Yeah, yeah, yeah, you’ve heard it all before – all you need to speed up your metabolism is to build more muscle, drink lots of ice water and try to spend less time sitting, right?
But there are actually a tonne of other factors to consider. You might be messing with your metabolism without even realising it.
Read on to learn what you’re doing wrong – and how to fix it.
1. You ditched dairy
Muscle is essential for keeping your metabolism humming and women who consumed three to seven servings of dairy per day lost more fat and gained more muscle mass than women who downed less, according to research from McMaster University.
2. You crank up the heating
To fry fat, dial down the thermostat.
Participants who slept in bedrooms cooled to 66°F (18.8°C) for a month doubled the amount of brown adipose tissue – a type of fat that burns rather than stores calories, researchers at the National Institutes of Health found.
‘Brown fat becomes more active in cooler temperatures to help keep us warm,’ says Aaron Cypess, M.D., an endocrinologist at the National Institutes of Health. So the more active your brown fat, the more calories you’ll burn throughout the day.
While it’s too early to say how long you need to spend in the cold to reap the calorie burning rewards, turning down your heat, sleeping in cooler temps and spending time outdoors may make a difference.
3. You cut carbs completely
True, study after study shows that for weight loss, a low carb diet trumps a low fat one. But that doesn’t mean you should eliminate carbs completely, especially if you exercise regularly.
‘During exercise, your muscles demand glycogen from carbohydrate stores in your body,’ says Precision Nutrition coach Brian St. Pierre, R.D. ‘If you don’t consume enough carbohydrates, your glycogen levels will be too low and you won’t have the energy to exercise as intensely.’
As a result, you’ll burn fewer calories during your workout as well as post-exercise since your body won’t require as much energy to recover. His advice: consume a serving of carbs (about the size of one cupped palm) such as oatmeal, brown rice or sweet potato at each meal.
4. Your rush through a strength training workout
Bicep curls, bench presses and deadlifts are great ways to build muscle. But speeding through the reps causes you to miss out on the major metabolism boosting benefits that come from the eccentric – or lowering – aspects of these movements. Eccentric movements are more muscularly damaging, so they require more effort from your body to repair and recover compared to concentric or lifting motions, says St. Pierre. That equals more calories burned.
Researchers in Greece found that women who performed one weekly strength workout that focused on eccentric movement increased their resting energy expenditure and fat burning by five and nine%, respectively, after just eight weeks.
5. You snack wrong
Instead of reaching for low calorie eats like rice cakes, welcome nuts back to snack time.