What Happens After You Lose Five Pounds Even after losing just a few pounds, you'll start to see positive chang...

Let's be real: Losing weight is hard. And sometimes, it can feel like you don't see any results, no matter how hard you try. But even if you don't see the fruits of your efforts in the mirror (yet!), subtle changes are starting to happen in your body—even if you just lose five pounds.

That's right: you don't need to lose a dramatic number of pounds for your body to start to transform. Here are 13 things that happen to your body when you start shedding weight. And if you lose more than five pounds, you'll rack up the health benefits and see even more noticeable differences. Check out the 15 Underrated Weight Loss Tips That Actually Work to keep your momentum going!

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To lose weight, you take in fewer calories than you expend. But where does your body get the extra energy it needs? Your fat cells. "As your body starts to pull energy from your fat cells to make up for the energy from the food you're not eating, your fat cells will shrink," says Dr. Mike Roussell, PhD, co-founder of Neuro Coffee. And if you need more incentive to keep the weight off, Rousell says that rapidly regaining weight can hyper-inflate your fat cells. "They become bigger than they were before you lost weight," he says.

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Shedding a few pounds may improve your body's ability to dial into your blood sugar. "Eating less and exerting yourself more will lead to greater insulin sensitivity, which allows your body to better control and stabilize blood sugar levels," says Roussell. Keeping your blood sugar levels balanced can help you avoid hunger pains.

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And it's not just your imagination. "When you reduce your calories to lose weight, your body will release higher amounts of a hormone called ghrelin. Ghrelin tells your brain that you are hungry and could eat," says Rousell. No wonder you're always hungry when you try to lose weight!

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While inflammation is part of your body's natural defense system, carrying extra weight can cause it to go into overdrive, leading to chronic health conditions like heart disease, diabetes, and cancer. But in a study published in Nutrition Research, researchers found that losing an average of six pounds decreased inflammation by tamping down the production of pro-inflammatory proteins. It also improved immune system function.

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You know that your metabolism is the engine that drives calorie burn. And when you start to lose weight, your metabolic rate will decrease, because your body will need fewer calories per day to keep your body running. But those changes can be relative. "A 200-pound person who loses five pounds will have less of a metabolic impact than a 115-pound person who loses five pounds," Roussell explains. "The severity in which you cut calories and increase exercise will also have an impact. Slower, more gradual changes will have less of a negative impact [on your metabolism]."

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It makes sense: The more you weigh, the more force you exert on your bones and joints when you move. And over time, that additional strain may lead to joint damage and osteoarthritis. Losing five pounds of excess weight could mean 20 fewer pounds of pressure on your precious joints.

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According to a study published in Cell Metabolism, dropping a few pounds was enough to decrease not only liver fat but also intra-abdominal fat. That's the "bad" fat that clings to your organs and can trigger the release of molecules linked to a variety of health conditions. Reducing the amount of intra-abdominal fat may lower your risk for cardiovascular disease and diabetes.

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Slimming down boosts HDL cholesterol—the good-for-you kind—and lowers triglycerides, decreasing your risk for heart disease. In a study published in the Journal of the American Heart Association, overweight and obese women who lost weight over a two-year period dropped their total cholesterol levels, regardless of the number of pounds dropped.

RELATED: The 7-day diet that melts your belly fat fast.

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Your body that is. When you begin to exercise as part of your weight loss plan, your body has to work hard to keep up with the new activity. But once you get the hang of it, your body requires less effort (and calories) to maintain the same level of activity, says Roussell. "Your muscles will start to become more efficient, meaning that you will burn fewer calories the more you run, even if you're running the same distance," he says.

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Who couldn't use some more quality sleep? One study from the University of Pennsylvania found that even a small amount of weight loss can improve sleep. That means you'll have more energy and a better mood, too!

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But it depends on how you change your diet. "If you cut carbs significantly, then some of the weight that you will lose will be water weight as your body stores carbohydrates in your muscles along with water. When those carbohydrates are used up and not replaced (since you're eating a lower-carb diet), you will lose the water that was also stored there," says Roussell. However, if you adjust your diet moderately and don't severely restrict calories or carbs, you're more likely to lose body fat, he adds.

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When you're carrying around extra weight, your heart has to work harder to pump blood, which can mean higher blood pressure. Lowering the number of the scale can drop systolic and diastolic blood pressure in people who are overweight or obese and had Type 2 diabetes, according to a study published in Diabetes Care.

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Losing five pounds may make you feel happier, even if it's just the kick-off to your weight loss journey. One review of published research found that people experienced positive mental health benefits, such as higher measures of self-esteem, when they shed a few pounds, and sometimes when they didn't lose any weight at all. So even if you aren't seeing drastic results on the scale just yet, lifestyle changes like eating better and moving more can have countless positive impacts on your health.

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The Trick for Losing More Weight While Walking Here's why varying the speed of your walks is the key to losing ...

Despite what you may have heard from any hardcore distance runners or weightlifters you happen to know, walking—when paired with a healthy diet—is an effective way to lose weight. According to a study published in the Journal of Exercise Nutrition & Biochemistry, researchers who studied the effects of walking on obese women found that it was especially effective at reducing belly fat, while also improving the body's insulin response. Another study, published in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine, found that sedentary men and women between the ages of 40 and 65 managed to lose weight when they walked for 12 miles every week without meaningfully changing their diets.

If walking is your exercise method of choice, know that there's one thing you can be doing after you lace up your shoes that not only makes your walks more interesting but also ensures that you're maximizing your weight loss: You can perform walking intervals—or varying the pace of your walks by working in shorter bursts of more intense walking. 

"By varying the speed of your walk, especially adding in some faster pace interval work, you will raise your heart rate and increase your caloric expenditure, helping you lose more weight over time," says Tom Holland, MS, CSCS, CISSN, an exercise physiologist and author of The Micro-Workout Plan: Get the Body You Want without the Gym in 15 Minutes or Less a Day. "Remember that your body is an intelligent machine that adapts to your workouts. By adding variation into your walks, you will keep your body challenged and ensure you avoid the dreaded weight-loss plateau."

Studies have shown that high-intensity interval training (HIIT)—when not performed to the extreme, of course—is one of the most effective exercises that you can do to lose weight. One enormous meta-analysis published in the journal Sports Medicine found that HIIT "significantly reduced total, abdominal, and visceral fat mass, with no differences between the sexes." The researchers concluded: "HIIT is a time-efficient strategy to decrease fat-mass deposits, including those of abdominal and visceral fat mass."

Though sprinting fast, knocking out Burpees, and jumping rope are way more hardcore than walking, the same exercise principles apply to walking intervals: By varying the intensity of your exercise and pushing your heart rate more, you'll reap greater rewards.

"It's also been pointed out to me that intervals more resemble natural play," Martin Gibala, Ph.D., professor of kinesiology at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario—and one of the world's top experts on interval training—once explained to me. "So, if you look at children in a playground, they don't sort of jog at a moderate pace for a continuous period of time. They run and jump and they take breaks and they sprint, and then stop and take a break. So, in some ways I think intervals tend to resemble more natural activities, either from an evolutionary perspective or from a child behavior perspective."

If you want your walk to be more interesting and productive, apply intervals to your next outing. Consider trying your hand at this great 30-minute interval walking workout below, courtesy of Tom Holland. It's done in only a half-hour, but your body's fat-burning apparatus will be working long after you've stopped. Whatever you do, make sure you're not making any of these Major Mistakes You Shouldn't Make While Walking, According to Experts.

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Walk at an easy pace for 10 minutes to get your body loose and comfortable.

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For 30 seconds, do a hard power walk—walking for as fast as you can. Immediately afterward, slow back down to an easy walk for recovery. Repeat this cycle 9 more times.

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Walk at an easy pace for 10 minutes.

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Follow the same routine as above, but perform your power intervals on a hill. Walk 30 seconds powerfully up the hill, and then 30 seconds back down at an easy pace. And if you're eager for more Eat This, Not That!-approved workouts to try, don't miss these great ones right here:

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One Amazing Way Walking Changes Your Body Researchers reveal how a few 30-minute walks every week can make you ...

We’ve known that going out for more daily constitutionals is as good for your brain as it is for the rest of your body. In fact, a recently released study published in the journal Scientific Reports suggests that walking, along with other forms of moderate exercise, is proven to boost your creativity and inspire your imagination. An earlier study published in the journal APA PsycNet, in 2014, found that exercising more is actually linked to the ability to conjure more successful innovations.

In the latest scientific evidence linking your legs and your brain, a new study of cognitively impaired, older adults, which was published in the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, has found that going out for brisk, half-hour walks promotes healthy blood flow to the brain and improves its cognitive performance, while boosting memory function. Read on for more about this study, and how you can take action to ensure that your own mind stays sharp. And for more advice for making the most of your walks, don't miss the Major Mistakes You Shouldn't Make While Walking, Say Experts.

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It’s no secret that as you age your brain ages as well and can lose its sharpness. Your blood plays a key role here, say experts, as your heart weakens over time and your arteries harden up. The result? Your brain gets less blood flow, and less blood flow means less oxygen and other nutrients to your brain, which impacts function. For more tips for improving your brain health, make sure you're avoiding The Worst Foods for Your Brain.

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Studies, like this latest one—and a previously published study from 2013 in the Journal of Hypertension—have shown that older exercisers have healthier blood flow. The study in the Journal of Hypertension found that older men who were more active were able to produce better scores on cognitive tests.

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For this new study, researchers from the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center tested 70 men and women, all 55 years of age and older, who were known to be cognitively impaired. They were assigned fitness regimens, including brisk walks or stretching exercises, which they needed to perform three to five times every week for 30 to 40 minutes. Along the way, they wore the requisite heart monitors and were administered brain scans.

At the end of the study, of the 48 volunteers who completed the program, those who performed the aerobic exercise (including brisk walking, which started in a lab setting on a treadmill but eventually included outside walks) were revealed to have less stiffness in their necks’ blood vessels and more blood flow to their brain. (Other exercises included swimming, bike rides, or ballroom dancing.) Those who stretched did not experience the same result.

“This is part of a growing body of evidence linking exercise with brain health,” Professor Rong Zhang, Ph.D., a researcher in the Institute for Exercise and Environmental Medicine at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas, remarked in the study's official release. “We’ve shown for the first time in a randomized trial in these older adults that exercise gets more blood flowing to your brain.”

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“They also performed better than the stretch-and-tone group on some of the tests of executive function, which are thinking skills involved in planning and decision-making,” observes The New York Times. “These tend to be among the abilities that decline earliest in dementia.”

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Zhang notes to the NY Times that “it probably takes more time” than 12 months to see real results in better cognitive function from regular aerobic exercise, but he recommends that people “park further away” from their destinations when shopping and “take the stairs” whenever possible. And for more ways you can walk your way to better health, see this 20-Minute Walking Workout That Will Help You Get Fit and Burn More Fat.

Read on for More Great Exercise Routines from Eat This, Not That!

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19 Ways to Burn 100 Calories Without a Gym Ideas so easy, you won't even feel like you're torching calories.

A taste of a friend's dessert. A handful of candy from the dish on your desk. Those extra nibbles really add up—and can stall your weight loss efforts.

But don't panic and think you need to head back to the gym for a double session. There are actually plenty of easy (and fun!) ways to blast away the extra calories without breaking a sweat or putting on your workout gear. Below are some of the easiest ways to burn off 100 calories—fast! All the information has been calculated for a 175-pound person. If you weigh more, you'll burn calories at a more rapid pace.

Here's exactly what you can do to burn those calories, and to keep things going be sure to check out these 15 Underrated Weight Loss Tips That Actually Work.

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Dig out the broom and mop and get to it! Not only will 25 minutes of cleaning burn off 100 calories, it will leave you with a spick and span home.

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Checking out the latest fashions and gadgets at local stores, and this will fry 100 calories in a mere 33 minutes! For more bloat-banishing tips, check out these 33 Lazy Ways to Flatten Your Belly—Fast.

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Getting busy between the sheets for 50 minutes will burn off 100 calories. Not sure you can go that long? Add these 20 Foods That Increase Your Sexual Stamina and Sex Drive to your weekly diet.

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Stay warm and stay slim this winter by weaving a one-of-a-kind sweater. Just 50 minutes with your knitting needles and yarn will incinerate 100 calories.

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Turn up the radio and sing along to your favorite tunes. If you spend 40 minutes belting it out, you'll burn off about 100 calories. For more surprising ways to burn calories, check out these 21 Ways to Sneak In a Workout While You're Waiting For Your Food Delivery.

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Typically order in? Don't. Spend 30 minutes cooking and you'll burn 100 calories. Now that's a diet dinner!

burn calories without a gym - bowling

So long as you steer clear of the concession stand, a round of bowling (which lasts about 25 minutes) will kick 100 calories to the curb.

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Who knew that diving into a good read could scorch calories? 100 calories, gone, in 75 minutes!

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Even if you just bust a move in your living room, shaking your tail feather for just 17 minutes will burn off 100 calories. For more ways to burn off those extra nibbles, check out these 8 Best Workouts for Fat Loss and Burning Calories.

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Strap on your skis and head down the bunny hill. One 11-minute run is all it takes to burn off 100 calories.

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Spend the first third of your lunch hour strolling around outside. It's an easy way to squeeze in some daily exercise and works off about 100 calories.

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Spend 22 minutes shopping for these 16 Staples for a Flat Belly Kitchen to burn off a 100 calories.

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Tending to your garden for 22 minutes is a great way to incinerate 100 calories while getting some fresh air.

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We know it's ironing is an annoying chore, but setting aside time to catch up on all of your wrinkled clothing can benefit your waistline and your wardrobe. Sixty minutes is all it takes to blast away 100 calories.

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You and your co-workers can easily burn 100 calories in just 38 minutes by taking your meeting outside the conference room.

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A 37 minute game of putt-putt will incinerate 100 calories.

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Take in the sights and sounds of nature all while burning off mega calories. Just 15 minutes into your hike, you'll have burned off 100 calories—and most trips last far longer than that!

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There's nothing more fun than laughing your way to slimmer waistline! An 80-minute flick with lots of jokes is enough to burn off 100 calories.

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Spend 51 minutes at your favorite bar playing a fun game of darts with friends. So long as you steer clear of the booze, you'll burn off 100 calories. And next time you indulge in some alcohol, stick with one of these 16 Wines For Weight Loss.

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