
There are so many diets on the internet! Keto, No Carb, Protein, Intermittent Fasting, etc. I’m sure that these work for some people, and good for you if you’re one of them. Whatever it takes to get you to your healthy weight!
Personally, I’ve tried some different things. I was a chunky 13 year old and didn’t want to be anymore, so Mom helped me go on a diet that was very simple: I ate a hamburger patty and a boiled egg every day, twice a day, until I took off the weight. It worked. And I was able to keep the weight off because I then had a picture in my mind of how I wanted to look.Â
Much later on, after my divorce I did the grapefruit diet. Eat all you want but after every meal drink an eight-ounce can of grapefruit juice. This also worked and I used it several more times in my adult life. BIG CAUTION: Before starting any diet with grapefruit, check with your doctor or pharmacist for med interactions. If you are taking certain meds, grapefruit isn’t just harmful, it can be fatal.
With the above caution in mind, yeah, I can’t do the grapefruit diet any more and it was my favorite. Sigh.Â
So when I add a few pounds now, what do I do? That question took me five years to answer.Â
I yo-yo’d with 10 pounds that I desperately wanted to lose and couldn’t find a way to do it. I was of the mind (see grapefruit above) that I could somehow eat all I want and that as long as I was exercising the weight would come off.

But it didn’t happen. Or, I would start to lose and then gain it back and then some. Total bummer. Stubborn as always, I kept at it, doing exactly the same thing and experiencing exactly the same result while expecting a different result. Calling Dr. Einstein, code blue!
Finally, I found that the simplest answers are usually the right ones. I went back to old school, back to good old fashioned counting calories. Since it’s not mainstream anymore, I had to do a little research.
- First, I came up with about 10 meals I enjoy cooking in the wintertime, and 10 in the summer. Fall and spring vary between the two or something different, which is the spice of life.
- Second, I checked the calories for each meal, trying to keep the overall calorie count down to 1600 per day. Now guys, this takes into account exercising every day. If you are not exercising, get moving. If you exercise 3 times per week, lower the calorie count to 1200/day.
- I do cardio, isometric, resistance, endurance and stretching 5 days per week for 45 minutes to an hour.
- I have a Fitbit watch that I wear all day. It keeps track of calories burned, among other useful things and I highly recommend it. If you work out in the water like I do, make sure you get a waterproof watch.
- Keep a food diary. Every day, write down everything (and I do mean that candy bar!) that you eat each day. Referring back to this will keep you on track.
- Drink lots of water. You should drink half your body weight in ounces of water. So if you weigh 140, you should drink 70 ounces of water per day.
 
 This is how I keep my “diet†on automatic. I’ve been doing this for years and still keep the food diary. If something (like my weight) is off for that week, I just look back and see what (all) I consumed.Â

  Okay, so how much exercise is enough? Simple answer: When you are burning more calories than you’re taking in, you’re doing enough. When you break it down this way, it’s obvious that your choice for losing weight is pretty straightforward: Either burn more calories or take less calories in.
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 What about specific exercises? I hesitate to recommend specific exercises. You should sit down with an instructor at your gym pool and discuss this with her/him. I will say that generally speaking, when you’re doing cardio, faster is better for losing weight. I tell some people this and they fly through the exercise, abandoning proper form, and do no good for themselves at all. So don’t go that fast. Just keep a steady pace as opposed to a slow pace.

 The reason I do the exercises I do – cardio, resistance, endurance, isometrics and stretching – is because it works for me. I have worked with instructors for years, and worked through every exercise they recommend. Then, when I began teaching, I put together a routine from the best of the best.
- Cardio, like running/jumping, gets your heart rate up. It also improves your overall heart health and assists with weight loss.Â
- Resistance and endurance exercises burn calories efficiently and decrease abdominal fat.Â
- Isometric exercise boosts bone density and has a high caloric burn.Â
- Stretching is absolutely mandatory. It provides a cool down, decreases your risk of injuries, and moves your joints through your full range of motion. *
     *Stretching should not be done at the beginning of exercise; save it for last. Do some warm up exercises to begin. Think about it this way: If you take a rubber band out of the fridge and start stretching it, it will break.
 There are great resources for choosing specific exercises. As I mentioned, the best is consulting with an instructor at your gym or pool. And there are tons of videos available online, and great books (with pictures) for developing your own weight-loss exercise routine.
  You can do this.
Thanks for reading, and I’ll see ya’ in the water!

































