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16 totally doable weight-loss resolutions you should commit to this year

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Over the next year I will…

1. Sleep on my side

The Sleep Assessment and Advisory Service says that other positions interrupt your breathing. This wrecks your shuteye and puts 1 318 more food kilojoules in your grocery basket the next day.

Dr Colin Chapman of Uppsala University says lack of sleep makes you “less capable of self-control, leading to impulsive, craving-driven purchases.”

Duvet-tugs-of-war also sabotage sleep.

Read more: These 5 crazy facts will make you want to sleep naked. Every night

2. Be vague about my weight-loss target

When establishing your goal, think of the number of kilograms you want to lose, then subtract two.

Giving yourself a range for weight loss keeps up your motivation when you step on the scales for your daily weigh-in, found the Journal of Consumer Research.

Broadening your goal also makes you more likely to hit your target.

3. Make eating an effort

Load up on snacks that take a bit of work to consume, such as pistachios in shells, unpitted olives or reluctantly deskinned oranges.

“Foods that need to be shelled or peeled curb the autopilot eating that leads to massive consumption,” says Caroline Farrell from the Institute for Optimum Nutrition.

4. Crack some eggs

Research has shown that people who like theirs in the morning lose 65% more weight than those who scoff a bread-based breakfast with the same number of kilojoules.

An omelette with two eggs and cheese “utilises the protein and calcium to increase satiety for the day,” says nutrition consultant Drew Price.

eggs, breakfast, omelette

Read more: These seven simple rules will get you ripped

5. Break the breakfast habit

If you eat breakfast regularly and then start cutting it out occasionally, you may feel hungry, but it will also stop you from overeating at subsequent meals, says Dr David Levitsky, a nutrition scientist at Cornell University.

He found that occasional breakfast dodgers ate 1 700 fewer daily kilojoules than usual.

6. Play it cool

Researchers at Brunel University have discovered your workout playlist is most effective if it makes keeping time difficult.

“Jazz creates interference between your body and brain, blocking out the sensations of fatigue,” saysDavid Lee Priest, a bio-psychologist at the University of East Anglia. Ungroovy as that may sound, it means you’ll burn more weight each session.

7. Scent out the appeal of an orange

Just the sight and smell of healthy foods can improve your self-discipline.

“Smelling an orange reduces the kilojoules eaten by subjects by more than half,” says Nicola Buckland, a researcher at the University of Leeds. “Just looking at a picture of healthy food has a similar effect.”

orange, fruit, food, healthy,

8. Eat an apple, just for starters

Apples have been found to produce a hormone called GLP-1 in the body, which turns off hunger alerts in your brain.

Researchers from the University of Iowa discovered that participants in a study ate 15% fewer kilojoules after chomping on the fruit before they consumed their biggest meal of the day.

Read more: The 4 worst and best things to eat before bed

9. Buy food online

It doesn’t matter whether it’s on your browser or your phone, but ticking off your food shop on a list helps you lose an extra half a kilo every month, according to a study at Monash University.

“A predetermined list commits you to buy only the items on that list,” says researcher Dr Nicole Au. (Note: this falls apart if a family pack of Lay’s is on there.)

10. Exercise on empty once a week

“When you wake up in the morning your body is depleted of carbs,” says conditioning coach Rob Blair. “Cardio will cause your body to raid its fat stores to get the energy necessary for 30 minutes on the rower.”

 A “cardio-fast” session like this equates to just more than 1 255kJ.

cardio, running, stairs, outdoors, fitness, exerci

11. Drink tea in the afternoon

If your Friday afternoon treat is usually doughnut-shaped, a fruity brew at 15:00 will boost your willpower. This is when your blood sugar slumps and leaves you vulnerable to treats. Tea will save you from getting your glaze on.

12. Finish workouts with a glass of milk

Research published in the International Journal of Obesity shows that people reward themselves with a post-workout, kilojoule-dense treat to the tune of 920kJ.

Swerve it by necking a glass of the white stuff and you’ll only take on 343kJ while receiving the muscle-repairing benefits of a protein shake too.

Read more: How much post-workout protein do you really need?

13. Complete a brick session

This triathlon drill burns 1 839kJ and leaves you with a raised metabolism: ride a bike for 15 minutes, followed by a 15-minute run. Without rest, hop back on the bike for 10 minutes and finish with a 10-minute run. Easy.

14. Swim like a butterfly

Front crawl or breast stroke are nothing to swim home about, but get a couple of lessons in the butterfly and you’ll master the most fat-burning stroke in the pool. It burns 627kJ for every 10 minutes you can keep it up. Not so easy.

swimming, exercise, pool, man, fitness

15. Take a hit (or two)

Impact sports like rugby and squash cause your body to convert cells into lean tissue, not fat. A study in Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport found these sports send signals to the body that it needs to be protected by muscle – so at a cellular level it does just that.

Read more: 3 boxing moves that can make you stronger and faster

16. Switch my exercise programme

By now, results should start to become visible, but according a Mayo Clinic study, your metabolism slows as you begin to lose body mass.

To stop your results from flatlining, swap your usual gym session for half an hour of kickboxing (to burn 1 804kJ) or don your wetsuit and get out on the water with a surfboard for an hour (2 656kJ).

This article was originally published on www.menshealth.com

Image credits: iStock


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