Scale

Aging Stressor: Excess Body Weight

The last major stressor that comes with age is excess body weight. The first book that I ever bought in grad school was about obesity. In it, there was a chart of almost 100 health issues that were linked by research to carrying extra body fat and one that was not. In the 40 years since then, the list of negative effects of obesity has grown.

If you remember my answer to the question from last week’s Memo about what one thing would I do differently in my life, that’s the reason I chose getting to a healthier weight and staying there. Pick a body system, any system, and you’ll find the deleterious impact of excess fat on that system. Immune system? Yes. Joints? Yes. Liver? That too. Pancreas? Yes—and on and on and on. That’s why it’s important to get to a healthy weight as young as you can and stay there.

But what about now? It’s been a 50-year fight for me, and I still have not succeeded to the extent I would like. Getting to a healthy weight is not about a specific diet or foods or anything other than one thing: the quantity of food we eat.

I’m going to give you the simplest approach to losing excess body fat I can with two ways to do it.

  • Use a smaller plate when you eat meals and fill it only once. Moving from a dinner plate to a salad plate will cut off about 20 to 25% of the calories you eat. You can use the same logic with smoothies or cereal or soups. Smaller portions yield fewer calories.
  • As an alternative, reduce your caloric intake by 250 to 500 calories per day if you already track your food intake. That’s it.

Can you work on the quality of food? Sure. How about fewer carbs or less fat? If you want. What I’m saying is that to attack the excess body weight you carry, you have to attack your number of calories and eat fewer of them. Start with the sledgehammer to break down the wall. You can get to the chisel later on to fine-tune your lifestyle.

That one benefit of being overweight? It reduces the risk of osteoporosis. I don’t think that’s worth the hundreds of other risks it increases.

Aging with a Vengeance

The first Aging with a Vengeance webinar will be on Super Bowl Sunday; the topic will be increasing muscle mass. I’ll be covering a specific strength training program together with nutrition approaches including diet and supplements. The approach is based on the practical application of the most recent research. The first Memo of 2023 will give details on how to sign up for the webinar and the materials you’ll get.

Have a Very Merry Christmas from all of us at DrChet.com! Talk to you again on January 1, 2023.

What are you prepared to do today?

        Dr. Chet