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If it's all CICO - why can't you outrun a bad diet?

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Replies

  • Gamliela
    Gamliela Posts: 2,468 Member
    With a spoon and the peanut butter jar... need I say more? Can't imagine excersizing enough in a day if I do that thang.
  • JenHuedy
    JenHuedy Posts: 611 Member
    Gamliela wrote: »
    With a spoon and the peanut butter jar... need I say more? Can't imagine excersizing enough in a day if I do that thang.

    If you get those stupid Skippy Peanut Butter bites you don't even need the freaking spoon. Ten mile run canceled out in less time than it took me to tie on my running shoes. *sigh*
  • kmbrooks15
    kmbrooks15 Posts: 941 Member
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    You could outrun it, but it may not be healthy to do so. Eating 1500 calories of crap and burning 2000 calories will still cause weight loss, but you will likely be unhealthy because of the lack of vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients necessary.

    Is crap in the MFP database? What is the nutritional profile of crap? Also, it seems unhealthy to eat crap. You should probably seek professional help for the compulsion that is leading you to eat crap instead of food. That sounds like a serious and potentially dangerous problem.

    Ha Ha. I meant that 1500 calories of junk/processed/fast food vs. 1500 calories of vegetables, fruits, lean proteins, etc., doesn't matter for weight loss. But it does matter for overall health. You're obviously not going to get the nutritional benefit from the first group that you would for the second.

    I'm what ways is a reasonable diet of "junk" deficient where a "lean proteins*" diet is not? How extreme will your example have to be to make this point?


    *what's with the continued hate for animal fat? It's remarkably nutritious.

    Are you suggesting that a bag of Cheetos has the same nutritional value as baked chicken and vegetables? That's what I'm referring to. Calories matter for weight loss, but if you're going to get into actual health, that's a different story. You can hit your macros, too, by eating junk, but you're going to miss out on vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients your body needs. I'm not saying you can't have treats and junk once in awhile, but living off of it isn't healthy no matter what your weight is.
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    tlflag1620 wrote: »
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    tlflag1620 wrote: »
    Machka9 wrote: »
    parfia wrote: »
    This is purely for debate purposes - if weight loss is purely calories in and calories out, why can't you 'outrun a bad diet' - surely if you run enough to burn off the calories of a bad dietary intake, you can for all intents and purposes outrun a bad diet?

    If a person is in a caloric deficit surely they will lose irrespective of what their food intake is.

    begin.....

    A little late to this, but it is because you can eat far more calories in far less time than you could ever burn running.

    But would you keep eating those calories for the length of time it would take you to burn them off?

    Others have pointed out that they could consume 1000 calories in 15 minutes ... but it would take them 2-3 hours to burn that off. Yes, that's probably true. But would you continue to eat 1000 calories every 15 minutes during those 2-3 hours? Or would you be full after consuming those 1000 calories, and be off doing something else with your time for the next 2-3 hours?

    Personally, if I do consume 1000 calories in one sitting (rare), I'm stuffed to the gills and don't want to look at food for the next 2-3 hours. So while it is true that I can consume those 1000 calories in a mere 15 min, it takes me about the same length of time to get process that consumption and feel hungry again as it would to burn off 1000 calories by going for a 2-3 hour bicycle ride.

    Depends on what the meal is. A quarter pounder with cheese, medium fries, and a medium soda (regular, not diet) is right around 1000 calories. I could eat that in 15 min and not be "stuffed" at all. In fact I've btdt and been hungry just an hour or two later (one reason I don't eat fast food terribly often). So I could reasonably eat that same meal every 2-3 hours during my waking hours (let's call it 16 hours) easily consuming between 5000 and 8000 calories for the day. No problem. But I'm not sure I could work out at a high enough intensity, long enough to burn that many calories in the same 16 hour time frame... I kinda doubt it. I would think I would get fatigued a lot sooner and either would have to stop altogether, or would be at a very low intensity, therefore not burning nearly as many calories as I would need to in order to outrun that level of intake.

    That, but with diet soda, was my normal fast food order when forced to do fast food (i.e., road trip). It was quite filling and I'd feel if anything sluggish (high fat) and not want anything more 'til my next planned meal. High cal if lots of meals were made up of that, but for an occasional meal, no. The reason I don't eat fast food is that I don't care for it, not because it's that hard to fit in.

    Anyway, I agree with Machka. There are some foods I like where I can eat insane calories in a short amount of time (Indian), but even so that's great for hours. I can't imagine eating and eating. I now don't get Indian 3x/week but maybe 1 time/month around a half marathon or long bike or run, and allow myself to eat whatever I want. Works fine for maintenance. Is that outrunning a bad diet?

    Fwiw, when I do occasionally get fast food, these days I get unsweetened iced tea (hate the taste of diet soda), skip the fries altogether (or sub a salad) and get a double burger, no bun. That fills me up for 3-4 hours, no sluggishness. But the meal I described? That used to be my go-to mickey d's meal and I would always be hungry an hour or two later. Not sluggish at all. Heck, I could do a double qpc, supersize fries (back in the day when they still offered that) and supersize regular soda, and be ready for my next meal in 3-4 hours. For me the carbs awaken my inner monster. And the monster is hangry, lol. Now, 1000 calories of steak and salad? Stuffed to the gills for hours. My point was, mcd's aside, I could easily consume 5000+ calories in a day, given the right food (or the wrong food depending on how you look at it, lol). I'd be hard pressed to be able to maintain a high enough intensity of cardio to burn that off in the same timeframe. I'd really have to train for it and work up to it. Wouldn't need to train for or work up to that level of intake. At. All. And I suspect that rings true for the average person (which is whom I believe that saying is directed at in the first place).

    I just don't like fast food. McD's was something I'd get for a road trip, but not like, so I'm not a good example. I always found it filling, though, and would not be hungry early. (There is as much fat in that meal as carbs, FTR.) The idea of fast food burgers no bun is icky to me as I have the idea the meat isn't that good (probably unfair). I do burgers no bun at home all the time (I get ground beef from a farm I have a CSA with).
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    edited May 2016
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    You could outrun it, but it may not be healthy to do so. Eating 1500 calories of crap and burning 2000 calories will still cause weight loss, but you will likely be unhealthy because of the lack of vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients necessary.

    Is crap in the MFP database? What is the nutritional profile of crap? Also, it seems unhealthy to eat crap. You should probably seek professional help for the compulsion that is leading you to eat crap instead of food. That sounds like a serious and potentially dangerous problem.

    Ha Ha. I meant that 1500 calories of junk/processed/fast food vs. 1500 calories of vegetables, fruits, lean proteins, etc., doesn't matter for weight loss. But it does matter for overall health. You're obviously not going to get the nutritional benefit from the first group that you would for the second.

    I'm what ways is a reasonable diet of "junk" deficient where a "lean proteins*" diet is not? How extreme will your example have to be to make this point?


    *what's with the continued hate for animal fat? It's remarkably nutritious.

    Are you suggesting that a bag of Cheetos has the same nutritional value as baked chicken and vegetables?

    How on earth did your reference to "junk" or "processed food" make it clear you meant Cheetos?

    I'm curious, and asked a specific question earlier I'd love an answer to.
  • Ruatine
    Ruatine Posts: 3,424 Member
    Gamliela wrote: »
    With a spoon and the peanut butter jar... need I say more? Can't imagine excersizing enough in a day if I do that thang.

    Been there, done that - and recently (smh). For me, I know I could never exercise enough to cover the amount of food that I could (very easily) eat in a single day, but that's because I hate to exercise and love to eat. I think this saying is true for many people but not all people (which, let's be honest, is the case for most aphorisms).
  • jodidari
    jodidari Posts: 95 Member
    All I can say is I agree. If it is all CICO then you should be able to outrun a bad diet in order to lose weight. However, that does not mean you'll be healthy!
  • WinoGelato
    WinoGelato Posts: 13,454 Member
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    You could outrun it, but it may not be healthy to do so. Eating 1500 calories of crap and burning 2000 calories will still cause weight loss, but you will likely be unhealthy because of the lack of vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients necessary.

    Is crap in the MFP database? What is the nutritional profile of crap? Also, it seems unhealthy to eat crap. You should probably seek professional help for the compulsion that is leading you to eat crap instead of food. That sounds like a serious and potentially dangerous problem.

    Ha Ha. I meant that 1500 calories of junk/processed/fast food vs. 1500 calories of vegetables, fruits, lean proteins, etc., doesn't matter for weight loss. But it does matter for overall health. You're obviously not going to get the nutritional benefit from the first group that you would for the second.

    I'm what ways is a reasonable diet of "junk" deficient where a "lean proteins*" diet is not? How extreme will your example have to be to make this point?


    *what's with the continued hate for animal fat? It's remarkably nutritious.

    Are you suggesting that a bag of Cheetos has the same nutritional value as baked chicken and vegetables? That's what I'm referring to. Calories matter for weight loss, but if you're going to get into actual health, that's a different story. You can hit your macros, too, by eating junk, but you're going to miss out on vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients your body needs. I'm not saying you can't have treats and junk once in awhile, but living off of it isn't healthy no matter what your weight is.

    Ahhh the Cheetoh strawman. One of my favorites. Are there actually people who consider what to have for dinner, and say, "well I could have baked chicken and vegetables, but instead I think I'll have a bag of Cheetohs instead, it is still under my calorie alotment for the day, so *kitten* it, I'm going to just turn my fingers orange!"

  • ryry_
    ryry_ Posts: 4,966 Member
    WinoGelato wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    You could outrun it, but it may not be healthy to do so. Eating 1500 calories of crap and burning 2000 calories will still cause weight loss, but you will likely be unhealthy because of the lack of vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients necessary.

    Is crap in the MFP database? What is the nutritional profile of crap? Also, it seems unhealthy to eat crap. You should probably seek professional help for the compulsion that is leading you to eat crap instead of food. That sounds like a serious and potentially dangerous problem.

    Ha Ha. I meant that 1500 calories of junk/processed/fast food vs. 1500 calories of vegetables, fruits, lean proteins, etc., doesn't matter for weight loss. But it does matter for overall health. You're obviously not going to get the nutritional benefit from the first group that you would for the second.

    I'm what ways is a reasonable diet of "junk" deficient where a "lean proteins*" diet is not? How extreme will your example have to be to make this point?


    *what's with the continued hate for animal fat? It's remarkably nutritious.

    Are you suggesting that a bag of Cheetos has the same nutritional value as baked chicken and vegetables? That's what I'm referring to. Calories matter for weight loss, but if you're going to get into actual health, that's a different story. You can hit your macros, too, by eating junk, but you're going to miss out on vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients your body needs. I'm not saying you can't have treats and junk once in awhile, but living off of it isn't healthy no matter what your weight is.

    Ahhh the Cheetoh strawman. One of my favorites. Are there actually people who consider what to have for dinner, and say, "well I could have baked chicken and vegetables, but instead I think I'll have a bag of Cheetohs instead, it is still under my calorie alotment for the day, so *kitten* it, I'm going to just turn my fingers orange!"

    *embarrassingly raises hand*
  • zyxst
    zyxst Posts: 9,149 Member
    WinoGelato wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    You could outrun it, but it may not be healthy to do so. Eating 1500 calories of crap and burning 2000 calories will still cause weight loss, but you will likely be unhealthy because of the lack of vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients necessary.

    Is crap in the MFP database? What is the nutritional profile of crap? Also, it seems unhealthy to eat crap. You should probably seek professional help for the compulsion that is leading you to eat crap instead of food. That sounds like a serious and potentially dangerous problem.

    Ha Ha. I meant that 1500 calories of junk/processed/fast food vs. 1500 calories of vegetables, fruits, lean proteins, etc., doesn't matter for weight loss. But it does matter for overall health. You're obviously not going to get the nutritional benefit from the first group that you would for the second.

    I'm what ways is a reasonable diet of "junk" deficient where a "lean proteins*" diet is not? How extreme will your example have to be to make this point?


    *what's with the continued hate for animal fat? It's remarkably nutritious.

    Are you suggesting that a bag of Cheetos has the same nutritional value as baked chicken and vegetables? That's what I'm referring to. Calories matter for weight loss, but if you're going to get into actual health, that's a different story. You can hit your macros, too, by eating junk, but you're going to miss out on vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients your body needs. I'm not saying you can't have treats and junk once in awhile, but living off of it isn't healthy no matter what your weight is.

    Ahhh the Cheetoh strawman. One of my favorites. Are there actually people who consider what to have for dinner, and say, "well I could have baked chicken and vegetables, but instead I think I'll have a bag of Cheetohs instead, it is still under my calorie alotment for the day, so *kitten* it, I'm going to just turn my fingers orange!"

    You burn plenty of calories scrubbing the cheese dust off.

    And what jof is referring to, I believe, is eating Cheetos is as nutritionally deficient as eating chicken and broccoli IF BOTH ARE ALL YOU ARE EATING. You're missing out on plenty of minerals and vitamins with both examples. Why don't people who argue this kitten understand that?
  • WinoGelato
    WinoGelato Posts: 13,454 Member
    zyxst wrote: »
    WinoGelato wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    You could outrun it, but it may not be healthy to do so. Eating 1500 calories of crap and burning 2000 calories will still cause weight loss, but you will likely be unhealthy because of the lack of vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients necessary.

    Is crap in the MFP database? What is the nutritional profile of crap? Also, it seems unhealthy to eat crap. You should probably seek professional help for the compulsion that is leading you to eat crap instead of food. That sounds like a serious and potentially dangerous problem.

    Ha Ha. I meant that 1500 calories of junk/processed/fast food vs. 1500 calories of vegetables, fruits, lean proteins, etc., doesn't matter for weight loss. But it does matter for overall health. You're obviously not going to get the nutritional benefit from the first group that you would for the second.

    I'm what ways is a reasonable diet of "junk" deficient where a "lean proteins*" diet is not? How extreme will your example have to be to make this point?


    *what's with the continued hate for animal fat? It's remarkably nutritious.

    Are you suggesting that a bag of Cheetos has the same nutritional value as baked chicken and vegetables? That's what I'm referring to. Calories matter for weight loss, but if you're going to get into actual health, that's a different story. You can hit your macros, too, by eating junk, but you're going to miss out on vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients your body needs. I'm not saying you can't have treats and junk once in awhile, but living off of it isn't healthy no matter what your weight is.

    Ahhh the Cheetoh strawman. One of my favorites. Are there actually people who consider what to have for dinner, and say, "well I could have baked chicken and vegetables, but instead I think I'll have a bag of Cheetohs instead, it is still under my calorie alotment for the day, so *kitten* it, I'm going to just turn my fingers orange!"

    You burn plenty of calories scrubbing the cheese dust off.

    And what jof is referring to, I believe, is eating Cheetos is as nutritionally deficient as eating chicken and broccoli IF BOTH ARE ALL YOU ARE EATING. You're missing out on plenty of minerals and vitamins with both examples. Why don't people who argue this kitten understand that?

    I know. I don't know where this magical fairy tale world of extremes is where you either eat nothing but Cheetohs, or you eat nothing but chicken and vegetables.

    For example, I had leftovers for lunch - a grilled chicken cutlet, sauteed snap peas and baby carrots. It wasn't nearly enough food for me. So I had hummus (store bought) and wheat thins (processed). I feel like that's a very normal, balanced lunch - a mix of whole foods and "processed" foods, but overall, each contributed something positive to my day. Except I'm still hungry. Maybe I should go get a bag of cheetohs from the vending machine.
  • PiperGirl08
    PiperGirl08 Posts: 134 Member
    parfia wrote: »
    This is purely for debate purposes - if weight loss is purely calories in and calories out, why can't you 'outrun a bad diet' - surely if you run enough to burn off the calories of a bad dietary intake, you can for all intents and purposes outrun a bad diet?

    If a person is in a caloric deficit surely they will lose irrespective of what their food intake is.

    begin.....

    I believe you can outrun a bad diet. All of the articles say that people tend to eat back the calories they burn with exercise with Gatorade and pizza. But those who do not can indeed outrun a bad diet. The articles refer to behavior rather than physiology.
  • moe0303
    moe0303 Posts: 934 Member
    ryry62685 wrote: »
    WinoGelato wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    You could outrun it, but it may not be healthy to do so. Eating 1500 calories of crap and burning 2000 calories will still cause weight loss, but you will likely be unhealthy because of the lack of vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients necessary.

    Is crap in the MFP database? What is the nutritional profile of crap? Also, it seems unhealthy to eat crap. You should probably seek professional help for the compulsion that is leading you to eat crap instead of food. That sounds like a serious and potentially dangerous problem.

    Ha Ha. I meant that 1500 calories of junk/processed/fast food vs. 1500 calories of vegetables, fruits, lean proteins, etc., doesn't matter for weight loss. But it does matter for overall health. You're obviously not going to get the nutritional benefit from the first group that you would for the second.

    I'm what ways is a reasonable diet of "junk" deficient where a "lean proteins*" diet is not? How extreme will your example have to be to make this point?


    *what's with the continued hate for animal fat? It's remarkably nutritious.

    Are you suggesting that a bag of Cheetos has the same nutritional value as baked chicken and vegetables? That's what I'm referring to. Calories matter for weight loss, but if you're going to get into actual health, that's a different story. You can hit your macros, too, by eating junk, but you're going to miss out on vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients your body needs. I'm not saying you can't have treats and junk once in awhile, but living off of it isn't healthy no matter what your weight is.

    Ahhh the Cheetoh strawman. One of my favorites. Are there actually people who consider what to have for dinner, and say, "well I could have baked chicken and vegetables, but instead I think I'll have a bag of Cheetohs instead, it is still under my calorie alotment for the day, so *kitten* it, I'm going to just turn my fingers orange!"

    *embarrassingly raises hand*

    +1

    Also, an empty bag of Cheetos might actually prove to be more difficult to outrun if it is flying around in the wind like that bag from American Beauty.

  • ForecasterJason
    ForecasterJason Posts: 2,577 Member
    edited May 2016
    Years ago I went through a period of time when it was not unusual at all for me to sit down to crackers and cookies as my only source of calories for lunch. Now granted, that was just one meal. But IMO the notion of eating a diet of all processed foods doesn't seem so far-fetched to me for some people to do it.
  • tlflag1620
    tlflag1620 Posts: 1,358 Member
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    tlflag1620 wrote: »
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    tlflag1620 wrote: »
    Machka9 wrote: »
    parfia wrote: »
    This is purely for debate purposes - if weight loss is purely calories in and calories out, why can't you 'outrun a bad diet' - surely if you run enough to burn off the calories of a bad dietary intake, you can for all intents and purposes outrun a bad diet?

    If a person is in a caloric deficit surely they will lose irrespective of what their food intake is.

    begin.....

    A little late to this, but it is because you can eat far more calories in far less time than you could ever burn running.

    But would you keep eating those calories for the length of time it would take you to burn them off?

    Others have pointed out that they could consume 1000 calories in 15 minutes ... but it would take them 2-3 hours to burn that off. Yes, that's probably true. But would you continue to eat 1000 calories every 15 minutes during those 2-3 hours? Or would you be full after consuming those 1000 calories, and be off doing something else with your time for the next 2-3 hours?

    Personally, if I do consume 1000 calories in one sitting (rare), I'm stuffed to the gills and don't want to look at food for the next 2-3 hours. So while it is true that I can consume those 1000 calories in a mere 15 min, it takes me about the same length of time to get process that consumption and feel hungry again as it would to burn off 1000 calories by going for a 2-3 hour bicycle ride.

    Depends on what the meal is. A quarter pounder with cheese, medium fries, and a medium soda (regular, not diet) is right around 1000 calories. I could eat that in 15 min and not be "stuffed" at all. In fact I've btdt and been hungry just an hour or two later (one reason I don't eat fast food terribly often). So I could reasonably eat that same meal every 2-3 hours during my waking hours (let's call it 16 hours) easily consuming between 5000 and 8000 calories for the day. No problem. But I'm not sure I could work out at a high enough intensity, long enough to burn that many calories in the same 16 hour time frame... I kinda doubt it. I would think I would get fatigued a lot sooner and either would have to stop altogether, or would be at a very low intensity, therefore not burning nearly as many calories as I would need to in order to outrun that level of intake.

    That, but with diet soda, was my normal fast food order when forced to do fast food (i.e., road trip). It was quite filling and I'd feel if anything sluggish (high fat) and not want anything more 'til my next planned meal. High cal if lots of meals were made up of that, but for an occasional meal, no. The reason I don't eat fast food is that I don't care for it, not because it's that hard to fit in.

    Anyway, I agree with Machka. There are some foods I like where I can eat insane calories in a short amount of time (Indian), but even so that's great for hours. I can't imagine eating and eating. I now don't get Indian 3x/week but maybe 1 time/month around a half marathon or long bike or run, and allow myself to eat whatever I want. Works fine for maintenance. Is that outrunning a bad diet?

    Fwiw, when I do occasionally get fast food, these days I get unsweetened iced tea (hate the taste of diet soda), skip the fries altogether (or sub a salad) and get a double burger, no bun. That fills me up for 3-4 hours, no sluggishness. But the meal I described? That used to be my go-to mickey d's meal and I would always be hungry an hour or two later. Not sluggish at all. Heck, I could do a double qpc, supersize fries (back in the day when they still offered that) and supersize regular soda, and be ready for my next meal in 3-4 hours. For me the carbs awaken my inner monster. And the monster is hangry, lol. Now, 1000 calories of steak and salad? Stuffed to the gills for hours. My point was, mcd's aside, I could easily consume 5000+ calories in a day, given the right food (or the wrong food depending on how you look at it, lol). I'd be hard pressed to be able to maintain a high enough intensity of cardio to burn that off in the same timeframe. I'd really have to train for it and work up to it. Wouldn't need to train for or work up to that level of intake. At. All. And I suspect that rings true for the average person (which is whom I believe that saying is directed at in the first place).

    I just don't like fast food. McD's was something I'd get for a road trip, but not like, so I'm not a good example. I always found it filling, though, and would not be hungry early. (There is as much fat in that meal as carbs, FTR.) The idea of fast food burgers no bun is icky to me as I have the idea the meat isn't that good (probably unfair). I do burgers no bun at home all the time (I get ground beef from a farm I have a CSA with).

    I'm not a big fan these days, but used to like it a lot when I was younger. I've never found it particularly filling tho, especially with the fries and soda. I think my blood sugar crashes an hour or so later and I go into scavenger mode, but I'm not a great example of a carb tolerant person because, well, I'm not carb tolerant - yes there is a lot of fat in the meat (which is why it's not a bad choice for me so long as I only use the bun as a holder and then toss it out after I've eaten the good part), but that meal is close to 70 g of carbs, more than I currently eat in a whole day (maybe two days depending). But the point wasn't about carbs anyway. I'm sure we all have that kind of food that we could easily eat obscene amounts of and keep on coming back for more... At least I do. No way I could "outrun" say, pecan pie.

  • Machka9
    Machka9 Posts: 25,616 Member
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    tlflag1620 wrote: »
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    tlflag1620 wrote: »
    Machka9 wrote: »
    parfia wrote: »
    This is purely for debate purposes - if weight loss is purely calories in and calories out, why can't you 'outrun a bad diet' - surely if you run enough to burn off the calories of a bad dietary intake, you can for all intents and purposes outrun a bad diet?

    If a person is in a caloric deficit surely they will lose irrespective of what their food intake is.

    begin.....

    A little late to this, but it is because you can eat far more calories in far less time than you could ever burn running.

    But would you keep eating those calories for the length of time it would take you to burn them off?

    Others have pointed out that they could consume 1000 calories in 15 minutes ... but it would take them 2-3 hours to burn that off. Yes, that's probably true. But would you continue to eat 1000 calories every 15 minutes during those 2-3 hours? Or would you be full after consuming those 1000 calories, and be off doing something else with your time for the next 2-3 hours?

    Personally, if I do consume 1000 calories in one sitting (rare), I'm stuffed to the gills and don't want to look at food for the next 2-3 hours. So while it is true that I can consume those 1000 calories in a mere 15 min, it takes me about the same length of time to get process that consumption and feel hungry again as it would to burn off 1000 calories by going for a 2-3 hour bicycle ride.

    Depends on what the meal is. A quarter pounder with cheese, medium fries, and a medium soda (regular, not diet) is right around 1000 calories. I could eat that in 15 min and not be "stuffed" at all. In fact I've btdt and been hungry just an hour or two later (one reason I don't eat fast food terribly often). So I could reasonably eat that same meal every 2-3 hours during my waking hours (let's call it 16 hours) easily consuming between 5000 and 8000 calories for the day. No problem. But I'm not sure I could work out at a high enough intensity, long enough to burn that many calories in the same 16 hour time frame... I kinda doubt it. I would think I would get fatigued a lot sooner and either would have to stop altogether, or would be at a very low intensity, therefore not burning nearly as many calories as I would need to in order to outrun that level of intake.

    That, but with diet soda, was my normal fast food order when forced to do fast food (i.e., road trip). It was quite filling and I'd feel if anything sluggish (high fat) and not want anything more 'til my next planned meal. High cal if lots of meals were made up of that, but for an occasional meal, no. The reason I don't eat fast food is that I don't care for it, not because it's that hard to fit in.

    Anyway, I agree with Machka. There are some foods I like where I can eat insane calories in a short amount of time (Indian), but even so that's great for hours. I can't imagine eating and eating. I now don't get Indian 3x/week but maybe 1 time/month around a half marathon or long bike or run, and allow myself to eat whatever I want. Works fine for maintenance. Is that outrunning a bad diet?

    Fwiw, when I do occasionally get fast food, these days I get unsweetened iced tea (hate the taste of diet soda), skip the fries altogether (or sub a salad) and get a double burger, no bun. That fills me up for 3-4 hours, no sluggishness. But the meal I described? That used to be my go-to mickey d's meal and I would always be hungry an hour or two later. Not sluggish at all. Heck, I could do a double qpc, supersize fries (back in the day when they still offered that) and supersize regular soda, and be ready for my next meal in 3-4 hours. For me the carbs awaken my inner monster. And the monster is hangry, lol. Now, 1000 calories of steak and salad? Stuffed to the gills for hours. My point was, mcd's aside, I could easily consume 5000+ calories in a day, given the right food (or the wrong food depending on how you look at it, lol). I'd be hard pressed to be able to maintain a high enough intensity of cardio to burn that off in the same timeframe. I'd really have to train for it and work up to it. Wouldn't need to train for or work up to that level of intake. At. All. And I suspect that rings true for the average person (which is whom I believe that saying is directed at in the first place).

    I just don't like fast food. McD's was something I'd get for a road trip, but not like, so I'm not a good example. I always found it filling, though, and would not be hungry early. (There is as much fat in that meal as carbs, FTR.) The idea of fast food burgers no bun is icky to me as I have the idea the meat isn't that good (probably unfair). I do burgers no bun at home all the time (I get ground beef from a farm I have a CSA with).

    Yes, I find fast food filling too.

    We rarely ate McD's because we don't particularly like it, but we'd stop at Hungry Jacks and get the $5 meal ... and I'd be full for the rest of the evening on that.

    Whopper Junior: 1550 kj (370 cal)
    Small Fries: 1120 kj (268 cal)
    Small Chocolate Sundae: 1200 kj (287 cal)

    Total: 925 cal
    https://www.hungryjacks.com.au/media/20888/nutrition-guide-2016.pdf

    More recently one of the bigger "fast food" meals we eat is a burrito from Zambreros which comes in at about 750 cal. I might have a little bit of yogurt much later in the evening after that, or sometimes not. It's just that filling.
  • Machka9
    Machka9 Posts: 25,616 Member
    jodidari wrote: »
    All I can say is I agree. If it is all CICO then you should be able to outrun a bad diet in order to lose weight. However, that does not mean you'll be healthy!

    Yes! :)
  • jofjltncb6
    jofjltncb6 Posts: 34,415 Member
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    You could outrun it, but it may not be healthy to do so. Eating 1500 calories of crap and burning 2000 calories will still cause weight loss, but you will likely be unhealthy because of the lack of vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients necessary.

    Is crap in the MFP database? What is the nutritional profile of crap? Also, it seems unhealthy to eat crap. You should probably seek professional help for the compulsion that is leading you to eat crap instead of food. That sounds like a serious and potentially dangerous problem.

    Ha Ha. I meant that 1500 calories of junk/processed/fast food vs. 1500 calories of vegetables, fruits, lean proteins, etc., doesn't matter for weight loss. But it does matter for overall health. You're obviously not going to get the nutritional benefit from the first group that you would for the second.

    I'm what ways is a reasonable diet of "junk" deficient where a "lean proteins*" diet is not? How extreme will your example have to be to make this point?


    *what's with the continued hate for animal fat? It's remarkably nutritious.

    Are you suggesting that a bag of Cheetos has the same nutritional value as baked chicken and vegetables? That's what I'm referring to. Calories matter for weight loss, but if you're going to get into actual health, that's a different story. You can hit your macros, too, by eating junk, but you're going to miss out on vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients your body needs. I'm not saying you can't have treats and junk once in awhile, but living off of it isn't healthy no matter what your weight is.

    In which vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients would one be deficient with a diet comprised of "junk" that hits macro targets? No one is talking about a diet consisting entirely of Cheetos. Just give us a sample day or two to prove your point. This is a hanging curve ball I'm serving up for you. Take a swing.
  • jofjltncb6
    jofjltncb6 Posts: 34,415 Member
    edited May 2016
    zyxst wrote: »
    WinoGelato wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    You could outrun it, but it may not be healthy to do so. Eating 1500 calories of crap and burning 2000 calories will still cause weight loss, but you will likely be unhealthy because of the lack of vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients necessary.

    Is crap in the MFP database? What is the nutritional profile of crap? Also, it seems unhealthy to eat crap. You should probably seek professional help for the compulsion that is leading you to eat crap instead of food. That sounds like a serious and potentially dangerous problem.

    Ha Ha. I meant that 1500 calories of junk/processed/fast food vs. 1500 calories of vegetables, fruits, lean proteins, etc., doesn't matter for weight loss. But it does matter for overall health. You're obviously not going to get the nutritional benefit from the first group that you would for the second.

    I'm what ways is a reasonable diet of "junk" deficient where a "lean proteins*" diet is not? How extreme will your example have to be to make this point?


    *what's with the continued hate for animal fat? It's remarkably nutritious.

    Are you suggesting that a bag of Cheetos has the same nutritional value as baked chicken and vegetables? That's what I'm referring to. Calories matter for weight loss, but if you're going to get into actual health, that's a different story. You can hit your macros, too, by eating junk, but you're going to miss out on vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients your body needs. I'm not saying you can't have treats and junk once in awhile, but living off of it isn't healthy no matter what your weight is.

    Ahhh the Cheetoh strawman. One of my favorites. Are there actually people who consider what to have for dinner, and say, "well I could have baked chicken and vegetables, but instead I think I'll have a bag of Cheetohs instead, it is still under my calorie alotment for the day, so *kitten* it, I'm going to just turn my fingers orange!"

    You burn plenty of calories scrubbing the cheese dust off.

    And what jof is referring to, I believe, is eating Cheetos is as nutritionally deficient as eating chicken and broccoli IF BOTH ARE ALL YOU ARE EATING. You're missing out on plenty of minerals and vitamins with both examples. Why don't people who argue this kitten understand that?

    (I see I should have kept reading before posting because we've jumped ahead a few steps on my progression of dietary sufficiency enlightenment flowchart. I'll stop posting and catch up now.)

    ETA: Okay, caught up...but I see the dialogue has stopped. So maybe someone else could craft this sample "junk" diet so I can better understand in which nutrients it is deficient....

    ...and then we can offer some simple solutions to tweaking that "junk" diet to cover those deficiencies to demonstrate that it isn't the "junk" that's the problem...but the quantity (in calories).
  • NewMEEE2016
    NewMEEE2016 Posts: 192 Member
    I think, theoretically, as long as your calorie expenditure is greater than your intake, you could lose weight by eating ANYTHING. HOWEVER- if you were to eat only processed junk food, your body might end up looking thin but not attractive by any means- not to mention the fact that you would not be *healthy*. Additionally, if you were to eat only nutritionally poor foods, you would have much less energy to expend on exercise & muscle building.
  • jofjltncb6
    jofjltncb6 Posts: 34,415 Member
    :neutral:
  • richln
    richln Posts: 809 Member
    Good point, I think you may be on to something. This guy looks rail thin and kind of sickly, even though he is always wearing running shoes.

    501q7qguxuoq.jpg
  • ryry_
    ryry_ Posts: 4,966 Member
    richln wrote: »
    Good point, I think you may be on to something. This guy looks rail thin and kind of sickly, even though he is always wearing running shoes.

    501q7qguxuoq.jpg

    Definitely the undesirable skinny fat. He should play Soccer and eat Frosted Flakes because that Tony the Tiger guy is jacked.
  • ForecasterJason
    ForecasterJason Posts: 2,577 Member
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    zyxst wrote: »
    WinoGelato wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    You could outrun it, but it may not be healthy to do so. Eating 1500 calories of crap and burning 2000 calories will still cause weight loss, but you will likely be unhealthy because of the lack of vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients necessary.

    Is crap in the MFP database? What is the nutritional profile of crap? Also, it seems unhealthy to eat crap. You should probably seek professional help for the compulsion that is leading you to eat crap instead of food. That sounds like a serious and potentially dangerous problem.

    Ha Ha. I meant that 1500 calories of junk/processed/fast food vs. 1500 calories of vegetables, fruits, lean proteins, etc., doesn't matter for weight loss. But it does matter for overall health. You're obviously not going to get the nutritional benefit from the first group that you would for the second.

    I'm what ways is a reasonable diet of "junk" deficient where a "lean proteins*" diet is not? How extreme will your example have to be to make this point?


    *what's with the continued hate for animal fat? It's remarkably nutritious.

    Are you suggesting that a bag of Cheetos has the same nutritional value as baked chicken and vegetables? That's what I'm referring to. Calories matter for weight loss, but if you're going to get into actual health, that's a different story. You can hit your macros, too, by eating junk, but you're going to miss out on vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients your body needs. I'm not saying you can't have treats and junk once in awhile, but living off of it isn't healthy no matter what your weight is.

    Ahhh the Cheetoh strawman. One of my favorites. Are there actually people who consider what to have for dinner, and say, "well I could have baked chicken and vegetables, but instead I think I'll have a bag of Cheetohs instead, it is still under my calorie alotment for the day, so *kitten* it, I'm going to just turn my fingers orange!"

    You burn plenty of calories scrubbing the cheese dust off.

    And what jof is referring to, I believe, is eating Cheetos is as nutritionally deficient as eating chicken and broccoli IF BOTH ARE ALL YOU ARE EATING. You're missing out on plenty of minerals and vitamins with both examples. Why don't people who argue this kitten understand that?

    (I see I should have kept reading before posting because we've jumped ahead a few steps on my progression of dietary sufficiency enlightenment flowchart. I'll stop posting and catch up now.)

    ETA: Okay, caught up...but I see the dialogue has stopped. So maybe someone else could craft this sample "junk" diet so I can better understand in which nutrients it is deficient....

    ...and then we can offer some simple solutions to tweaking that "junk" diet to cover those deficiencies to demonstrate that it isn't the "junk" that's the problem...but the quantity (in calories).
    http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/comment/36374193/#Comment_36374193

    (While a calorie surplus was implicated, note the types of foods). Again, my point is that a diet of eating nothing but highly processed foods is not necessarily something that does NOT happen in the real world.
  • goldthistime
    goldthistime Posts: 3,213 Member
    Machka9 wrote: »
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    tlflag1620 wrote: »
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    tlflag1620 wrote: »
    Machka9 wrote: »
    parfia wrote: »
    This is purely for debate purposes - if weight loss is purely calories in and calories out, why can't you 'outrun a bad diet' - surely if you run enough to burn off the calories of a bad dietary intake, you can for all intents and purposes outrun a bad diet?

    If a person is in a caloric deficit surely they will lose irrespective of what their food intake is.

    begin.....

    A little late to this, but it is because you can eat far more calories in far less time than you could ever burn running.

    But would you keep eating those calories for the length of time it would take you to burn them off?

    Others have pointed out that they could consume 1000 calories in 15 minutes ... but it would take them 2-3 hours to burn that off. Yes, that's probably true. But would you continue to eat 1000 calories every 15 minutes during those 2-3 hours? Or would you be full after consuming those 1000 calories, and be off doing something else with your time for the next 2-3 hours?

    Personally, if I do consume 1000 calories in one sitting (rare), I'm stuffed to the gills and don't want to look at food for the next 2-3 hours. So while it is true that I can consume those 1000 calories in a mere 15 min, it takes me about the same length of time to get process that consumption and feel hungry again as it would to burn off 1000 calories by going for a 2-3 hour bicycle ride.

    Depends on what the meal is. A quarter pounder with cheese, medium fries, and a medium soda (regular, not diet) is right around 1000 calories. I could eat that in 15 min and not be "stuffed" at all. In fact I've btdt and been hungry just an hour or two later (one reason I don't eat fast food terribly often). So I could reasonably eat that same meal every 2-3 hours during my waking hours (let's call it 16 hours) easily consuming between 5000 and 8000 calories for the day. No problem. But I'm not sure I could work out at a high enough intensity, long enough to burn that many calories in the same 16 hour time frame... I kinda doubt it. I would think I would get fatigued a lot sooner and either would have to stop altogether, or would be at a very low intensity, therefore not burning nearly as many calories as I would need to in order to outrun that level of intake.

    That, but with diet soda, was my normal fast food order when forced to do fast food (i.e., road trip). It was quite filling and I'd feel if anything sluggish (high fat) and not want anything more 'til my next planned meal. High cal if lots of meals were made up of that, but for an occasional meal, no. The reason I don't eat fast food is that I don't care for it, not because it's that hard to fit in.

    Anyway, I agree with Machka. There are some foods I like where I can eat insane calories in a short amount of time (Indian), but even so that's great for hours. I can't imagine eating and eating. I now don't get Indian 3x/week but maybe 1 time/month around a half marathon or long bike or run, and allow myself to eat whatever I want. Works fine for maintenance. Is that outrunning a bad diet?

    Fwiw, when I do occasionally get fast food, these days I get unsweetened iced tea (hate the taste of diet soda), skip the fries altogether (or sub a salad) and get a double burger, no bun. That fills me up for 3-4 hours, no sluggishness. But the meal I described? That used to be my go-to mickey d's meal and I would always be hungry an hour or two later. Not sluggish at all. Heck, I could do a double qpc, supersize fries (back in the day when they still offered that) and supersize regular soda, and be ready for my next meal in 3-4 hours. For me the carbs awaken my inner monster. And the monster is hangry, lol. Now, 1000 calories of steak and salad? Stuffed to the gills for hours. My point was, mcd's aside, I could easily consume 5000+ calories in a day, given the right food (or the wrong food depending on how you look at it, lol). I'd be hard pressed to be able to maintain a high enough intensity of cardio to burn that off in the same timeframe. I'd really have to train for it and work up to it. Wouldn't need to train for or work up to that level of intake. At. All. And I suspect that rings true for the average person (which is whom I believe that saying is directed at in the first place).

    I just don't like fast food. McD's was something I'd get for a road trip, but not like, so I'm not a good example. I always found it filling, though, and would not be hungry early. (There is as much fat in that meal as carbs, FTR.) The idea of fast food burgers no bun is icky to me as I have the idea the meat isn't that good (probably unfair). I do burgers no bun at home all the time (I get ground beef from a farm I have a CSA with).

    Yes, I find fast food filling too.

    We rarely ate McD's because we don't particularly like it, but we'd stop at Hungry Jacks and get the $5 meal ... and I'd be full for the rest of the evening on that.

    Whopper Junior: 1550 kj (370 cal)
    Small Fries: 1120 kj (268 cal)
    Small Chocolate Sundae: 1200 kj (287 cal)

    Total: 925 cal
    https://www.hungryjacks.com.au/media/20888/nutrition-guide-2016.pdf

    More recently one of the bigger "fast food" meals we eat is a burrito from Zambreros which comes in at about 750 cal. I might have a little bit of yogurt much later in the evening after that, or sometimes not. It's just that filling.

    Not me. For a long time I thought that McDonald's put out a "worst case" calorie count for their products because I found their food to be so much less filling that my homemade fare. Not sure why this is. Fiber? Sodium?
  • J72FIT
    J72FIT Posts: 6,002 Member
    This is still going?
  • moe0303
    moe0303 Posts: 934 Member
    J72FIT wrote: »
    This is still going?

    Yes. It's awesome.
  • ForecasterJason
    ForecasterJason Posts: 2,577 Member
    Machka9 wrote: »
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    tlflag1620 wrote: »
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    tlflag1620 wrote: »
    Machka9 wrote: »
    parfia wrote: »
    This is purely for debate purposes - if weight loss is purely calories in and calories out, why can't you 'outrun a bad diet' - surely if you run enough to burn off the calories of a bad dietary intake, you can for all intents and purposes outrun a bad diet?

    If a person is in a caloric deficit surely they will lose irrespective of what their food intake is.

    begin.....

    A little late to this, but it is because you can eat far more calories in far less time than you could ever burn running.

    But would you keep eating those calories for the length of time it would take you to burn them off?

    Others have pointed out that they could consume 1000 calories in 15 minutes ... but it would take them 2-3 hours to burn that off. Yes, that's probably true. But would you continue to eat 1000 calories every 15 minutes during those 2-3 hours? Or would you be full after consuming those 1000 calories, and be off doing something else with your time for the next 2-3 hours?

    Personally, if I do consume 1000 calories in one sitting (rare), I'm stuffed to the gills and don't want to look at food for the next 2-3 hours. So while it is true that I can consume those 1000 calories in a mere 15 min, it takes me about the same length of time to get process that consumption and feel hungry again as it would to burn off 1000 calories by going for a 2-3 hour bicycle ride.

    Depends on what the meal is. A quarter pounder with cheese, medium fries, and a medium soda (regular, not diet) is right around 1000 calories. I could eat that in 15 min and not be "stuffed" at all. In fact I've btdt and been hungry just an hour or two later (one reason I don't eat fast food terribly often). So I could reasonably eat that same meal every 2-3 hours during my waking hours (let's call it 16 hours) easily consuming between 5000 and 8000 calories for the day. No problem. But I'm not sure I could work out at a high enough intensity, long enough to burn that many calories in the same 16 hour time frame... I kinda doubt it. I would think I would get fatigued a lot sooner and either would have to stop altogether, or would be at a very low intensity, therefore not burning nearly as many calories as I would need to in order to outrun that level of intake.

    That, but with diet soda, was my normal fast food order when forced to do fast food (i.e., road trip). It was quite filling and I'd feel if anything sluggish (high fat) and not want anything more 'til my next planned meal. High cal if lots of meals were made up of that, but for an occasional meal, no. The reason I don't eat fast food is that I don't care for it, not because it's that hard to fit in.

    Anyway, I agree with Machka. There are some foods I like where I can eat insane calories in a short amount of time (Indian), but even so that's great for hours. I can't imagine eating and eating. I now don't get Indian 3x/week but maybe 1 time/month around a half marathon or long bike or run, and allow myself to eat whatever I want. Works fine for maintenance. Is that outrunning a bad diet?

    Fwiw, when I do occasionally get fast food, these days I get unsweetened iced tea (hate the taste of diet soda), skip the fries altogether (or sub a salad) and get a double burger, no bun. That fills me up for 3-4 hours, no sluggishness. But the meal I described? That used to be my go-to mickey d's meal and I would always be hungry an hour or two later. Not sluggish at all. Heck, I could do a double qpc, supersize fries (back in the day when they still offered that) and supersize regular soda, and be ready for my next meal in 3-4 hours. For me the carbs awaken my inner monster. And the monster is hangry, lol. Now, 1000 calories of steak and salad? Stuffed to the gills for hours. My point was, mcd's aside, I could easily consume 5000+ calories in a day, given the right food (or the wrong food depending on how you look at it, lol). I'd be hard pressed to be able to maintain a high enough intensity of cardio to burn that off in the same timeframe. I'd really have to train for it and work up to it. Wouldn't need to train for or work up to that level of intake. At. All. And I suspect that rings true for the average person (which is whom I believe that saying is directed at in the first place).

    I just don't like fast food. McD's was something I'd get for a road trip, but not like, so I'm not a good example. I always found it filling, though, and would not be hungry early. (There is as much fat in that meal as carbs, FTR.) The idea of fast food burgers no bun is icky to me as I have the idea the meat isn't that good (probably unfair). I do burgers no bun at home all the time (I get ground beef from a farm I have a CSA with).

    Yes, I find fast food filling too.

    We rarely ate McD's because we don't particularly like it, but we'd stop at Hungry Jacks and get the $5 meal ... and I'd be full for the rest of the evening on that.

    Whopper Junior: 1550 kj (370 cal)
    Small Fries: 1120 kj (268 cal)
    Small Chocolate Sundae: 1200 kj (287 cal)

    Total: 925 cal
    https://www.hungryjacks.com.au/media/20888/nutrition-guide-2016.pdf

    More recently one of the bigger "fast food" meals we eat is a burrito from Zambreros which comes in at about 750 cal. I might have a little bit of yogurt much later in the evening after that, or sometimes not. It's just that filling.

    Not me. For a long time I thought that McDonald's put out a "worst case" calorie count for their products because I found their food to be so much less filling that my homemade fare. Not sure why this is. Fiber? Sodium?
    Maybe their food has more fat, which would inflate the calorie count as compared to yours.

  • EvgeniZyntx
    EvgeniZyntx Posts: 24,208 Member
    edited May 2016
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    zyxst wrote: »
    WinoGelato wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    You could outrun it, but it may not be healthy to do so. Eating 1500 calories of crap and burning 2000 calories will still cause weight loss, but you will likely be unhealthy because of the lack of vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients necessary.

    Is crap in the MFP database? What is the nutritional profile of crap? Also, it seems unhealthy to eat crap. You should probably seek professional help for the compulsion that is leading you to eat crap instead of food. That sounds like a serious and potentially dangerous problem.

    Ha Ha. I meant that 1500 calories of junk/processed/fast food vs. 1500 calories of vegetables, fruits, lean proteins, etc., doesn't matter for weight loss. But it does matter for overall health. You're obviously not going to get the nutritional benefit from the first group that you would for the second.

    I'm what ways is a reasonable diet of "junk" deficient where a "lean proteins*" diet is not? How extreme will your example have to be to make this point?


    *what's with the continued hate for animal fat? It's remarkably nutritious.

    Are you suggesting that a bag of Cheetos has the same nutritional value as baked chicken and vegetables? That's what I'm referring to. Calories matter for weight loss, but if you're going to get into actual health, that's a different story. You can hit your macros, too, by eating junk, but you're going to miss out on vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients your body needs. I'm not saying you can't have treats and junk once in awhile, but living off of it isn't healthy no matter what your weight is.

    Ahhh the Cheetoh strawman. One of my favorites. Are there actually people who consider what to have for dinner, and say, "well I could have baked chicken and vegetables, but instead I think I'll have a bag of Cheetohs instead, it is still under my calorie alotment for the day, so *kitten* it, I'm going to just turn my fingers orange!"

    You burn plenty of calories scrubbing the cheese dust off.

    And what jof is referring to, I believe, is eating Cheetos is as nutritionally deficient as eating chicken and broccoli IF BOTH ARE ALL YOU ARE EATING. You're missing out on plenty of minerals and vitamins with both examples. Why don't people who argue this kitten understand that?

    (I see I should have kept reading before posting because we've jumped ahead a few steps on my progression of dietary sufficiency enlightenment flowchart. I'll stop posting and catch up now.)

    ETA: Okay, caught up...but I see the dialogue has stopped. So maybe someone else could craft this sample "junk" diet so I can better understand in which nutrients it is deficient....

    ...and then we can offer some simple solutions to tweaking that "junk" diet to cover those deficiencies to demonstrate that it isn't the "junk" that's the problem...but the quantity (in calories).

    An all broccoli diet would be pretty junky.

    (waits for the anti junkers to crawl out of the woodworks...)
  • nutmegoreo
    nutmegoreo Posts: 15,532 Member
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    zyxst wrote: »
    WinoGelato wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    jofjltncb6 wrote: »
    kmbrooks15 wrote: »
    You could outrun it, but it may not be healthy to do so. Eating 1500 calories of crap and burning 2000 calories will still cause weight loss, but you will likely be unhealthy because of the lack of vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients necessary.

    Is crap in the MFP database? What is the nutritional profile of crap? Also, it seems unhealthy to eat crap. You should probably seek professional help for the compulsion that is leading you to eat crap instead of food. That sounds like a serious and potentially dangerous problem.

    Ha Ha. I meant that 1500 calories of junk/processed/fast food vs. 1500 calories of vegetables, fruits, lean proteins, etc., doesn't matter for weight loss. But it does matter for overall health. You're obviously not going to get the nutritional benefit from the first group that you would for the second.

    I'm what ways is a reasonable diet of "junk" deficient where a "lean proteins*" diet is not? How extreme will your example have to be to make this point?


    *what's with the continued hate for animal fat? It's remarkably nutritious.

    Are you suggesting that a bag of Cheetos has the same nutritional value as baked chicken and vegetables? That's what I'm referring to. Calories matter for weight loss, but if you're going to get into actual health, that's a different story. You can hit your macros, too, by eating junk, but you're going to miss out on vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients your body needs. I'm not saying you can't have treats and junk once in awhile, but living off of it isn't healthy no matter what your weight is.

    Ahhh the Cheetoh strawman. One of my favorites. Are there actually people who consider what to have for dinner, and say, "well I could have baked chicken and vegetables, but instead I think I'll have a bag of Cheetohs instead, it is still under my calorie alotment for the day, so *kitten* it, I'm going to just turn my fingers orange!"

    You burn plenty of calories scrubbing the cheese dust off.

    And what jof is referring to, I believe, is eating Cheetos is as nutritionally deficient as eating chicken and broccoli IF BOTH ARE ALL YOU ARE EATING. You're missing out on plenty of minerals and vitamins with both examples. Why don't people who argue this kitten understand that?

    (I see I should have kept reading before posting because we've jumped ahead a few steps on my progression of dietary sufficiency enlightenment flowchart. I'll stop posting and catch up now.)

    ETA: Okay, caught up...but I see the dialogue has stopped. So maybe someone else could craft this sample "junk" diet so I can better understand in which nutrients it is deficient....

    ...and then we can offer some simple solutions to tweaking that "junk" diet to cover those deficiencies to demonstrate that it isn't the "junk" that's the problem...but the quantity (in calories).

    An all broccoli diet would be pretty junky.

    (waits for the anti junkers to crawl out of the woodworks...)

    But broccoli has so much protein! :wink: