Dr. Collins shares Dieting and Weight-Loss Information
Dr. Collins makes Brief Positive Statements for Inspiration and Motivation.
Healthy Home Cooking by Dr. Collins for a Low-Calorie Lifestyle.
A place for Grandbabies to visit with their online Grandma.
Salad for Lunch - POSTED ON: Nov 02, 2011
Today I posted another cooking video, Apple Tuna Salad which is located at DietHobby, under RECIPES, Mealtime. This is a low-calorie, low-fat, and reduced carb recipe.
Happy Halloween - POSTED ON: Oct 31, 2011
Here is my Halloween treat to you.
A Joke.
Okay, maybe it was a trick.☺
Positive Power - POSTED ON: Oct 30, 2011
This morning I watched an inspiring video that reflects my own beliefs and experience in life. These truths are relevant for our efforts towards weight-loss and maintenance of that weight-loss as well as for all of the other areas of our lives. So, I'm sharing it here with you.
The video below, "Positive Thought Power", is also located in DietHobby under RESOURCES, Videos, Interviews.
For those who are following my “Ask Grandma” videos click to see my latest one: “How To Attract A Boy" which is located in DietHobby under RESOURCES, Videos, Ask Grandma.
Hunger After Weight-Loss - POSTED ON: Oct 29, 2011
About six years ago, I reached my goal weight, and now for all of that six years, I’ve been working to maintain my body at that normal weight. Here in the DietHobby Archives you can find many articles that talk about how I do this, my own experiences and viewpoint. The recent LA Times article quoted below confirms that my own individual experiences are generally true. I can personally testify that this hunger persists…even after 6 years.
"Dieters face a long battle with hunger. Study finds weight loss triggers hormones that tell you to eat, making it clear why it is so difficult to keep those lost pounds off. As if people needed a reminder that losing weight is hard and maintaining weight loss is even harder, a study has found that for at least a year, subjects who shed weight on a low-calorie diet were hungrier than when they started and had higher levels of hormones that tell the body to eat more, conserve energy and store away fuel as fat. The report, published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine, helps explain why roughly 80 percent of dieters regain lost pounds within a year or two of losing them -- and, sometimes, regain more. After weight loss, "multiple compensatory mechanisms" spring to life, the study shows, and work together to ensure that weight loss is reversed quickly and efficiently. The researchers, led by Joseph Proietto of the University of Melbourne's Department of Medicine, write that more than one solution to obesity will likely be necessary: "a combination of medications" that will have to be safe for long-term use.
Two-thirds of Americans and a growing proportion of the developing world's population are overweight or obese, and though obesity rates in the United States have begun to stabilize, there's been no significant decline. The Australian study paints a "very comprehensive" and "really discouraging" picture of the breadth of the body's response to weight loss, said Dr. Daniel Bessesen, an endocrinologist and obesity researcher at University of Colorado's Denver Health Medical Center. It captures just how many resources the body musters to ensure that weight is restored -- a long list of hormones that regulate appetite, feelings of fullness after eating and how calories are used. The study enrolled 50 obese men and women without major health problems and put them on a strict low-calorie diet for eight weeks. Within two weeks after that diet, and again a year later, researchers measured subjects' blood levels of nine distinct hormones that affect appetite and metabolism, and asked subjects about feelings of hunger after meals, between meals and as mealtimes approached. The challenges quickly became evident. Thirty-four of 50 enrolled subjects made it to the one-year mark. Four withdrew during the eight-week period of dieting -- a rigorous 550-calorie per day regimen. Seven failed to lose 10 percent of their body mass, which had been set as a condition of continued participation. And five withdrew during the yearlong "weight maintenance" phase, when subjects got regular counseling on a diet-and-exercise plan to stay at the new weight. Of those who remained, the average weight loss at 10 weeks, when hormone levels were first measured, was just short of 30 pounds. One year out, those subjects had gained back an average of just more than 12 pounds. But after and between meals, their appetites -- and the hormones that influence hunger -- rebounded even more robustly. The hormones -- including leptin, ghrelin, amylin, cholescystokinin and insulin -- vary widely. Some are secreted from the gut, others by the pancreas or fat cells themselves. Some increase appetite, some tell the brain that enough food has been eaten and others help regulate how calories are used. And for the dieters, those hormones were sending a single message a year later: ".Eat more". The subjects said they were just as hungry as they had been upon completion of their crash diets and significantly hungrier than they had been before their diets had begun. "The high rate of relapse after dieting is not surprising," the authors concluded".
Article by: MELISSA HEALY, Los Angeles Times October 26, 2011
Checking In - POSTED ON: Oct 27, 2011
Just checking in to say Hello to everyone. This morning the scale said 116.8 lbs. This is the lowest weight I've been since April, and I'm very pleased about it. Especially since my calorie count has been about the same, ...which of course is really very low... and I haven't been exercising. The only thing I'm doing different right now is my zero wheat experiment. I've having some veggies and fruit, and even had some potato chips, so my carbs aren't super-low, ...that is...not super-low when we consider my calorie count totals. It looks like this house repair, construction guy intrusion, is going to go on for a couple more weeks. My little repair job is the kind that the construction company schedules in between other bigger jobs, so it's hit and miss, here and there, which I find difficult. This past week, I've also been putting in 12 to 15 hour days on my computer dealing with small technical details on my videos which are stored on the companion Diethobby YouTube channel. Tech things to do with YouTube navigation and rating issues etc. It isn't that technically difficult, but it involves hitting the keys over and over and over and over and over and over for hours and hours and hours and hours. I've become obsessed with getting that organizational detail done, and hopefully after a couple of more days, I'll have accomplished it. I'm also spending a lot of time as the YouTube Grandma answering the comments and questions of people who are visiting the DietHobby channel. I've noticed some new registrations here at DietHobby.com, this past week, and I think they might be people that I've directed here for more info and support re dieting and weight-loss. Life goes on....as I'm always writing here. We have to be committed to our food plan and follow through even in the busy, stressful times in order to be successful with weight-loss and maintenance of that weight-loss. That's what I'm working very hard to do as well.
Today I'm rather lacking in inspiration, except for sharing my own life's details. However, there are many very inspirational and informative articles in the Archives. Take the time to read some.
Mar 01, 2021 DietHobby: A Digital Scrapbook. 2000+ Blogs and 500+ Videos in DietHobby reflect my personal experience in weight-loss and maintenance. One-size-doesn't-fit-all, and I address many ways-of-eating whenever they become interesting or applicable to me.
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