You may think you know when you look in the mirror, or you may be
too busy trying to cover up unshapely areas to really see yourself as you are.
Do you know how much fat you're carrying, compared to how much muscle? Do you
know where you tend to gain weight–upper body, lower body or around the middle?
Until you know the answers to these questions, you are not ready to make your
personal plan for losing weight and keeping it off. Understanding your body is
the first step to reaching your best personal shape. As someone who teaches
both doctors and the public about obesity, I believe weight loss has been
overemphasized and body shape underemphasized. You have probably read about the
Body-Mass Index (BMI), which is a weight-to-height ratio. If your BMI is
greater than 25, you are considered overweight in the United States, and if it
is greater than 30 you are obese. This ratio has been a powerful way for
scientists to document the obesity epidemic in this country and its effects on
health and disease. However, when it comes to you as an individual, it can be
misleading. A football player can be considered overweight on the BMI scale,
but if the extra weight being carried is muscle, he is not really fat. A thin
woman can have a normal BMI, yet still
be over-fat. So shape counts.
Shapes are personal and go beyond the usual apple and pear. Women
can have three typical body shapes–upper body fat, lower body fat and both
upper and lower body fat. Men usually only get upper body fat. The upper body
stores fat in times of stress and some people can lose and gain weight rapidly
in the upper body. The lower body fat in women responds to female hormones such
as estrogen and progesterone and stores fat for breastfeeding a newborn baby.
Women who have both upper and lower body fat will lose their upper body fat
first. Women with more upper body fat tend to have more muscle than women with
lower body fat and will need more protein in their diet to help control their
hunger. Losing weight is harder if you have lower body fat rather than upper
body fat, but the medical benefits of losing your upper body fat are greater.
Losing weight around your neck, face, chest and waist usually goes along with
losing fat on the inside as well. So as you look better, you are also improving
your health tremendously.
Finally, there are two more body shapes to consider: The shape you
can change and the shape you can't change. It is important to know the
difference and work on the shape you can change, while adjusting your wardrobe
and attitudes to the shape you cannot change. Due to low metabolism, many women
with lower body fat can't lose weight just by cutting calories. These lower
body-fat cells are resistant to both exercise and diet. Only a personalized
program can help make sure you get enough protein to control cravings and build
or maintain lean muscle.




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