For goodness sakes Waleed, I don't want to be rude, but basically you are calling us liars. Please go do some research on why women don't lose weight like men. And there is no one size fits all. Like I said if it were that easy none of us would be diabetic. I'm 2 stone overweight and it isn't as easy as cutting calories
*edited by a moderator for rudeness towards another poster*
Nonsense.When you cut your calories intake and still not lose weight, then you are not counting calories correctly.
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Except that I can't be bothered, I could find numerous articles out there debating whether CICO has any bearing whatsoever on human metabolism. You should be able to do your own research. Next you'll be telling us to exercise more, when that has been disproven as a weight loss method as well.
Edited to remove rudeness towards another poster.
My apologies. Didn't mean to offend anybody. Only wanted to help.
@dawnmc, as you seem to be at a standstill with your weight loss have you considered zig zagging your calorie intake.
If your calorie intake for the day is say 1000 calories then over 7 days that is 7000 calories. Rather than eat the same amount each day you could eat less or more each day as long as the total for the week is still 7000.
1200 one day, 800 another day and so on. Might be worth a try as it does work for a lot of people and gets the weight loss moving again. You are not eating any more per week but just staggering your daily intake.
You may also find that if this starts the weight moving then you could up your calories but still zig zag them.
It must be so frustrating if you do not see any results.
So how do you explain my weight gain? I was 8 st for years, had 4 children and retained 1/2 a stone with each child. I then had a hysterectomy at 44 and gained the extra 2 st, without eating any more and walking as much (kids to school etc). It would be lovely to think I gained this as overeating, I could blame myself then. But for 3 years I have logged my food with fitnesspal. Maybe fitness pal is wrong.
I agree, but still I must be overeating junk food (sorry I couldn't resist)Not an expert but I think the body stores fat easier as we get older, maybe that's why........??
I don't think waleed is suggesting that's it's only as simple as cutting calories. However, that is half of the equation.
Calories are a measurement of energy. Hopefully we all agree. Conservation of energy laws tells us that energy cannot be created or destroyed. So we know that what goes in has to come out one way or another.
There are a lot of variables but it truly is as simple as calories in/calories out.
Fiber is a great example of why it's important to understand the types of calories we consume. Fiber is considered a carbohydrate and it has energy (roughly 4 calories per 1g). However, our bodies cannot digest fiber and it essentially passes through us.....that's why fiber is health....it fills you up and cleans you out. Sounds a little funny but it's true.
Sucrose and carbs high on the glycemic index are rapidly digested. That's why we see a quick blood sugar spike. However, that energy either needs to be used through physical exertion or it has to go somewhere. Unfortunately, our bodies often store this extra unused energy from carbohydrates as body fat. It's our body's way of defending itself against starvation.
This is where things start to get a bit fuzzy for me, but it's my understanding that protein can be converted into glucose through the process of glycogenesis, but it's a slower and more difficult process.
Dietary fats cannot be directly converted into glucose. However, it's my understanding that they are made up of glycerol and fatty acids. When glycerol binds three fatty acids together it creates a triglyceride which is the molecule that causes fat storage.
The idea behind a LCHF diet: with an ultra low carb diet your body begins to burn ketones as a source of energy. Without carbs and with a moderate protein intake your body has limited glucose production. Less glucose means less glycerol which means less triglycerides. The end result is that dietary fats have very little chance of converting into body fat and unused energy passes through undigested rather than being stored as body fat.
Disclaimer: I expect my understanding isn't 100% perfect and I welcome anyone to critique anything I didn't understand properly.
Bottom line: on a 600 calorie diet, your body may slow its metabolism and enter a "starvation mode." The result is that you're eating less calories, but also burning less. If that diet contains carbs they may be converted into glucose and store in fat cells which hinders weight loss.
On that 2000 calories low carb/high fat diet your body has more than enough useable energy between dietary fat and energy in your fat cells. In the absence of glucose, your body begins burning ketones and unused energy is very difficult to store in fat cells (triglycerides).
So with a ketogensis diet you're not necessarily burning more calories but more calories are passing through your body which supports the calories in/out concept.
It's not how many calories you consume, it's what they are from. It's the carbs that cause the problem and the advice to eat wholemeal grains. My weight stays the same at around 1250 cals a day (low carb). When I did a fat fast and increased calories to around 2300 a day for 5 days I lost weight ( 6 pounds). The low fat high carb diets that many of us were told to follow have helped to cause our obesity.
What you have said makes sense, but in the real world many of us, particularly women have other hormonal problems thrown into the mix. The reality is much more complicated.
Then there's the effect of leptin resistance which can cause over eating because the person feels so hungry all the time.
For goodness sakes Waleed, I don't want to be rude, but basically you are calling us liars. Please go do some research on why women don't lose weight like men. And there is no one size fits all. Like I said if it were that easy none of us would be diabetic. I'm 2 stone overweight and it isn't as easy as cutting calories
*edited by a moderator for rudeness towards another poster*
Hi I have to say I agree with your comments above . There are hormone and genetics at play . I have seen some research that has found in a control group of people that where given a strict exercise regime and the same diet . Some of them lost 12 pounds some lost a few pounds . And 2 of the group put on some weight . It was only a small group of 20 . But it dose show the all people are different . And what works for some will not work for others . So I think that if anyone thinks they have the answer then they need to think again
Clive
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