Are all celebrities magically blessed with amazing weight loss powers allowing them to wear their skinny jeans only weeks after giving birth? It sure feels that way to moms who are still toting 15 extra pounds along with their six-month-old. The truth is that many celebrities hire trainers, nutritionists, and full-time nannies to help get their bodies in red carpet shape fast. Lucky for you, there are diet and exercise secrets that stars pay big bucks for that you will learn without spending a dime. Even though you won't be walking the red carpet any time soon, you will soon be walking through the grocery store looking red-carpet ready.
Try to remember that celebrities get paid millions to look a certain way and are therefore highly motivated to lose the weight. On the other hand, for us "normal" moms, 2-3 hour training sessions twice a day is a little over the top. Your body has just done something miraculous, and you need to take some time to heal and enjoy your baby.
Before you begin any exercise program, talk with your doctor about when it is safe to begin. Many doctors recommend you wait until your six-week check-up. Avoid crash dieting, and keep your caloric intake within 1,500-1,800 per day to avoid fatigue and irritability. At this point in your life, you need all the energy you can get!
Most experts agree that to
maximize your weight loss potential you must focus on both diet
and exercise. Actress Gwyneth Paltrow insists she is, "not
dieting, because I am a milk machine," but she does make sure
she eats healthy organic food and drinks plenty of water. Most
stars need a more structured diet plan and hire nutritionists
to count every carbohydrate and monitor every calorie that
passes their pampered mouths. Here are the most common diet
plans to help you lose the jelly belly.
High protein/low carbohydrate:
Jennifer Garner, Kate Hudson, Elizabeth Hurley and
Catherine Zeta-Jones all lost their post-baby bodies by
following a diet that is low in carbohydrate-based foods
(breads, pastas) and high in protein (fish, chicken, lean
beef). Jennifer Garner, mom to one-year-old Violet, tells
People magazine, "It took me a long, long time. I just wasn't
that motivated. I wanted to play with her. Then I got on the
treadmill, stopped stuffing my face and lost the weight. I cut
out croissants, bagels and muffins - all the good stuff. And
went back to having a salad once a day and protein."
David Kirsch, supermodel Heidi Klum's trainer, tells Access Hollywood that the best way to lose the bloat is to cut down on "starchy carbs" like dairy and fruit for two weeks.
Food delivery services:
Celebrity moms like Denise Richards and Uma Thurman don't
trust themselves to eat right, so they hire a food delivery
service to tell them what to eat and how much of it to eat. Uma
reportedly lost 25 pounds in six weeks using this type of
service. These food delivery services will deliver
portion-controlled healthy foods right to their doors. It can
be expensive, but for many busy celebrity moms it is an easy
way to shed the pounds. Besides the high price tag, programs
like this can often lead to weight gain once the food service
stops and you are back in the "real world" making your own
meals.
Commercial weight loss programs:
A good alternative to food delivery services, if you need a
more structured diet plan, may be a program like Weight
Watchers or Jenny Craig. Weight Watchers helped Jenny McCarthy,
author of
Belly Laughs: The Truth about Pregnancy and Childbirth,
lose the 80 pounds of baby weight she gained. She was so
impressed with them that she is now their spokesperson. The
weight loss may be slow in celebrity terms (it took McCarthy
one year to lose almost all of her weight) but for many people
it is more realistic.
Now that you know how the rich and
famous diet, let's talk about how they exercise. It seems
celebrity exercise programs run the gamut from extreme (Kate
Hudson's daily three-hour workouts to lose 60 pounds in four
months) to non-existent (Elizabeth Hurley who insists, "I don't
do a lot of exercise."). It seems like the common denominator
in most celebrities exercise programs is that they exercise for
at least an hour a day, five days a week.
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