Question:
i am borderline diabetes, and need to lose weight ASAP whats a good method? and what to eat? please help me?
jordii
2011-12-17 16:12:01 UTC
I like veggies, and fish, and all that stuff, I just need some guidance, the internet has too much info, and most of it contradicts itself... please help me out! diabetes is a scary thought, and it's for life
24 answers:
Ben Trolled
2011-12-18 02:58:33 UTC
First of all Exercise is the key. Plus a low glycemin index diet.





Description

Nordic walking can be done year round in any climate and anywhere a person of any age or ability might

otherwise walk without poles. It combines simplicity and accessibility of walking with simultaneous core and

upper body conditioning similar to Nordic skiing. The result is a full-body walking workout that can burn

significantly more calories without a change in perceived exertion or having to walk faster, due to the

incorporation of many large core, and other upper-body muscles which comprise more than 90% of the

body's total muscle mass and do work against resistance with each stride. 'Normal walking' utilizes less

than 70% of muscle mass with full impact on the joints of the legs and feet.



Nordic Ski Walking produces up to a 46% increase in energy consumption compared to walking without

poles.



Benefits



Compared to regular walking, Nordic walking involves applying force to the poles with each stride. Nordic

walkers use more of their entire body (with greater intensity) and receive fitness building stimulation not as present in normal walking for the chest, lats, triceps, biceps, shoulder, abdominals, spinal and other coremuscles. This extra muscle involvement leads to enhancements over ordinary walking at equal paces such

as:

increased overall strength and endurance in the core muscles and the entire upper body

significant increases in heart rate at a given pace

greater ease in climbing hills

burning more calories than in plain walking

improved balance and stability with use of the poles

significant un-weighting of hip, knee and ankle joints

effective weight bearing exercise - creates positive total body bone density-preserving stress



I use plain old wooden sticks, works well>



Kewl!



http://www.mendosa.com/gilists.htm

This table includes the glycemic index and glycemic load of more than 2,480 individual food items. Not all of them, however, are available in the United States. They represent a true international effort of testing around the world.





The glycemic index (GI) is a numerical system of measuring how much of a rise in circulating blood sugar a carbohydrate triggers–the higher the number, the greater the blood sugar response. So a low GI food will cause a small rise, while a high GI food will trigger a dramatic spike. A list of carbohydrates with their glycemic values is shown below. A GI is 70 or more is high, a GI of 56 to 69 inclusive is medium, and a GI of 55 or less is low.





The glycemic load (GL) is a relatively new way to assess the impact of carbohydrate consumption that takes the glycemic index into account, but gives a fuller picture than does glycemic index alone. A GI value tells you only how rapidly a particular carbohydrate turns into sugar. It doesn't tell you how much of that carbohydrate is in a serving of a particular food. You need to know both things to understand a food's effect on blood sugar. That is where glycemic load comes in. The carbohydrate in watermelon, for example, has a high GI. But there isn't a lot of it, so watermelon's glycemic load is relatively low. A GL of 20 or more is high, a GL of 11 to 19 inclusive is medium, and a GL of 10 or less is low.





Foods that have a low GL almost always have a low GI. Foods with an intermediate or high GL range from very low to very high GI.





Both GI and GL are listed here. The GI is of foods based on the glucose index–where glucose is set to equal 100. The other is the glycemic load, which is the glycemic index divided by 100 multiplied by its available carbohydrate content (i.e. carbohydrates minus fiber) in grams. (The "Serve size (g)" column is the serving size in grams for calculating the glycemic load; for simplicity of presentation I have left out an intermediate column that shows the available carbohydrates in the stated serving sizes.) Take, watermelon as an example of calculating glycemic load. Its glycemic index is pretty high, about 72. According to the calculations by the people at the University of Sydney's Human Nutrition Unit, in a serving of 120 grams it has 6 grams of available carbohydrate per serving, so its glycemic load is pretty low, 72/100*6=4.32, rounded to 4.



I lost 70 pounds in 9 months,



Take care

Ben Trolled
2016-08-31 08:18:26 UTC
1
Sheryl
2016-09-17 11:32:45 UTC
2
BJC
2011-12-20 13:25:40 UTC
The best thing you can do is exercise (cardio and weight resistance training) and eat a very low carbohydrate diet (low glycemic diet is OK, but the glycemic index is not very accurate for a diabetic). Just don't overdue it with too much protein. Certain veggies (not corn, potatoes, or tomatoes), fish, meat and cheese are all fine.



The weight loss that will ensue will make it much less likley that you will become a full-fledged diabetic. And the increased muscle mass will help your body utilize the insulin you make more efficiently which will also decrease the risk of developing type II diabetes.



The above measures have saved my life.
Jean
2016-05-19 05:25:38 UTC
I found the book to be very informative and easy to read.



I've lost 17 pounds in 12 days, I'm just concerned that I'm losing too much weight, too quickly. I will admit I haven't followed the guide exactly. I'm not sticking perfectly to the listed foods and meal plans (but mostly) and doing very little exercise, but the weight keeps flying off.



It clearly works and if I'd followed it exactly I think it would scare the living daylights out of me because of the amount that I'd lose. So thanks again for the information. I've never purchased anything like this before because they are usually full of trash, but 3WD has been a pleasant surprise.



Get started today!
velia
2016-05-03 06:37:51 UTC
Life style is often part of the issue. Life style changes now could delay or prevent you from getting diabetes later. Learn here https://tr.im/iW6jP



What you eat is not actually the cause of diabetes, but how you live can be. If you sit on the couch all day, your chances of developing diabetes goes up greatly.



Just do the best you can to not gain weight and to maintain an active life style and that will greatly help reduce some of your risks.
2016-04-14 05:51:17 UTC
There's no point in buying pills because there's 50% chance they'll work. Your eating routine is horrible. I've made an eating schedule for you. This will cut out some of the junk food, but I promise, it will work. Breakfast: Fruit salad, hard-boiled eggs, yogurt. Lunch: Salad, turkey & cheese (subway) sandwhich, hard-boiled eggs, yogurt. Lunch: Potatoes, salad, etc. You should have at least 3 fruits/veggies a day. I suggest getting one fast food meal per month. Also, drink water for monday, tuesday, wednesday, thursday, saturday, and sunday. On Friday, you can drink pop. Run everyday and work out.



For the best answers, search on this site https://smarturl.im/aDQkT
2011-12-17 16:26:12 UTC
Firstly I would have a aim weight or dress size but be realistic at the same time with it so you know or expect how much weight to loose. This will also keep you going as an incentive so every week when you weight or measure yourself you can see your improvement.



Work out your BMI (Body mass index) you can google this, it will tell you what you are now whether overweight, obese, morbidy obese or ideal weight. Check the calculation for your height as an indicator as an aim weight.



Try and make home cooked food as much as you can so you know what is in your food it will also contain less processed foods, fat, salt and sugar etc. And be cheaper.



Dont be too hard on yourself, subsitute say a chocolate bar for perhaps a banana, new potatoes for chips. Little changes make a big difference.



Avoid - Ready meals, take aways, fizzy sugary drinks *If you are not a big fan of water look out for 'sugar free drinks' like robinsons dilute.* Cakes, sweets and alcohol. These are not good if you are at risk of diabetes nor loosing weight.



If you need a good guideline and motivation try slimming world or weight watchers, maybe see if a friend or relative wants to start with you for more motivation.



Perhaps look at local zumba, dance or fitness classes or wi fit if you are not confident going to a class to make you physically fit this will also motivate you to loose weight as you will see results more.



Eat 3 meals a day, breakfast a non sugary cereal or ceral bar. Eat porridge with chopped banana for sweetness, plain yoghurt with chopped fruit, fruit smoothie, poached/boiled wholemeal toast with low fat butter (flora).



Lunch - Wholemeal sandwich, low fat philadelphia and ham, jacket potatoes with tuna or beans. Salads, pasta.



Dinner - Homemade shepards pie with vegetables, Chicken stew baked cod with new potatoes and veg. etc..



Snacks - Rice cakes, fruit, yoghurt fat free low in sugar (natural).



Good luck
2016-02-15 22:57:07 UTC
Get off the scales! Seeing that women, our weight can fluctuate as outlined by our menstrual cycle, water preservation and meal times. So keep from standing on the scales excessively to avoid becoming obsessed in addition to demotivated.
Maisie
2016-01-28 08:48:11 UTC
Snack on high dietary fibre, low starch carbs including pure nuts and seeds, quinoa, barley and oats to reduce those pesky hunger pangs until eventually dinnertime. It also stops a person from attacking the biscuits.
Veronica
2017-03-11 06:29:27 UTC
Choose menu items that are grilled, baked, blackened, steamed, or broiled rather than fried or breaded.
Redmon
2017-03-10 05:19:47 UTC
make meals less meals
Robert
2017-02-24 04:12:57 UTC
3
2017-02-03 11:49:35 UTC
Remove the maximum amount of stool as you can.
Burkatt
2016-07-01 19:14:50 UTC
minimal carb plus calorie counting is the ideal solution
2016-12-26 04:39:30 UTC
Eat in front of a person rather than screen. It cuts down on mindless eating and makes you more accountable for each chew.
2016-02-24 11:07:19 UTC
Keep healthier dessert options accessible so you have something have fun with during office birthdays and additional celebrations.
nenita
2016-04-21 12:05:14 UTC
Sip calorie-free water, seltzer, or green tea using your meal instead of soda, sweetened hot tea, or juice.
2016-12-25 00:30:32 UTC
consume mineral water with out polished carbs
2016-07-15 01:51:26 UTC
start off walking a bit more
pickmefirstplz
2011-12-17 16:13:22 UTC
stay out of the fast food joints
henriette
2016-05-03 06:53:11 UTC
in case you must have the lovely, take in the fruit. or possibly a biscuit
2016-02-24 14:57:08 UTC
commence walking a little more
Mercedes
2016-03-23 11:26:52 UTC
Answer --> http://DiabetesGoGo.com/?DkuR


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