Who hasn't ever heard a person that
has taken back weight after a regime
which however had made him lose
several kilograms? You will quickly
understand why this untoward
adventure it is so ended.
Imagine that Mrs Dupont decides to
make a regime, for instance a classica
l regime in which Mrs Dupont is going
to abolish sugars of her feeding and
also to eat less than before.
Mrs Dupont will lose weight quickly, it is normal and logical: you bring less energy for the functioning of your organism. Therefore, this one will use the existent glycogen reservation and the body will not be able to renew them (the glycogen is the sugar reservation of our organism). She acquires a weight loss immediately from 3 to 5 kg. Mrs Dupont is happy. (Not for a long time)
On the contrary, at the end of some days, the organism of Mrs Dupont is going to claim its glucose. Glucose is necessary to the nervous system. The organism of Mrs Dupont is going to destroy the muscular mass in order to transform it into glucose, and creating an imperious need of sugar at Mrs Dupont's. Due to the lack of glycogen, the muscles of Mrs Dupont are going to be harder, more fragile; Mrs Dupont is going to feel tired;
Due to her tiredness and her frustration Mrs Dupont is going to become bad-tempered; meals between friends are going to become a chore, because Mrs Dupont is going to be hard due to proscriptions and choices imposed by his regime and because she is going to suffer from temptations imposed by the view of the proscribed food.
Mrs Dupont is going to know terrible instants of depression, notably when his hormonal cycle is going to make him take back two or three kilograms without explanation.
Inevitably Mrs Dupont is going to rush on a chocolate bar or quite other appetizing source of sugar. The psychological shock by its lack of will is going to be stressful. Mrs Dupont is going to compensate by eating. The recovery of its glycogen will be baed on the principle of the overcompensation, drawing away an important weighty catch in two days.