endless assortment of other goodies? Well, did you also notice that
there's usually a tray full of carrot sticks, cauliflower, celery,
fruit, turkey breast and other healthy snacks too?
No matter where you are, you always have options,
so make the best choice you can based on whatever your options are. If
nothing else, you can choose to eat a small portion of "party foods"
rather than a huge portion, thereby obeying the law of calorie balance.
If you skip meals or eat less earlier in the day
to bank calories for a big feast at night, you are thinking only in
terms of calories, but you’re depriving yourself of the
valuable nutrition you need all day long in terms of protein (amino
acids), carbohydrates, essential fats, vitamins, minerals and other
nutrients that come from healthy food, as well as the small frequent
meals required to stoke the furnace of your metabolism.
Not only that, but eating less early in the day in
anticipation for overeating later is more likely to increase your
appetite, causing you to binge or eat much more than you thought you
would at night when the banquet does arrive.
Eating healthy food earlier in the day is likely
to fill you up and you'll be less likely to overeat in the evening.
High fiber foods, healthy fats and especially lean protein, tend to
suppress your appetite the most.
I don’t like the concept of "banking
calories." Your body just doesn't work that way - it tends to seek
equilibrium by adjusting your appetite to the point where you consume
the same total amount of calories in the end anyway.
Even if it worked the way you wanted it to, why
would you eat less (starve) in an attempt to burn more fat, then
overeat (binge) and put the fat right back on? Why allow yourself to
put on fat in the first place?
A starving and bingeing pattern will almost
certainly cause more damage than an occasional oversize meal. Some
dieticians might even say that this kind of behavior borders on
disordered eating.
A better approach is to stay on your regular menu
of healthy foods and small meals through the entire day - business as
usual - and then go ahead and treat yourself to a "cheat meal," but
sure to keep your portions small.
It should be a big relief to know that on special
occasions, whether it's a party, restaurant meal, banquet or holiday
dinner, you can eat whatever you want with little or no ill effect on
body composition, as long as you respect the law of calorie balance.
However, you CANNOT starve and binge and expect not to reap negative
consequences.
To burn fat and be healthy, you don't have to be a
"party pooper" or completely deny yourself of foods you enjoy, but you
do need to have the discipline to stick with your regular meal plan
most of the time and control your portion sizes all of the time.
About the Author:
Tom Venuto is a lifetime natural bodybuilder, an
NSCA-certified personal trainer (CPT), certified strength &
conditioning specialist (CSCS), and author of the #1 best-selling
e-book, "Burn the Fat, Feed The Muscle.”
Tom has written more than 200 articles and has been featured in print
magazines such as IRONMAN, Australian IRONMAN, Natural Bodybuilding,
Muscular Development, Exercise for Men and Men’s Exercise, as
well as on hundreds of websites worldwide. For information on Tom's Fat
Loss program, visit: www.burnthefat.com
|