Male dieting: A trend on the rise
Victoria Vlisides
Issue date: 2/27/08 Section: Lifestyle
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Although women are usually seen as the ones who watch their weight and have been bombarded with the need to be thin, many male students are weight-conscious and are making an effort to maintain healthy eating choices.
Matt Mallin, a Limited Time Employment Counselor at the University Health and Counseling Services was in consent.
"Society has made a shift in terms of marketing," he said. "Men are just as susceptible to those media infiltrations."
Junior Dan Lutz lost 40 pounds throughout the past year and a half by managing his food intake and working out. After reaching his target weight, he's currently finding the best routine for him to maintain his weight.
Lutz exercises six days a week and has developed alternative eating habits from the traditional three meals a day.
His diet is regimented to six or seven small meals per day. Each meal is about 400 calories, Lutz said.
"I needed a new goal other than to lose weight, so I wanted to gain more muscle mass," Lutz said.
Lutz preached habit over the quick-fix.
"People starve themselves, and that's the exact wrong way to lose weight," he said.
He insists his eating habits are not a diet, although he admits to always being conscious of what he puts into his body.
"It's not a diet because a diet screams temporary," he said. "You want to focus on making a lifestyle change."
Sometimes people give him a hard time about his eating habits because they aren't typical and require more time and money, he said.
"It's to become more of a healthy person," Lutz said. "It's not to impress anyone."
Mallin said males typically have a higher rate of metabolism, meaning it's generally easier for them to lose weight compared to women. Typically, men's bodies are leaner than women's bodies, he said.
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