Weight Loss: It Is Not Just About Eating Less

Weight Loss: It Is Not Just About Eating Less

Many people think weight loss is only about willpower. In real life, it is more complicated. Sleep, stress, hormones, medicines, insulin resistance, gut health, pain, mental health, and even your work schedule can affect weight.

Some patients eat very little during the day, then overeat at night. Others exercise hard but sleep poorly. Some are taking medicines that increase appetite. Some have thyroid problems, PCOS, diabetes, depression, or chronic stress.

So when a patient says, “Doctor, I am trying but nothing works,” I believe them.


Less-known facts about weight loss

1. Your body defends its weight.

When you lose weight quickly, your hunger hormones can increase and your metabolism may slow down. This is one reason crash diets often fail.


2. Liquid calories are easy to miss.

Tea with sugar, fruit juice, soft drinks, alcohol, milkshakes, and fancy coffees can quietly add hundreds of calories.


3. Protein at breakfast can reduce evening cravings.

A breakfast with eggs, Greek yogurt, paneer, dal, tofu, or nuts may help control hunger later in the day.


4. Poor sleep can increase hunger.

Even one or two nights of poor sleep can increase cravings for high-calorie foods.


5. Weight loss is not always visible first on the scale.

You may lose inches, improve sugar levels, reduce fatty liver, and feel better before major weight change appears.


5 practical tips

1. Start with one plate rule: Half vegetables, one quarter protein, one quarter carbohydrates.

2. Add protein to every meal: This helps control hunger and protects muscle.

3. Walk after meals: Even 10 minutes after lunch or dinner can help blood sugar and fat storage.

4. Do not drink your calories: Replace sweet drinks with water, lemon water without sugar, or unsweetened drinks.

5. Track habits, not just weight: Sleep, steps, cravings, waist size, mood, and energy matter too.


When to speak to a doctor

Consult a doctor if weight gain is sudden, weight loss is unexplained, you feel tired all the time, have irregular periods, swelling, breathlessness, snoring, low mood, or if you have diabetes, thyroid disease, PCOS, fatty liver, or high blood pressure.