Use more calories than you consume is the ONLY way to lose weight.I eat when I'm hungry and work out 3 times a week.
Thanks for saying that, Zep. I have found that this fact really upsets some people. It's just basic physics, but I got in a yelling argument over it once. People like to believe something so hard must be solved by a complicated solution.Zep said:herbaliser, do you know WHY you are losing weight? The answer is simple, and I quote you yourself: Use more calories than you consume is the ONLY way to lose weight.
Simple, no?
Zep said:herbaliser, do you know WHY you are losing weight? The answer is simple, and I quote you yourself: Use more calories than you consume is the ONLY way to lose weight.
Simple, no?
QuarkChild said:US brought up a point I always wonder about. Are people who are on low-carb diets intending to stick to the diet their whole life? Because otherwise, what good does it do to go on a diet if you just gain the weight back?
I don't understand dieting.
Zep said:Use more calories than you consume is the ONLY way to lose weight.
Simple, no?
QuarkChild said:US brought up a point I always wonder about. Are people who are on low-carb diets intending to stick to the diet their whole life? Because otherwise, what good does it do to go on a diet if you just gain the weight back?
I don't understand dieting.
From: http://www.medicineau.net.au/clinical/obesity/obesit2272.html
The take home message for GPs advising their patients is that you can lose weight and keep it off long term, but to achieve that you must persistently have a low fat, high CHO[carbohydrate]/fibre diet, exercise a lot, eat breakfast and monitor progress regularly and be prepared to tighten the reins if straying off the rails.
(my emphasis)
Diamond said:Dieting per se is by definition a lack of something. Dr Atkins always said (although this is hardly ever reported) that a change of diet from high carb/sugar to high protein must be a lifestyle change to consciously restrict carbs and eat more good proteins and fats (and by good fats he didn't mean trans fats)
He also recommended exercise and more exercise (again not much mentioned). He noted that people on a low carb diet go through an energy crisis as their bodies switch metapbolic pathways from high evailbility energy (glucose) to lower availability energy (body fat breakdown), but that people would experience greater energy levels without the sugar highs and crashes of the so-called "healthy" high carb diet.
We have not transcended our evolutionary biology. We are evolved to eat a high protein, high animal (inc. fish) diet, with fibers and only seasonal fruits (which help put on wieght for the lean winter months). All year round availability of fruit plus sugar concentrate (especially high fructose corn syrup which is just about everywhere) is, he contended, causing an epidemic of obesity and diabetes in ever younger people.
Although it may be counter-intuitive, a calorie from meat is not the same as a calorie from sugar because of the human metabolism.
That said, I'm too damn heavy so I'm giving up carbs today. If anyone wants more help with the Atkins approach see www.atkinsdietbulletinboard.com
Zep said:If ANY of the test subjects used ANY other lifestyle change while "dieting" then the results of the diet, whatever it is, are in doubt. An experimental given.
And the report indicates that these test subjects also indeed did start changed exercise regimes and changed other aspects of their lifestyle. As per Atkins' "diet prescription".
Ergo, the Atkins diet itself may or may not be a contributing factor to weight loss. And knowing full well that exercise IS a contributing factor to weight loss, one is drawn to the conclusion that it is not possible to conclude that the Atkins diet actually has any effect at all.
In fact, here's something that seems to indicate that Atkins had it diametrically wrong:
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