Effective Ways of Measuring Progress
By Chad Tackett
Success can be measured on a number of levels.
It's important to measure your progress by the new healthy habits you're
adopting as well as by your appearance. Long-term decreases in medical problems,
injury, and other health risks and an improved quality of life, with or
without weight loss, are the most important measures of success.
Short- and medium-term changes can also be measured
regularly during the process. These include obvious changes in health-related
behavior patterns such as a decreased reliance on medications, increased
ability to perform physical activity, a reduced intake of fat, and the increased
intake of dietary fiber, vitamins, and minerals in your diet.
If you've started making slight changes in how
your food is cooked or prepared, or if you're reading labels at the grocery
store and are discovering new tastes and textures, you're making great improvements
towards a healthier lifestyle. When you feel good about yourself and acknowledge
the changes you're making along the way, you're more likely to keep moving
forward on your path.
Physical indicators of progress towards a healthier
body fat distribution include the waist circumference and waist-hip ration
(WHR). Because abdominal obesity has consistently been associated with risk
factors for diabetes and heart disease, any reduction in the waist circumference
or in the WHR is a positive step towards a healthier body fat distribution,
regardless of weight loss.
Another good way of determining physical progress
is having your body fat measured by either hydrostatic weighing, electrical
impedance, or simply by using skinfold calipers. This latter is by far the
cheapest and most accessible. Although it is not as accurate as the other
two methods, it can at the very least give you a beginning point from which
you can easily measure decreases in body fat. Please refer to the Global
Health and
Fitness Personal Trainer Directory (www.global-fitness.com)
to find a certified personal trainer in your area that can measure your
body fat percentage.
However you decide to measure your physical progress,
never use the scale as an indicator. Your weight does not reflect how healthy
you are or the progress you've made. When you step on the scale, your weight
reflects the combined total of both your lean body weight (muscle, bone,
organs, fluids) and body fat weight. Two people with identical body weights
do not have the same body composition; they could, indeed, have entirely
different body types. For example a 170-pound man might have 60 pounds of
body fat and 110 pounds of lean body mass. A healthier, more muscular man
might only have 25 pounds of body fat and 145 pounds of lean body mass.
Even though these two individuals weigh the same, one is in much better
shape than the other.
Using the scale to measure your progress gives
you no information about the body composition (fat vs. muscle) changes that
are actually occurring. The scale may show that you've lost seven pounds,
but it can't tell you that half of the weight was muscle and water, not
fat. Similarly, people become discouraged when they haven't lost any weight,
even though they have actually lost pounds of fat and replaced them with
pounds of firm, fat-burning muscle.
Developing healthier eating and physical activity
habits will most likely result in a loss of body fat even though the scale
may indicate that you weigh the same. Learn to use other methods of determining
body composition and pay more attention to improvements in how you feel,
in your self-esteem, and in your physical appearance.
Height/weight charts and other tables such as the
BMI (Body Mass Index: weight in kilograms divided by height in meters, squared)
have similar limitations when used as an indicator of progress towards a
healthier lifestyle for several reasons. First, these formulas are not always
related to how fat you are since they don't take into account body composition/fat
distribution. Many people who are muscular or short and stocky have a high
BMI, even though they are not necessarily fat or at high risk for disease.
Second, the BMI is only appropriate for adults 20-65 years of age. It cannot
account for patterns of growth in adolescents or in the elderly, who may
decrease in height with age. Third, the focus is still on changing one's
weight to produce a lower BMI (since it's not possible to increase one's
height). This continues to promote weight change as the ideal way to improve
health.
Don't forget to notice and acknowledge improvements
in energy, performance, self-esteem, and the many other benefits you'll
gain from this healthier lifestyle: improvements in health risk factors
and medical conditions, improved quality of life and psychological functioning,
healthier eating, and more enjoyable physical activity. Good luck: I hope
you enjoy all the wonderful benefits of a healthy, active lifestyle.
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