Mission Possible: Eat More 2 Lose More
By Dan Amzallag
()
About this ebook
The Author possesses personal training certifications from the National Academy of Sports Medicine (NASM) and the Weider Institute of Health, combined with 23 years of experience in the field of kinesiology, resistance and cardiovascular training, as well as an extensive knowledge in nutrition. . Thorough research has been conducted during the writing of the book through seminars, studies, reading and many other avenues revolving around health. It is such a fascinating subject that the author devoted three years of research in pursuit of valuable information published in this book. The authors' own experience with fighting obesity acted as an inspiration for writing "Mission Possible"(use the same font as Mission possible). Following many odd diets with no success and consuming many supplements with detrimental effect on the body, the author successfully lost weight by adhering to the use of the traditional food pyramid (FDA approved) for his program, combined with a regular exercise regimen. The program offered in this book will allow you to maintain your ideal weight while eating as much as you want of the right foods. Understanding the science of what foods to combine, at what time of the day to eat them, will allow you to lose weight, while still enjoying your favorite foods (fast food not included). Many of these strategies are used in Western Europe and are very helpful for those suffering from obesity-related diseases. This two parts, two phases method described in this book will help you understand the complex relationship of food and how to use it in your advantage to control and maintain your ideal weight. Knowledge of your own body will help reach these goals. This is your journey, Ladies and Gentlemen. Your Destination? Living long, healthy and looking good!
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Mission Possible - Dan Amzallag
Publication:
Editorial/production : Emily Streaker
Cover design: Rose F. Thiam
All rights reserved.
Copyright ©Dan Amzallag 2002
Published in Rockville, Maryland by:
Pro-Ace International Publishing Group
122 Gold Kettle Drive
Gaithersburg, MD 20878
E-mail: publishing@proaceintl.com
URL: www.proaceintlshoppingmall.com
Library of Congress Control Number: 2002095869
No part of this book may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, magnetic, photographic including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without prior written permission of the publisher or author.
ISBN No: 0-9688644-2-2
First Printing in 2002
Printed in the United States of America
This publication is designed to provide accurate information on the subject covered. It is sold in the understanding that the author is not engaged in rendering legal, accounting or other professional service. If legal advice or other expert assistance is required during acquisition process, the services of competent professionals should be sought.
The author and Pro-Ace International, individually or corporately, do not accept any responsibility for any liabilities resulting from the actions of any parties involved.
About the author
The Author possesses personal training certifications from the National Academy of Sports Medicine (NASM) and the Weider Institute of Health, combined with 23 years of experience in the field of kinesiology, resistance and cardiovascular training, as well as an extensive knowledge in nutrition. . Thorough research has been conducted during the writing of the book through seminars, studies, reading and many other avenues revolving around health. It is such a fascinating subject that the author devoted three years of research in pursuit of valuable information published in this book. The authors’ own experience with fighting obesity acted as an inspiration for writing Mission Possible
(use the same font as Mission possible). Following many odd diets with no success and consuming many supplements with detrimental effect on the body, the author successfully lost weight by adhering to the use of the traditional food pyramid (FDA approved) for his program, combined with a regular exercise regimen. The program offered in this book will allow you to maintain your ideal weight while eating as much as you want of the right foods. Understanding the science of what foods to combine, at what time of the day to eat them, will allow you to lose weight, while still enjoying your favorite foods (fast food not included). Many of these strategies are used in Western Europe and are very helpful for those suffering from obesity-related diseases. This two parts, two phases method described in this book will help you understand the complex relationship of food and how to use it in your advantage to control and maintain your ideal weight. Knowledge of your own body will help reach these goals. This is your journey, Ladies and Gentlemen. Your Destination? Living long, healthy and looking good!
Table Of Contents
Acknowledgment : Page
Preface: Page
Introduction: Page
Chapter I: Page
Hypoglycemia:
Diabetes and other related diseases
Chapter II: Page
Hypo and Hyperthyroid:
Some causes to being overweight or hyperactive
Body types: endomorph, ectomorph, and mesomorph
Chapter III: Page
HYPERCHOLESTEROL: CORONARY Heart Disease
Chapter IV: Page
Vitamins, minerals, and amino acids
Chapter V: Page
Why refined sugar is a poison to your body
Chapter VI: Page
Cardiovascular exercise versus
resistance training: The truth behind the sport.
Chapter VII: Page
Food and sports supplements:
(Anabolic steroids not included)
Chapter VIII: Page
Stress: The silent killer and precursor to obesity
Chapter IX: Page
Obesity in children:
Implement good eating habits for a healthy
lifestyle for children
Chapter X: Page
Vending machines: Easy kill for vending
operators
Chapter XI: Page
The fast food industry : You pay them to kill you-
Almost as bad as is financing terrorism
Chapter XII: Page
Other diets in the market and their critics
Chapter XIII: Page
The easy fix: When nothing else works,
plastic surgery might just be the last solution
Part II: The method
Preface Page
Introduction Page
Chapter I: Page
Calories: Principles and theories
Chapter II: Page
Classification of food
Chapter III: Page
HOW DO WE GAIN WEIGHT?
Chapter IV: Page
Managing your nutrients
Chapter V: Page
The method
Phase I: Losing the weight
Phase II: Maintenance phase
Conclusion: Page
Bibliography: Page
Index: Page
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
IN 1986, MICHEL MONTIGNAC published his first book on a revolutionary dietary method that was later to bear his name. Based on medical discoveries made in the United States during the previous decade, the Montignac method challenged traditional dietary wisdom with the claim that to be healthy and to lose weight we do not have to starve ourselves. All we have to do is follow a nutritionally balanced diet (approved by the FDA, such as the Food Pyramid) that excludes saturated fats and carbohydrates with a high glycemic index. A couple of years later, Montignac published his second book, Eat Yourself Slim, that aimed at a more general audience. His new book reached the international bestseller list, attracting the interest of the medical profession around the world. This diet is well known in European countries as well as in North America. Many studies have been conducted, either directly or indirectly, on the validity and effectiveness of the Montignac method in helping participants lose weight and combat conditions such as obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease.
Michel Montignac has become well known through the publication of his previous best-sellers denouncing the errors of conventional diets (mostly extreme diets practiced in North America). He explains that you only have to change eating habits to lose weight, and maintain the weight loss.
I have based some of my research on the Montignac Diet and the wonders of its principles. My plan has worked well for me and will work beautifully for you as well.
Determination and discipline is required to follow through and reach your goal; however, these principles will not make you starve to death. They will enable you to eat the right foods (this does not include fast food, in case some of you might wonder), at the right time of the day, as much as you want.
I dedicate this book to all those who’ve been struggling with their weight for so many years, been through so many failed diets, used many miracle diets pills (Yeah, right), and who’ve been suffering from so many obesity-related diseases.
The time has come to turn over a new leaf. It is up to you to make it a most enjoyable and successful journey. This is your last stop. Noooooo.... Not THAT one!
I wish you the best of luck and congratulations for setting your goals of great health, happiness, and prosperity.
Preface:
Part I: Understanding Obesity and How to Avoid It
While the United States may be the richest country in the world, it also tops the list as the most extreme when it comes to obesity per capita. Far too often ignorance is regarded as bliss when it comes to food and its effect on the body. Many people adhere to diets and eating patterns that have no positive effect on the body or fail within a few months.
Staying on a diet has become one of the hardest tasks in today’s society, and sometimes it is even harder than maintaining a successful marriage. Many of us in search of the perfect body and perfect health all too often find that the results of our efforts and objectives fall short of our expectations. We try diet after diet only to realize, down the road, that we have spent an average of as much as 20% of our annual budget on the futile pursuit of reaching what we consider to be our ideal weight. Because the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) considers obesity to be a disease, the government is spending roughly $16 million annually on programs that prevent obesity by promoting nutrition and physical activity. In comparison, it spends almost $100 million on programs that control tobacco addiction. Margo Wootan, D.Sc., a nutrition scientist at the Center for Science in the Public Interest in Washington, D.C., claims Poor diet and inactivity kill as many people as tobacco. The investment in nutrition and physical activity programs pales in comparison to their impact on health
.
According to the CDC, 56.4% of U.S. adults are overweight. Depending on the year being surveyed, a hefty
19 - 28% of the population is officially obese. These numbers have jumped by 61% over the past decade, because 27% of us don’t engage in any physical activity and another 28.2% aren’t regularly active.
Can this disease place itself in the ranking alongside the category of HIV-infected people? Obesity, which now is considered a national disease, claims its victims after decades of weakening their hearts, blowing holes in their arteries, suffocating their organs and grinding their joints. Aside from being publicly shunned, many doctors don’t know how to treat obesity. Obesity is not just a national case of bad eating habits; obesity is a real disease and a public health crisis.
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) spends approximately 1% of its annual budget on obesity research. In 2001 it designated $226 million for the study of obesity. By comparison, it allotted $2 billion for research concerning cardiovascular disease and diabetes (diseases in which obesity is the major risk factor). So what is it that causes people to become grossly overweight? Is it heredity so that we are destined to be obese for the rest of our lives? Is it a lack of motivation to push ourselves to the gym every morning and eat healthier to reach our ideal weight? Promoting healthy lifestyles should be a national priority,
declared Frank Vinicor, M.D., and Director of the CDC’s Diabetes Program. These days, public health officials have enough on their plates without having to worry about the junk food on ours.
Obesity ((foot notes: Source: Self
/December 2001.Author: Shannon Brownley). , an enormous challenge for the country, is a deadly disease that must be eradicated. There are a myriad of diets on the market that attempt to inspire individuals and communities to enlist in the fight against fat. In terms of annual costs of this disease for the country, every year an estimated 300,000 Americans die from obesity-related causes. The direct cost of obesity and inactivity accounts for nearly 10% of all healthcare expenses. The Fat
epidemic has reached such a high level among the U.S. population that obesity now has the potential to bankrupt our country,
warns John Foreyt, Ph.D., Director of the Nutrition Research Clinic at Houston Baylor College of Medicine. People are living longer, but we’re living fatter with chronic health problems and reduced quality of life.
If the current trends continue, half of America will be obese by 2010,
says Todd Whitthorne, producer of the syndicated show Healthy Living with Dr. Cooper. That is eight more years before 150 million Americans are at enormous risk. This is a truly discouraging statistic.
Obesity levels have increased sixty percent across the nation since 1996 affecting more than seventy million Americans,
reports ABC News. Many blame overeating for this increase but food is only part of the problem. What many don't realize is that the never-ending supply of labor saving and prepared food has greatly attributed to the obesity problem by actually changing the environment (due to increased technology) that we work and live in.
Obesity is such a major problem in the United States that the number of obese Americans is higher than the number who smokes, use illegal drugs, or suffer from physical ailments (foot notes:1.Posner). It has been linked to multiple health issues that plague our nation such as diabetes and heart problems. Not only have machinery and labor saving devices changed the work environment, more Americans than ever work in offices or other sedentary settings where employees do not have time for physical activity throughout the day due to their work environment.
Along with the lack of physical activity at work, technology has also led to decreased levels of physical activity in our leisure time. Many Americans work so many hours each week that they prefer spending their limited time off relaxing.
One way of relaxing is taking the shortcuts that technology offers us. These shortcuts appear all through our lives and we may not even know it. If you pay attention, you will notice that many Americans choose to use an escalator or elevator instead of using the stairs. We would rather drive our cars than have to walk or ride a bicycle anywhere. Instead of going outside to play, many children sit at home watching television or playing video games that are available in abundance these days. This lack of enthusiasm for physical activity worries many experts. These experts wonder whether the simple act of walking will be eliminated by devices that make maneuvering in urban environments easier.
(foot notes:2.Willis)
And of course, technology has changed our environment so much that it affects the food that we eat. Instead of eating the types of food that are part of a balanced diet, many Americans choose to eat unhealthy, cheap, and convenient food. Instead of making a meal at home, we would rather go out to a fast food restaurant where we don't even have to get out of our cars to eat. If we do choose to eat at home, we have the convenience of frozen dinners that we can prepare while watching TV. Or we can have food delivered to us. All around our new environment are vending machines that give us easy access to junk food and candy. It is this easiness of getting food that technology has given us that has greatly attributed to America's obesity problem.
Finally, technology has caused many to believe that actions do not have consequences. If someone is overweight, doctors will be able to fix it with such things as liposuction. There are constant advertisements on TV about new inventions that claim to slim you down in just five minutes a day. People believe that taking certain types of drugs will take off weight without having to exercise. However, this has proven very dangerous with such drugs as Fen-Phen, which causes permanent heart problems. We are programmed to always look for the quick fix in life, and solving a weight problem is not an exception.
Getting fat is deeply ingrained in American culture. Physicians and public advocates have had little to offer overweight Americans but the same eat less, exercise more
message. The problem is not the message. It is indeed the solution to combating obesity and losing excess pounds. The average person who is obese knows what they are supposed to eat,
says Charles Billington, M.D., a leading obesity specialist at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis. They can do it conceptually, but they can’t do it for real.
Portion size contributes as well to the obesity problem in America. More deli’s and fast food restaurants are offering more, for less. The Big Meal
concept is ingrained in the American culture. The original muffin was 2 oz, now it has increased up to 4 and 5 oz. It seems it (the muffin, of course) had been injected with anabolic steroids.
What is shocking is the fact that hospitals, which are supposed to promote a healthier environment for patients, have opened their doors to fast food joints. In San Diego, St. Louis, and Chicago, you can be admitted for a triple bypass surgery and then, before checking-out of the hospital, can stop by the fast food counter and order a Big Mac. Not a bad strategy for re-clogging your arteries.
The average child is exposed to 10,000 food advertisements a year and spends more time in front of the TV than on any other activity, except sleeping. We have spent years and years trying to figure out why an individual is overweight and almost no time thinking about why the nation is overweight,
says Kelly D. Brownell, from the Yale Center of Weight and Eating Disorders. His answer: It’s the environment.
Corporate America has to get involved. For every dollar spent on the prevention of obesity and the promotion of fitness, corporations will see many more back in reduced healthcare expenses. Fitness awareness must start in school, not the workplace,
says Foreyt. We have to help adults, of course, but the future depends on the kids, who now spend more time watching TV than they spend in school.
Kids are the ones who eat the most unhealthy snacks since most of their days are spent in school or an after care program where fatty snacks are readily available. Education is not fulfilling its purpose. We have to teach these kids good eating habits to assure a good future for them. We see academic curricula that include sex education for seventh, eighth and ninth graders. How about more attention to health education, followed by support from