detox

  • Calculating macronutrients: Your calorie, protein, carbs and fat targets (to lose weight or gain muscles)

    Several years ago, in the supermarket where I most often buy groceries, I picked up some packaged food, looked at the nutrition facts label and said to myself: “I want to know exactly what these numbers mean”.

    I’m so happy I did that, because learning about macronutrients (proteins, carbs, fats) was some of the most valuable knowledge I ever acquired about dieting.

    So, I want to share with you, in a very structured and simple way, all the important basics of macronutrients that every single person should know.

    Among many other things, learning how to read nutrition fact labels and understanding macronutrients (macros, in short) will help you to:

    • Easily calculate when you are in a caloric deficit or surplus, depending on whether you want to lose weight or for your muscles to grow.
    • The percentage of proteins, carbs, fats and sugars that you intake and how to fine-tune your diet according to your dieting goals.
    • Realize how much sugar (or toxic trans fats) there is in almost every food, easily identify junk food outside fast food restaurants (it’s everywhere) and avoid empty calories.

    I suggest you read the article on how to find the perfect diet before reading this one.

    Calculating macronutrients is extremely important when it comes to dieting

    First of all, don’t get fooled into believing that calories and macronutrients don’t count. There are many people out there trying to convince you that prehistoric people didn’t have a clue about calories (I was one of the people who believed in such a philosophy).

    It’s absolutely true that prehistoric people didn’t know about calories, but they also didn’t have milkshakes, French fries, candies or even fruit in such an abundance as we have it today. On top of that, they were moving all day. Times have changed, so counting calories and macros can be really beneficial.

    When it comes to dieting, the quality and quantity of food are what matters. Both of them matter.

    Quantity (how much you eat – calories) is important when it comes to losing weight. Quality (what type of food you eat) is important when it comes to growing muscles, enjoying a high level of energy, having good digestion, staying healthy, and so on.

    Trust me, I experimented with this on my own skin. I was on a vegetarian, vegan, fruitarian, macrobiotic, paleo and keto diets and many others, and the same rules apply over and over again (more about the rules in a moment).

    I experimented with exercising and zero exercise while on all the different diets. I got very different results. Here is a simple chart that shows completely different body compositions on different diets:

    Diet Macros Weight Body fat
    Standard diet High carb (50%)

    Low fat (30%)

    Mid protein (20%)

    90 kg 25%
    Fruitarian diet High carb (80%)

    Low fat (10%)

    Low protein (10%)

    69 kg 18%
    Current diet Low carb (30%)

    Mid fat (30%)

    High protein (40%)

    82 kg 16% and going down

    Let’s not forget, every time I started to exercise while eating the same quantity of food, my body fat went down and my good moods went up.

    Before we go to the calculations, there are only five rules that you must remember:

    1. If you want to lose weight, you must be in a caloric deficit. If I exaggerate a bit: I did get fatter while eating only oranges and avocados if I ate too many calories. No matter what you eat, how many calories you consume has a big influence on gaining or losing fat.
    2. You can get yourself in a caloric deficit by eating less (consuming fewer calories) or exercising (burning calories). It’s much easier to restrict calories than burn them. You can so easily eat 500 calories but it takes an hour of working out to burn the same amount. A good rule of thumb is that it takes 10 minutes to burn 100 calories. There’s a saying that you can never out-train your diet and that six-packs are made in the kitchen. But …
    3. When you are in a caloric deficit, your body burns fat and muscles. That’s why it’s essential to also exercise while dieting. With exercise you build muscles, speed up your metabolism, improve your mood, burn additional calories, and so on. The right combination of strength, endurance and flexibility training will give you the best long-term overall results.
    4. The unfortunate challenge that comes with exercising is that your appetite goes up. Consequently, you must be more disciplined about how much you eat. There are several tricks for eating less , but increasing the amount of protein, complex carbs with lots of fiber and the healthy fats will keep you fuller for a longer period.
    5. If you want your muscles to grow, you need to increase the protein intake. But that’s not the only important thing. If you want to preserve your health in the long term, the quality of the food you consume also matters. Limiting sugars, refined grains and trans fats is mandatory for a healthy living. So up with proteins, fibrous foods, healthy fats, and down with sugars, trans fats and processed food.

    In the end, remember that the combination of exercise and dieting is what works best. And when it comes to dieting, you must know your macros – (calorie), proteins, carbs and fat intake. There’s no doubt, counting calories and macros can be really beneficial. Now let’s learn how to calculate them.

    Nutrition facts label - calculating macronutrients

    Step 1: Calculate your recommended daily caloric intake or TDEE

    Everything starts with BMR. BMR stands for the Basal Metabolic Rate. It’s the number of calories your body burns only by existing. Your BMR depends on your weight, height and age. If you don’t exercise or move at all, your target calories would equal your BMR.

    But as we said, exercise is a must; or at least moving around as much as possible (walking, biking, jogging, playing basketball etc.). By exercising and moving around, you burn additional calories and speed up your metabolism.

    You won’t believe it, but you burn calories even when you eat food. It actually costs energy to digest and absorb food. That’s called the Thermic Effect of Food or TEF (or sometimes SDA or DIT). Combining your BMR with the calories you burn through physical activity and the calories you burn while eating leads us to Total Daily Energy Exposure or TDEE.

    TDEE = Calories you burn just by existing + calories you burn to process food + calories you burn by moving around and exercising

    If your calories consumption equals TDEE, you will neither loose nor gain weight. TDEE is the number of calories that lets you maintain your weight.

    There are many BMR/TDEE calculators out there, so I recommend you experiment with several of them and see what kind of calculations you get. As an even better alternative, let’s do the calculations by hand, since it’s not really hard.

    Practical examples

    Now the fun begins. Let’s calculate my ideal BMR and TDEE as an example.

    Calculating your BMR

    To calculate your BMR, we will use the Katch-McArdle formula, which looks like this:

    P = 370 + (21.6 * LBM)

    LBM stands for the lean body mass (in kg).

    Lean body mass (LBM) is all the weight that you carry which isn’t fat. In other words, how much you would weigh if you had 0% body fat (it’s theoretical, because you would die without any body fat).

    To calculate your LBM you need two pieces of data: your weight and your body fat. You can get both with a good smart scale (approximate) or by using a regular scale and body calipers (more accurate).

    Here is the equation for calculating your LBM:

    LBM = (100 – % Fat) / 100 * Weight

    Let’s do a practical example. Here is my current data:

    • Weight: 82 kg
    • Fat: 16% (oh boy do I want to get that down to 12%)

    My LBM = (100 – 16) / 100 * 82 = 68.8 kg (let’s say 69 kg). That means I carry 13kg of fat around (82kg -69kg = 13kg).

    And my BMI is 370 + (21.6 * 69) = 1,860 kcal. If I don’t move at all, I use 1,860 by merely existing.

    Calculating your TDEE

    The next step is to calculate the TDEE out of BMI. It’s a very simple calculation. The more you move, the higher your TDEE is and the more calories you can consequently eat. Basically, you multiply your BMI with a number depending on how often you exercise.

    Activity Multiplier* (general)
    Sedentary 1.1 (1.2)
    Light exercise: 1 – 3 times per week 1.2 (1.375)
    Moderate exercise: 3 – 5 times per week 1.35 (1.550)
    Hard exercise: 6 – 7 days per week 1.45 (1.725)
    Very hard exercise: 6 – 7 days per week 1.7 (1.9)

    * The multiplier is a little bit lower than generally recommended based on observations of experienced trainers

    Now I can easily calculate my TDEE. Since I do moderate exercise 3 – 5 times per week, this is how I calculate my TDEE:

    TDEE = 1,860 * 1.35 = 2,511 kcal (let’s round that down to 2,500 kcal)

    TDEE is the number where I won’t lose fat or gain muscles with the same level of exercise. But that’s not our goal, which leads us to the second step.

    Step 2: Your target calories based on a dieting goal – losing weight or gaining muscles?

    Usually there is a goal behind a new diet – to lose weight or to gain more muscles. That requires a little additional math effort because you need to calculate your target calorie intake. But it’s simple math, I promise.

    Here are the rules to follow:

    • If you want to lose fat/get toned (also called cutting): The overall goal is to lose fat with a minimum loss of muscles. Remember, when dieting your body eats muscles and fat. To achieve that goal, it’s recommended to train 3 – 5 times per week (to preserve muscles, speed up metabolism, burn additional calories etc.) and be at around a 500kcal deficit every day with your diet. You should eat around 20% fewer calories than you burn. You should train with weights and add cardio to your weekly training schedule.
    • If you want to gain muscles/get big (also called bulking): The goal is to gain muscles while gaining a minimum amount of fat. To achieve that goal, you should again exercise 3 – 5 times per week, mainly doing weightlifting and HIIT training, and be in around a 300 kcal surplus per day (around 5% to 10% above your overall calorie intake).

    As you can see, it’s quite simple.

    If you’re skinny or want to focus on muscle growth, you bulk (caloric surplus, weights, little cardio) and if you’re fat, you cut (caloric deficit, weights, a little bit more of cardio).

    Unfortunately, when you cut, you are losing fat and muscles (especially if you don’t exercise at all) and when you gain, you gain fat and muscles. You just want to make sure that it happens at different rates, in favor of gaining or preserving muscles. That’s why exercise and sufficient protein intake are so important, but more about that later.

    Below is the table to help you decide if you should bulk or cut:

    Current body fat (Men) Current body fat (Women) Diet type Calories Exercise
    Lower than 10% Lower than 17% Bulk + 300 kcal Weightlifting,

    Little cardio

    Over 15% Over 22% Cut – 500 kcal Weightlifting, More Cardio
    11% – 15% 18% – 22% First cut to 10 – 12%, then bulk

    or

    First bulk, then cut to 10 – 12%

    Below are some general recommendations on how to choose the right path, if you currently fall into this category and you have plans to look better in the mirror.As you can see in the table above, there are two paths to take if you’re around 11% – 15% of body fat (18% – 22% for women) – first cut, then bulk or vice versa.

    Go for the “first cut, then bulk” path, if you:

    • Love cardio exercise or it’s summer time, when you can do a lot of cardio outdoor sports
    • Never lifted weights and you first need to learn how to properly lift
    • Like to eat a lot and need to learn how to respect caloric limits (to not overbulk)
    • Would like to get rid of the excess fat hanging off your body
    • Really easily gain weight

    If you choose this path, you should be doing moderate cardio (some sport you really enjoy outside the gym), learn how to lift weights properly with a personal trainer, and discipline yourself to follow your caloric targets. You will be losing fat, but you’ll also see your muscles get toned.

    Go for the “bulk first, cut later” path, if:

    • You already have good aerobic endurance and you are eager to lift weights
    • It’s winter time and it’s harder to do cardio exercise outside (running, hiking, swimming etc.)
    • You did research on beginner’s lifting programs (like 5×5 Stronglifts), have proper form or enough knowledge to lift weights (otherwise get a personal trainer, please)
    • You have no problem following a strict diet
    • You would like to gain muscles (look bigger) rather than go for definition
    • You lose muscles really quickly

    In such a case, you should do almost no cardio (well, you want to do a cardio sport you enjoy at least one time per week), focus on lifting weights, and eat enough protein. Your muscles will start to grow, usually quite fast in the beginning.

    It takes around 2 – 3 months to see the first results (on both paths), but beginnings always give the fastest progress if you do things correctly.

    Lean (toned), big (muscles) or natural (without steroids). You can only choose two.

    Now let’s get back to my case. I managed to cut down from 22% to 16% fat in the past year or so. But that’s still not enough to start with clean bulking and focusing solely on muscle gain. Thus, during the summer, I’ll still be in the cutting phase. That means a 500 kcal daily deficit. :(

    Let’s calculate my target calories:

    • My TDEE = 2,500 kcal
    • Cutting = 500 kcal deficit
    • My target calories = 2,000 kcal per day (and in the bulking phase, that would be 2,800 kcal)

    How fast will you be losing fat with a daily 500 kcal deficit?

    Approximately 7,700 kcal equals 1 kg of fat (or 3,600 kcal for one pound of fat). It’s just an approximate number (there’s a big fight about that online!), not an exact one, because your metabolism can slow down, it’s harder to lose fat with a lower body percentage, it depends on your macros etc.

    But it’s good enough to give us some very general direction. Now let’s do the calculation:

    • 500 kcal daily deficit = 15,000 kcal monthly deficit (500 kcal * 30 days)
    • 15,000 kcal / 7,700 = 1.95 kg. That’s almost 2kg of lost weight a month, the upper healthy limit for weight loss.

    Exactly what I want and need.

    Step 3: Calculate targeted calories per meal

    Now that you know your targeted daily caloric intake, you can easily calculate your meal caloric targets. That’s especially beneficial for not overeating on snacks.

    You will soon see why your snacks should be around 200 kcal on typical 3 big meals, 2 snacks diet. It’s sad but one bigger snack can get you away from your caloric targets and your fat won’t go anywhere.

    There are some standard eating patterns that people follow that we can use in our calculations:

    • Standard three big meals and two snacks
    • Three big meals without snacks
    • Two big meals and two snacks without dinner
    • Six smaller meals

    Now let’s do some calculations for my targeted 2,000 kcal daily consumption:

    6 meals 3 meals + 2 snacks 3 meals + 0 snacks 2 meals + 2 snacks
    Breakfast 20% – 400 kcal 25% – 500 kcal 33% – 660 kcal 30% – 600 kcal
    Snack 15% – 300 kcal 10% – 200 kcal 20% – 400 kcal
    Lunch 20% – 400 kcal 30% – 600 kcal 33% – 660 kcal 30% – 600 kcal
    Snack 15% – 300 kcal 10% – 200 kcal 20% – 400 kcal
    Dinner 20% – 400 kcal 25 % – 500 kcal 33% – 660kcal
    Post workout 10% – 200 kcal
    Total 2,000 kcal 2,000 kcal 2,000 kcal 2,000 kcal

    I love to eat often and a lot, and my blood sugar levels drop fast, which is why I follow the first option of having 6 meals more or less equally combined.

    Sometimes it’s quite a challenge to squeeze six meals into an 8-hour timeframe while following an intermittent diet. But you definitely don’t suffer from hunger issues in doing so.

    If you go for bigger main courses (breakfast, lunch, dinner) and have snacks in between, be careful not to over-snack. Make sure your snacks are around 200 kcal, otherwise you can quickly miss your macro targets.

    Beware of empty calories

    You consume empty calories with all the foods that provide zero nutritional value. These especially include soft drinks, candies, biscuits, cakes, jams, jelly, syrups, and so on.

    Don’t forget to count such (liquid) calories if you consume them during the day. Empty calories can quickly get you over the caloric limit. One sugary drink (soda, juices) can quickly amount to 200 kcal.

    Now the fun begins. It’s time to learn the macro goals for the favorite foods you eat most often.

    Proteins, carbs and fats

    Step 4: Define your macronutrient goals according to the diet you follow

    We discussed all the important basics about the calorie intake. Calculate your TDEE and go for a deficit if you want to lose fat or for a surplus if you want your muscles to grow (in combination with eating enough protein and regular weightlifting).

    The next step is to dive deep into calculating the right amount of protein, carbs and fats to consume daily with every meal.

    • Macronutrients: Protein, carbs, fats
    • Micronutrients: Vitamins, minerals

    Before we start with any calculations, let me explain the basics of the three major food-building blocks (macronutrients or macros), why they are important and what the best food sources for each category are.

    Macronutrient Best for
    Protein Building muscles
    Carbohydrates (carbs) Primary source of energy
    Fats Hormones, nerves, tissues, vitamin absorption

    Secondary source of energy

    Protein – building blocks for your muscles

    Your body is made mainly of water and protein. Proteins are chains of amino acids. We know approximately 20 different amino acids and 9 of them can’t be made by your body, but need to be consumed with foods.

    The major role of protein is to build new tissue and fix broken down tissue. They also help fight off infections (amino acids such as glutamine). If you don’t consume enough protein, your body starts to tear down your muscles to get the sufficient amount of protein.

    Animal protein sources Plant based protein sources
    Lean meat

    Fish and seafood

    Low fat dairy

    Eggs

    Whey protein

    Nuts

    Greek Yogurt

    Nuts

    Chia, hemp and other seeds

    Beans

    Lentils

    Seitan

    Tofu

    Carbohydrates – the more complex and fibrous the better

    Carbohydrates get turned into glucose and are the main and primary fuel for the body and brain (as sugar). Body breaks carbohydrates down to burn them as an energy source.

    We know simple carbohydrates and complex carbs (whole foods with more fiber and micronutrients). It takes a longer time to break down complex carbs and consequently they don’t spike your insulin levels.

    It’s not hard to guess which ones are healthier. Complex carbs, of course. The biggest problem are refined simple carbs that mess with your insulin levels and are so easy to consume in abundance (think crackers, for example).

    Complex carbs (good carbs) Fibrous and starchy carbs (good carbs) Highly processed carbs (bad simple carbs)
    Whole grains

    Brown rice

    Oatmeal

    Quinoa

    Veggies

    Fruits

    Lentils

    Beans, peas

    Sweet potato

    Refined grains

    Sugars

    Honey

    Syrups

    Soft drinks

    Candy etc.

    Fats – essential for your body to function and excellent fuel

    Fats (or fatty acids) are especially important for hormone balance, cell growth, nerve function, healthy tissues, some micronutrient absorption and for protecting your organs. We know saturated (animal sources), polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fats.

    Usually there is one dominant type of fat, and that is how food is categorized. And let’s not forget about trans fats, which are absolutely bad for you. Trans fats are created when polyunsaturated oils are altered through hydrogenation.

    Fats can also be a source of energy for your body (on a keto diet).

    Good fats

    Monounsaturated

    Good fats

    Polyunsaturated

    Fats to limit*

    Saturated fats

    Worst food

    Trans fats

    Avocado

    Nuts

    Olives

    Olive oil

    Some seeds

    Flax seed

    Hemp seed

    Some nuts

    Salmon, sardines

    Beans

    Eggs

    Fish oil

    (they stay liquid in colder temperatures and contain lots of omega-3-6)

    Fatty meat parts

    Red Meat

    Diary

    Butter

    Dark chocolate

    Tropical oils (coconut, palm oil)

    Margarine

    French Fries

    Potato chips

    Crackers

    Everything fried

    * There are contradictory studies on whether saturated fats are bad for you. Many diets recommend you limit saturated fats to 10% or less of your daily calorie intake (no more than 20 grams).

    On the other hand, the keto diet doesn’t advocate any restrictions. Listen to your body, what you prefer, but be careful because if you are not on keto, you can easily overeat on saturated fats.

    Simple guidelines for what to eat

    As you can see, the tables above include three food types that need to be avoided or minimized:

    • Everything with added sugar
    • Highly processed carbs (sugars, refined grains, sweets, cakes etc.)
    • Foods with trans fats (everything fried, crackers and similar snacks, margarine etc.)

    And almost every diet agrees to include the following in your meals:

    • Veggies and fruits (the latter in moderation)
    • Healthy unsaturated fats
    • Drinking enough water
    Experiment with different diets
    Experiment a little bit with different diets

    Everything else is up to you and what works for your body and other factors (beliefs, culture etc.):

    • If you are vegetarian, you will eliminate animal proteins and saturated fats
    • If you are on a keto diet, you will eliminate carbohydrates and focus on eating fats
    • If you are on a macrobiotic diet, you will focus on complex carbohydrates
    • If you are on paleo, you focus on eating unprocessed food
    • If you follow a standard diet, you will mainly eat carbs, and so on

    The foods to experiment with and see if they work for your body:

    1. Animal products (protein source for muscle growth or a source of fat)
      1. Meat – poultry, beef, lamb, pork etc.
      2. Dairy – yogurt, cheese, butter, milk etc.
      3. Eggs
    2. Fish and seafood (protein source for muscle growth)
    3. Grains (complex carbs for energy)
    4. Beans, legumes and lentils (complex carbs for energy)
    5. Nightshades – tomato, peppers, chili, eggplant
    6. Coffee
    7. Food supplements

    The ratio between macronutrients

    The point of this article is not to advocate any diet in particular, but rather to teach you how to do macronutrient calculations.

    So, let’s look at what the most popular diets recommend about how much protein, carbs and fats you should consume:

    Diet type Protein Carbs Fats
    Standard 15% (mid) 50% (high) 35% (mid)
    Fruitarian 10% (low) 80% (high, fruits) 10% (low)
    Macrobiotic 10% (low) 70% (high) 20% (low)
    Low-carb 40% (high) 10% (low) 50% (high)
    The Zone Diet 30% (high) 40% (mid) 30% (mid)
    Keto 20% (mid) 10% (low) 70% (high)
    Paleo diet 40% (high) 20% (low) 40% (high)
    Fitness community 40% (high) 40% (mid) 20% (low)

    Well, as I said, you have to do a little bit of experimenting to find the diet that works best for you. I would just recommend you don’t go into any extreme. I currently follow the paleo diet with carb cycling, but you will have to experiment on your own.

    Now the next step is to get the actual grams for each macronutrient. To calculate that, we need yet another piece of data:

    Macronutrient 1 gram = number of calories
    Protein 4 kcal
    Carbs 4 kcal
    Fats 9 kcal

    With that piece of data, it’s very easy to calculate how many grams of each macronutrient you should eat. Let’s do the calculation for my 2,000 calories, based on the 40P/20C/40F split that I follow after a little bit of experimenting.

    I also do carb cycling, but that would only complicate things.

    Macronutrient % of calorie intake kcal grams
    Protein 40% 800 kcal 200g
    Carbs 20% 400 kcal 100g
    Fats 40% 800 kcal 90g

    Now we have the exact targeted grams of protein, carbs and fats to intake. Let’s now do a few safety checks to make sure the calculations are okay.

    Are you eating enough protein for muscles to grow?

    It’s completely up to you to find the right ratio of proteins, carbs and fats that works for you. But the one thing you want to make sure is to consume enough protein to preserve or grow your muscles.

    As we said, proteins are responsible for muscle tissue and if you don’t consume enough protein, your muscles start to break down.

    The recommended consumption of protein for muscles to grow is in the table below. I also added minimum recommendations for fats consumption, and the range for the carb intake. Commonly, people get enough proteins with using a protein shake.

    So you can do the calculations the other way around as well.

    • First calculate how much protein you want to consume and how many calories equals that.
    • Then calculate the fats you need and the rest are carbs.
    Macronutrient Recommended consumption

    (per body mass in kg)

    Protein (for muscle growth) 2.3g – 3.1g (1g to 1.4g per 1lb)
    Fats At least 0.5 g (0.23g per 1lb)
    Carbs From 1g to 3.1g (0.45g to 1.4g per 1lb)

    (on keto, your carb intake should be less than 50g per day, moderate amount of proteins and mainly fats)

    I weigh 82kg (180lbs), so let’s do the calculations:

    • 200g of protein equals 2.4g per my body weight. Checked.
    • 90g of fats equals 1.1g of fat per my body weight. That’s more than the 0.5g minimum. Checked.
    • The rest are carbs, which I cycle. I eat around 1.2g of carbs per my body weight.

    The last step is to calculate approximate macros for every meal (there are only general directions to meet by the end of the day).

    Meal Calories Protein (g) Carbs (g) Fats (g)
    Breakfast 20% – 400 kcal 40 20 18
    Snack 15% – 300 kcal 30 15 14
    Lunch 20% – 400 kcal 40 20 18
    Snack 15% – 300 kcal 30 15 14
    Dinner 20% – 400 kcal 40 20 18
    Post Workout 10% – 200 kcal 20 10 9
    Total 2000 kcal 200g 100g 91g

    Remember, these are not strict rules, only general directions. Of course, some of my meals will be more protein-based, others filled with more carbs or fats. But at the end of the day, I should hit my macro targets.

    Here are some additional directions to follow:

    • If you drink whey supplements, don’t consume more than 30g of protein at once. Crossing the 30g limit with solid food is not a problem.
    • It’s good to have a planned meal with healthy fats every day, since it’s much easier to eat carbs than fat.
    • Try to consume protein before and after a workout (in a few hours’ time frame) and as your last meal. Whey supplements after a workout might also help you with quick recovery.
    • If you want to aggressively lose weight, you can temporarily cut carbs and eat more fats. It works really well for some people. They don’t eat carbs for 3 – 5 days and then they do carb loading. Carb cycling can also be a really good solution.
    • For some people, the best time to eat carbs is with the first meal after you wake up and after exercise, but you will have to experiment with that.

    When you are eating what type of food is not really that important. There’s a great article by Precision Nutrition explaining the nutritional hierarchy of importance:

    1. How much do you eat? – Calorie control, not overeating
    2. How you eat? – Slowly and mindfully, without distractions
    3. Why you are eating? Hunger, emotional eating, social pressure
    4. What are you eating? Macros and food type
    5. When you are eating? Skipping meals, pre/post workout

    And we are almost at the end – a slightly adjusted table of how I plan to achieve my daily macro targets:

    Meal Protein Carbs Fats Calories
    Breakfast 30g 10g 30g 430
    Snack 30g 20g 20g 380
    Lunch 50g 10g 15g 375
    Snack 20g 40g 30g 380
    Dinner 50g 10g 5g 285
    Post Workout 30g 20g 1g 209
    Total 210g 100g 91g 2059

    Step 5: Get to know the macros of the food you most frequently eat and prepare a plan

    It’s not over yet. At this final step, the fun continues. You know your macro targets – calories, protein, carbs, fats.

    Thus, it’s time to hit these targets as precisely as possible at least by the end of the day.

    To do that, you need the following data:

    • A list of the foods you most frequently eat (for different meals): I suggest you prepare a list of all the foods you eat based on your daily meal plans, a meal log or your standard shopping list.
    • The weight of foods: That’s the hardest part, but for a week or so you will have to weigh everything you eat on a kitchen scale.
    • Macro values for every food: You get the macro values on a nutrition facts label, in different online spreadsheets or software applications. You can find many recipes online that already give macros for the whole dish and can help you do the calculations quicker.

    As an example, let’s look at the approximate values of the food that I regularly eat:

    Protein-based food

    Food Quantity kcal Protein Carbs Sugars Fats
    Lean chicken 100g 110 23.0 0.0 0.0 1.2
    Lean beef 100g 160 22.0 0.0 0.0 7.0
    Curd 100g 130 11.0 4.0 3.8 8.0
    Sea bass 100g 199 18.0 1.0 0.0 2.0

    Carb-based food

    Food Quantity kcal Protein Carbs Sugars Fats
    Banana 100g 90 1 23 12 0.3
    Blueberry 100g 60 0.7 15 10 0.3
    Broccoli 100g 34 2.8 6.6 1.7 0.4
    Chickpea 100g 165 9 27 5 2.6
    Buckwheat 100g 345 13 71 1 3.5

    Fat-based food

    Food Quantity kcal Protein Carbs Sugars Fats
    Egg 100g 200 13 1 1 15
    Salmon 100g 193 20 0 0 11
    Avocado 100g 160 2 9 0.5 15
    Almonds 100g 650 55 14 4 21

    Based on that, you build your typical meals. Let’s look at the example of my favorite lunch meal:

    Food Quantity kcal Protein Carbs Sugars Fats
    Beef steak 150g 240 35 0 0 11
    Broccoli 50g 35 3 7 2 1
    Quinoa 25g 90 4 15 0 1
    Total 365 42 22 2 13
    Targets 375 kcal 50 20 0 15

    As you can see, we are approximately in the macro targets for my lunch. I could add a few almonds to the dish and it would be perfect.

    The next step is to:

    • Make calculations for a few combinations of your favorite dishes (breakfast, lunch, dinner, snacks)
    • Upgrade your favorite dishes to meet the macro targets (very approximately)
    • Combine the dishes in the way that you get to your daily targets (quite precisely)
    • Prepare your weekly dieting plan
    • Do the same for the bulking phase, carb cycling and any other variations

    You can do the calculations in a spreadsheet (download the template below) or in any food tracker, like MyFitnessPal.

    I recommend you do it in a spreadsheet, especially the first time, to get a feeling of how calorically different food is and what macronutrients it’s based on. Afterwards you can set up the tracking system in one of the apps.

    It took me approximately 15 – 20 hours to build my standard meals and do all the calculations. But it was definitely worth it. I never imagined how many calories there are in some food and how quickly and easily you can get in a surplus.

    To really follow the calculations, you can make a few rules for yourself that you strictly follow. For example:

    1. Approx. 2.5g of protein, 1.2g of carbs, 1g of healthy fats per 1kg of mass (200g P, 100g C, 80g F)
    2. Eat a meal every 3 hours, and every meal should include proteins (7:00, 10:00, 13:00, 16:00, after workout)
    3. 0% trans fats, below 10% saturated fats, 50% from unsaturated fats (0g saturated, 8g- saturated, 40g+ unsaturated)
    4. 60 – 90 GI carb 30 min before (10% carbs) and after a workout (40% carbs), all other carbs below 60 GI
    5. No carbs 5h before bed
    6. 3-5 servings of fruits and veggies, no fruit juices
    7. 4L of water per day
    8. Eat 80% healthy, 1 big cheat meal per week

    After you master the basics, you can additionally focus on how much fiber, sugar, trans fats and saturated fats you consume. And after that, tracking your micronutrients is an additional recommendation to make sure you get all the vitamins and minerals.

    I hope this blog post helped you clarify some things around macronutrients and that you now know how to calculate the perfect targets for your dieting and fitness goals.

  • Not sure which diet to follow? Here is how to choose the perfect one

    If there is a single area of life with the most confusing and contradictory information, it’s dieting without a doubt. There are hundreds of different diets out there, most of them claiming to offer you a miraculous solution for high levels of energy, a fit body and absence of any illness.

    After reading a few dieting books or articles, you have no idea who to believe and what really works and what doesn’t. For almost every type of food in existence, you can find several “scientific” studies that are for and against eating that specific food.

    And for almost every type of diet, there are gurus explaining their stories of how they easily acquired a six-pack, got cured of cancer and now they need only 2 hours of sleep. All you have to do is to click the buy button.

    And you know what. They are all wrong. Because I’m the one who found the perfect diet for you … I’m the one who knows the secret to the spring of eternal youth, building muscles while eating French fries, and a secret supplement that makes you super strong.

    I’m just kidding … But let me share with you my experience with different diets and what I learned about healthy eating up until now. It might help you solve some confusion and give you directions for what really works and what doesn’t.

    I read my first few dieting books before I was even 18 years old. All the contradictory information got me super confused, as it happens to everyone. In all the confusion, I decided to experiment with different diets on my own skin and see what works and what doesn’t.

    In the past 15 years, I followed many different diets and eating patterns. Here are only a few of the major diet types that I did:

    • Standard (American) diet: Sometime up to my 18th birthday
    • Vegetarian diet (standard, lacto, ovo, alkaline): 4 years
    • Vegan diet: 2 years
    • Fruitarian diet: 1 year
    • Raw – plant/fat-based diet: 0. 5 years
    • Macrobiotic diet: 0.5 years (yin/yang principle – whole grain based)
    • Atkins diet: 0.5 years (high protein, low carb, low fat)
    • Ketogenic diet: 0.5 years (mid protein, low carb, high fat)
    • The Zone Diet: 0.5 years (40% carbs, 30% protein, 30% fat)
    • Paleo diet: 1 year
    • The diet I currently follow is a combination of the past few diets and it fits me perfectly. I cycle complex carbs, on non-carb days I eat lots of healthy fats, and my diet is mainly based on meat, fish, eggs, dairy, veggies, nuts, seeds, fruits, ancient wheat sorts and beans.

    Much like I experimented with different diets, I also experimented with different eating patterns – skipping breakfast or dinner, intermittent fasting, carb-cycling, different number of meals during the day, juice fasting, gluten-free diet, not eating sweets at all for several years, eating only low GI foods, and many other eating patterns and diets.

    Before we start, I want to be very clear – I’m not promoting any specific diet and I definitely didn’t invent yet another miraculous solution that will make you super fit overnight. What I’ve learned is that you must experiment a little bit to find the diet that works best for you as an individual.

    But you must be very careful not to go into extremes and, in the end, do more damage to your health than good. Eating disorders and dieting extremes are often a sign of emotional suffering.

    If you find yourself getting obsessed with a certain type of diet and beating yourself up when you don’t follow it 100%, there’s a high probability you’re trying to compensate for emotional suffering by punishing your body.

    Extreme diets, not supervised by a specialist, are most often only a version of self-punishment.

    There are three major goals of this article:

    1. I want to help you solve the confusion of which is the best diet out there. There is no such thing as the perfect diet. By experimenting you must find the one that works best for you (and this article will teach you how).
    2. Even though many diets claim completely different things, there are some general health recommendations that most diets agree with. We will look at these recommendations, because they are absolutely worth following. What to definitely eat and what definitely not to eat.
    3. I want to share with you how to safely experiment to find the diet that will perfectly fit you as an individual.

    To put everything together, we will look at several things:

    • The foundations of a healthy lifestyle
    • The foods you should definitely eat
    • The foods you should definitely not eat
    • The foods to experiment with and figure out if they work for you
    • Perfecting your diet with little tricks

    Healthy living foundations

    The foundations of healthy living – diet, exercise and lifestyle

    You can eat the healthiest diet in the world, but eating habits are only one part of a healthy lifestyle.

    The other two foundations of health and fitness are exercise and a moderate style of living. Much like you can do damage to your health with a bad diet, so you can do it with a lavish lifestyle and physical laziness.

    Don’t expect to solve all of your health problems or to be fit only by following a miraculous diet. Diet is absolutely important, and you can greatly influence your health, fitness and energy levels with proper dieting, but don’t forget about the other two foundations – exercise and lifestyle.

    Diet, exercise and lifestyle all greatly influence your health and fitness levels.

    When it comes to exercising, here are some general recommendations:

    • Find the exercise you dislike the least and move at least three times per week
    • Systematically work on your endurance, strength, flexibility/mobility/stability
    • Learn to breathe properly through your nose, inhaling in the belly
    • Spend enough time in nature, in the sun, playing and enjoying life
    • Make sure your posture is good

    And when it comes to your style of living, here are the rules to follow:

    With regular exercise, you speed up your metabolism, preserve or gain muscles, improve your overall state of health, burn additional calories and brighten your mood. Never forget that you’re always only one workout away from a good mood.

    When I went on a very calorie-restrictive diet without exercising, I did lose weight, but my posture got really bad, my muscles went away, and I certainly didn’t look healthy. A healthy diet with regular exercise works best.

    On the other hand, a moderate lifestyle makes it much easier to follow your diet and exercising goals. If you make sure you’re well rested, in good company with a positive outlook on life, there won’t be any emotional eating, you will have an easier job focusing on your dieting goals, your hormones will be balanced, and your overall happiness will improve.

    So please keep all three health foundations in mind – diet, exercise, and general lifestyle.

    The quest for perfect diet – First narrow down the choices and the confusion will immediately decrease

    The best thing that helped me reduce the confusion around dieting and which foods to eat, was narrowing down my choices. The fewer choices you have, the less confused you can be.

    I simply went through the most popular types of diets and categorized foods into three types:

    1. The foods most diets DO recommend eating
    2. The foods most diets agree are NOT healthy at all
    3. The foods where opinions differ (it means you must figure it out by yourself)

    Now let’s look at these three categories.

    Healthy foods

    1. The foods you should DEFINITELY EAT on a daily basis

    In all the confusion, there are luckily a few types of foods that most diets recommend. These are the foods you should absolutely eat on a daily basis – if possible with every meal, no matter which diet you follow.

    As you probably figured out, green veggies are on the list.

    A word of caution. Eating only the foods on the “safe list” is absolutely not enough for getting all the macro- and micro-nutrients that your body needs. But these are definitely the foods that should be on your plate regularly and will help preserve your fitness and health.

    There are three types of foods that are recommended by most diets:

    • Veggies, especially the green ones, with the exception of nightshades
    • Plant-based healthy fats, mainly from nuts and seeds
    • Fruits, but absolutely eaten in moderation and not juiced
    • We can also add water to the list

    Make veggies your favorite food

    Organic seasonal veggies, especially the green ones, have the best reputation in different diets. But you must go for the organic grown option.

    The only exception among veggies are nightshades (tomatoes, potatoes, peppers, eggplants, chilies), for which some studies assert that they cause inflammation. To keep things as simple as possible, let’s keep nightshades off the list at this step.

    Even without nightshades, there are so many vegetables you can enjoy with every meal:

    • Artichoke
    • Asparagus
    • Broccoli
    • Brussels sprouts
    • Cabbage
    • Carrots
    • Cauliflower
    • Celery
    • Chinese cabbage
    • Cucumber
    • Green beans
    • Kale
    • Kohlrabi
    • Lettuce, chicory, endive
    • Pea
    • Radish
    • Rutabaga
    • Spinach
    • Squash
    • Zucchini etc.

    As you can see above, there are more than 20 tasty vegetables to enjoy with every meal. Veggie soups, salads, green smoothies, and veggie mix side dishes are the healthiest options you should definitely eat every day.

    Veggies are rich in vitamins, minerals and fiber, they are low in calories, and there are so many different tasty dishes you can make out of them.

    Healthy fats will make your cells super happy

    Healthy fats also have a very good reputation in many diets. The most common reason they might not be recommended is because they are dense in calories. But that only means you must eat them in moderation.

    And let’s not forget that there is a big marketing gimmick out there created by the sugar industry, claiming that fat is making you fat, which is absolutely not true. Overeating is making you fat, not fat.

    Below is the list of foods filled with healthy fats that should absolutely be on your shopping list:

    • Avocado
    • Nuts (if you don’t have any allergies and make sure they’re not roasted and salted) – walnuts, almonds, pistachios, brazil nuts, cashew, macadamia, pine nuts and pistachios (exception are peanuts, since they are legumes, not nuts)
    • Seeds – flax, chia, sesame, sunflower, pumpkin, hemp and other seeds
    • Dark chocolate (85%+)
    • Olives
    • Healthy oils – olive oil, coconut oil, flax seed oil

    Fruits are the best way to sweeten your life

    You probably know the saying an apple a day keeps the doctor away. It’s hard to fight such an old wisdom; as long as you eat fruit in moderation. Some diets are not very enthusiastic about fruit, because it contains quite a lot of sugar.

    Unfortunately, modern fruit is grown to be as sweet as possible, since sugar is so addictive. Nevertheless, fruit is still packed with so much beneficial stuff for your health (vitamins, minerals, fiber) that a few pieces of fruit will absolutely do more good for your health than bad, at least in most cases.

    When it comes to fruit, there are a few important rules to follow:

    • Buy organic fruit from a trusted supplier (same as veggies and nuts)
    • Go for seasonal fruit, especially the locally grown kind
    • Eat only a few pieces of fruit per day (up to 5 portions – pieces or small cups)
    • Don’t eat fruit after big meals as a dessert, but rather eat it as a snack between meals (otherwise fruit might mess with your digestion or make you hungry again)
    • Don’t drink fruit smoothies or fruit juices
    • Don’t eat dried or canned fruit
    • If you want to lose weight, temporarily limit fruit consumption
    • Don’t eat fruit if your doctor advises you against it because of some particular illness (diabetes etc.)

    There are so many different fruits that can serve as a delicious snack:

    • Apples
    • Apricots
    • Bananas
    • Berries – blueberries, strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, cranberries (berries are really good for you)
    • Cherries
    • Figs
    • Grapes
    • Kiwis
    • Lemons and limes
    • Mangos
    • Melons
    • Nectarines
    • Oranges
    • Passion fruits
    • Papayas
    • Peaches
    • Pears
    • Pineapples
    • Plums
    • Tangerines
    • Watermelons
    • All the exotic fruit

    Let’s not forget to drink enough water

    Another tip that most diets recommend is to drink enough water. It’s the only way to keep your body and brain hydrated. Thus, drink a glass of water the first thing when you wake up, and then every time before meals and between meals.

    You should drink around half a gallon (2 liters) of water per day, and even more during heat and exercise. Try not to drink out of a plastic bottle (plastic contains toxic chemicals like phthalates, bisphentol-BPA and xenoestrogens) and make sure you always have a glass of water by your side in the office.

    Any other drinks like sodas, fruit juices, coffee, alcoholic beverages etc. do not count as an alternative to water. The only alternative might be un-sugared herbal tea (but not green tea). Still, make sure you drink a few glasses of water every day to become fond of drinking pure water without any taste.

    Toxic food

    2. The foods you should DEFINITELY AVOID

    Much like we have foods that most diets and nutrition experts do recommend consuming on a daily basis, so we have foods that the majority of nutrition experts advise against.

    These are the foods you should not eat at all, or at least very rarely (let’s say less than 10% – 20% of your overall food intake is reasonable and easily achieved).

    Here is the list of the foods most nutrition specialists recommend you avoid:

    1. Foods high in added sugar
    2. Refined (highly proccessed) carbohydrates
    3. Artificial trans fats

    We should add to the list also:

    1. All other highly processed food (sausages, salami, frozen food, canned food etc.).
    2. Cheap foods of an unknown source
    3. Cigarettes, alcohols and drugs

    Sugar is your number one enemy

    Let’s start with sugar. Sugar is your number one enemy and the greatest poison when it comes to food. The problem is because it’s so addictive and added to almost every processed food.

    Sugar is not only in sweets, but also in low-fat foods, fruit yogurts, dressings, bread etc. There’s added sugar almost everywhere. While you can’t completely avoid sugar, it’s smart to limit it as much as possible.

    Foods high in sugar (obvious and not so obvious) are:

    • All types of candies and sweets – muffins, cakes, bonbons, chocolate, pudding, desserts etc.
    • Breakfast cereals
    • Low-fat yogurts and yogurt with fruit
    • Honey, jelly and jams
    • Dressings and sauces
    • Cereal bars and many protein bars
    • Flavored coffees and ice teas
    • Pre-made soups
    • Granola
    • Bread
    • Canned fruit
    • Ice cream, frozen yogurt and milkshakes
    • Juices, fruit drinks and smoothies
    • Sports drinks
    • Soft drinks
    • And so on

    Trans fats are as bad as sugar

    Besides sugar, trans fats are definitely something to avoid. Artificial trans fats are created in an industrial process that adds hydrogen to liquid vegetable oils to make them more solid. Don’t confuse trans fats with saturated fats from animal products.

    Trans fat raises your LDL (“bad”) cholesterol and lowers your HDL (“good”) cholesterol. Not to mention that trans fats cause cancer.

    Here are the foods high in trans fats you must avoid at all costs:

    • Baked goods – cakes, cookies, waffles, biscuits, rolls and pies
    • Snacks – chips, crackers, tortilla chips
    • Fried or battered food – French fries, doughnuts, fried meat
    • Breakfast sandwiches
    • Frozen pizza
    • Microwave popcorn
    • Margarine

    Highly processed food and refined grains

    The third group of foods to be avoided are refined and highly processed carbohydrates and refined grains. Refined carbohydrates are grains that have had all the beneficial stuff removed (fibers, minerals, vitamins).

    Consequently, most diets agree that you should go for the whole, healthier versions of carbohydrates.

    The refined carbohydrates to avoid are:

    • Pure sugar – white or brown sugar
    • Syrups – agave, corn, maple brown rice and all other types of syrups
    • Snack foods – chips, crackers, pretzels
    • Soft sandwich breads and toasts
    • Hamburger buns or hot dog buns
    • Instant oatmeal, pancakes and waffle mixes
    • Again, all types of desserts and sweets
    • Highly processed food with expiration date in years – sausages, salami frozen food, canned food etc.
    • White bread and white pasta (debatable) – but whole version is definitely healthier

    In the end, we must add fast food, highly processed food and cheap foods from unknown sources to the list of unhealthy foods to be avoided. And you already know about the damage that cigarettes, drugs and alcohol do to your health.

    We all need cheat meals

    Does this mean you should never eat these types of foods? Being an extremist or a perfectionist only brings pain and suffering into your life.

    I used to be an extremist and eating something from the list of “forbidden” foods above made me angry and anxious for a couple of hours. The emotional reaction probably did more damage to my health than that unhealthy snack.

    When it comes to shitty food there are a few humane rules to follow:

    • Eating less than 10 – 20% of shitty food is in most cases good enough (if you don’t suffer from any real illnesses or if you are not on a very strict diet). Don’t expect to completely avoid shitty foods, because that’s impossible in today’s world.
    • It takes some energy, planning and a higher budget to avoid shitty food. The environment is not on your side when it comes to avoiding shitty foods. Be prepared for people, commercials and restaurants to not support your desire to eat healthy, rather than the opposite.
    • Always go for the healthiest food available and don’t emotionally beat yourself up if it’s not the healthy choice. Sometimes on a business meeting or when you are travelling, it’s just impossible to eat really healthy.
    • It’s normal to have a pig-out day from time to time (approximately once per month), when you eat all the possible crap food. It’s pretty much the same when you’re emotionally upset and there’s nothing that can calm you down except a big bowl of ice cream. Just make sure that it doesn’t happen daily.
    • If you find yourself eating shitty food for several days in a row, at some point decide to eat only healthy food for the upcoming couple of days. You can always correct choices with your next move.
    • Don’t have shitty food at home.
    Experiment with different diets
    Experiment a little bit with different diets

    3. The foods you must figure out on your own if they work for you or not

    Now you are familiar with the foods to definitely eat and the foods to avoid. That leads us to the last group of foods, with which you will have to experiment a little bit and find out what works for you and what doesn’t.

    Your religious, ethical beliefs, taste preferences and exercise goals usually also have a big influence on what to go for.

    The foods for which you have to decide for yourself (best with experimenting) if you will eat them or not are:

    1. Animal products (protein source for muscle grow or source of fat)
      • Meat – chicken, cattle, sheep, pigs etc.
      • Dairy – yogurt, cheese, butter, milk etc.
      • Eggs
    2. Fish and seafood (protein source for muscle growth)
    3. Grains (complex carbs for energy)
    4. Beans, legumes and lentils (complex carbs for energy)
    5. Nightshades – tomato, peppers, chili, eggplant

    We can also add to the list:

    These are the foods where most of the confusion comes from – many different diets are for or against and opinions of nutrition experts vary.

    There are also many contradictory scientific studies about the effects of these foods on your health. The best thing to do is to experiment a little bit and see what works for you and what doesn’t.

    Here is in general what different diets recommend:

    • Vegetarian diet – no meat products, only plant based protein and fat
    • Vegan diet – no animal products or seafood, only plant based protein and fat
    • Macrobiotic diet – based especially on grains
    • Paleo diet / Keto diet – no grains, beans, legumes or lentils
    • Zone diet – eat everything in moderation (1/3 protein, 2/3 complex and fibrous carbs), no fatty meat

    A simple way to find out what fits your body and what doesn’t

    First eliminate all the foods that you don’t like, don’t want to eat because of religious, ethical or any other beliefs, or that just aren’t very popular in your local environment.

    Then the best way to find out which foods fit your body and which don’t is to write a food journal. In the food journal, you note the following things:

    • Your observations before eating anything – Do you like the smell, does the food looks tasty, do you like the texture and the actual taste? What is your body telling you?
    • Observe your body’s reaction after eating the food – How does your mood change, any variations in energy levels, do you have any allergic reactions, would you eat the same meal next time?
    • Body responses if you (don’t) eat a certain type of food – Do you have any cravings (doesn’t work for sugary foods), how good is your sleep, overall feeling, energy levels etc.
    • Scientific tests – You can measure your blood sugar levels, vitamins and minerals deficiencies, there are several allergy tests out there, DNA test recommendations etc.

    By gathering all the data, you only need several months to find the foods that work for you and the ones that don’t.

    While you experiment, make sure you don’t go to any extremes. If you listen carefully to your body’s reaction, you will soon find the foods that resonate the best with your body.

    For example, here is what works for me:

    • I eat quite a lot of lean meat without fatty parts (saturated fat doesn’t resonate well with me). Eating a lot of meat was quite hard for me, considering that I was vegetarian for a long time. But I have much more energy now and my blood test also significantly improved.
    • I eat yogurt made from goat milk, cheese, curd, but don’t consume butter or milk.
    • All beans, legumes and lentils, work great for me, except soy.
    • I need whole grains for high energy levels – wild rice, barley, millet, quinoa, buckwheat, oats. Refined grains don’t work good for me, at least psychologically.
    • I do eat fish, but not other seafood.
    • I absolutely don’t like nightshades.
    • No coffee for me, but I do drink green tea.
    • I do take a few food supplements.
    • From time to time, I change my dieting regime a little bit to always try new things and options.

    Other factors to consider when it comes to choosing the perfect diet

    You might also have certain fitness or health goals that can influence your choice of foods. Here are some general directions to follow:

    Do you want to grow muscles?

    If you want to grow muscles, you will have to increase your protein intake. The easiest way to get enough protein are animal sources (meat, dairy, eggs, fish, whey protein).

    You can find vegetarian bodybuilders eating only plant-based protein (beans, legumes, lentils, rice proteins etc.), but it’s much harder to get enough protein for muscles to grow.

    That means growing muscles most often requires eating a lot of meat and animal products. Many diets like keto, paleo, Atkins etc. are big advocates of eating animal proteins.

    Do you want to lose fat?

    If you want to lose fat, there are two important rules to follow. The first one is that you can never out-train your diet. Exercising absolutely does help to lose fat, but a six pack is mainly made in the kitchen, not in the gym.

    That’s because it’s so easy to eat 500 kcal, and you need to work out for an hour to burn the same number of calories.

    The second rule when it comes to losing fat is that you should be in a caloric deficit (around 500 – 700 kcal a day). Some nutrition specialists claim that the quantity of the food is not important, only quality.

    That’s not true. Both are important. When it comes to loosing fat, quantity can be even more important than quality, and when it comes to your overall health we must add quality to the equation.

    • I lost fat on a standard American diet by restricting calories
    • I got fat on paleo, vegetarian or any other diet by overeating

    If you want to really lose fat, the best way is to calculate your BMR, TDEE and macros (carb, fat, protein intake) and then track your daily values. In practical terms that means, you will have to restrict calories in your diet if you want to loose fat.

    You will get the best weight loss results by:

    • Following a healthy calorie restrictive dieting
    • Regularly exercising
    • Increasing your protein intake foods rich in fiber
    • Eliminating simple carbs and sugars
    • Eliminating empty calories (sodas, juices, sweets etc.)

    Do you want to run your body on glucose or ketones?

    Your body can run on glucose or ketones. Ketones are alternative fuel, when glucose (blood sugar) is in short supply.

    Ketones are produced in the liver from fat. When your body runs on ketones, your insulin level becomes very low. Your body produces ketones when you eat a minimal amount of carbs and a moderate amount of protein.

    Some people feel great on the keto diet and others terrible. There is no other way to find out than to try it.

    Ketones (70%+ of energy comes from fat) Glucose (energy comes from healthy carbs)
    Fatty meats

    Fatty fish

    Cheese

    Eggs

    Butter

    Oils

    Avocado, olives

    Whole grains

    Wild rice

    Beans, lentils, legumes

    Sweet potato

    Vegetables

    Fruits

     

    The perfect diet

    Putting it all together – the formula for finding your perfect diet

    If we put it all together, the formula for finding your perfect diet is pretty simple:

    1. Eat as many veggies as possible every day (except nightshades, if your body doesn’t like them) – Go for veggie soups, salads and green smoothies. Make sure there is always some type of veggies on your platter as a side dish. Be in love with veggies. No matter which diet you follow, veggies are the most vital food for your health.
    2. Eat fruit in moderation – Fruit contains fructose (sugar), which is not optimal, but it is also packed with vitamins, minerals and fiber. So, eat fruit in moderation, maximum 2 – 5 pieces per day. When you crave sweets, go for a piece of fruit. If you want to lose weight, or your body to run on ketones, limit your fruit intake only to berries and to 1 portion.
    3. Never forget to eat healthy fats – Avocado, nuts (if you’re not allergic), seeds, olives and dark chocolate are great snacks and super healthy foods. You should get at least 20% of your calorie intake from fats, and if you want to run your body on ketones, that should go up to 70% (by adding fatty meats etc.). Fat is not making you fat, overeating is making you fat.
    4. Drink enough water – No matter which diet you follow, make sure you drink enough water. Drink a glass of water with a little bit of lemon when you wake up, and always have a glass bottle filled with water with you. Avoid all other types of drinks.
    5. Make sure that you eat less than 10% – 20% of shitty foods – these are foods high in sugar, artificial trans fats, refined carbohydrates, fast food and all other highly processed foods. They should be consumed as an exception when you have a cheat meal, can’t calm down your emotions or there is nothing else to eat. But don’t beat yourself up after you eat any type of shitty food. Don’t strive for perfection, go for good enough. Be satisfied by choosing the best meal available at a certain moment.
    6. Six types of foods to experiment with – When you know the foods to avoid and foods to eat as often as possible, there are certain foods for which you must figure out on your own if they work for you or not. Your religious and ethical beliefs, local customs, dieting goals, different diets that sound reasonable to you, and especially paying attention to your body’s responses (by keeping a journal) should give you a good idea of what to eat and what not to eat. The following are the foods to find out on your own how they fit your body, beliefs and goals:
      1. Animal products (meat, dairy, eggs) – recommend by all high protein diets (paleo, atkins, low-carb etc.) and keto diet (fatty meats)
      2. Seafood (fish, seafood)
      3. Grains – As a source of complex carbs. A very popular type of diet is also to go primary for grains without gluten.
      4. Starchy food (legumes, lentils, beans) – observe how they influence your diegestion
      5. Nightshades
      6. Coffee
    7. Know your macros – Last but not least, one of the most beneficial things to know when it comes to dieting are macronutrients. That is the number explaining how many calories, protein, carbs, sugars and fats are in a certain type of foods. If you want to find the perfect diet for your body, you have to experiment a little bit with different macro ratios.

    Here are the things you should know about macros and finding your perfect diet:

    1. Your BME and TDEE – your daily caloric consumption based on your height, weight and how often you train
    2. Do you want to be in a caloric surplus (gaining muscles) or deficit (losing fat)?
    3. Your per meal caloric targets (number of meals, calories per meal)
    4. % of carbs / proteins / fats that you intake on an average day
    5. g of carbs / proteins / fats / sugars that you intake on an average day
    6. g of proteins consumed per kg of your body weight
    7. Macro values for your typical meals
    8. Once in a while you can also calculate micronutrients (vitamins, minerals) to make sure you’re getting enough of them

    More about that in one of the next articles.

    Experimenting with different eating patterns

    Last but not least, there are different eating patterns to experiment with. There are a few general recommendations for eating patterns that most nutrition experts agree on:

    • If you want to lose weight, you must permanently change your lifestyle, not only go on a diet
    • Simplify your meals so that you don’t overburden your stomach
    • Eat slowly – it should take you at least 20 minutes to eat a major meal
    • Do not overeat, you know to the point where you can explode
    • Controlled fasting can be beneficial from time to time, check out intermittent fasting
    • If possible, cook your own food

    On the other hand, there are many other eating patterns that you will have to experiment with on your own to find what fits you best:

    • Should you go for a smaller number of big meals (2-3) or a greater number of small meals (5-6)?
    • Skipping breakfast, dinner or any other meals
    • Eating carbs before going to sleep
    • Cycling macronutrients (for example carbs) or supplements (for example creatine)
    • Using food supplements (vitamins, minerals, sports nutrition)
    • How much your Facebook or Instagram friends are interested in photos of every meal that you eat :)

    Here’s what I figured out works best for me, and is an example of how a good personalized diet looks like. I need a very structured eating plan – 6 meals, more or less at the same time. My body runs best on complex carbs, but I cycle them to eat enough fats. It’s much easier for me to eat carbs than fats. Intermittent fasting works really great for me, with the last meal around 5pm.

    In the end, it’s not that hard to find your perfect diet

    When it comes to dieting, the information out there can be really confusing. But that shouldn’t stop you from improving your diet and overall eating habits.

    There is no miraculous diet or a single trick that will make you super healthy and fit. Diets don’t work anyway. What you’re looking for is a permanent healthy lifestyle change, with healthy eating habits, regular exercise and a moderate lifestyle, which all combined provide you with optimal levels of energy, good health and a fit body.

    As you’ve learned, there are foods you should more or less freely enjoy (veggies, fruits, nuts, seeds, water) and foods you should avoid at all costs (fast foods, fried foods, foods high in sugar, refined grains and processed foods).

    From the many different animal products, seafood and starchy foods, you must find the dishes that work best for your body. Having clear dieting goals and knowing your macros can help you a lot when it comes to fine-tuning your diet.

    And eating a bagel from time to time won’t make you super fat or take 5 years of your life away. That’s it. Implementing these simple rules will get you to the top 10% or an even smaller percentage of people who live a super healthy life and follow a long-term endurable healthy diet. And that’s more than good enough.

  • Sugar is poison for your mind and body

    I put a lot of effort into eating an extremely clean diet. It’s not only good for keeping the fat percentage low, a clean diet also optimizes your energy levels, you feel better overall and you get sick less. I see my body as a temple that deserves the best, even though I sometimes push it too hard and too far.

    But it’s impossible to be disciplined 100 % of time. There are various reasons that dampen your discipline and strong spirit. Sometimes you just slip. Sometimes life forces you to take a step back. And sometimes you must break the rules that you persistently follow to restore the power of iron will. When it comes to a diet, I call breaking the rules a pig-out day.

    I have a pig-out day approximately once a month. I don’t put it on a calendar, it’s not something planned. It comes by itself. I feel the inner tension slowly building up, and that’s the first hunch that the blowout is near.

    I tried not to listen to myself several times, and ignored the need for a cheat day, but it only caused more damage with all the tension that quickly escalated.

    The sugar treat

    Not long ago, I had a pig-out day. This time it was a special kind of a pig-out day. It wasn’t based on junk food, fried food or any other highly processed food. It was based on sugar.

    It happened at a big birthday party, where everybody brought home-baked sweets. There were so many delicious biscuits, cakes, pastry and other sweets, I simply couldn’t resist.

    I don’t remember when was the last time I ate so many sugary foods at once. To find something good in everything bad, a sugar overload represented a great opportunity for me to observe what kind of an effect it had on me.

    The moment I realized it was time for a sugary pig‑out day, I also decided to pay special attention to my body, mind and spirit. Well, I didn’t need to eat high amounts of sugar for weeks to note the bad side effects. One day was more than enough.

    Sugar is poison

    An extra stomach effect

    The birthday celebration didn’t start with sweets. It started with soup, followed by another appetizer and then continued with two main dishes. We haven’t even gotten to the dessert yet when I was completely full.

    There was no room in my stomach for any additional food at all; not even a bite. For a second, I naively thought that I might not eat as many sweets as I assumed when I first saw all the delicious stuff that made my mouth water.

    Then the sweets were put on the table. I somehow managed to take a small bite of a cupcake; and then some kind of dark sorcery happened. I didn’t feel full anymore. The cravings for sugary food took over and my stomach suddenly felt empty. The room for a sugar fest was made.

    Interestingly, that happens to me every single time. The first bite of any sweet food gives me an extra stomach. Even if I feel completely full, the feeling of fullness goes away with the first bite into a sweet course.

    Just one more bite

    I admire people who eat one small piece of chocolate, foil it back into packaging and put it into the pantry for next time. When I open a bar of chocolate, I need to eat the whole damn thing. Even if it’s extra-large. That’s why I rather don’t eat sweets at all.

    If I have to eat the whole chocolate when I open it, imagine how hard it is for me to set limits when I have an unlimited supply of homemade delicious sweets on the table. In two hours, I ate one sweet thing after another. When everything went way too far already , I said to myself “just one more bite”.

    And then one more and then one more. I already felt ill from all the sugar, but after 10 minutes, there was one more thing to try. I ate like 1,500 calories of real food before I even touched the sweets.

    With all the sweets that I consumed, I easily ate another 1,000 calories or probably more accurately 2,000 or even more. That’s 3,500 calories altogether. You need to run for 6 hours to burn that.

    When it comes to sugars, it’s never just one more bite for most people. It’s actually one more bite and one more bite all the way until everything sweet is gone. It’s like having an endless stomach. That’s why you need an extra smart strategy and extremely strict limits in your diet for sugar intake.

    A foggy mind and low levels of energy

    The next day I felt terrible. My mind was foggy and my energy levels were low. My body felt exhausted. I couldn’t think as clearly as usual. It felt like having a big hangover; and I didn’t drink a droplet of alcohol. Sugar messes with your insulin levels, it causes sugar crashes and over‑stimulates your body.

    It feels like pushing the break and gas pedals at the same time. It’s not healthy and it isn’t good for your body or your mind. The next day, that was more than obvious to me.

    Your body needs a steady source of fuel without big ups and downs. There is no comparison between how good it feels when a body is fueled with complex carbs or healthy fats and the dreadful energy roller-coaster caused by sugar.

    The horrible addiction – sugar is poison

    Sugars is a horrible addiction. It’s a drug. Even though I felt bloated, craved even more sugar the next day. I had to eat a few tangerines when I woke up. After I ate fruit, the craving for more cakes and biscuits from yesterday got evoked. While my body was kind of saying no, my stomach and mind already pushed me toward a new portion of sugar.

    I immediately stopped the vicious circle. The pig-out day was over and it was time to go back to eating clean. Nevertheless, it was obvious how easily I could go on and on with a bad, sugar‑based diet.

    “Just one more day” that never ends and turns into a catastrophically bad diet. All the sweet food, processed food, and the simplest carbs, they’re all so addictive.

    How Much Sugar Is In Food

    There is sugar everywhere, even in plain yogurt

    Only when you deliberately try to minimize your sugar intake do you realize that there is sugar basically in almost every food. A glass of apple juice – filled with four tablespoons of sugar. Plain yogurt. There’s sugar in it. Ketchup, tomato sauce, salad dressings, there’s sugar everywhere.

    The irony is that there is usually a lot of sugar added to “low fat” foods. You might think that you are eating healthy, because of the “low fat” label, but you’re probably not. People bought the idea that fat makes you fat. That’s a myth. Your body needs healthy fats. Eating too much of anything makes you fat.

    And eating too much sugar makes you unhealthy and fat. The main problem with sugar is that even when you’re full, it still causes cravings and you’re quickly hungry again. It’s easy to overeat on sweet foods.

    They are packed with empty calories. The math simply doesn’t work out. And on top of that, it’s so easy to reach for sweet foods when you’re bored, stressed out or need to diversify your life. Sugar is an ideal poison for emotional eating. But you are only doing damage to your body and your mind.

    Try to avoid sugar for a week, just to get a feeling of how much sugar there is in everything. Read the label before you eat anything and calculate how much sugar you eat in a day. You’ll be surprised. It can add up to 20 tablespoons a day or even more. That’s like 30 kg of sugar consumption per year.

    The damage sugar does to your health

    Sugar has no real nutritional value. There’s no fiber, protein or healthy fats, no vitamins or minerals. Just empty calories that spike your blood sugar and accelerate your appetite; and the effects on your health are devastating.

    It has been scientifically proven that too much sugar destroys your health over and over again. Sugar is poison. It’s perfectly normal and healthy to eat a very limited amount of sugar per day, but 20 tablespoons or even more lead straight to several very brutal diseases.

    Cavities, diabetes, obesity, cancer, heart diseases, non-alcoholic liver diseases, bad skin, low energy levels (adrenaline fatigue), brain fog, anxiety, addiction, the list goes on and on. There is extremely big long-term health risk for very small short-term pleasure when it comes to sugar.

    It’s the definition of a stupid decision. High risk, low reward. Like smoking or drunk-driving. If you want to be fit and healthy, you must limit your sugar intake, there is no other way. Period.

    How to win the sugar battle

    I know. Life is too short for not eating anything sweet. Nevertheless, you want to have control over the sugar, not vice-versa (except on pig-out days, maybe).

    You want to have a smart strategy when you encounter sugar cravings and you want to have strict limits you don’t cross. Actually, there are two ways how to reduce your sugar intake and take it under control.

    The first way to reduce your sugar intake is to immediately minimize the level of sugar intake. You educate yourself about macro- and micronutrients of every single food you eat and you eliminate everything that contains too much sugar, especially sweets, cakes and desserts.

    Pastry, processed food, junk food, fruit juices, sodas and white flour (and other simple carbs) should also end up on the list. That approach is especially a good fit for people like me, who have a hard time setting limits when it comes to eating sweet food. Go for a 30-day challenge, not eating sugar at all.

    The second approach is to slowly reduce the amount of sugar you consume step by step:

    • Start by eliminating sodas and fruit juices, and drink only water and herbal tea.
    • Make a list of sugary food you don’t even like that much and have no problem excluding from your diet (gummy bears for example) and then permanently exclude them.
    • Switch from “low fat” sugary food (or simple carbs) to a healthier version of food with less sugar. Instead of fruit yogurt go for plain Greek yogurt. Instead of white bread go for buckwheat, brown rice or quinoa.
    • If you have a habit of eating sweets several times per day, reduce it to one time per day; and make sure you don’t eat the same amount of sweets that one time as you would in the whole day. The idea is to reduce your sugar intake, not to concentrate it.
    • Instead of a dessert go for a piece of fruit or a small fruit salad with local, seasonal organic fruits; or maybe eat a small protein bar.
    • Don’t have any sweet foods at home. Increase the transaction costs for consuming sugary foods. And the best time to eat sweet food is after a workout.
    • Don’t be fooled by “natural” alternatives like honey, agave syrup or brown sugar. They are sugars, nothing else.
    • When you get sugar cravings go for a walk, take a bath, brush your teeth, or try to use any other trick for eating less.

    Like with every addiction, it’s hard in the beginning. You have to persist a few days. But then a whole new world opens. The brain fog goes away. Your energy levels stabilize. Cravings are gone. You take over control. A few days of internal battle are absolutely worth the benefit you can enjoy later.

    Make sure sugar is not bossing you around in your life.

    Nevertheless, sometimes cravings can be too strong and you must eat something sweet. There’s nothing wrong with that. Go for a piece of organic, local, seasonal fruit; or even two pieces.

    Fruit does contain sugar, but it’s in a natural form and it comes with fibers and vitamins. 2 – 3 pieces of fruit per day are a good way to sweeten your life. You can add a piece of dark chocolate (70 %+ cacao) too. Dark chocolate is a brain food that will give additional power to your mind sharpness.

    So, what will be your next step in cutting down on the sugar intake?

    Don’t blame only sugar for being fat

    If you want to lose weight, you have to mind the quality and quantity of your food intake. By limiting the amount of sugar that you eat, you drastically improve the quality of your diet; assuming you replace sweet foods and simple carbs with healthy foods like green veggies, lentils, healthy grains, healthy fats and proteins.

    But if you want to lose weight, you must also mind the quantity of the food you eat. You can gain weight, even if you cut out most of the sugar from your diet. That’s because you gain weight when you’re in a caloric surplus.

    You can get in the surplusby eating either too many sweets or too much clean food. It’s probably much easier to overeat on sugar, but for being lean you must pay attention to both – the quality and quantity of the food you eat.

    So, while you are scanning the label for how much sugar there is in the food you are about to eat, also pay attention to the calories.

    Additional reading:

  • Super healthy foods you simply must eat every day

    If you’re a complete newbie to the healthy lifestyle like I was a few years ago, not to mention that I was super fat as a kid, there are two pieces of advice that helped me the most to start taking care of my body better.

    The first one is go for a type of exercise you dislike the least. That helped me go from hating exercise, to being okay with it, to loving it a few years later. By using the search mode principle, I found some exercise I was okay with it, and then continued from there.

    The second advice is: add a few healthy foods to your diet, to slowly start transitioning to a new healthier lifestyle. Luckily there are a few types of foods that are super healthy, tasty, don’t need lots of preparation and are inexpensive.

    These foods will provide you with the perfect package of micronutrients – antioxidants, fiber, vitamins, minerals and other healthy nutrition properties.

    Even more importantly, they will trick you into slowly starting to love healthy food instead of junk food. Here are super healthy foods I eat almost every day (at least 4 of them in a day):

    • Berries
    • Avocados
    • Nuts
    • Broccoli
    • Olive oil
    • Green tea

    Blueberries super healthy

    Blueberries or any other type of berries

    Number one on the list are blueberries. Berries are a type of fruit that contains the lowest amount of sugar and high amounts of antioxidants, fiber and vitamins A and C. Next to that, they are delicious and don’t need any heavy preparation.

    You just wash them a little bit and enjoy their superior taste; or you can add them to many other foods like yogurt, oatmeal, on top of protein pancakes, and so on.

    Blueberries are great for your brain and prevent memory loss, they help prevent urinary tract infections, and are generally delicious for your health. The only downside is that they aren’t the most inexpensive food, but they’re absolutely worth the cost.

    • Every day, eat a small cup of blueberries as a snack
    • Sprinkle a palm of blueberries on some of your favorite dishes
    • When it’s hard to get fresh blueberries I use frozen ones, which is not ideal, but still an option
    • Alternatively, you may go for raspberries, goji berries, acai berries or blackberries (but those cost more)

    Avocado

    Avocados are considered to be one of the best superfoods. They contain lots of healthy fats, soluble fiber, vitamin E, folate and potassium. They help keep your blood sugar levels stable and your eyesight sharp.

    The downside is that they have a very specific fatty taste, they’re rich in calories and they can be a bit expensive if you go for the organic ones.

    I don’t like them so much that I would eat them alone or in a salad, but I eat them daily in a smoothie that I make for myself. Well, to be completely honest, my girlfriend makes it for me.

    • Avocados are a great basic ingredient for a smoothie
    • You can also add them to a salad or make yourself delicious guacamole sauce
    • Just eat them in moderation, since they’re packed with calories

    Nuts

    Nuts are a great source of healthy fats, they taste delicious and serve as a very handy snack. They help lower “bad” LDL cholesterol and raise “good” HDL cholesterol, they’re generally considered as one of the best brain foods (trail mix) and you can take them with you everywhere you go.

    There are many different types of nuts – almonds, walnuts, pistachios, almonds, brazil nuts, cashew, macadamias, and so on, so your taste buds will never get bored.

    As you probably know, nuts are considered to be allergenic food, so be careful about any potential allergic reactions. Peanuts are the most delicate ones, because they aren’t even technically nuts. And most importantly, don’t eat too many of them, because they’re rich in calories.

    • Eat a handful or 20 – 25 nuts every day as the perfect snack
    • Try different types of nuts and find the ones that work best for you
    • Always add a few of them to your favorite smoothie, together with chia and flax seeds
    • If possible, buy organic nuts, but don’t eat too many of them if you want to lose weight

    Broccoli super healthy

    Broccoli

    The two foods I used to hate the most are broccoli and olives. I was flicking olives off my pizzas and I thought to myself: who eats this weird green alien tasteless vegetable or whatever the hell it is. Today, broccoli is my number one favorite food. I couldn’t survive without broccoli now.

    If you’re wondering how I started liking broccoli, it’s simple. For a week or two, I forced myself a little bit to eat it, and then your taste changes. You can really reprogram yourself quickly for whatever you like. We’re able to adjust really quickly (especially your brain), the only unfortunate thing is that we usually adjust to worse habits.

    But now back to broccoli. It contains sulfur compounds, which help fight cancer. It’s rich in protein and antioxidants. It contains a lot of vitamins A, C and K as well as folate. You can steam broccoli really fast to use it as a side dish, add it to a salad or make a soup out of it.

    It keeps your tummy full for a long time. Already by only looking at a nice piece of broccoli, you immediately know that it’s super healthy.

    • To every main meal, add broccoli as a side dish
    • You can make a fast and easy delicious broccoli soup a few times per week

    Olive oil

    Olive oil is packed with healthy fats. It helps lower “bad” LDL cholesterol and raises “good” HDL cholesterol. Olive oil keeps your artery walls smooth and cholesterol-free, and it’s also rich in antioxidants. I use exclusively organic cold-pressed extra virgin olive oil.

    For cooking, I use coconut oil, and as salad dressing I always use tons of olive oil. If I somehow don’t eat a salad in a particular day, which rarely happens, I eat a small tablespoon of olive oil or flax oil. My girlfriend is always surprised at how fast I can empty a big bottle of delicious olive oil.

    • Add a little bit of lemon and tons of olive oil to your salad
    • Eat a tablespoon of olive oil with your lunch
    • Only adding olive oil to your diet is far from as healthy a lifestyle as many imagine, but it’s one small step towards it

    Green tea

    Green tea is an extremely healthy and tasty beverage, filled with antioxidants and just a strong enough stimulant to wake you up and brighten your mood without messing with your sleep pattern, as long as you don’t drink it in the afternoon or before sleep.

    Studies show that green tea helps fight heart disease, cancer, stroke, Alzheimer’s disease and keeps your gums, teeth and bones healthy.

    Green tea also helps burn fat and improves physical performance. Green tea has also been shown to improve blood flow, lower cholesterol and help with other health issues. There are mixed opinions regarding coffee, but everyone agrees that drinking green tea is very beneficial to you.

    • Drink only water, fresh-made mild lemonade, green tea, green drink, nothing else
    • Drink one cup of your favorite green tea between breakfast and lunch, and one between lunch and dinner but not after 4 or 5 PM, if you want to get quality sleep. Green tea may interfere with absorption of some minerals, especially iron, so drink it between meals instead.
    Super healthy foods
    My super healthy food pack for 2 days.

    Other super healthy foods

    There are many other healthy foods I eat almost daily. I eat different kinds of seeds, lots of eggs, oatmeal, quinoa, yogurt, tons of green veggies (salad, kale or spinach), a piece or two of seasonal organic fruit, and some types of beans and lentils.

    I add cinnamon to some foods and to lemonade. Sweet potatoes are also considered to be a nutrient-rich food, but I don’t eat it since it’s not popular in my country. I also take a few core supplements daily with one of my main meals.

    But these are add-ons. The first step you can make is to add the six mentioned foods to your diet. When you go grocery shopping, just add them to your cart without even thinking. Most of them don’t need much preparation and you can consume them immediately. And all of them taste delicious.

    Homework
    • For one of the snacks during a day, eat a palm of blueberries and nuts.
    • With one of the main meals, eat a cup of broccoli as a side dish or add it to a salad.
    • For a salad always use olive oil or eat a small spoonful of it during lunch.
    • Between meals, make yourself a green tea or two.
    • Make yourself a delicious green smoothie with avocado, seeds and a few green veggies. Just don’t add too much other fruit in it. This takes the most effort, but it will also benefit you the most.
    • From this point on, slowly improve your diet by removing juices, sugary food, fried food and so on, step by step. But first learn to love a few super healthy and super delicious foods.

    Add these things to your shopping list and start eating them daily or almost daily. Your body and your brain will be super grateful to you, your mood and your energy levels will improve including your overall health.

    It really takes zero effort to add these things to your diet, and they do taste delicious. If not for the first few times, then after a week or so. Bon appétit. Enjoy there super healthy foods every day.

  • Tricks to eat less that will help you lose weight without any suffering

    There is a very important fact in the fitness and weight loss industry, emphasizing that you can never out-train your diet. Your losing weight goals are 80 % done in the kitchen and 20 % done in the gym.

    Regular exercise is absolutely important and you have to do it if you want to be/look fit and gain some muscles, but for losing fat, an elaborate diet is what counts the most. There is some simple math behind it.

    Here’s how many calories you burn (rough estimate) in 30 minutes of exercise:

    • Walking: 150 kcal
    • Weight training: 220 kcal
    • Cycling: 250 kcal
    • Swimming: 300 kcal
    • Running: 300 kcal

    And here are the calories in some relatively small meals and snacks (again, only rough estimates):

    • Egg: 80 kcal
    • Banana: 100 kcal
    • One slice of pizza: 240 kcal (yes, one slice)
    • Snicker’s Bar: 250 kcal
    • Big Mac: 563 kcal

    You can eat a Big Mac in 3 minutes, and then you have to go running for an hour to burn it. If we take a step further, 7,700 calories are roughly 1 kg of fat together with water (or 3,500 kcal equals 1 lb of fat). So if you eat 500 calories over your TDEE (Total Daily Energy Expenditure), you will gain 1 kg of fat in two weeks.

    Now, there is a lot of debating going on out there over how accurate these calculations are, but at the end of the day, if you eat more than you burn, you get fatter and if you burn more than you need, you lose weight. It’s a simple rule that can’t be avoided. And it’s much easier to dam up calories than trying to burn all the excess you consume with exercise.

    It’s so easy to eat 500 calories. It’s so hard to burn 500 calories.

    The main problem is that when you start to exercise, your appetite goes up. That’s why many people get disappointed when they start to take care of their bodies. They feel much better after exercise, they put in the hard work, but their appetite also goes up and consequently they eat much more and don’t see fat loss as quickly as they would desire.

    And even if you stuff your face with healthy food, you gain weight. If you want to lose weight, you simply have to curb your eating appetites. There is no other way.

    Weight loss

    Tricks to eat less

    If you want to lose weight, you have to control how much (quantity) and what (quality) you eat. You do that by making smart big and small eating decisions.

    Big smart decisions are the decisions of how you design your eating pattern in general – the number of meals you eat, what time you eat them, the typical meals you like and their size. You have to know your macros and how you will meet them. Besides that you have to know your body very well and how it resonates with different diet approaches. You do that by testing.

    Small smart decisions are all the small things that prevent you from eating that one banana or chocolate bar too many per day. They’re small tricks that help you keep the discipline and really stay within the bigger plan (macro calculations, eating pattern). Small decisions are the details you have to be careful about. As they say, God or the Devil are in the details. Diet is no exception here.

    Now let’s look at 15+ tricks to eat less that will help you eat less in order to lose weight and be healthier. If you are prone to overeating as I am and your body weight fluctuates like the tide, these tricks may actually change your life.

    How to lose weight? Portion control, portion control.

    Be smart about shopping

    There is a saying that fitness professionals repeat over and over again: “5 minutes of willpower in the grocery store is much easier than a week of willpower in the kitchen”. Make sure you aren’t hungry when you go shopping, and buy only healthy food.

    Have a list of things you need to buy and don’t get tempted to buy anything that will lead you to a temptation later on. Have a rule to not have junk food or sweets at home at all!

    Tricks to eat less

    Skip a meal or do intermittent fasting

    One great way to eat less is to skip meals. If you ate too much at your last meal, skip the next one. From time to time, skip breakfast or dinner for a few times in a row. Not eating after 6pm at all may also help you a lot.

    As an alternative, you can also do intermittent fasting and introduce periods in your days when you don’t eat at all. Test a few different approaches to skipping meals and find the eating pattern that works best for you.

    Brush your teeth

    When you crave a snack in the evening, go and brush your teeth. It’s a signal to your brain that the time to stop eating has come. Your hunger can go away like that. And if you are a little bit lazy, you know that after eating, you’ll have to brush your teeth again, and who wants to do that?

    Drink plenty of water

    If you get really hungry, drink lots of water. Well drink lots of water anyway, but when you are hungry, drink it even more. It can also be with a few drops of a freshly squeezed lemon.

    Just know that if you do it before sleep, you will go to the toilet several times and that may disturb the quality of your sleep. Drinking a glass of water before every meal can also help a lot. As mentioned the good news is that drinking water is extremely healthy for you anyway.

    Always have broccoli in your belly

    Organic broccoli is the most awesome and healthy green food in existence. You can see how healthy it is even by only looking at it. Half a kilo of broccoli only has 170 kcal and 15g of protein.

    And trust me, you feel very full after eating 0,5 kg of broccoli. If you’re feeling hungry, just eat some broccoli. Make sure you always have some broccoli in your stomach. It’s that simple.

    Healthy food choices

    The hunger test

    Imagine a really healthy food you like, without sugars or fats (fruit doesn’t count, except for avocado). Preferably a green vegetable – broccoli, spinach, salad, whatever. If you feel real hunger, you’ll have no problem eating your favorite green vegetable.

    But if you just go “no, no”, I want pizza, a chocolate bar, French fries, chips or whatever, you’re probably not really hungry. It’s emotional hunger.

    If you are really hungry, slice some carrots and pickles and eat them with some hummus. No? Then you aren’t really hungry.

    Go for a walk

    Feeling super hungry? Distract yourself with a productive and healthy activity. Go for a walk and eat something healthy when you come back. Sometimes distracting yourself works.

    Just make sure that you don’t overeat after you finish with the selected activity. There is a thin line when you go too far with hunger and you just want to eat everything afterwards.

    Eat slowly, especially when you cheat

    This is the hardest one for me, but it does wonders. There is a thing called mindful eating. It means that you eat really slowly, paying full attention to the food. You do slow bites and try to engage yourself in the eating activity with all of your senses.

    When you do that, not only do you eat more slowly which is super healthy, you usually also eat less. You pay more attention to when you’re really full.

    There are a few tricks you can employ to eat more mindfully:

    • Closely examine every bite of food before you put it in your mouth – texture, color etc.
    • Keep switching the spoon from one hand to the other or eat with your non-dominant hand
    • Take a few bites with your eyes closed
    • Eat with chopsticks
    • Make sure you take one bite at a time
    • Take a break during your meal
    • Chew 25 times every bite
    • Be thankful for the meal before you start eating – say a prayer or just think about how lucky you are

    The signal to your brain that your stomach is full comes with some delay, so eating slowly helps that the signal doesn’t come too late, when you already eat twice as much as you should.

    Use smaller plates

    Always put your food on a plate

    To better control how much you eat, always put your food on a plate. Never eat out of a bag. Never just take food out of the fridge and put it in your mouth. And never do it above the kitchen sink, stuffing yourself with fruit, for example (like I do sometimes and my girlfriend doesn’t like it).

    On second thought, don’t just put food on a plate. Prepare it. Slice it, cook it, decorate it, whatever. Give yourself time to play with the preparation and while you do it, think about a reasonable portion size.

    Always put your food on a plate and always eat only sitting at the table with no exceptions. Especially don’t eat in front of a TV. Eating in front of the TV is the opposite of mindful eating. You get lost in a TV show and just eat and eat, with no idea of how much you ate.

    Using smaller plates may also be used as a psychological trick to not put too much food on a plate and to see small portions as big enough.

    Under 200 calories snacks

    Always have a few “healthy snacks under 200 calories” with you for an emergency if you are really hungry or your sugar levels drop. Never wait until you’re extremely hungry and then eat twice as much as you should.

    Instead control your appetite with small non-caloric healthy snacks. Examples of those kind of snacks are:

    • Small banana with a few almonds
    • Greek yogurt with a piece of fresh fruit
    • Carrot with hummus
    • Cup of blueberries
    • Avocado
    • Cucumber salad
    • Olives and a few slices of cheese
    • Apple
    • Shrimp cocktail
    • Protein bar

    Tracking calories

    The number one thing weightlifters and gym rats usually regret is not paying more attention to their diet when they started exercising. Most weightlifters claim that tracking calories changed their life and the speed of progress.

    Tracking calories significantly helps you stay within your macros (protein, carbs, fat, fiber, vitamins, minerals intake), stay in a moderate deficit (if you are cutting) or surplus (if you are bulking), and it always gives you a chance for a second thought over whether you should eat something or not.

    Now, I don’t track my calories daily, but I have a big spreadsheet with all the calculations for my typical meals that I usually eat in a day. Since I like to simplify my life, I have a few typical meals for breakfast, lunch, dinner and snacks, and I have a standard meal plan for high-carb and low-carb days.

    I know exactly when I overeat, and I try to balance that by skipping meals. Going through the macros of my typical meals really opened my eyes as to why I had such big problems losing weight. Because food contains so much more calories than you think.

    It’s so easy to overeat. A good rule that can help you eat less is: don’t put anything in your mouth before you log it.

    Get enough sleep

    Getting enough quality sleep is very important for your health in general. A lack of sleep causes stress, puts additional pressure on your body, you usually feel hungrier and it messes with your self-discipline. So if you want to eat less, go to bed early and make sure you get enough sleep.

    If you stay up late, you will want to eat more, especially unhealthy snacks. Who likes to cook at midnight? If you’re tired because of a lack of sleep, you will want to eat even more the next day.

    Because your self-discipline will be poor, you’ll have no problem eating lots of unhealthy food. You have to be smarter than that. Get enough sleep and your appetite will go down.

    Your picture on the fridge

    You can also go a big step further to stop yourself from overeating. You can take a photo of yourself in a swimming suit, nicely showing your excess of fat. Make sure that the picture is as unattractive as possible. Stick a photo of you clearly showing the excess of fat to the fridge and it’s going to be a nice reminder to walk away.

    Fat you pic on the fridge

    Make yourself a cup of green tea

    Interestingly, I often overeat because I feel a lack of energy. I want to operate at 100 % capacity all the time, which is ridiculous. My underlying assumption is that if I eat more, I’ll immediately have immediately more energy. It doesn’t work that way, except maybe with sugar, but soon a sugar crash comes and that makes you even more tired.

    If you’re like me and you want to eat only because you’re tired, get yourself a cup of green tea or coffee instead, if it’s not too late. A piece of dark chocolate also picks me up nicely and the desire to overeat slowly goes away.

    Many people also reported that a chewing gum helps a lot when they’re hungry. Find one caloric acceptable snack that picks you up when you’re tired. Assuming you are already following a healthy diet throughout the day.

    My wrong underlying assumption is that I will have more energy if I eat more. What are your false assumptions and beliefs?

    Wire yourself to enjoy hunger

    If there is one thing I hate, it’s being hungry. Nevertheless, I try to rewire or reprogram myself not to hate it. Much like I hate hunger, I also used to hate broccoli and olives, and now I love them.

    Fasting has always been an important part of a healthy lifestyle and even spiritual life. There are many physical, emotional, intellectual and spiritual benefits of fasting, if you do some research on it.

    With intermittent fasting, I’m slowly learning to love being hungry and enjoy it. I focus myself on feeling light, I can feel how my discipline is building up, and at the end of the day I am very proud of myself for having stayed in a caloric deficit.

    If you learn to enjoy hunger, you can always control your portions and how much you eat throughout the day.

    Minus 20 % rule

    A good trick you can use that will help you get in that 500 kcal deficit is to serve yourself 20 % less food. When you have food on a plate, cut away 20 % and throw it away, give it to your dog, share it among others or whatever. At every meal, prepare yourself a full portion and then cut off 20 %. Be proud of yourself when you do that.

    If your TDEE is 2500 calories and you do that, you will eat 500 calories less. A 500 calories deficit every day will lead you to losing 2 kg (4 lbs) in a month. That’s the healthy limit of losing weight.

    When you do the “minus 20 % rule” just make sure you don’t add additional meals to your eating pattern or somehow else compensate for the food you cut off.

    Eat foods that fill you up first

    As we said, drinking a glass of water before a meal may help you eat less. Similarly, you can eat a salad or a soup before the main meal. They are both light in calories and fill your stomach quite a bit. Foods with lots of protein and fiber also keep the hunger away for longer.

    Healthy snack decisions

    Avoid empty calories

    Last but not least, avoid empty calories at all costs. Empty calorie foods are all foods that contain high amounts of calories and sugars, but have zero nutritional value (protein, vitamins etc.).

    They are also very easy to consume as main meals or snacks, and you can almost eat unlimited amount of them. One bite like that too many and you can already be in a caloric surplus. Make a rule to simply not eat foods and drinks with empty calories.

    • Drink water or herbal tea instead of juices, sodas and other sugary drinks
    • Don’t eat fast food at all, or only do it on rare occasions
    • Drink alcohol in moderation
    • Be really strict about how much sweets and desserts you eat
    • Watch out for unhealthy salty snacks like chips and pretzels

    People really use these tricks to eat less

    You may be thinking that this all sounds nice, but these eating tricks are only in magazines to entertain people. That isn’t true. Go to the gym, talk with athletes, join online health and fitness communities, and you will soon realize that people who are fit or lost weight really employed these kinds of tricks. They work, you just have to do it.

    I do most of them and they help me lose weight nicely. So pick a few tricks to eat less you like the most and start them doing immediately. Don’t wait for tomorrow or next Monday, don’t wait for the next summer or the perfect moment, do it with your next meal.

    Your next meal is an opportunity to make smarter eating decisions and to be more kind to your body. Just do it and good luck. Now you know all the major tricks to eat less.

  • A day without a screen

    I’m a big fan of technology. Technology is a big productivity leverage and general contributor to a much higher quality of life. But as any leverage, it’s a double-edged sword. Technology is like fire, you can cook yourself a meal with it or you can burn yourself. How you burn yourself with technology is pretty simple.

    It’s when you stop using technology to your advantage and start abusing it instead. There are two pretty common ways how people start abusing technology. The first one is about quality and the second one is about quantity.

    In this blog, we will talk about how large quantities lead to abuse, but before we get there let’s just scratch the other type – the so-called quality abuse. It’s pretty simple. You have one of the most capable computers in your head available for use, a product of billions of years of evolution.

    Next to that, you have most of the knowledge ever created by humankind available everywhere you go on your mobile phone. This is so revolutionary, so groundbreaking, and we’re often not even aware of it.

    If you tried to explain to someone from 200 years ago that they would be able to carry all humankind knowledge on a small device in their pocket, they’d think you were nuts.

    But here comes the important question: Why would you use your brain and the internet for browsing funny pictures of cats?

    That’s what 90 % of people do, and with that kind of actions they’re on the wrong side of the double-edged sword. Make sure you’re on the right side by setting up a proper infostructure.

    Now let’s move to quantity.

    Technology detox

    As mentioned I’m a big fan of technology, but I’m an even bigger fan of regular technology detox. The average person checks their smartphone a few hundred times a day. A few hundred times. Doing that continuously day by day, week by week, month by month and even year after year, of course, leaves negative consequences.

    Too much of anything, even good things, becomes toxic.

    There are many negative consequences of abusing technology:

    • Being unable to focus and concentrate
    • Reducing the ability to live in the present moment
    • Stifling your creative potential
    • Losing connection with yourself
    • Running away from real-life problems
    • Damaging your posture
    • Hurting your eyesight, etc.

    The only way to make sure you don’t abuse technology is to set very strict and hard limits, when and how often to take time completely off and away from technology.

    Here are the suggested minimums for technology detox, how often you should turn off all devices that need electricity:

    • A few hours before you go to sleep, if you want to get quality sleep
    • One whole day every two weeks (two days a month, basically)
    • One extended weekend every quarter (3 – 4 days)
    • One or two whole weeks during the summer vacation

    The main catch is that it may sound much easier than it really is.

    Don’t just agree, really try it for yourself

    One thing is to read about “a day without screen” concept and somehow agree with it, it’s a completely different thing to really implement it. We’ve become so addicted to technology that it takes severe discipline and preparation to really follow this trough.

    If you think having a day without a screen is easy, it’s not. There are screens everywhere.

    First of all, you have screens everywhere. In most cases that includes your:

    • Mobile phone
    • Tablet
    • Computer
    • Laptop
    • TV
    • Smartwatch (if you don’t have it, it will probably be your next one)
    • VR headset (if you don’t have it yet, you’ll have it soon)
    • Kindle (discussable whether it’s a screen or not)
    • And probably another device or two

    Now when you wake up, you probably look at your smartwatch, especially to see how many people liked your statuses on social networks. Then you take your smartphone to the toilet and check all the emails. And this is only the beginning of a day.

    Then you spend the whole working day behind a computer or a laptop. And before you go to sleep, you browse news on your tablet and then watch a bit of TV, just to relax and forget about the daily worries.

    Even if it’s weekend, you may not work that much on your computer, but you definitely play a game or two or watch new funny vines or try to relax in some other way (by staring at a screen).

    It may not look 100 % exactly like that – funny vines may be replaced by the daily news, TV with Netflix, playing games with a VR headset, but anyway, you get the picture. There are screens everywhere in your life, and there’s going to be even more screens in your life in the future.

    Fridge, car, closets, clothes, glasses, windows, mirrors, you name it. Everything will have a screen, everything will be connected to the internet and interact with you, which is awesome. But only if you have the discipline and the will to manage all this technology and not let the technology manage you and dictate your life.

    A day without a screen

    With a day without a screen, something magical will happen to you

    Instead of just agreeing with how abuse of technology can be toxic, really try to have one day without a single look at any screen. Because it’s hard, you have to strategically prepare yourself for that kind of radical action. The best way to do it is to dramatically increase the transaction costs for starting to use any type of screen.

    That means completely unplugging your TV, locking all the devices in a safe and making sure you don’t know the unlock code, but only someone you trust who won’t give it to you for that day. You have to drain batteries from all your devices, make sure there are no “urgent” emails to answer, and so on.

    You have to do it the day before, and you have to make sure that every single electronic device is dead and locked away. It may sound silly, but you’ll see how hard it is.

    But even more importantly, you will see that without any screen something magical will happen.

    You may get confused the moment you wake up. There is no watch, smartphone or whatever to get distracted. What to do? Hug your spouse. Be grateful that you are alive. Stretch a little bit. Pay attention to your body and how you feel.

    If nothing else, you’ll probably have to go to the toilet. Sitting on the toilet, you may again get confused. There is no email or 9gag. Should you read labels on shampoos? Should you think about the meaning of life? Or maybe about what you should do through the day.

    But what should you really do throughout the day? Remember, no TV, no computer, no tablet. It’s really confusing. Since you aren’t a robot and can’t just shut down, this is the point where the magic will start to happen. You will naturally and slowly get drawn to really interesting and inspiring primal human activities.

    You may actually go out into the nature and play. You may start talking to your spouse and reconnect. You may pick up a book and start reading. You may take a notebook and start brainstorming or planning your future.

    Confusion will slowly start turning into clarity. You will become more relaxed. You will be more present. You will start feeling more connected to yourself. You will become more alert to your surroundings and how you interact with the world.

    You’ll be able to think better and more creatively, connect with people on a deeper level, and you will start to feel your batteries recharging. You will feel FUCKING ALIVE. The electronic devices’ batteries will be empty, but yours will be full.

    Here are a few ideas for what you can do when you decide to have a day without a screen:

    And what not to do:

    The first few hours may be very confusing and alien to you. But after a few hours, oh boy. You will completely forget about email. You won’t care about all the likes and messages anymore. You won’t care what will happen in the next episode of your favorite show.

    Because suddenly, you’ll realize what you’ve been missing out on. Real life. Being really connected to yourself, nature and other people is what makes you feel alive. And it’s so awesome. Just try it for one day, as an experiment.

    Nevertheless, it might be a good idea to relay on some old tech, such as a mechanical watch. You still want to know what time it is. There are many options for superwatches, that are mechanical, not digital type.

    Have the best of both worlds

    I see many parents who forbid their kids from using technology. I think that’s silly. Because mastering technology is a really big advantage in life and an important competence. Technology helped me so much in my life advancement and following my goals, and it’ll be even more important in the future.

    Technical literacy has become as important as general literacy. So, you shouldn’t be afraid of technology, avoid it at all costs or see it as a bad thing. Technology is not good or bad. It all depends on how you use it. If you ignore it, it’s definitely bad. And if you abuse it, it’s also definitely bad.

    Mind the quality and the quantity and you’ll be okay.

    All you have to do is set healthy limits. Like with everything in life. You shouldn’t deprive yourself of anything. You should have the best of everything life has to offer.

    Having the best of both worlds means being connected to yourself, nature and other people, and using technology to your advantage – to be more productive, to learn faster and to have fun from time to time. And to communicate with people on the other side of the world.

    The best way to meet healthy limits regarding technology is to set daily limits of technology usage and to plan a day without a screen from time to time.

    As an experiment, open your calendar and select the most appropriate day, when you’ll give priority to the people you love instead of emails, enjoy life in nature instead of watch TV, and listen more to yourself than poke people on social networks.

    Make sure technology isn’t turning you into a zombie. Use technology to your advantage, don’t abuse it.