How To Repair A Damaged Metabolism
Q: Hey Tom, I have a question about repairing a damaged metabolism. I am 6’ and up to 225 lbs. The past 3 years have been a 30+ pound climb. With one of those cheap plastic body fat calipers, I tested 25% body fat. (I’m not sure if that’s accurate, but I know I need work).
I admit I am guilty of a lot of the metabolism slowing mistakes you pointed out in your Burn The Fat book. I Know that eating small, frequent meals will help, but will my body “forget the past” and start burning immediately or should I expect a long repair process? Thanks,Scott
A: If you’ve caused metabolic damage as a result of following starvation diets or losing weight too rapidly in the past, it can be extremely difficult to achieve any further fat loss at all. The good news is, metabolic damage can be repaired. All it takes is the right combination of metabolism stimulating exercise and metabolism stimulating nutrition (NOT just a diet), all done consistently over time.
The big irony is that most of the diet programs that claim to help you get rid of excess weight, only end up making it harder for you in the long run because they use harsh metabolism-decreasing diets and not enough exercise (almost never any weight training).
It may take a little longer if you have really messed things up with severe starvation dieting in the past, especially if you’ve lost a lot of lean body mass, but it is never hopeless. Anyone can increase their metabolism.
Most people get an almost immediate boost in metabolic rate when they start the Burn The Fat program. However, the results are not going to be “overnight.” Give it a little time…
Within 3 weeks your metabolism will already be more efficient. Within 6-8 weeks, it’s burning hot. Give me 12 weeks of consistent diligent effort, sticking with all the metabolism boosting strategies I teach, and your metabolism really will become like a turbo charged engine, and I’m not exaggerating when I say that.
What’s most important for upping your metabolism is CONSISTENCY in applying the Burn The Fat nutrition and training principles every single day.
That includes:
- Meal frequency: eat 5-6 small meals per day
- Meal timing: eat approximately every 3 hours, with a substantial breakfast and a substantial post workout meal.
- Sufficient Caloric Intake: maintain a small calorie deficit and avoid starvation-level diets (suggested safe levels for fat loss: 2100-2500 calories per day for men, 1400-1800 calories per day for women; adjust as needed)
- Food choices: Select natural, unprocessed foods with high thermic effect (lean proteins like chicken, turkey, egg whites and fish are highly thermic, as are all green vegetables, salad vegetables and other fibrous carbs)
- Cardio training: Push up the intensity a bit if you really want to get a metabolic boost. Walking and low intensity cardio is fine, but higher intensity is more metabolism-stimulating
- Weight training: The basic exercises that include the largest muscle groups or even call into play the entire body as a unit (squats, front squats, split squats, deadlifts, stiff legged deadlifts, overhead presses, all kinds of rows and core-activation exercises) will have a much greater metabolism stimulating effect than isolation exercises (concentration curls, calf raises, etc)
The weight training is extremely important in cases of “metabolic damage” because this is the stimulus to keep the muscle you have and begin rebuilding new muscle tissue, which is the engine that drives your metabolism.
The men don’t usually have a problem with the weight training, but I still hear women say they don’t want to lift weights as part of their fat loss programs. Well, people who wont lift weights can expect a very, very long metabolism “repair process” if they achieve it at all.
Consistency is the key.
Nothing will undermine the “re-building” of your metabolism like inconsistency. If you stop and start, or skip meals and workouts often, you will not even get off the ground.
After your metabolism is back up where it should be, it takes continued “stoking” of the metabolic furnace to keep it there. Once you get your metabolic engine running, you’ve got to keep feeding it fuel or the fire will die down.
Picture an old fashioned wood burning stove…
Imagine you’re in a cabin up in the mountains in the winter. It’s cold in there and you want to keep the cabin warm. Can you achieve this by feeding the fire once or twice per day? Nope. Not enough fuel to burn, so not much heat is generated.
What if you just toss an entire pile of wood in the stove all at once? Will that work? Nope. Lots of fuel, but can’t all be used at once… it just smothers the fire and the excess just sits there.
How about if you throw some tissue paper or crumpled newspaper in the stove, will that work? Nope - too quickly burning.
You have to keep putting small amounts of wood (the right type of fuel) on the fire at regular intervals or the fire burns out.
It’s also difficult to get the fire lit again. In the case of metabolism, it’s like going through that initial few weeks of overcoming inertia all over again.
Your goal is to get your metabolism burning hot and keep it burning and this cannot be achieved by missing meals, missing workouts or with sporadic, infrequent training.
I have only seen a handful of cases where all these things were done properly and there was still a longer “repair” process.
For example, one case was former ballet dancer. At 5’ 5”, she was previously 110 lbs and had increased to about 145 or so. She didn’t want to reach her previous 110, but find a happy medium of about 125 lbs.
I figured with 20 lbs to cut, this would be a simple and predictable process, but she had a challenging time (and I didn’t know why at first).
I later found out that she had been anorexic and bulimic for many years. This had caused a lot of damage, and although she did reach her goal, it took about twice as long as we had anticipated.
The good news is, even in this extreme case, the same nutrition and training principles worked! It just took a little longer. And by the way her program included some serious training with free weights and she ate a lot more (clean) food than she had ever eaten before. No “starvation!”
That’s the power of burning the fat and feeding the muscles… Trying to starve the fat with crash diets is what causes the metabolic damage in the first place!
If you’re interested in the healthy, sensible way to take off the fat, while keeping all your muscle and actually increasing your metabolism in the process, then my Burn the Fat, Feed The Muscle program can teach you how. No gimmicks or false promises. Just the truth - you have to work at it and you have to be patient. www.burnthefat.com
About the Author:
Tom Venuto is a natural bodybuilder and author of the #1 best selling e-book, “Burn the Fat, Feed The Muscle,” which teaches you how to burn fat without drugs or supplements using the little-known secrets of the world’s best bodybuilders and fitness models. Learn how to get rid of stubborn fat and turbo-charge your metabolism by visiting: www.burnthefat.com.
15 June, 2006 posted in Reader Q & A


Comments
I can vouch for a HUGE metabolic boost!
I remember when I was eating the regular "3 square meals a day" American diet, and every so often I would go on a 24-hour fast for personal reasons, drinking only water. I felt hunger pains (as I anticipated) but it was bearable.
Once I discovered BFFM (2004), I switched in a heart beat. But I had no clue that it would rev up my metabolism so high. Let me explain.
I again decided to fast for 24 hours (all day), but this time I was well involved with BFFM. By lunch time, not only was I feeling hunger pains, but I was feeling dizzy. By 1 PM, I started to get blurry vision, and I started to lose some vision in my left eye. I was getting very scared. As best as I could, I researched my symptoms and found out that there was a huge glucose deficit in my brain! I quickly broke my fast and decided that I could not do this on the BFFM plan.
Case in point, BFFM will increase your metabolism so high that you'll be burning through foods so fast that you better have food to eat! :) It's quite different than the conventional "starve yourself" diet.
Sincerely,
Mark
Posted by: Mark Bojovic | June 20, 2006 4:37 PM
Hey Tom,
I've been on your program for the past 2 weeks and I must say early on I have seen great changes in my motivation and procedure.
Thanks a lot, I appreciate it
Jeff
Posted by: Jeff | June 21, 2006 10:39 AM
How long will it take for a metabolism to recover and the fat to start melting off. I have been a chronic under eater (1500 cal max and I am 5'8" and 191 lbs). I do not intentionally not eat but because of certian dietary retrictions (Celiac disease), avoiding high carb foods and just not being hungry, I think that my metabolism is very slow. I believe this because for 1 month I worked out 6 days a week with good strong cardio (min of 30 minutes mainly 60 minutes) and lifting and yoga and nothing budged. I have the next goal for the next month of eating at least 1700 calories a day and carb cyling every 4 days. I would like to know how long I should keep this up before I know that it will not work and have to try something else?
Any insight would be greatly appreicated.
Nicole
Posted by: Nicole | April 14, 2007 2:08 PM
Hi Tom,
Over the past 10 years I used every diet in the book (hoping to be healthy) and lots of fasting. At the time I started this dieting was after having my children, I really only needed to lose 5kgs of FAT, and build my muscle back up again - but I didnt realise that.
After 10 years of the yo-you my weight climbed from 70kg (I am 5.6) to a monster 97kgs.
After the last diet being a ketosis 5 years ago. I was completely devasted at how quickly my body went from 77kgs at the time to 97kgs (try 3 months) - so I gave up on diets and focused on exercise - and healthy eating (at the time 3 meals a day) so over the past 4 odd years my weight just stayed the same - I did tone up abit.
I started back on the journey again after giving up smoking, so I took up weight training and tried to run (so I could feel my lungs and justify why I shouldnt smoke), after weight training with intensity and 5 hours cardio a week (I started studying the subject) I got annoyed because all of this work I had no results - just a bit muscle under still a heap of fat.
So after researching on the web about fat burning - I discovered your book - well let me tell you:
Jan 20th 96kgs 30BF
I did 12 weeks following the BFFM and came out at 84kgs 24% BF, then I took 2 weeks off and backed off on the cardio relaxed my diet (still eating every 3 hours) and enjoyed a drink on my 41st birthday. Then I went back to start the 12 weeks again - after 2 weeks of being lax my weight stayed the same and I lost 1% bodyfat!
I am 5 weeks into my second 12 weeks and am now 80kgs and YAY!!!!! 19% Body fat!!
I plan to finish this one off and will be in Fiji for two weeks just swimming and relaxing and then I plan to do ANOTHER 12 weeks with the focus on building muscle and less on fat loss.
All I can say is that after years of my body just storing fat and not budging - me giving up on myself - I now am burning fat (and HOW) and I feel absolutely incredible.
Your book is my bible and I read it until my mind is so saturated - I NEVER want to go back to eating 3 meals a day, and I enjoy getting up real early in the morning to fit in cardio and organising my meals.
Thank you for sharing your wealth of experience to us - as out there currently is a wealth of crap information that really does great damage to your bodies metabolism - I am living proof!
Catherine
Posted by: Catherine | June 12, 2007 7:29 PM