Think-Feel-Eat Episode #37: Managing Stress & Cortisol Levels for Weight Control (Part II of II)

Think-Feel-Eat Episode #37: Managing Stress & Cortisol Levels for Weight Control (Part II of II)

Hi! I’m Donna Reish, IF teacher, weight loss coach, blogger, and half of “The Minus 220 Pound Pair” as my husband and I have lost over 220 pounds together (160 of that in the past couple of years through the Weight Loss Lifestyle habits and strategies I teach!).

In this episode, I present second part to Stress—this one offers some solutions!

(Check out Part I where I tell the effects of stress on weight, stomach fat, cravings, and more! Think-Feel-Eat #36!)

In this episode, I first review stress and cortisol and what happens in the body when cortisol is released too much/too often/too long due to stress. Then I move into the big picture look of stress and cortisol, including:

  • Developing a life plan that helps you controls your stress (including looking down as an observer of your life, developing habits, building incrementality, convincing your brain that you are creating a stress plan, and more!)
  • Understanding stress eating (what I call “Frenzied Food” in the 4 F’s of Food Types—Fuel Food, Fun Food, Frenzied Food, and Fog Food)
  • Setting yourself up for food success with barriers, substitutions, and interrupting the stress eating pattern.

Then I move into specific practices that can help us control stress and excessive cortisol release, including sleep, mindfulness/meditation/breathing, exercise, yoga, laughter, nature, and music.

Find all of my episodes, outlines, and articles for my two weekly broadcasts:

(1)  Weight Loss Lifestyle broadcast (formerly Donna’s Intermittent Fasting Broadcast)

(2)  Think-Feel-Eat broadcast 

Sign up for my free webinar

Think Feel Eat Outline 37: Managing Stress & Cortisol Levels for Weight Control Part II of II

A. Stress and Cortisol Defined

1. Stress

a. Makes fat loss hard

b. Can be anything that threatens our safety, status, well being

c. Can be anything that initiates physical or psychological demands that are above our ability to handle them

d. Can be unpredictable change in environment

e. Can be an inconsistency between our expectations and actual outcomes

f. Can be real or perceived

g. Different for all people

h. Response based on our experiences with that stressor

i. When stress occurs, we have emotional responses

i. Feelings of uneasiness

ii. Impending doom

iii. Rumination/worr

iv. Desire to avoid the stress

j. When stress occurs, we have physiological responses

i. Body bloods with adrenaline and noradrenaline—fight/flight…for a few seconds

ii. When this happens, we respond/rise to the challenge

iii. This is why people are given adrenaline to wake them up, etc. when injured

iv. When we have a stress, we also release cortisol

2. Cortisol

a. Stress hormone that turns into neurotransmitter—turns into “steroids”

b. Slow acting but long lasting

c. Broken down in the body to give energy when needed

d. Helps recovery when emergency is over

e. Suppresses inflammation (i.e. cortisol shots and creams)

f. The stomach has four times the number of cortisol receptors as anyplace else—thus, the belly fat from chronic stress and high cortisol.

3. Stress and cortisol different nowadays than early man

a. Only had cortisol for short periods of time before

b. Now we get stressed frequently and have high cortisol for longer periods, sometimes chronically

4. Ari Whitten, Fat Loss Blueprint

a. Course I have recently taken

b. Learned a lot about stress, cortisol, and sleep from it

c. Many of the studies I refer to here were explained in that course

B. Big Picture Look at Your Stress and Cortisol

1. Not in the middle of your stress—not “during the conflict”

2. Develop a life plan that helps you control your stress

a. Look down as an observer of your life

b. Habits

c. Incrementality

d. A “stress prevention activities” plan

e. If brain thinks you have a plan to deal with stress, it believes you—even if your plan isn’t fully in place!

f. TFE 29 and 30 Over-hunger vs. Over-desire

3. Understand stress eating

a. “Frenzied” eating (TFE #15)

b. Brain becomes habituated to a heightened state of craving foods—this becomes a habit (if we created this habit before, we can create a new habit now!)

c. Set yourself up for food success

i. Food choices/dieting/resisting urges is a stress on top of the stress

ii. Too much restriction causes unnecessary stress

1. Research shows overweight people are more prone to stress eat

2. Research shows that those who overly-restrict are more prone to stress eating

3. Create barriers for these times

a. Barriers

b. Substitutions

c. Interrupt the stress eating pattern

i. Word you use

ii. Clap or tap

iii. Closing something

iv. 5 Second Rule

C. Sleep (Effects of Too Little Sleep on Weight —TFE #34)

1. Sleep loss makes us more emotionally reactive, impulsive, and prone to cognitive deficits that create more stress

2. Chronic stress makes sleeping difficult and worsens the quality of our sleep

3. Focusing on both sleep increasing and stress reduction will benefit both

4. Sleep can be enhanced

a. Morning sun exposure

b. Avoid artificial light at night

c. Sleeping in a cool environment

d. Using melatonin if needed

D. Mindfulness/Meditation/Breathing

1. Train yourself to think differently

a. Visiting WHY often (TFE #3)

b. Doing Thought Work (TFE #1)

2. One meditation session

a. Drops cortisol levels by 20% in a study of medical students

b. Lower cortisol levels correlate with length of time spent meditating

3. Train yourself to think differently through meditation—programs/apps, prayer, gratefulness practices, journaling

4. Breathing

a. Take ten deep breaths before you answer? True!

b. Some say equal inhale and exhale; some say twice as long on exhale as inhale

E. Exercise

1. Exercise is a stress in itself

a. Choose HIIT (fast cortisol recovery), strength training, yoga, walking—if it feels crazy stressful, it probably is!

b. Choose according to how you feel

c. Exercise helps relieve pent up stress

2. Walking

a. Outdoors known for reducing cortisol (and also increasing groundedness)

b. Walking lowers cortisol by up to 18%

i. It is a beneath the surface type of activity so doesn’t cause a compensatory mechanism (making up for high intensity exercise by sitting too much and eventually reducing NEAT (non exercise activity thermogenesis)

ii. Women are more susceptible to compensatory mechanism

iii. Walking doesn’t cause this compensation because it doesn’t send negative signal to the brain since the calorie burning is slower (not losing calories at such a high rate so body doesn’t sense that calories are being burned)

3. Yoga

a. Great way to cope with stress, burnout, and high cortisol

b. Known to reduce perceived stress, anxiety, cortisol levels

F. Other

1. Laughter

a. Considered lifestyle medicine

b. Used for those receiving treatments for cancer, Parkinsons, and more

c. Increases production of endorphins in brain, which leads to a variety of benefits including improved mood and greater life satisfaction

d. Reduces cortisol and stress

e. “Laughter and tears: best medicine for stress.”

2. Nature

3. Music

a. Research shows before and after stressful even—lowers cortisol

b. Relaxing music best

G. Get More Help!

1. Join our holiday weight loss challenge 

2. Join my FREE FB group where I record videocast/podcast episodes!

3. Emails with teaching around weight management—articles, videos, free charts and booklets, and more

4. Take my month-long Intermittent Fasting course

5. Schedule a free 30 minute coaching consult

Think-Feel-Eat Episode #36:  Stress, Cortisol, and Weight Management, Part I of II

Think-Feel-Eat Episode #36: Stress, Cortisol, and Weight Management, Part I of II

Hi! I’m Donna Reish, IF teacher, weight loss coach, blogger, and half of “The Minus 220 Pound Pair” as my husband and I have lost over 220 pounds together (160 of that in the past couple of years through the Weight Loss Lifestyle habits and strategies I teach!).

In this episode, I present Part I of II of Stress, Cortisol, and Weight Mangement.

Turns out, the main factor in weight loss is creating a calorie deficit. That is, we eat more like our new sized body needs.

Turns out, the main factor in creating said deficit is choosing a protocol that you can stick to.

AND…turns out, there are other factors that can slow or hinder weight loss, fat loss, cravings, overeating, the desire to move, and more.

These include sleep (TFE #34) and stress/cortisol, among other things. 

I’m excited to be delving into this topic with my listeners/readers. This week I examined what stress and cortisol can do to weight. Next week I will unveil things we can do about stress and high cortisol.

In today’s episode:

1. Stress and cortisol defined
2. Hormones and neurotransmitters
3. Studying stress and cortisol via people with Cushing Syndrome
4. Obesity and cortisol
5. Muscle loss and cortisol
6. Emotional eating—how chronic stress affects appetite
7. Stress eating

Find all of my episodes, outlines, and articles for my two weekly broadcasts:

(1)  Weight Loss Lifestyle broadcast (formerly Donna’s Intermittent Fasting Broadcast) https://donnareish.com/intermittent-fasting-journal-index/

(2)  Think-Feel-Eat broadcast at https://donnareish.com/think-feel-eat/

Sign up for my free webinar: https://intermittentfastingwebinar.com

Listen to episode at iTunes here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/think-feel-eat/id1498498769

 

Think Feel Eat Outline 36: Stress, Cortisol, and Weight Management, Part I of II

A. Stress and Cortisol Defined

1. Stress

a. Makes fat loss hard

b. Can be anything that threatens our safety, status, well being

c. Can be anything that initiates physical or psychological demands that are above our ability to handle them

d. Can be unpredictable change in environment

e. Can be an inconsistency between our expectations and actual outcomes

f. Can be real or perceived

g. Different for all people

h. Response based on our experiences with that stressor

i. When stress occurs, we have emotional responses

i. Feelings of uneasiness

ii. Impending doom

iii. Rumination/worry

iv. Desire to avoid the stress

j. When stress occurs, we have physiological responses

i. Body bloods with adrenaline and noradrenaline—fight/flight…for a few seconds

ii. When this happens, we respond/rise to the challenge

iii. This is why people are given adrenaline to wake them up, etc. when injured

iv. When we have a stress, we also release cortisol

2. Cortisol

a. Stress hormone that turns into neurotransmitter—turns into “steroids”

b. Slow acting but long lasting

c. Broken down in the body to give energy when needed

d. Helps recovery when emergency is over

e. Suppresses inflammation (i.e. cortisol shots and creams)

f. The stomach has four times the number of cortisol receptors as anyplace else—thus, the belly fat from chronic stress and high cortisol.

3. Stress and cortisol different nowadays than early man

a. Only had cortisol for short periods of time before

b. Now we get stressed frequently and have high cortisol for longer periods, sometimes chronically

4. Ari Whitten, Fat Loss Blueprint

a. Course I have recently taken

b. Learned a lot about stress, cortisol, and sleep from it

c. Many of the studies I refer to here were explained in that course

B. Hormones and Neurotransmitters

1. General

a. Stress hurts our weight loss efforts by taking down our two main communication pathways—hormones and neurotransmitters

b. Neurotransmitters used by nervous system to transmit messages from brain to muscles, glands, etc.

c. Hormones special chemical messengers secreted into blood and travel to give messages

2. Dopamine

a. Motivation and reward

b. Most addictive behaviors controlled by it

c. Plays role in learning, motor control, emotion and executive functions

3.Seratonin

a. Regulates brain development

b. Also has effect on sleep, mood, memory, aggression, and more

4. Stress/cortisol release disrupts serotonin uptake

a. Chronic stress leaves body and brain deprived of serotonin

b. Can also reduce dopamine and cause apathy and less motivation to do what we love

c. Results in vicious loop—chronic stress causes lower levels of serotonin and dopamine; lower levels of serotonin and dopamine can lead to stress

C. Studying Stress and Cortisol

1. Best looked at through chronically elevated cortisol in disease called Cushing Syndrome

a. Cushing causes giant hump between should blades and protruding abdomen (i.e. stomach obesity)

b. They have chronic high cortisol due to disease, not through stress—but we can see results of high cortisol in them since they have consistently high levels

2. High levels of cortisol general results associated with weight

a. Interfere with hormones like growth, thyroid, sex, etc. leading to muscle loss and fat gain

b. Decrease the ability to turn on and burn body fat processes

c. Increase appetite with a high desire for comfort foods

D. Obesity, Cortisol, and Stress

1. Obese people have higher cortisol levels

a. Study of 10,00 adults

b. Relationship between obesity and higher cortisol levels

2. Study from Harvard Medical School

a. Ten years; 1,300 men and women

b. Weight gain and stress for job related stresses high

3. More stress cycle

a. Leads to more cortisol

b. More cortisol leads to more body fat

c. More body fat can lead to more stress again

E. Muscle Loss and Cortisol

1. Cortisol hampers muscle gain/increases muscle loss

a. Hampers protein synthesis so you aren’t processing protein well

b. Increases breakdown of muscle tissues

2. Both of these cause muscle loss—muscle is imperative for metabolism, strength and activity, and aging well

F. Emotional Eating—Chronic Stress Affects Appetite

1. 2016 Study by Health Care Department of Metropolitan Autonomous University

a. Created to observe relationship between obesity, depsression, and emotional eating

b. 1500 people

c. Results: An inability to cope with depressive stress led to emotional eating and greater body weight

2. Online Survey by American Psychological Society in 2007

a. 1,848 adults

b. 43% showed that stress caused them to eat too much

3. Restrained eaters more likely to participate in stress eating

a. High susceptibility to stress-induced eating may be caused by rigid control of eating behavior

b. Flexible control of eating behavior leads to less stress eating

G. Stress Eating

1. General

a. Stress and food scarcity were common for early man

b. Thus, we seek calorie dense, highly palatable foods when stressed for our lives

c. Stress alters brain and motivation pathways that keep us seeking these foods

2. Repeated daily stressors

a. Different than bursts of adrenaline and shorter term cortisol highs for early man

b. Daily stressors keep our cortisol levels up

i. Stress stays high

ii. Brain reward and motivation pathways keep us wanting and searching for hyperpalatable foods

iii. Food is easy to get leading to overweightness

H. Get More Help!

1. Join our holiday weight loss challenge

2. Join my FREE FB group where I record videocast/podcast episodes!

3. Emails with teaching around weight management—articles, videos, free charts and booklets, and more 

4. Take my month-long Intermittent Fasting course

5. Schedule a free 30 minute coaching consult!

 

Think-Feel-Eat Episode #35: Five Ways to Crave Less

Think-Feel-Eat Episode #35: Five Ways to Crave Less

Hi! I’m Donna Reish, IF teacher, weight loss coach, blogger, and half of “The Minus 220 Pound Pair” as my husband and I have lost over 220 pounds together (160 of that in the past couple of years through the Weight Loss Lifestyle habits and strategies I teach!).

In this episode, I present five ways to reduce cravings!

In weight loss, we have a tendency to focus a lot on how to handle cravings. We have tricks and tips and techniques that we automatically turn to when we are having cravings or urges for foods that are not on our protocol or that do not lead to weight loss or weight management.

(I have ten ways to sit with urges in a previous TFE #9 episode —-)

But we don’t focus as much on what would even be better than “making it through cravings”—reducing our total number of cravings overall.

(It’s like which is better—treating a headache with pain reliever or realizing you just need to wear glasses so you don’t have the headaches anymore!)

In today’s episode, I present five ways we can reduce our urges and cravings!

Remarkable. I honestly never knew this was possible.

Here are the five things I have found that directly affect my cravings:

1) Decide Food Ahead of Time (See TFE 22!)
2) Substitute foods on protocol for highly palatable foods
3) Make simpler foods
4) Stretch out the instances of hyper-palatable/six seductive cravings types of foods
5) Sleep!

I hope you will listen or watch the episode to change your cravings! (I have a detailed outline with the info from the sleep studies especially.)

Find all of my episodes, outlines, and articles for my two weekly broadcasts:

(1)  Weight Loss Lifestyle broadcast (formerly Donna’s Intermittent Fasting Broadcast) 

(2)  Think-Feel-Eat broadcast 

Sign up for my free webinar

 

 

 Think Feel Eat 35: Five Ways to Crave Less

A. Five Ways!

1. Decide Ahead of Time

a. Write down the night before or the morning of exactly what you will eat for the entire day

b. Don’t write down too little, things you won’t eat, etc.

c. This builds self-integrity

d. Causes us to have food/meals to look forward to/fall back on: “I don’t need this snack right now because at XXX I am having XXX.”

e. TFE Episode 32: More of the First Four

f. Free Daily Decide Ahead of Time Journal Sheet

g. Self Integrity: TFE 19 and TFE 20

2. Substitute foods on your protocol (hopefully less caloric) that do not spike dopamine like 6 Seductive Craving Foods Do

a. Weight Loss Lifestyle 49

b. Don’t just think of calories or carbs or fat grams—think of what each food does to you in terms of cravings

c. Create a Protocol: TFE 16, 17, and 18

3. Make simple foods

a. Fewer seductive cravings

b. Will start to gain a taste for simple foods

c. Easier, less expensive, more routine (not so elaborate)

d. Protein

i. Fills you up

ii. Boosts metabolism by up to 15%

iii. Spares muscle while you instead lose/burn fat

iv. Helps with cravings

4. Stretch out the instances of hyper-palatability/six seductive cravings types of foods

a. Make food rules—I only eat flour/sugar/fat combinations on these days and/or these times and/or these locations and/or these situations

b. As we stretch out these foods, we crave them less and less

c. “The fewer times we eat XX, the fewer times we crave XX.”

d. The Hungry Brain by Dr. Stephen Guynet

e. 80/20 eating must be measurable in order to work

i. TFE 15

ii. Helpful Food Lists

5. Get Plenty of Sleep!

a. Truly need more sleep!

i. 7-9 hours every night

ii. New mantra—not I need more sleep so I’m not so tired or grouchy or fatigued or stressed….but actually making a connection to sleep and food/weight

iii. New mantra: “I need 7.5 hours sleep a night because I can’t stop overeating!”

iv. New mantra: “Sleep helps curb overeating!”

b. New York Obesity Research center of Columbia University study

i. Study basis: five consecutive nights; nine hours in bed for half; four hours in bed for other half; both slept in lab; monitored with polysomnography (electrodes and wires monitoring brain waves and other sleep indicators)

ii. It was a crossover design—meaning each participant did both sides (good for comparing each person against himself and increases validity of study)

iii. 5th day—allowed to eat whatever they wanted for a day as long as research team weighed and recorded everything

iv. Conclusion: Sleep deprived group ate nearly 300 more calories than the rested ones.

v. Conclusion: “…..sleep restriction increases food intake. It’s as simple as that.”

c. Brain studies show insufficient sleep’s detriments on food choices

i. Same study as above from Columbia University also studied effect on food choices

a.) Brain scans showed that sleep restriction increases the brain’s responsiveness to food

b. ) Parts of the brain associated with food reward were more active in sleep-restricted people (which made them choose more calorie dense, junk foods)

6. Sleep deprivation leads to lack of impulse control (and lack of food control)

a. Researchers have found that economically people who are sleep deprived have something called optimism bias—they think things will work out for them more easily and make poor choices in gambling and other financial decisions.

i. One team studied 50 people to see if this optimism bias affected food decisions also

ii. They had them sleep different amounts and observed their snack habits (very controlled at a center).

iii. Sleepier people munched on more calories AND were more likely to eat food they had rated as delicious and unhealthy

iv. The researcher concluded, “When you have inadequate sleep, you’re probably less likely to live in accordance with your own health goals. You’re less likely to get to bed on time, you’re less likely to go to the gym, and you’re less likely to have your eating behaviors align with your long-term health goals.”

b. Similar research shows that one night of total sleep deprivation reduces the food cue responsiveness—in other words, even one night of sleep deprivation can cause us to abandon our healthy food goals!

B. Next Steps

1. It’s not too late to join the Drop 8 Pounds by Christmas challenge!

a. Join at the blog to get all of the email updates and trainings: 

b. Join the FB group!

c. Watch the short info video here

2. Free Challenge group! 

3. Free Coaching Consult Call

4. Intermittent Fasting Month-Long Course

Think-Feel-Eat Episode #34: Effects of Sleep on Weight, Appetite, and Food Control

Think-Feel-Eat Episode #34: Effects of Sleep on Weight, Appetite, and Food Control

Hi! I’m Donna Reish, IF teacher, weight loss coach, blogger, and half of “The Minus 220 Pound Pair” as my husband and I have lost over 220 pounds together (160 of that in the past couple of years through the Weight Loss Lifestyle habits and strategies I teach!).

In this episode, I present important information about the effects of sleep on weight, appetite, and food control.

I begin with general sleep details, such as the need we have for seven to nine hours of sleep and the fact that it is estimated that 35% of people are sleep-deprived. And something that many people do not understand: we thwart our sleep-inducing signals with many things besides caffeine or blue light; things like sleeping too much during the day, being sluggish or inactive; lying around a lot can all lead to sleep disruption. (We think we need to “rest” because we are tired, but we are potentially messing up our sleep that night.)

Of course, we also have many benefits to adequate sleep (again, 7-9 hours), such as fewer cravings, boost in metabolism, better insulin sensitivity, hunger hormone regulation, lower cortisol (stress hormone) levels, and more.

I shared many in-patient/in-center studies on sleep and its effect on things related to hunger, appetite, and even metabolism. (For a more thorough look at sleep, including this research, how to help yourself sleep better, and more, check out Weight Loss Lifestyle 40, 41, and 42.)

Turns out, when we don’t get enough sleep, we choose more calorie dense, nutrient-poor foods; we overeat in total intake; we eat more sweets; and our metabolism actually slows down!

As one of the researchers in the studies concluded, “When you have inadequate sleep, you’re probably less likely to live in accordance with your own health goals. You’re less likely to get to bed on time, you’re less likely to go to the gym, and you’re less likely to have your eating behaviors align with your long-term health goals.”

Think Feel Eat Outline 34: Effects of Sleep on Weight, Appetite, and Food Control

 A. Introduction

1. Two Episodes: #34–Sleep; #35–Stress

2. It’s not too late to join the Drop 8 Pounds by Christmas Challenge!

a. Join the blog to get all the email updates and trainings!

b. Join the FB Group! 

c. Watch the short video here:

B. General Sleep

1. Deep details of sleep, circadian rhythms, helping your body go to sleep, effect of sleep on hormones, etc. in Weight Loss Lifestyle 40, 41, and 42

2. Need 7-9 hours a night

3. According to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 35% of people are sleep deprived!

4. 29% of adult Americans get six hours or fewer per night (22% in 1985)

5. Over 9 hours for people over the age of 18 often results in depression (or may indicate a sign of existing depression).

6. Causing ourselves to go to sleep

a. We have sleep-inducing signals that accumulate in the brain the longer we are awake, the harder we work, and more we exert ourselves, etc.

b. We often thwart this system with caffeine, blue light, too little activity, staying in a slow state (i.e. laziness), sleeping too much during the day, etc., so that the signal is not perceived as “off” and “on” anymore.

C. Benefits of Adequate Sleep—7-9 Hours

1. It leads to fewer cravings

2. It provides a boost in metabolism

3. It gives you better insulin sensitivity

4. Leads to more regulating of hunger hormones (ghrelin and leptin)

5. Helps you have better workouts

6. Way less stress hormone (cortisol—a hormone that increases hunger and cravings, and much more!)

D. Detriments of Inadequate Sleep

1. Inadequate sleep has been shown in study after study to negatively affect weight management

a. Sleeping six hours or fewer affects ghrelin and leptin (hunger and satiation hormones)

i. Studies show that sleeping under six hours results in lower leptin levels, higher ghrelin levels, and a distinct trigger in the brain requiring more food.

ii. One study showed that just sleeping one to two hours less caused a 24-30% increase in hunger

iii. Another study showed that people who regularly sleep fewer than seven hours have 26% more hunger than people who sleep closer to eight hours per night.

2. Decreased fat loss

a. A study on obese women at the same caloric intake had great fat loss until they divided the groups in two and the second half reduced their sleep

b. Sleep deprived group had half the fat loss from that point on from the other group (with no caloric or energy expenditure changes)

c. Research shows a 55% reduction in fat loss for sleep-deprived people.

3. Brain studies

a. New York Obesity Research center of Columbia University study

i. Study basis: five consecutive nights; nine hours in bed for half; four hours in bed for other half; both slept in lab; monitored with polysomnography (electrodes and wires monitoring brain waves and other sleep indicators)

ii. It was a crossover design—meaning each participant did both sides (good for comparing each person against himself and increases validity of study)

iii. 5th day—allowed to eat whatever they wanted for a day as long as research team weighed and recorded everything

iv. Conclusion: Sleep deprived group ate nearly 300 more calories than the rested ones.

v. Conclusion: “…..sleep restriction increases food intake. It’s as simple as that.”

b. Brain studies show insufficient sleep’s detriments on food choices

i. Same study as above from Columbia University also studied effect on food choices

a. Brain scans showed that sleep restriction increases the brain’s responsiveness to food

b. Parts of the brain associated with food reward were more active in sleep-restricted people (which made them choose more calorie dense, junk foods)

c. Brain studies show insufficient sleep’s detriments on metabolism

i. Same study from Columbia University

ii. Went on to study the “lipostat”—that part of the brain that tells the body how much food it needs

iii. Sleep deprived people are told by their brain that they need more food—more energy (probably because of underlying fatigue)

iv. Lipostat thinks you need more energy, signals the food reward part of the brain to tell you to eat more/get more energy

4. Sleep deprivation leads to lack of impulse control (and lack of food control)

a. Researchers have found that economically people who are sleep deprived have something called optimism bias—they think things will work out for them more easily and make poor choices in gambling and other financial decisions.

i. One team studied 50 people to see if this optimism bias affected food decisions also

ii. They had them sleep different amounts and observed their snack habits (very controlled at a center).

iii. Sleepier people munched on more calories AND were more likely to eat food they had rated as delicious and unhealthy

iv. The researcher concluded, “When you have inadequate sleep, you’re probably less likely to live in accordance with your own health goals. You’re less likely to get to bed on time, you’re less likely to go to the gym, and you’re less likely to have your eating behaviors align with your long-term health goals.”

b. Similar research shows that one night of total sleep deprivation reduces the food cue responsiveness—in other words, even one night of sleep deprivation can cause us to abandon our healthy food goals!

D  Work With Me!

1. Free Challenge group!

2. Free Coaching Consult Call

3. Intermittent Fasting Month-Long Course:

Think-Feel-Eat Episode #33: Create a WHY That Works

Think-Feel-Eat Episode #33: Create a WHY That Works

Hi! I’m Donna Reish, IF teacher, weight loss coach, blogger, and half of “The Minus 220 Pound Pair” as my husband and I have lost over 220 pounds together (160 of that in the past couple of years through the Weight Loss Lifestyle habits and strategies I teach!).

In this episode, I present how we can create a weight loss why that works!

If you have spent any time at all in weight loss, self-development, entrepreneur, or goal setting, you have probably heard the importance of having a WHY in your life to help you meet your goals.

Because of this, many of us have worked on some WHY statements through the years. We write down grandiose ideas that we think will somehow magically move us when we are having a tough time staying on our weight loss plan. Then we don’t understand why those statements aren’t working.

Many times our WHY isn’t helping us because it is too vague, too unbelievable to us, too grandiose, too far away, too cumbersome to remember, or too disconnected from our daily weight loss efforts.

In this episode, I teach how you can create a WHY that works—Understand…

1) A WHY is a Thought…and a Thought leads to a Feeling and a Feeling leads to an action.

2) A strong WHY will take you back to your goals.

3) It’s okay if your best WHY seems vain! It’s okay to want to look great.

4) A WHY should help you take the next best step.

5) Your WHY doesn’t have to be noble.

I provide an amazing workbook that has a Q and A section that will help you come up with at least 20 WHY’s—so that you can pull out the right one for the job at the right time!

These include questions like Why do I want to lose weight? How will I feel when I reach my goals? What will change when I reach my goal? And more..

Also included in the workbook is a sample of my page of answering the questions and some of my best WHY’s (for me!).

I want so many good things for you! I know that finding your WHY will help!

Find all of my episodes, outlines, and articles for my two weekly broadcasts:

(1)  Weight Loss Lifestyle broadcast (formerly Donna’s Intermittent Fasting Broadcast)

(2)  Think-Feel-Eat broadcast 

Sign up for my free webinar 

A. Introduction

1. We need a strong WHY in order to stay on our protocols!

2. Get booklet for this here! 

3. Join us at the “Drop 8 Pounds by Christmas” challenge!

a. Join at the blog to get all of the email updates and trainings 

b. Join the FB group

c. Watch the short info video here!

B. Thoughts About Creating a WHY That Works

1. A Why is a thought… A thought leads to a Feeling… A Feeling leads to an action…

2. Think: Strong Why–   Feel: Helpful Feeling — Act: Weight Loss Actions!

3. A strong WHY will tak you back to your goals!

4. One WHY isn’t enough!

5. Create at least 20 Why’s.

6. A Why isn’t to give you warm fuzzies, a why is to make you pause…and make a good decision… take the best path for your weight loss…

7. It’s okay if your best why seems vain! It’s okay to look great!

8. Your why doesn’t have to be noble.

9. Your why may make you cry… but it’s okay if it doesn’t

10. Write your best why’s over and over — keep your best one’s handy!

C. Questions to Ask to Find 20 WHY’s (See my sample worksheet filled in here!)

1. Why do I want to lose weight?

2. How will I feel when I reach my goal?

3. How will I look when I reach my goal?

4. What will change when I reach my goal?

5. What gets you excited about your goal weight?

D. Closing

1. Put your WHYs where you’ll see them

2. Make them short and snappy enough to remember them

3. Use the right one for the job!

4. Intermittent Fasting Course

Think Feel Eat #32: More of the First Four (First Four Things to Do in Order to Lose Weight)

Think Feel Eat #32: More of the First Four (First Four Things to Do in Order to Lose Weight)

Hi! I’m Donna Reish, IF teacher, weight loss coach, blogger, and half of “The Minus 220 Pound Pair” as my husband and I have lost over 220 pounds together (160 of that in the past couple of years through the Weight Loss Lifestyle habits and strategies I teach!).

In this episode, I present the First Four steps of weight loss.

When we set out to lose weight, we often want to “do it all.” We want to make all the changes and do every single thing that will cause us to “lose weight fast.” But we usually find that we can’t sustain all of those changes all at the same time—and we often find ourselves going too low in something to continue, so we give up.

Habit formation teaches us that these “all or nothing” approaches usually do not work—and seldom last if they do work.

So enter The First Four—four easy-to-implement, yet still effective steps in the right direction for life-long weight loss.

These four steps are

Number 1: Decide ahead of time for food

Number 2: Monitor sleep

Number 3: Drink water

Number 4: Time your eating

They are effective because they work on specific key areas of weight management:

1) Help in controlling total intake—through timed eating, sleeping enough, filling up with water, deciding ahead of time what we will eat (which helps us with cravings and overeating)

2) They help us burn more calories

3) They help us with cravings

4) They help us by causing us to use our pre-frontal cortex for decisions rather than using our “toddler brain” to decide on things in the moment

5) So much more!

Additionally, when we implement steps that are completely doable, we start to build habits—not just short term solutions.

AND…. Success breeds success. As we are successful in the First Four, we will develop confidence and have success in harder areas!
Grab my handout/daily journal page (two to three minutes a day!) to make the First Four YOUR first four!

Find all of my episodes, outlines, and articles for my two weekly broadcasts:

(1)  Weight Loss Lifestyle broadcast (formerly Donna’s Intermittent Fasting Broadcast)

(2)  Think-Feel-Eat broadcast 

Sign up for my free intermittent fasting webinar

Think Feel Eat 32 More of the First Four (First Four Things to Do in Order to Lose Weight)

A. Weight Loss Decisions

1. Weight loss is not one BIG decision (though Picking Your Protocol is ONE big decision but you can change it as needed)

a. It is a series of little decisions that we make over and over again

b. It is a series of little life-changing decisions (we eventually change sooo many things to make weight loss our lifestyle)

c. Almost every time we gain weight or lose weight, it is because we have made a decision either ahead of time (or with willpower in the moment) or we have made a decision in the moment without willpower.

2. In the Perfect Storm, we start with the FIRST FOUR

a. Four decisions that are easy to make

b. Four things to implement that are not hard

c. But four things with huge impacts on weight loss

d. Four things that we want to develop habits of while they are easy

B. Willpower Gap—See Weight Loss Lifestyle 60 and 61

1. Research shows that we spend four hours a day resisting temptations and have up to 120 food-related decisions a day.

2. We simply don’t have the willpower for that! Thus, we have a willpower gap.

C. Decisions Ahead of Time

1. Pre-frontal cortex

a. Unaffected by emotions, willpower, cravings, etc.

b. The planning part of our brain

c. The part that has our best interest in mind

d. The part that cares about our future self

2. Decisions in the moment are made with our primal brain

a. Avoid discomfort

b. Seek happiness and immediate gratification

c. Toddler brain

3. First Four Decisions for Weight Loss: Decide ahead of time! (Free Journal Sheet!)

a. Number 1: Decide ahead of time for food

b. Number 2: Monitor sleep

c. Number 3: Drink water

d. Number 4: Time your eating

D. Join the Drop 8 Pounds by Christmas challenge! Join today—we start on October 1st!

a. Join at the blog to get all of the email updates and training

b. Join the FB group!

Watch the short info video here:

 

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