Weight Loss for Golfers Insures No Holiday Gains

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                     

Weight Loss for Golfers

Special Offer Insures No Holiday Gains 

Top Golfer’s Food and Weight Loss Coach Larry Jacobs
Consistently Outperforms the Weight Loss “Experts”
Shows Golfers How to Go from Fat Storer to Fat Burner

NORTH POTOMAC, Maryland – Promising golfers smaller clothing sizes, no hunger, plenty to eat and the sublime feel of lightly striding up the 18th fairway with legs as fresh as on the first, veteran Food and Weight Loss Coach Larry Jacobs is offering access to his Weight Loss for Golfers Tele-Seminar Series at a Limted time highly discounted rate.

Guaranteed to make participants “Thin for Life,” the program can more immediately help golfers navigate a difficult time of year (the holidays) when dietary temptations are rich, plentiful and powerfully seductive.  “Just as players in many parts of the country are putting away their clubs for winter, extra weight often starts to sneak on,” says Jacobs. “Then comes Thanksgiving and feasts that don’t stop until January. Without a change in eating habits and some focus, a lot of people are destined to pack on more flab.”

“I call it Weight Gain Season because so many Americans gain seven to 10, or even 15 to 20 pounds over the holiday season, and more important they feel really bad about it,” continues Jacobs, who since 1983 has helped clients adopt healthful eating and lose pounds. “But with a simple change in eating habits, it’s possible to start out 2014 a lot lighter than you were on Thanksgiving. Instead of gaining 10 or 20 pounds over the holidays, some of my more famous golf clients actually LOST 15 to 30 pounds. That’s like making a birdie on a hole you expect to double bogey.”

Due to his lively “no nonsense” approach in providing commentary on this important topic that plagues people everywhere, Jacobs is a frequent and popular radio talk show guest and he continues to emerge as the food and weight loss expert for national golf and lifestyle media.

Jacobs typically offers his Live and Interactive Tele-Seminars every four months, with the next scheduled for  2015.  His “Turn the Tables on the Holidays” special offer (for those don’t want to wait until 2015) grants instant access to the password-protected “Private Member Graduates” section of his most recent Tele-Seminar, which includes all audio recordings and published materials from the Weight Loss for Golfers program.

The $297 represents a 70 percent discount from the seminar’s regular rate of $997,  for anyone who signs up before December 25, 2014.

Through thousands of individual consults and more than 50 Weight Loss Tele-Seminars, Jacobs has enabled people from all walks of life in 32 countries to modify and improve their eating habits. More recently he’s focused on golfers, with a list of notables that include Champions Tour Players Fred Funk and Allen Doyle; famed Golf Instructor Don Trahan and Golf Channel’s Charlie Rymer.

In fact, Tour Pro D.J. Trahan’s father and swing coach Don Trahan now fits into a suit he hasn’t worn in 17 years and credits Jacobs’ program with saving his life.

Don Trahan started Larry’s program in the fall and before Christmas 
he was fitting into a suit he hadn’t been able to wear in 17 years.
 

The “Chubby Don”       Thin and Fit Don

Don’s Doctor credits my Weight Loss for Golfers program with
helping to save Don’s Life. (that’s turning a Quadruple Bogey into a Birdie)

Listen to Don’s Story in his own words Click Here

A Weight Loss Plan for Golfers – Takes the “D” Word Out of Tee-To-Green Health

Jacobs teaches his clients a clean eating regimen that’s proven to burn excess fat while leaving them full and satisfied. His promise is compelling, “I can show any golfer how to go from a Fat Storer to a Fat Burner in two weeks or less – without starving or dieting in the traditional sense or counting calories,” he explains. What’s more, the program doesn’t hinge on fasting, pills, banning carbohydrates or the severe caloric restriction common to conventional diets.

“It’s almost impossible to restrict calories and eat less forever, which is why diets don’t work and people usually regain all or more of what they lost,” says Jacobs. “My clients eat as much as they want whenever hungry, and it’s real food that you get in grocery stores and restaurants. The key is to learn to eat clean. It’s not how much you eat. It’s what you eat that matters most.”

By combining simple physical activity with Jacobs’ method of eating clean, the body’s metabolism is trained to burn fat instead of storing it, which can show up in a major way. “I don’t want my clients obsessing over a number on a scale, which can be demoralizing,” adds Jacobs. “The best way to measure progress isn’t weight, but fitting into smaller clothes, feeling more energetic, healthy, and happy about how you look and feel.”

The Thin for Life program had its genesis in California during the 1970s, when Jacobs suffered from severe gastrointestinal pain. After several futile treatments, he turned to a physician pioneering nutrition-oriented medicine, who discovered he was allergic to one specific food. Inspired by a dramatic health turn around, Jacobs returned to his native Maryland, studied nutrition, its impact on health and hung up a shingle to coach others on what he’d learned.

“While the original idea was more about wellness than weight,” he adds, “I eventually ended up working with more folks with BIG bellies than with bad bellies.”

Although a novel practice at the time, the science of nutrition, wellness and physical performance is now mainstream, most famously evident when the world’s top tennis player, Novak Djokovic, removed glutens from his diet.

But why the focus on golfers?

“First, seven out of 10 golfers are overweight, says Jacobs, “and the other three are not in the best shape, either. Second, it’s a way to merge my passion for golf with what I’m best at: Helping people burn fat. I’m a Special Olympics golf coach, a four handicap and mad dog golfer myself, and know the lengths players will go to improve their games.”

“I make the whole thing like a game of golf. The front nine is from the time you and I wake up until after lunch. The back nine is after lunch until it’s time we go to bed. I like to say that unlike golf, this is a game you can win by “shooting par or under” almost every day of your life. Even if on the front nine you had a bogey or two, you’ve still got the rest of the day and the opportunity to shoot a decent score.”

Jacobs says that this instantly resonates with a large group of Baby Boomers and senior golfers heading down “the back nine of life,” when excess weight and the poor health that comes with it detracts from play and makes the game less fun.

“They immediately know I’m one of them,” says Jacobs. “While golfers have been encouraged to try stretching and get stronger, food and nutrition has been largely overlooked. Most important, all of us need the right information, the right mindset and the right blueprint. Most golfers have none of these three pieces, so it’s no wonder they constantly struggle in this arena.”

Structured to run over four sessions, the seminar consists of written materials and audio recordings of the four separate call-in or web sessions, each of which lasts from 60 to 90 minutes. While this special offer doesn’t include the live call-ins that don’t start up again until February, the audio recordings and written materials that are included cover the entire program.  

“We break things into two week chunks,” says Jacobs, “and the first piece is about temporarily eliminating certain foods that aren’t good for you.” Some things, like potato chips and processed meats are obvious. But Jacobs also has a “dirty dozen” list of foods to avoid and a list of 50 or 60 foods to enjoy any time you’re hungry in that first two-week period.

The second session involves systematically re-introducing some of the foods and gauging the body’s reaction, while the next sessions are devoted to creating an individualized long-term plan to build healthy eating into a lifestyle. Jacobs isn’t a fan of weigh-ins; he’s more interested in pant size. “I don’t really believe in eating smaller portions,” he says. “No one can eat less forever. You have to start learning how to eat clean. Food is the foundation. I also insist on some form of daily physical activity. When you know how to merge eating clean and exercise, you get a multiplier effect. It’s like adding 1 + 1 = 4.”

For more information on Larry Jacobs and to register for his Weight Loss for Golfers Tele–Seminar program, go to http://thin247.com/

Larry with Michael Breed at
a Wounded Warriors golf clinic
at Walter Reed Hospital
Larry with CBS Sports
Legend Jim Nantz
Larry with Arnold Palmer
raising money for
Special Olympics


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