If you’ve ever lost weight but found that your lower abdomen, hips or thighs seemed almost unchanged, you’re certainly not alone.
For many people, these areas are the last to respond, often leading to frustration and the belief that they simply need to exercise harder, eat less or find the latest diet.
The reality is considerably more interesting.
Human fat is not stored uniformly throughout the body, nor is it released uniformly when energy is required. Every fat cell receives chemical messages from hormones, communicates with surrounding tissues and responds to its local environment. Some fat stores are remarkably willing to release their stored energy, while others appear far more reluctant.
This phenomenon is often described as stubborn fat, but stubborn fat is not stubborn because your body is working against you.
It is stubborn because of biology.
Modern research has shown that different fat stores possess different blood supplies, different hormone receptor profiles and different responses to stress hormones and metabolic signals. This means two areas of the same body can behave very differently, even when exposed to exactly the same diet and exercise programme.
Understanding this biology changes the conversation completely.
Instead of asking, “Why can’t I lose fat from my stomach?”, a better question becomes:
“What is happening inside those fat cells that makes them behave differently?”
The answer begins with understanding what body fat actually is.