You: On a Diet: The Insider’s Guide to Easy and Permanent Weight Loss. Michael Roizen F.

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Chronic stress makes your body store more fat.

      22 a. A duodenal switch is one of several surgical options for people with morbid obesity.

      23 d. Bupropion, an antidepressant, has been shown to help control cravings and lead to about a 7 percent weight loss. Other antidepressants, such as tricyclic antidepressants or selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), can often be associated with weight gain.

      24 c. Adding a little muscle through resistance training helps your body burn more fat throughout the day.

      25 c. Yo-yo dieting not only has physiological effects, because you end up gaining more weight after you’ve lost it, but it also has psychological effects.

      Scoring

      You get one point for each correct answer.

      20 and above: Congratulations, doc. You’re an anatomical expert.

      11–19: You’re average, but then again, the average person is overweight, so maybe this isn’t so good. Maybe you’d better read on.

      10 and below: Don’t worry, you’re about to enroll in the ultimate course in the biology, history, and anatomy of fat-which is the best way to change your body.

      Chapter 1

      The Ideal Body

      What Your Body Is Supposed to Look Like

      Diet Myths

       Your body doesn’t need any fat.

       Fast food is responsible for most of our fat problems.

       Dieting has to be hard.

      The most common question heard among overweight people isn’t “Can I have more sour cream?” It’s “Why can’t I lose weight?” While you may think you know the answer (severe pancake addiction), the real reason is biological: We’re actually hardwired to store some fat.

      Our bodies have more systems that allow us to gain weight than to lose it. Historically, as we’ll see in a moment, that served us well. Today, though, we’ve poisoned the systems that help us lose weight and empowered the ones that allow us to gain it—botching up our anatomy and turning our bodies into fat-storing machines. One of your goals will be to reprogram your body so that your internal systems can work the way they did when the greatest enemy we faced was a charging wildebeest, not a cheese-drowned pork roll.

      Our ancestors survived by gaining and storing weight to survive periodic famines. That has left our bodies prone to storing fat and gaining weight, tendencies that willpower alone can rarely overcome. To see how our bodies have morphed from rock-hard to sponge-soft, let’s look inside the bodies of early man and woman. They looked like stereotypical super-heroes: strong, lean, muscular, able to jump snorting mammals in a single bound.

      As we evolved, we created systems and behaviors to survive when droughts and poor eyesight made picking and hunting less than successful. We learned to thrive, and we learned to eat. In early times, our diets consisted of fruits, nuts, vegetables, tubers, and wild meat—foods that were, for the most part, low in calories. That’s not to say our ancestors didn’t enjoy their foods. They consumed their sugars through fruit, and they even splurged when they came across the Paleolithic Cinnabon—a honeycomb. The difference between their splurges and ours? They came across the sweet treats only rarely; it’s not as if they popped in for a 900-calorie sugar bomb every time they went shopping for a new buffalo hide. Add that to the fact that their definition of “searching for food” included walking, stalking, and chasing, not sliding the milk carton out of the way to find the pudding pack. It was a lot of work to get food, so they naturally burned many of the calories they consumed through the physical activity of hunting and gathering.

      The Heavyweight Fight: Genetics Versus Environment

      It’s easy to argue that lifestyle choices and lack of willpower are responsible for weight problems (it’s the argument that lean people tend to make). But it doesn’t explain the 95 percent failure rate after two years of people who have lost fifty pounds or more; they had plenty of willpower to lose but regained the weight nonetheless. Researchers argue that obesity is more genetically linked than any other trait except height-and at least 50 percent of obesity cases clearly have genetic components. Our take: The waist control game requires two players-environment and genetics. Even if your genes have made you predestined for a life of taking up two seats, that doesn’t mean you should abdicate control over your body. When you make the right behavioral and biological changes that we outline, you’ll be able to stay healthy and avoid the bad side effects of excess weight, like diabetes, high blood pressure (hypertension), and arterial inflammation. While 10 percent of the obese population has genetic challenges that may make a supermodel contract impossible, the bigger risk with these genes is not in the weight itself but in the predispositions for risks associated with obesity. For example, one genetic problem associated with being overweight is called leptin deficiency (leptin is a hormone associated with satiety, which we’ll discuss in the next chapter). Folks who either don’t produce leptin or block its signals usually become morbidly obese, and the problem is surely genetic.

      While some people have these abnormalities, they tend to be the minority of the population. If you need to worry about losing twenty-five, thirty-five, even fifty pounds, your problem is not likely to be genetic. Only when your excess weight exceeds one hundred pounds would most doctors consider testing for genetic abnormalities. Still, the example of leptin is only the tip of the scientific iceberg as far as genetics and obesity are concerned. As the fight against obesity continues, we’ll see more and more drug companies target genetic reasons for weight gain-that is, drugs that attack the genetic biochemical problems that may be contributing to your weight problem. That said, the onus of waist management still falls on you, to improve your environment and your behaviors so that your genetics can work for you, not against you.

      Because salt and sugar were scarce, our ancestors mostly feasted on grains, vegetables, and meats—for good reason. The meat provided the protein, vitamins, minerals, and fatty acids that helped them grow taller and develop larger brains, while the other foods gave them nutrients such as glucose, a simple sugar found in fruit and the complex carbohydrates of plants, that they needed to grow and develop, and for energy to move. And, of course, food was always fresh, as there was no canning or refrigeration to store up food for Super Bowl parties, or to sneak in an 11 p.m. bowl of sugar-coated oats.

      FACTOID

      The difference between obese people and thin people isn’t the number of fat cells, it’s the size of these cells. You don’t make more fat cells the fatter you get; you have the same number of fat cells you had as an adolescent. The only difference is that the fat globules within each cell increase as you store more fat. By the way, muscles work the same way: you don’t make more muscle cells; the muscle cells get larger.

      Another difference was that the meat our ancestors ate wasn’t like the meat we know today. Theirs was low in fat and high in protein; ours often comes in the form of corn-fed cows pumped up to make fattier, tastier cuts. Even today’s buffalo burger is corn-fed. Truly wild game has about 4 percent fat, while now most commercially available beef has nine times that amount. (The theory behind protein-heavy diets like Atkins is that protein reduces overall food intake

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