Olivia Borer
What Your Body is Trying to Tell You: Belly Fat

It may not seem important, but where we carry the majority of our weight on our body is an extremely important indicator of our health. For women especially, carrying a little extra weight in our lower body (butt and hips) is actually better due to the fact that women are meant to carry and birth children.
On the other hand, for both men and women, carrying extra weight in our mid-sections is not as optimal. In fact, having more belly fat has been linked to a greater risk for chronic disease, including heart disease, stroke, cancer, and diabetes.
What Causes Belly Fat?
When it comes to accumulating belly fat, it comes down to a few factors, the most important of which is the hormone cortisol.
Cortisol is our fight-or-flight response to stress in our lives. Whether that stress comes from work, family, poor diet, emotional stress, or even being chased by a tiger, cortisol responses to the stimulus created by our body when we sense stress.
Cortisol is a good thing, as it is necessary to be alive; however, when we are in a state of constant stress (like most of our nowadays!), cortisol production and levels can get out of control and become either too high or too low. This is where the development of belly fat occurs.
Other hormones also play a role in the creation of belly fat. High estrogen, low testosterone, and/or low DHEA can also lead to the development of belly fat.
And what causes these hormonal imbalances?
Stress.
It all comes back to stress. Like I stated above, stress can be in a variety of different forms (physical, mental, emotional, etc), but our body doesn't differentiate. It just sees stress as a threat and responses accordingly. Chronically high stress levels lead to more and more belly fat.
Other causes of belly fat include a poor diet, sleep problems, and lack or excess amounts of exercise.
When it comes to our diet, it is crucial to fuel our bodies with the proper macronutrients for energy, and the proper micronutrients for nutrition! Eating lots of refined foods, sodium, sugar, and vegetable oils lead to an inflammation response in the body, which ultimately creates belly fat. Such foods include refined grains (even whole grains!), gluten, wheat, pastries, candy, cakes, canola oil, high fructose corn syrup, hydrogenated oils, peanut oil, soybean oil, vegetable oils, and all the other packaged, processed foods that line the grocery store shelves.
Sleep, on the other hand, can also lead to belly fat because when we don't allow our body to rejuvenate throughout each night, we create a stressful situation in our body. This leads to inflammation in the body, which, as we now know, leads to belly fat.
Lastly, too little or too much exercise can also lead to belly fat. When we are sedentary, we aren't allowing our body to move and gain strength, which leads to weak, unused muscles which become smaller and smaller, while our fat cells grow larger and larger.
Too much exercise, also known as overtraining, is not the better solution to belly fat either. Too much exercise increases cortisol, and chronically high cortisol leads to belly fat. When we overexercise, our body starts to hold onto the fat we do have because it senses a stressful situation. By holding onto the belly fat, our body is protecting us from what it perceives as danger (which is actually just overtraining).
Overtraining and belly fat usually occur with chronic cardio, when we aim to do cardio everyday, all day. Running and running and running or biking and biking and biking all the time aren't the answer.
What to Do
(And no - the solution IS NOT 100+ crunches a day or running and running and running. That will get you nowhere fast.)
Alright, we've covered the causes of belly fat, which really can be summarized in one word: stress.
So, when it comes to getting rid of our belly fat and achieving an ideal body composition, it comes down to managing stress levels through our mindset, diet, and exercise.
Firstly, we need to change our mindset. What I mean by this is learning to let go of some of the things in life that are causing you stress. Understand that you cannot control the world; life happens, and sometimes, you need to just let go. Constantly worrying and having anxiety over every event in our lives leads to chronic stress, which leads to belly fat. Calm your mind, calm your body!
Also, along with the mindset piece is our perception of ourselves and how we talk to ourselves internally. Negative thoughts about our bodies and abilities is a huge stress on the body, even if it doesn't seem like it. Take time to appreciate your body for all it's worth, because it is amazing and deserves to be treated as such. You wouldn't call your friend some of the things your call yourself, right?! So don't reciprocate that judgement back on yourself.
With our diet, I've already talked about getting rid of the junk (read your labels for sugar and vegetable oils - they are everywhere!). Stick to wholesome foods: animal proteins, vegetables, fruits, and healthy fats, the latter being very important.
Healthy fats that help decrease inflammation and decrease belly fat include avocados, avocado oil, coconut oil, ghee (clarified butter), coconut milk, olives, and extra virgin olive oil. If you only make one change, change your cooking fats. Throw out ALL the vegetable oils in your pantry and replace them with coconut oil and extra virgin olive oil. It is a lateral shift that will make a huge difference.
Also with our diet, it is important to make sure we are drinking enough water. Keep a water bottle with you all day every day! And, we also need to be watching the sodium we are getting from packaged, processed foods.
Now, adding sea salt to real, whole foods is perfectly acceptable. Baked potatoes, broccoli, and other veggies taste so much better with a hint of sea salt! But, what doesn't help belly fat is the excess sodium in refined foods that have a long shelf life. Read your labels on everything - you'd be shocked how much sodium is in packaged foods (especially low fat or fat free items and condiments).
Lastly, like I joked about above, crunches do not lead to a flat stomach. Ever. Nor does chronic cardio.
Instead, high-intensity interval training, coupled with core strengthening exercises like planks, leads to a stronger core and flatter belly. I have plenty of workouts in the archives of Fitness Friday posts that will offer you HIIT workouts or plank ideas.
But, for a quick refresher on HIIT, it is alternating periods of high-intensity work (for a short interval) with rest. So, you may sprint for 20 seconds, rest for 30 seconds, and repeat. Or, do burpees for 30 seconds, rest 30 seconds and repeat. HIIT sessions are meant to be short and sweet, no longer than 15-20 minutes. By going hard during the work intervals, and using your rest appropriately, you will reap the fat burning benefits. Aim to do a high-intensity interval training workout 2-3 times per week.
Plus, strength training at least 2-3 times per week will also help decrease belly fat because as we build muscle, our metabolism increases, which equals a decrease in belly fat. A win-win!
Summary
When it comes to belly fat, it can be causes by a number of factors, the most common and important being stress. Diet, sleep, and exercise all play a role in the development of belly fat as well.
In order to decrease our belly fat and regain our health, we must work on lowering our stress levels, avoid overtraining, and fill our body with nourishing fats and real food.
Remember, it really comes down to cortisol. Decrease stress = lower cortisol = lower belly fat.
xoxo Olivia