Are you on the perpetual diet roller coaster?

You lose weight, you gain it back, you lose weight, you gain it back, and so it goes…

The vicious loop of yo-yo dieting, also known as “weight cycling,” normally stems from highly restrictive eating patterns that are unsustainable—and unhealthy. Extreme calorie curbing followed by weight fluctuation comes at a steep price. Yo-yo dieting puts undue strain on your body, such as:

Damage to the cells that line the walls of the blood vessels. When this happens, blood flow is restricted and your risk of heart attack and stroke increases.

Altered metabolism. Dramatic weight loss causes your metabolism to plummet. Your body then goes into starvation mode in order to survive. This is how you get flabby; your body is storing fat because it is starving for nutrients. When you resume your normal eating habits, your metabolism has trouble revving up. As a result, every time you repeat this cycle, it becomes harder to lose weight!

Nutritional deficiency. Your body needs a certain number of calories per day to function properly, and not just empty calories. It needs nutrient dense calories to function as it should. By virtue of the severe calorie restriction inherent in fad diets, it is nearly impossible to maintain the levels of protein to maintain muscle mass; the calcium to maintain bone density; and all of the various vitamins and minerals essential for mood, energy, and other bodily functions.

Small Changes Add Up!

Instead of going on a dangerous crash diet, try implementing small changes to your daily routine.

1. Replace soda, modified waters and other sugary drinks with sparkling water or herbal tea sweetened with natural stevia. Reducing your sugar intake slashes calories. Also start your morning off first thing with a glass of water before breakfast or your coffee. Your body has been fasting since the evening meal and needs hydration.

2. Add lean protein sources. Some examples include: legumes, beans, chicken and turkey breast, or grass-fed beef. Incorporate fish such as wild salmon for its healthful and essential omega-3 fatty acids. Meals that include protein help stabilize blood sugar and keep you full for hours.

3. Load up on vegetables—fill half of your plate with vegetables at dinner. Instead of nutritionally void, high-calorie carbs, replace breads, wheat products and white rice with a generous serving of starchy and green vegetables. Pile on steamed broccoli and cauliflower and eat a large salad. Vegetables are packed with fiber, which keeps you satisfied for much longer than any dinner roll can.

Above all, the key to lasting weight loss lies in setting attainable goals and being patient in the process.

Remember: A quick fix is usually too good to be true. By making such lifestyle shifts as adding veggies to your diet, exercising for 30-45 minutes 3 times per week, or reducing most refined sugars, you’ll see that slow and steady wins when it comes to weight loss.

Next week we will talk about the problems with a few of the popular diets out there.

Author's Bio: 

Cheryl helps women free themselves from hormonal symptoms so they can have confidence in the way they look and feel without boot camp workouts and deprivation diets.

Download a free copy of her guide, "8 Roots to Cultivate Lifelong Well-being and Get Your Euphoria Back!" at http://EuphoricRoots.com