NEW 11-16-07
Can You Lose Weight On A Restricted, Liquid Diet?
While I was in Canada doing research for a book, I had quite a few chances to talk with different people about many varied subjects. Most of the guests came to Echo Valley Ranch and Spa (EVR) because of the health related programs. Everyone knew I was involved in writing about health and wellness, and the topic of conversation at the dinner table was often about those subjects.
One day, while eating lunch with one of the ranch’s guest during a hike up Mount Bowman, the guest told me the following story.
One of his employees, at about 255#, was quite overweight. He and his employee ate lunch together on a regular basis and he noticed, even though the employee still ate like a pig (his words), he was losing weight. When the man was down to about 200# the guest asked him, “I know your eating habits and have noticed that you eat as much as you always have but you’ve lost a lot of weight. I also know that you’ve always been one to do a lot of exercise and I can’t imagine you doing more than you did. What are you doing?”
The man answered, “ I don’t take any calories in liquid form.” (Meaning he drank nothing but water. No sodas, no beer, no milk, no alcohol, no electrolyte replacement drinks, nothing with calories-period, water only.) “And, I haven’t changed anything else. No lifestyle changes, I do the same exercise program I’ve done for years and, as you’ve noticed, I still eat as much as I always did.”
The man got down to 190# and has maintained that weight which, according to the guest, is where the man looks (and probably feels) best. That particular day one of the EVR employees was eating lunch with the guest and me and decided to adopt the method and see if he too could lose some weight. He’d been carrying round an extra 40# for some time that he couldn’t seem to lose.
In a couple of months, with no other changes, the EVR employee had lost the weight and told me he had a lot more energy. Probably from not carrying an extra 40# around and at least in part because we’re electric beings. We need water at the cellular level in order to transport nutrients, haul away wastes and toxins and conduct the electrical impulses that keep us running. Plus, the hemoglobin ring on our red blood cells carries oxygen to the cellular level which promotes good health. Without adequate water, oxygen can’t enter the hemoglobin ring. And, many research projects have proven that water is water, and everything else isn’t.
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