What is the Best Diet Plan for You? – Factors to Consider

by admin on March 10, 2010

If you want to drop some fat and can’t decide what is the best diet plan to follow, this article aims to help. There are countless of diets on the market, and unfortunately a lot of them are at best useless, and at worst extremely unhealthy. If you’ve already attempted several diets and not got the results you were aiming for, you’re probably afraid of being ripped off again. So how do you know which plan to select?

Great diet plans – what to look for

If you want to lose weight in a sustainable, healthy way, make sure you go for a food plan that meets these criteria:

  • It should allow plenty of food, and not expect you to go hungry

  • It should be based on unprocessed nutritious food, not meal replacements

  • It shouldn’t involve taking potentially dangerous diet pills

  • It should be flexible enough to allow for restaurant visits and occasional treats

  • It should provide a food plan that you can stick with for a lifetime

The last point is particularly vital – most dieters who slim down eventually gain it back, and fall prey to the miserable yoyo cycle that many are familiar with. So when selecting a diet plan, don’t just go for a quick fix – choose something you can live with over the long term.

Having said that though, be aware that adjusting your eating patterns may be challenging to start with. Overweight people are often in the habit of eating too much unhealthy junk food (or even just too much healthy food). Making better choices and stopping the cycle of overeating means creating new habits, and that can be difficult. So don’t decide that a diet plan isn’t for you just because the initial period is tough. Most people discover that after the first couple of weeks or so, they begin to prefer more nutritious foods and no longer even want to overeat – this is a great place to be at!

So if you want to lose weight and are looking for an effective program to follow, it’s best to stop thinking in terms of ‘going on a diet’ and instead put your focus on making an ongoing change in your eating patterns. When considering a diet plan, do so with the intention that this will be the final diet you’ll ever buy and use – after making this decision, many of the short term diets available in books and online will no longer seem like a good idea, and you’ll find yourself attracted to those which take a more sensible, nutritious approach. With a great diet plan, you’ll be so satisfied with your new eating patterns, and with the results, that you’ll have no need to ‘diet’ ever again.

Lea Jones
http://www.articlesbase.com/nutrition-articles/what-is-the-best-diet-plan-for-you-factors-to-consider-746196.html

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{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

Joshua March 10, 2010 at 4:26 am

Marathons, ultra marathons, and triathlons.?
So I’ve taken a huge liking to running since I started many years ago. I’ve run a good few 5K and 10K races over the years but I keep wanting more The majority of my 5K times are under 21 or 22 min and the 10K runs are usually around the 50min or less mark. I’ve heard about marathons many a time and triathlons also. I work with a guy who recently qualified for his 3rd Ironman (HOLY SH*T!) and he talks it up like it’s the best thing since sliced bread. Not 2 days ago I sent in my registration form for the Oklahoma City Memorial marathon in April (which is a Boston qualifier). I’m very confident that I can finish the run and within my own personal alotted time of 4:30:00 and I wouldn’t mind qualifying for the Boston marathon which means finishing in less than 3:11:00. I’m also considering entering the Redman triathlon in September which is an Olympic distance triathlon. Also just this month I discovered something that pretty much made me melt, the ultra marathon. I have to get to that point. Being able to run a 50K or a 100 mile race would be the most awesome feeling in the world. I’m also entering the Hotter Than Hell 100 in August with my dad for the cycling. It should be pretty easy since me and my dad have been riding for years and the 50 mile rides are getting way too easy. Currently I’m maintaining a training schedule geared to get me though Navy SEAL training. Monday’s are my long run days since I’m coming off a light workout and swim on Saturday and Sunday’s are my off day. This Monday I ran a comfortable 8 miles, only stopping becuase it was 11pm and I couldn’t feel my hands anymore in the sub-freezing weather. Next Monday I’m going for 10 and I’m thinking I’ll do a half-marathon on MKLJ day since I’m off work. Thursdays are my long swim days and my most recent was a quick mile in a little under 45 min. Can anyone help me figure out a way to train for these events while still keeping the tight training schedule I’m already on or should I start a new one and make personal adjustments as I go. Also is my weight going to be a factor. I have a heavy bone structure and I’m fairly top heavy (6’1" 185…mostly centered in my chest) so what kind of diet and weight control plan am I looking at. any helpful tips and hints are welcome and greatly appreciated.

hshadow81 March 10, 2010 at 9:28 am

Firstly, there’s a huge difference between 6.2 miles(10k) and 26.2 miles.

Don’t try for the 3hr 11min marathon, that would take 7min 17sec miles, and already a 10k at 50 minutes is 8 minute miles. You’ll burn yourself out early in the race. The 4:30 goal is certainly doable, working out to a 10 minute 18 second per mile pace. I’d recommend running at 9:30 slowest on your long run days.

Diet-wise, don’t worry about eating too much with so much training and you seem to be a healthy weight.

Also for training for a marathon, just doing long runs alone isn’t going to help your times improve, you gotta do tempo runs and interval work.

Tempo runs are… I prefer a nice 6 mile route where I have set mile markers and know where each mile is. So on tempo run days I warm up for 15min, stretch at the start, then run making each of my miles more or less even. Tempo runs suck in the winter and you really gotta be warmed up to do them properly. I’d try starting with 5 mile tempo runs attempting to hit exactly 7:40, and changing it depending on how hard it was.

Interval running work is like LT work on the bike… 5 minutes hard, 2 easy, repeat a few times. Try to do on a track so you can keep the hard parts nice and even.

As for biking, do lactic threshold (LT) work and long bikes. Enter in time trials to keep training competitive, and if you don’t have aerobars on your bike, get clip ons. As for the hottern’ hell 100, good luck, it has a reputation for living up to its name.

As for swimming, I’m a terrible swimmer, and many triathletes are, just try to stay clear of the person’s legs in front of you, getting kicked in the face would be a shiite way to start an iron-man. Find a pool and do laps and intervals, make your heart rate go up, work on your form, thats all I can really say about swimming.

If you want to do an iron-man, you should swim, bike or run everyday. Once or twice a week you should do "brick workouts" where you combine two or all three events into a workout that will make you want to cry.

good luck!
References :
I run competitively… and bike. no swimming for me.

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