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    Why losing weight is so hard and gaining weight is so easy

    Scale

    You just went away for the weekend and you came back to find that you gained 5 pounds over the course of 3 days. In your disbelief, you quickly curse the Weight Gods for being so cruel. Sound familiar? This was me last weekend. A little jaunt to Montreal, eating at decadent cafes, packed it on quick. This inspired me to discuss the seemingly unbalanced equation of weight gain vs. weight loss, the facts that surround the issue and how losing the 5 pounds feels so much harder than gaining them:

    FACT 1 - It is Simple Math: To maintain your ideal weight, you need to eat as many calories as you burn in one day. The balanced equation looks like this:

    Calories Eaten = Basal Metabolic Rate + Physical Activity

    If what you eat equals more than what your body uses, you will gain weight. In the situation of a vacation, it is likely that you eat more unhealthy food than normal and possibly get less exercise, resulting in an imbalanced equation, with a higher number of calories on the eaten side than on the burned side. That imbalance over the course of a few days can easily represent a few pounds. (To assess an approximate of how many calories you need, click here.)

    FACT 2 - A Pound is a Pound is a Pound: One pound of body mass represents 3,500 calories. Regardless, if you are trying to lose a pound or gain a pound, the pound will always represent 3,500 calories. So, if you eat 3,500 calories more than your body requires, you will gain 1 pound. Similarly, if you eat 3,500 calories less than your body requires, you will lose 1 pound.

    FACT 3 - Exercise is Weight Discriminating: Whether you are 120 pounds or 175 pounds, you will gain one pound from eating 3,500 calories more than you need. Unfortunately, this doesn't hold true for burning calories. How much you weigh actually dictates how many calories you burn per hour. The more you weigh, the more you burn, and as a result, the easier it is to lose the pound...sound crazy? It is true. Check out the Calories Burned Chart .

    FACT 4 - Aging Contributes to Weight Gain: As if aging doesn't contribute enough to unfavorable things, it also contributes to weight gain. As we get older, our metabolism slows down, requiring us to need less food and calories. If you don't modify your caloric intake as you get older to reflect this change in metabolism, you will start to see weight gain.

    The Bad News: Unfortunately, eating an extra couple of unhealthy snacks or drinking a few extra glasses of wine can happen in a blink of an eye. However, the time and energy required to burn off those calories takes a lot more effort. We have provided a chart on what 1,000 calories looks like on both sides in the chart below (remember, it is 3,500 calories that make up a pound).

    Calorie Chart

    The Good News: Whether it is rapid or slow weight gain that you have experienced, losing the extra weight can be tackled through two avenues (and should be): calorie reduction and exercise . Choosing to lose weight through both calorie reduction and exercise will accelerate the process. If for seven days you burn 200 extra calories through exercise and reduce your food intake by 300 calories each day, you will lose that extra pound. Further, it is a lot easier than trying to either reduce your caloric intake by 3,500 calories (which is physically impossible) or burning an extra 3,500 calories during exercise (which takes a ridiculous amount of time and energy).

    What you Can Do: Assess whether your weight gain was a rapid gain due to atypical behavior (E.g., vacationing) or a longer-term gain. If it was a rapid gain, there is a good chance you will lose the weight by returning to your normal habits. You might have to be a little strict for a day or two, but you shouldn't feel like a major overhaul is in order. If, however, you have gained the weight over a period of time, assess your habits and think about what has changed in your life. Have you stopped exercising? Have you let your eating habits go? Have you hit a milestone birthday? Once you can assess the reality of your situation, remember the equation: to maintain balance, burn the calories you eat.

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    141 comments

    • Luke  •  4 months ago
      This is #$%$ Tell this to any hardgainer. I eat heaps of good foods high in protein, carbs etc. Workout 4 days a week and still can barely gain a kg. If you exercise and eat well, weight comes off (unless you have a medical condition). But for people like me with a high metabolism you can eat heaps and still not gain weight. So delete your essay and avoid any further embarrassment.
      • Laura 16 days ago
        I feel super bad for you
      • John 8 days ago
        did you even read the article Luke?
    • Andre  •  8 months ago
      Metabolism is the key to most weight issues
    • Kathleen  •  1 year 9 months ago
      give me a nick name.don't know how to do it.SorryI am so used ti taking part in political talkbacks but this one is beyond my ken.
      I need a "nick name" tell me please how?
    • BILL  •  2 years 2 months ago
      Boo Hoo!!! I am desperately trying to gain weight! I am 6'5 and weigh 170 lbs. I eat around 8,000 to 10,000 calories every day, and can barely gain a pound or two! I am sick of this!!! It is not fair. I eat just total crap too... Ice cream, fried foods, tons of beer, and nothing works... I even sit on my ass all day and do nothing to burn any calories... I need help!!!

      It is not just about people trying to lose the weight!!! LET ME MAKE THAT CLEAR!!!
    • Nickie  •  3 years 1 month ago
      in a year after a surgery i gained almost 50 lbs and i cant lose it and cant stay away from the food it is my best freind please help
    • Jett  •  3 years 9 months ago
      Thanks for the info. I had heard that cutting out 250 calories plus burning 250 calories each day would do it. While it's good to know the rules, it's also depressing to know it's so easy to gain weight!
    • banana  •  3 years 9 months ago
      wow
    • STEVENS  •  3 years 9 months ago
      Measuring calories eaten is old school. Why dont the so called experts address the calories absorbed vs calories eaten factor? The efficiency of the digestive system is the variable that the experts refuse to acknowlege. The experts arent so expert after all.
    • Ryan  •  3 years 9 months ago
      One more thing to add, an obese person with more muscle tissue than a skinny person who has little bodyfat may have a higher BMR. However, the skinny person, especially if they're an athlete with a low bodyfat percentage, is going to process all incoming cals better than the obese individual because that person's insulin sensitivity is much higher than the obese person. This means the active cells, primarily skeletal muscle cells, will much more readily assimilate incoming nutrients when there's an insulin spike. There really is more to successful dieting and fitness than simple cals in v. cals out, to think otherwise is vastly oversimplifying the matter. Yes it's important to watch the cals, but it's just as important if not more so to watch the kinds of cals consumed, just as it is important to know how to perform the right exercise to optimize fat loss.
    • liliecv3  •  3 years 9 months ago
      gaining weight is not so easy for everyone, that's not true... it all depends on the person, and many issues... but it not always easy!?
    • Brett Blumenthal - Sheer ...  •  3 years 9 months ago
      vixenvena...let's be nice...first off, it was an illustrative example...second off, water adds weight, but not permanent weight.
    • matthew  •  3 years 6 months ago
      Its very true and it stinks that it is way easier to gain than loose weight!
    • A Yahoo! User  •  3 years 9 months ago
      Grizzy, in some ways I wish I had your problem. I can just look at a cookie and gain ten pounds!!!! It's a real pain in the $#@!$#@ when you can't lose what you want.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  3 years 9 months ago
      Excellant info we should be greatful to the author
    • A Yahoo! User  •  3 years 9 months ago
      Boy do I know what this is like!!! My doctor warned me that after age 30 my metabolism would slow down, and how true it is!!! I used to be able to drop weight quickly with just a few little changes. Now it takes me three times the effort to do the same thing now. This article gave some pretty good info. I'll try to keep in all in mind!!
    • Brett Blumenthal - Sheer ...  •  3 years 9 months ago
      bigums...that is the point! Look at Fact 3...it makes the point you just stated.
    • Shanna  •  3 years 9 months ago
      Unfortunately, I have no problem gaining weight. However, I am not in denial. I know it is my obsessive compulsive eating. I also have no problem losing it. I had lost about 50 pounds in 5 months by writing down EVERYTHING I had eaten and how many calories. I was eating approximately 1200 calories a day. I was eating mostly low calorie/high fiber foods and low fat dairy. With as much as I love food...it is still easier for me to eat less than to exercise more. Good luck to everyone trying to lose weight and I hate all of you who can't gain weight...just kidding :)
    • John M., American  •  3 years 9 months ago
      I hate calorie reduction!!!
    • Slickpicker  •  3 years 9 months ago
      Wait a minute.. you didn't mention milk or soda?? That much liquid is "staying weight".. especially sugar filled or milk filled drinks.
      It amazes me how people can drink 2 or 3 soda's a day and not understand where all the weight gain came from.. those are real lbs. and they don't go away very quickly...
    • A Yahoo! User  •  3 years 9 months ago
      This is so true! It's unfortunate when one night out or a summer barbecue can pack on the pounds so that it's evident on the scale! The tips are great, and it's up to the individual to take ownership on what goes in the mouth - and what stays out! For more great summer tips that are quick and painless to incorporate into daily eating habits, check out my blog at http://buzz.prevention.com/community/carver-girl/my-summer-fitness-goals-and-how-to-keep-them.

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