Tuesday, June 4, 2013

When did this get here? The Beer Belly


Abdominal obesity, or weight carried around the stomach and waist, is a common problem as people age. It is especially common for men, 30 percent of whom will have a “beer belly” by their 40s or 50s, and 40 percent of whom will grow one by the time they reach their 60s. Men may bemoan their beer belly or laugh at it, but few realize the real and serious risks that are present when a person carries around excess belly fat.

This is a common visual we are forced to deal with as generations of men take pride in their girth and do nothing to prevent the growth of their waistline, pants sizes grow and with each inch your health deteriorates. I am a former fit guy that fell into this trap and now I am trying to reverse the damage done. I have lost the belly and now I am trying to decide if I want to put in the work and build that six pack all the kids rave about. Soon to be 50 years old I can say it's not a priority but I will say I enjoy being out of the danger zone after making some lifestyle changes.

Not all fat is created equal. Studies have shown that the fat stored in certain locations on the body carries much greater health risks than fat stored in other parts of the body. Unfortunately, abdominal fat is one of the most dangerous kinds of fat, carrying increased risk of heart disease, high blood pressure, insulin resistance, and high cholesterol.

This means that a beer belly can pose more risk to a person’s health than significantly greater amounts of fat stored elsewhere. An obese person with fat stored primarily around the hips and legs will have a smaller risk of heart disease and better health overall than a man who carries a beer belly on an otherwise trim frame.

While “beer belly” has become the common term for abdominal fat in a man, it can lead to the misconception than only excessive beer consumption can lead to beer belly formation. In fact, any kind of high fat, high sugar diet combined with insufficient exercise can cause a beer belly to grow. Many men do consume much of their excess sugar in beer form, and combine their drinking with high fat and high sodium snacks in order to replenish their electrolytes, so the nickname is understandable. But men should not make the mistake of thinking that they are beer belly immune of they do not imbibe.

One of the most frustrating aspects of weight loss can be the fact that exercising the area you want to slim down does not necessarily help to burn fat in that location. Men who want to trim their beer gut might start a heavy-duty routine of sit-ups and crunches, but this is unlikely to help them burn belly fat quickly. Of course, any exercise is better than a totally sedentary lifestyle. But focused muscle exercises are not designed to burn fat. You will probably end up with solid abs that are invisible beneath the belly fat, or even strained muscles as a result of straining one set of muscles too far.

Instead, aerobic exercise and better dietary habits are the way to make abdominal fat disappear. Aerobic exercise will improve overall health and well-being in addition to burning fat, and a healthy diet will have similar positive effects. If you make enough overall healthy adjustments to your diet, you don’t even have to remove beer from your diet in order to get rid of the beer belly and make sure it doesn’t return!

Monday, June 3, 2013

Summer Obsession!

First day of summer for the kids from school today, this is the time of year when believe it or not I have a difficult time working out. I lack the motivation to get up and get things done before I have the fatherly duties of driving my daughter to school. Without that looming over my head I procrastinate and end up missing my window to get done the things I should. The kids are home so I lack the push to head out into the garage and execute.

Last year at this time I had six days until I would be unemployed for the next five months and I started out this time with the confidence that I would find work in no time so I was looking forward to a few weeks off with the family. Two months later I was most likely clinically depressed and did not realize it. What kept me from sinking as low as you can go? Being a Beachbody Coach and whichever workout I would do that day. I also discovered the Primal Blue Print and changed most of my eating habits. This summer I will dive deeper into my Primal experiments and commit more effort to see how I can continue to improve my health. These things kept a bad situation from being a horrible experience.
   
It’s easy to think that working out lasts only as long as a workout. Wrong! Your goals and your method for getting there need to be with you day and night. A rolling list of to do’s: drink your water, watch your posture and be become more aware of your body, eat more food, resist the bad food, stretch that muscle group, research that question, find support for that issue, help others to succeed in their goals, drink your water, it is a continuous process day in and day out.

Some people call the workouts I have been doing an obsession, and my behavior obsessive. If it is, it must rank as a healthy one and it certainly doesn’t hurt anyone. I manage to hold down a challenging career, be a present parent in both of my children’s life, a supportive husband, coach a little baseball, and maintain a pretty active outgoing life with friends and family, all intertwined quite happily with this ‘obsession’.

Because of my obsession I have become a better parent, better husband and a better person. I know this just by the way I wake up each morning and get out of bed with that much more energy than I did before all of this started. I look myself in the mirror each morning and like the changes I am making and the progress I see. Everyone should be this obsessive about their life, you only get one.