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May we talk about set points?

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Replies

  • DebSozo
    DebSozo Posts: 2,578 Member
    edited November 2016
    DebSozo wrote: »
    ryry_ wrote: »
    My opinion on set point theory is all it does is create an artificial mental barrier about what you can acheive

    It does the opposite for me. I know that if only I can lose weight and keep it off for six months to a year that my body will accept the reset and work to maintain my new maintenance "set point".

    My opinion is that people who say that they "gained all the weight back and then some" have not put the set point method to use in their favor. In other words, it is possible to "reset" your set point thankfully!

    ETA link:
    Break through set point
    http://www.bidmc.org/YourHealth/BIDMCInteractive/BreakThroughYourSetPoint/WeekOneTheScienceofSetPoint.aspx

    No people who gain all the weight back and more gained it because they were not eating at their maintenance not because they didn't establish a set point.

    Right. I mentioned that also. I think we are playing with semantics on this thread. Did you read the article below, BTW?

    http://www.bidmc.org/YourHealth/BIDMCInteractive/BreakThroughYourSetPoint/WeekOneTheScienceofSetPoint.aspx
  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,982 Member
    ilex70 wrote: »
    I thought the science was pretty clear as far as the metabolism adapting and the body fighting back to maintain equilibrium. Pretty sure there have been multiple studies including at least one that said people that are formerly fat have to eat less to maintain the same weight as people that haven't been fat.
    One of the things science didn't cover though was the loss of lean muscle with those people. If a person who's never been fat maintains, they are maintaining weight and muscle they never lost. People that lose weight lose lean muscle along the way and therefore lowering their metabolic rate. Also they didn't state how long people who lost weight maintained. It might have been a year or so (not sure on this) but it may take longer for the body to adapt to that metabolic rate after being overweight so long.


    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
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    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
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  • DebSozo
    DebSozo Posts: 2,578 Member
    edited November 2016
    DebSozo wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    ryry_ wrote: »
    My opinion on set point theory is all it does is create an artificial mental barrier about what you can acheive

    It does the opposite for me. I know that if only I can lose weight and keep it off for six months to a year that my body will accept the reset and work to maintain my new maintenance "set point".

    My opinion is that people who say that they "gained all the weight back and then some" have not put the set point method to use in their favor. In other words, it is possible to "reset" your set point thankfully!

    ETA link:
    Break through set point
    http://www.bidmc.org/YourHealth/BIDMCInteractive/BreakThroughYourSetPoint/WeekOneTheScienceofSetPoint.aspx

    No people who gain all the weight back and more gained it because they were not eating at their maintenance not because they didn't establish a set point.

    Right. I mentioned that also. I think we are all playing with semantics. Did you read the article, BTW?

    http://www.bidmc.org/YourHealth/BIDMCInteractive/BreakThroughYourSetPoint/WeekOneTheScienceofSetPoint.aspx

    So basically you are saying the same thing as people who are saying that there is no set point. Your weight is established by your habits (exception:certain medical conditions) and how many calories you consume not a magical place that your body will stay at despite being at a deficit.

    No. That isn't what I'm saying. I'm saying that there is a set point --for ME. I'm conceding not to make a blanket statement because YMMV. I am also saying that the set point can go down by eating at a deficit, losing weight, and then working to establish a new set point. Once the weight maintenance "thermostat" is effectively at a set point for 6 months or so it is likely that the body will work to maintain that one.
  • DebSozo
    DebSozo Posts: 2,578 Member
    edited November 2016
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    Guess you didn't read the last line of the abstract.
    Current working hypotheses include roles for nutrients, dietary composition and organoleptic properties, hormones, neural pathways, various brain nuclei, and many neurotransmitters in the regulation of food intake. It is concluded that regulation of body weight in relation to one specific parameter related to energy balance is unrealistic. It seems appropriate to assume that the level at which body weight and body fat content are maintained represents the equilibria achieved by regulation of many parameters.
    So change dietary composition and have hormones change and "set point" won't be acheived.Even aging alone changes "set point". Metabolic rate obviously lowers and continued eating like one did in their 20's would result in weight gain.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
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    That is what happened to me. There are other variables affecting the set point that were not in place when I was younger that have come into play.
    So in other words, the body doesn't have a "set point". Because of variables along with eating patterns, weight can variably go up and down and not stay as steady. Steady weight comes down to one thing..............consistency of habit. Not a "set point".


    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png

    It has a set point if you listen to the body's real hunger signals and pay attention to signals saying to eat or not to eat.

    ETA: This would only work with someone who gets true hunger signals. I do hear on the threads that some people are never full. That would be problematic and I assume that they would artificially have to use calorie counting forever. I can maintain easily and have much difficulty losing. My body fights with me constantly to plateau.
  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,982 Member
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    nutmegoreo wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    nutmegoreo wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    Vailara wrote: »
    I can't speak for anybody else, but my own body has definitely seemed to have "set points" - a point at which I'll naturally maintain without consciously control diet or activity. The most obvious one was the healthy weight I was at for many years - I stayed within in a few pounds through various "lifestyle changes", through being highly active, being unwell and very inactive, and so on.

    Funnily enough, I had a similar thing happen at my heaviest - I maintained within a few pounds for a few years, without thinking about it.

    I do understand that some people are saying that they've never had a set point, and it has all been about how much conscious control they've had over eating and activity. So I think it may just be an individual thing.

    Not sure if set points actually *are* a thing (which I, for one, doubt) but if they exist, how can that set point fluctuate from - in your example - one at your lightest weight and another at your heaviest? Isn't a set point, by its very definition, *set?* <confused>

    For instance: My weight (let's pretend) is 148 and is stuck there for a long time. I would have to fight against the set point actively until I got down to, let's say, 139 pounds. I would have to work very hard against my body's natural tendency to want to go back to the original set point. It might take a while of actively fighting it to stay down. But after a time it will become a natural set point and will fight to stay there.

    Or maybe it just takes you a while to get used to eating the correct number of calories to maintain that new weight?

    You totally don't get what a set point is.

    Don't presume that your misinterpretation of my comment is representative of my lack of knowledge.

    You are claiming that your body is fighting against what you want it to have as a set point, until you have put in enough time maintaining that weight for it to become your new set point. What I'm saying is that during this time, while you are fighting to keep your body at that weight, you are making a concerted effort to keep to a specific calorie goal to maintain. After a while, you are subconsciously becoming accustomed to this caloric target and will become accustomed to eating that amount.

    I get what you are claiming a set point to be. I'm saying that there are subconscious factors at play. Finding a coloured egg doesn't prove the existence of the Easter bunny.

    So basically what Deb is claiming is a set point is like learning to ride a bike, or playing an instrument etc. At first it takes conscious effort to do and is hard and after a while it becomes second nature like breathing, provided you keep up with doing it.
    But that's a physical skill. Maintaining weight is more of a conscious effort of controlling your CICO and while it can become habitual, it needs to be adjusted if parameters in someone's life changes (IE hormonal changes, aging, stress incress, health issues). Playing an instrument is a skill that doesn't need to be adjusted much unless something impairs them (arthritis, loss of a finger, etc.)

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png

    How about driving a car? You get a new one and it handles differently and you need to get used to that until you could basically do it in your sleep.
    Yet still if you drive that car even everyday on the same route, traffic and weather conditions change where you will need to be conscious of decisions made. The actual learning of how to drive the car doesn't change, just the surrounding environment.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png

  • DebSozo
    DebSozo Posts: 2,578 Member
    DebSozo wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    ryry_ wrote: »
    My opinion on set point theory is all it does is create an artificial mental barrier about what you can acheive

    It does the opposite for me. I know that if only I can lose weight and keep it off for six months to a year that my body will accept the reset and work to maintain my new maintenance "set point".

    My opinion is that people who say that they "gained all the weight back and then some" have not put the set point method to use in their favor. In other words, it is possible to "reset" your set point thankfully!

    ETA link:
    Break through set point
    http://www.bidmc.org/YourHealth/BIDMCInteractive/BreakThroughYourSetPoint/WeekOneTheScienceofSetPoint.aspx

    No people who gain all the weight back and more gained it because they were not eating at their maintenance not because they didn't establish a set point.

    Right. I mentioned that also. I think we are all playing with semantics. Did you read the article, BTW?

    http://www.bidmc.org/YourHealth/BIDMCInteractive/BreakThroughYourSetPoint/WeekOneTheScienceofSetPoint.aspx

    So basically you are saying the same thing as people who are saying that there is no set point. Your weight is established by your habits (exception:certain medical conditions) and how many calories you consume not a magical place that your body will stay at despite being at a deficit.

    No. That isn't what I'm saying. I'm saying that there is a set point --for ME. I'm conceding not to make a blanket statement because YMMV. I am also saying that the set point can go down by eating at a deficit, losing weight, and then working to establish a new set point. Once the weight maintenance "thermostat" is effectively at a set point for 6 months or so it is likely that the body will work to maintain that one.
    I am confused. If you lose weight while on a deficit and gain on a surplus how does this prove there is a set point as opposed to your weight being determined by your habits?

    I lose two pounds and gain two pounds back. I lose 4 pounds over time and gain 4 pounds. It's a bugger.
  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,982 Member
    DebSozo wrote: »
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    nutmegoreo wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    nutmegoreo wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    Vailara wrote: »
    I can't speak for anybody else, but my own body has definitely seemed to have "set points" - a point at which I'll naturally maintain without consciously control diet or activity. The most obvious one was the healthy weight I was at for many years - I stayed within in a few pounds through various "lifestyle changes", through being highly active, being unwell and very inactive, and so on.

    Funnily enough, I had a similar thing happen at my heaviest - I maintained within a few pounds for a few years, without thinking about it.

    I do understand that some people are saying that they've never had a set point, and it has all been about how much conscious control they've had over eating and activity. So I think it may just be an individual thing.

    Not sure if set points actually *are* a thing (which I, for one, doubt) but if they exist, how can that set point fluctuate from - in your example - one at your lightest weight and another at your heaviest? Isn't a set point, by its very definition, *set?* <confused>

    For instance: My weight (let's pretend) is 148 and is stuck there for a long time. I would have to fight against the set point actively until I got down to, let's say, 139 pounds. I would have to work very hard against my body's natural tendency to want to go back to the original set point. It might take a while of actively fighting it to stay down. But after a time it will become a natural set point and will fight to stay there.

    Or maybe it just takes you a while to get used to eating the correct number of calories to maintain that new weight?

    You totally don't get what a set point is.

    Don't presume that your misinterpretation of my comment is representative of my lack of knowledge.

    You are claiming that your body is fighting against what you want it to have as a set point, until you have put in enough time maintaining that weight for it to become your new set point. What I'm saying is that during this time, while you are fighting to keep your body at that weight, you are making a concerted effort to keep to a specific calorie goal to maintain. After a while, you are subconsciously becoming accustomed to this caloric target and will become accustomed to eating that amount.

    I get what you are claiming a set point to be. I'm saying that there are subconscious factors at play. Finding a coloured egg doesn't prove the existence of the Easter bunny.

    So basically what Deb is claiming is a set point is like learning to ride a bike, or playing an instrument etc. At first it takes conscious effort to do and is hard and after a while it becomes second nature like breathing, provided you keep up with doing it.
    But that's a physical skill. Maintaining weight is more of a conscious effort of controlling your CICO and while it can become habitual, it needs to be adjusted if parameters in someone's life changes (IE hormonal changes, aging, stress incress, health issues). Playing an instrument is a skill that doesn't need to be adjusted much unless something impairs them (arthritis, loss of a finger, etc.)

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png

    How about driving a car? You get a new one and it handles differently and you need to get used to that until you could basically do it in your sleep.

    Here's a better analogy for "set point" method:

    You have a thermostat in your living room that you have set to 68 degrees Fahrenheit. The furnace kicks in when it drops below that set point. Now, you could turn on the furnace manually or turn it off to change the temperature to be what you want. But it is easier to have it set up on "auto" with the thermostat.
    That scenario would be a "set point", but the body HARDLY resembles that of a room that doesn't change. For instance leave the doors and windows open. Does the room stay at 68 degrees if it's 32 degrees outside and and they are open? Does a refrigerator stay at 40 degrees when the door is ajar?


    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png
  • DebSozo
    DebSozo Posts: 2,578 Member
    DebSozo wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    ryry_ wrote: »
    My opinion on set point theory is all it does is create an artificial mental barrier about what you can acheive

    It does the opposite for me. I know that if only I can lose weight and keep it off for six months to a year that my body will accept the reset and work to maintain my new maintenance "set point".

    My opinion is that people who say that they "gained all the weight back and then some" have not put the set point method to use in their favor. In other words, it is possible to "reset" your set point thankfully!

    ETA link:
    Break through set point
    http://www.bidmc.org/YourHealth/BIDMCInteractive/BreakThroughYourSetPoint/WeekOneTheScienceofSetPoint.aspx

    No people who gain all the weight back and more gained it because they were not eating at their maintenance not because they didn't establish a set point.

    Right. I mentioned that also. I think we are all playing with semantics. Did you read the article, BTW?

    http://www.bidmc.org/YourHealth/BIDMCInteractive/BreakThroughYourSetPoint/WeekOneTheScienceofSetPoint.aspx

    So basically you are saying the same thing as people who are saying that there is no set point. Your weight is established by your habits (exception:certain medical conditions) and how many calories you consume not a magical place that your body will stay at despite being at a deficit.

    No. That isn't what I'm saying. I'm saying that there is a set point --for ME. I'm conceding not to make a blanket statement because YMMV. I am also saying that the set point can go down by eating at a deficit, losing weight, and then working to establish a new set point. Once the weight maintenance "thermostat" is effectively at a set point for 6 months or so it is likely that the body will work to maintain that one.
    I am confused. If you lose weight while on a deficit and gain on a surplus how does this prove there is a set point as opposed to your weight being determined by your habits?

    Did you read the set point article? It will answer many of your questions.
  • DebSozo
    DebSozo Posts: 2,578 Member
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    nutmegoreo wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    nutmegoreo wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    Vailara wrote: »
    I can't speak for anybody else, but my own body has definitely seemed to have "set points" - a point at which I'll naturally maintain without consciously control diet or activity. The most obvious one was the healthy weight I was at for many years - I stayed within in a few pounds through various "lifestyle changes", through being highly active, being unwell and very inactive, and so on.

    Funnily enough, I had a similar thing happen at my heaviest - I maintained within a few pounds for a few years, without thinking about it.

    I do understand that some people are saying that they've never had a set point, and it has all been about how much conscious control they've had over eating and activity. So I think it may just be an individual thing.

    Not sure if set points actually *are* a thing (which I, for one, doubt) but if they exist, how can that set point fluctuate from - in your example - one at your lightest weight and another at your heaviest? Isn't a set point, by its very definition, *set?* <confused>

    For instance: My weight (let's pretend) is 148 and is stuck there for a long time. I would have to fight against the set point actively until I got down to, let's say, 139 pounds. I would have to work very hard against my body's natural tendency to want to go back to the original set point. It might take a while of actively fighting it to stay down. But after a time it will become a natural set point and will fight to stay there.

    Or maybe it just takes you a while to get used to eating the correct number of calories to maintain that new weight?

    You totally don't get what a set point is.

    Don't presume that your misinterpretation of my comment is representative of my lack of knowledge.

    You are claiming that your body is fighting against what you want it to have as a set point, until you have put in enough time maintaining that weight for it to become your new set point. What I'm saying is that during this time, while you are fighting to keep your body at that weight, you are making a concerted effort to keep to a specific calorie goal to maintain. After a while, you are subconsciously becoming accustomed to this caloric target and will become accustomed to eating that amount.

    I get what you are claiming a set point to be. I'm saying that there are subconscious factors at play. Finding a coloured egg doesn't prove the existence of the Easter bunny.

    So basically what Deb is claiming is a set point is like learning to ride a bike, or playing an instrument etc. At first it takes conscious effort to do and is hard and after a while it becomes second nature like breathing, provided you keep up with doing it.
    But that's a physical skill. Maintaining weight is more of a conscious effort of controlling your CICO and while it can become habitual, it needs to be adjusted if parameters in someone's life changes (IE hormonal changes, aging, stress incress, health issues). Playing an instrument is a skill that doesn't need to be adjusted much unless something impairs them (arthritis, loss of a finger, etc.)

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png

    How about driving a car? You get a new one and it handles differently and you need to get used to that until you could basically do it in your sleep.

    Here's a better analogy for "set point" method:

    You have a thermostat in your living room that you have set to 68 degrees Fahrenheit. The furnace kicks in when it drops below that set point. Now, you could turn on the furnace manually or turn it off to change the temperature to be what you want. But it is easier to have it set up on "auto" with the thermostat.
    That scenario would be a "set point", but the body HARDLY resembles that of a room that doesn't change. For instance leave the doors and windows open. Does the room stay at 68 degrees if it's 32 degrees outside and and they are open? Does a refrigerator stay at 40 degrees when the door is ajar?


    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png

    That's why set points can be changed. Sigh.
  • DebSozo
    DebSozo Posts: 2,578 Member
    edited November 2016
    DebSozo wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    ryry_ wrote: »
    My opinion on set point theory is all it does is create an artificial mental barrier about what you can acheive

    It does the opposite for me. I know that if only I can lose weight and keep it off for six months to a year that my body will accept the reset and work to maintain my new maintenance "set point".

    My opinion is that people who say that they "gained all the weight back and then some" have not put the set point method to use in their favor. In other words, it is possible to "reset" your set point thankfully!

    ETA link:
    Break through set point
    http://www.bidmc.org/YourHealth/BIDMCInteractive/BreakThroughYourSetPoint/WeekOneTheScienceofSetPoint.aspx

    No people who gain all the weight back and more gained it because they were not eating at their maintenance not because they didn't establish a set point.

    Right. I mentioned that also. I think we are all playing with semantics. Did you read the article, BTW?

    http://www.bidmc.org/YourHealth/BIDMCInteractive/BreakThroughYourSetPoint/WeekOneTheScienceofSetPoint.aspx

    So basically you are saying the same thing as people who are saying that there is no set point. Your weight is established by your habits (exception:certain medical conditions) and how many calories you consume not a magical place that your body will stay at despite being at a deficit.

    No. That isn't what I'm saying. I'm saying that there is a set point --for ME. I'm conceding not to make a blanket statement because YMMV. I am also saying that the set point can go down by eating at a deficit, losing weight, and then working to establish a new set point. Once the weight maintenance "thermostat" is effectively at a set point for 6 months or so it is likely that the body will work to maintain that one.
    I am confused. If you lose weight while on a deficit and gain on a surplus how does this prove there is a set point as opposed to your weight being determined by your habits?

    I lose two pounds and gain two pounds back. I lose 4 pounds over time and gain 4 pounds. It's a bugger.

    Weight fluctuates but going up and down 2-4 lbs pretty much shows that you are not consistent with your deficit. That looks more like maintenance.

    I have glycogen fluctuations. But I rarely gain more than 4 pounds before my body signals to start losing weight.

    Set point = maintenance equilibrium weight number
  • dbashby
    dbashby Posts: 44 Member
    edited November 2016
    The science says no, my experience says yes but conditionally. The calories in calories out mantra is generally accepted by most scientist as fact. This means that if you consume more calories than your TDEE for the day you will gain weight if you under consume you will lose weight and an exact daily balance is near impossible to hold. Making fluctuations of a few pounds in either direction normal. For most people upward weight gain (assuming you are moving into higher weights for the first time) is actually much more difficult than if you have had that weight before lost it and are now putting it on again. That weight comes back much easier, I think most people who have experienced this can vouch for it being accurate (it was for me but I can't speak for everyone). I think it is because the creation of fat cells has to take place in the first scenario, in the second they have shrunk but they are still there. That reason of course is very difficult to prove. but it stands to reason as possible and even probable do to the appetite factor, which actually comes into play in both situations. If your body doesn't need the calories and it knows it (in the first scenario) it seems to turn off your hunger much sooner than if have been there before like the second scenario. Overeating your TDEE is much easier the second time around. It also helps explain why formerly fat people put the weight back on much faster than a skinny person who is adding additional pounds for the first time. Because there are so many factors that play into it an definitive answer may never be provable.
  • singingflutelady
    singingflutelady Posts: 8,736 Member
    If you listen to your hunger signals and eat accordingly it generally has you eating at maintenance not deficit or surplus
  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,982 Member
    DebSozo wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    ryry_ wrote: »
    My opinion on set point theory is all it does is create an artificial mental barrier about what you can acheive

    It does the opposite for me. I know that if only I can lose weight and keep it off for six months to a year that my body will accept the reset and work to maintain my new maintenance "set point".

    My opinion is that people who say that they "gained all the weight back and then some" have not put the set point method to use in their favor. In other words, it is possible to "reset" your set point thankfully!

    ETA link:
    Break through set point
    http://www.bidmc.org/YourHealth/BIDMCInteractive/BreakThroughYourSetPoint/WeekOneTheScienceofSetPoint.aspx

    No people who gain all the weight back and more gained it because they were not eating at their maintenance not because they didn't establish a set point.

    Right. I mentioned that also. I think we are all playing with semantics. Did you read the article, BTW?

    http://www.bidmc.org/YourHealth/BIDMCInteractive/BreakThroughYourSetPoint/WeekOneTheScienceofSetPoint.aspx

    So basically you are saying the same thing as people who are saying that there is no set point. Your weight is established by your habits (exception:certain medical conditions) and how many calories you consume not a magical place that your body will stay at despite being at a deficit.

    No. That isn't what I'm saying. I'm saying that there is a set point --for ME. I'm conceding not to make a blanket statement because YMMV. I am also saying that the set point can go down by eating at a deficit, losing weight, and then working to establish a new set point. Once the weight maintenance "thermostat" is effectively at a set point for 6 months or so it is likely that the body will work to maintain that one.
    Not so. The body reacts to stimulus given to it. If you eat any calorie surplus, energy will be stored. Continue surplusing and the body will react FAST by adding weight. It DOESN'T work the same doing the opposite. It's EASY to put on weight, not so easy to give it up. And if you take the average person, it's likely that they will weigh more at 40 than they did at 20. But can they still lose weight and get close to where they were in their 20's? Yes. But it takes a conscious effort to achieve it and will take more work to sustain it versus what they did at that age.


    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png

  • DebSozo
    DebSozo Posts: 2,578 Member
    If you listen to your hunger signals and eat accordingly it generally has you eating at maintenance not deficit or surplus

    Exactly. It wants me to maintain.
  • DebSozo
    DebSozo Posts: 2,578 Member
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    ryry_ wrote: »
    My opinion on set point theory is all it does is create an artificial mental barrier about what you can acheive

    It does the opposite for me. I know that if only I can lose weight and keep it off for six months to a year that my body will accept the reset and work to maintain my new maintenance "set point".

    My opinion is that people who say that they "gained all the weight back and then some" have not put the set point method to use in their favor. In other words, it is possible to "reset" your set point thankfully!

    ETA link:
    Break through set point
    http://www.bidmc.org/YourHealth/BIDMCInteractive/BreakThroughYourSetPoint/WeekOneTheScienceofSetPoint.aspx

    No people who gain all the weight back and more gained it because they were not eating at their maintenance not because they didn't establish a set point.

    Right. I mentioned that also. I think we are all playing with semantics. Did you read the article, BTW?

    http://www.bidmc.org/YourHealth/BIDMCInteractive/BreakThroughYourSetPoint/WeekOneTheScienceofSetPoint.aspx

    So basically you are saying the same thing as people who are saying that there is no set point. Your weight is established by your habits (exception:certain medical conditions) and how many calories you consume not a magical place that your body will stay at despite being at a deficit.

    No. That isn't what I'm saying. I'm saying that there is a set point --for ME. I'm conceding not to make a blanket statement because YMMV. I am also saying that the set point can go down by eating at a deficit, losing weight, and then working to establish a new set point. Once the weight maintenance "thermostat" is effectively at a set point for 6 months or so it is likely that the body will work to maintain that one.
    Not so. The body reacts to stimulus given to it. If you eat any calorie surplus, energy will be stored. Continue surplusing and the body will react FAST by adding weight. It DOESN'T work the same doing the opposite. It's EASY to put on weight, not so easy to give it up. And if you take the average person, it's likely that they will weigh more at 40 than they did at 20. But can they still lose weight and get close to where they were in their 20's? Yes. But it takes a conscious effort to achieve it and will take more work to sustain it versus what they did at that age.


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    Agreed.
  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,982 Member
    edited November 2016
    DebSozo wrote: »
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    nutmegoreo wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    nutmegoreo wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    Vailara wrote: »
    I can't speak for anybody else, but my own body has definitely seemed to have "set points" - a point at which I'll naturally maintain without consciously control diet or activity. The most obvious one was the healthy weight I was at for many years - I stayed within in a few pounds through various "lifestyle changes", through being highly active, being unwell and very inactive, and so on.

    Funnily enough, I had a similar thing happen at my heaviest - I maintained within a few pounds for a few years, without thinking about it.

    I do understand that some people are saying that they've never had a set point, and it has all been about how much conscious control they've had over eating and activity. So I think it may just be an individual thing.

    Not sure if set points actually *are* a thing (which I, for one, doubt) but if they exist, how can that set point fluctuate from - in your example - one at your lightest weight and another at your heaviest? Isn't a set point, by its very definition, *set?* <confused>

    For instance: My weight (let's pretend) is 148 and is stuck there for a long time. I would have to fight against the set point actively until I got down to, let's say, 139 pounds. I would have to work very hard against my body's natural tendency to want to go back to the original set point. It might take a while of actively fighting it to stay down. But after a time it will become a natural set point and will fight to stay there.

    Or maybe it just takes you a while to get used to eating the correct number of calories to maintain that new weight?

    You totally don't get what a set point is.

    Don't presume that your misinterpretation of my comment is representative of my lack of knowledge.

    You are claiming that your body is fighting against what you want it to have as a set point, until you have put in enough time maintaining that weight for it to become your new set point. What I'm saying is that during this time, while you are fighting to keep your body at that weight, you are making a concerted effort to keep to a specific calorie goal to maintain. After a while, you are subconsciously becoming accustomed to this caloric target and will become accustomed to eating that amount.

    I get what you are claiming a set point to be. I'm saying that there are subconscious factors at play. Finding a coloured egg doesn't prove the existence of the Easter bunny.

    So basically what Deb is claiming is a set point is like learning to ride a bike, or playing an instrument etc. At first it takes conscious effort to do and is hard and after a while it becomes second nature like breathing, provided you keep up with doing it.
    But that's a physical skill. Maintaining weight is more of a conscious effort of controlling your CICO and while it can become habitual, it needs to be adjusted if parameters in someone's life changes (IE hormonal changes, aging, stress incress, health issues). Playing an instrument is a skill that doesn't need to be adjusted much unless something impairs them (arthritis, loss of a finger, etc.)

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    How about driving a car? You get a new one and it handles differently and you need to get used to that until you could basically do it in your sleep.

    Here's a better analogy for "set point" method:

    You have a thermostat in your living room that you have set to 68 degrees Fahrenheit. The furnace kicks in when it drops below that set point. Now, you could turn on the furnace manually or turn it off to change the temperature to be what you want. But it is easier to have it set up on "auto" with the thermostat.
    That scenario would be a "set point", but the body HARDLY resembles that of a room that doesn't change. For instance leave the doors and windows open. Does the room stay at 68 degrees if it's 32 degrees outside and and they are open? Does a refrigerator stay at 40 degrees when the door is ajar?


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    That's why set points can be changed. Sigh.
    No. In the scenarios I gave, there would be no set point because the units would be running consistently. Don't believe me. Try it. Guarantee you food in the fridge won't be cold and the room won't hit 68 degree in that scenario. Even if you turned the thermostat up to 80 degrees.


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  • singingflutelady
    singingflutelady Posts: 8,736 Member
    DebSozo wrote: »
    If you listen to your hunger signals and eat accordingly it generally has you eating at maintenance not deficit or surplus

    Exactly. It wants me to maintain.

    But this happens at any weight. So how is this different from those saying your weight is determined by your habits?
  • DebSozo
    DebSozo Posts: 2,578 Member
    DebSozo wrote: »
    If you listen to your hunger signals and eat accordingly it generally has you eating at maintenance not deficit or surplus

    Exactly. It wants me to maintain.

    But this happens at any weight. So how is this different from those saying your weight is determined by your habits?

    This conversation is getting circular. It is BOTH. I'm not denying that habits are a factor.
  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,982 Member
    DebSozo wrote: »
    If you listen to your hunger signals and eat accordingly it generally has you eating at maintenance not deficit or surplus

    Exactly. It wants me to maintain.
    Lol. Again, your body reacts to stimuli. Feed it less you lose weight. Feed it more you gain. Feed it enough it maintains. It doesn't STAY THE SAME for the first two, so why are you stating that it will with this dumb "set point" theory?


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  • DebSozo
    DebSozo Posts: 2,578 Member
    edited November 2016
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    If you listen to your hunger signals and eat accordingly it generally has you eating at maintenance not deficit or surplus

    Exactly. It wants me to maintain.
    Lol. Again, your body reacts to stimuli. Feed it less you lose weight. Feed it more you gain. Feed it enough it maintains. It doesn't STAY THE SAME for the first two, so why are you stating that it will with this dumb "set point" theory?


    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
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    I understand the mechanics of weight loss and weight gain. I'm not saying CICO does not come into play. I'm only stating that establishing a set point can help maintain weight within a couple pounds up or down.

    Establishing a set point:
    http://www.bodybuilding.com/fun/mielke1.htm

  • DebSozo
    DebSozo Posts: 2,578 Member
    edited November 2016
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    DebSozo wrote: »
    If you listen to your hunger signals and eat accordingly it generally has you eating at maintenance not deficit or surplus

    Exactly. It wants me to maintain.
    Lol. Again, your body reacts to stimuli. Feed it less you lose weight. Feed it more you gain. Feed it enough it maintains. It doesn't STAY THE SAME for the first two, so why are you stating that it will with this dumb "set point" theory?


    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

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    I understand the mechanics of weight loss and weight gain. I'm not saying CICO does not come into play. I'm only stating that establishing a set point can help maintain weight within a couple pounds up or down.

    http://www.bodybuilding.com/fun/mielke1.htm
    No that would be establishing a HABIT. The habit of eating the right amount of calories keeps one's weight stable.


    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
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    Please read down in the article (paragraph #8) where it talks about when the body is at maintenance and is no longer going up or down more than a couple pounds, then a set point has been established.
  • DebSozo
    DebSozo Posts: 2,578 Member
    If you listen to your hunger signals and eat accordingly it generally has you eating at maintenance not deficit or surplus

    {{Bingo}}
  • Vailara
    Vailara Posts: 2,466 Member
    I'm just going to chime in because my personal (emphasis on the "personal", YMMV!) experience of "set point" was different and nothing to do with habits, or with conscious control of CICO.

    As I've mentioned I maintained the same healthy weight for many years through several lifestyle changes, including more and less active jobs, being in and out of relationship, living with different people, eating different diets (including vegan) and so on. I've got to say again, that there was no conscious control - obviously there was unconscious control going on, but it was very precise - through all those changes of diet and activity I stayed almost exactly the same weight. It can't be habit, because my habits kept changing.

    Obviously, if I'd eaten more or less at any given time, I'd have gained or lost - I'm not saying it overrides CICO. But I do think it's striking that weight control can sometimes be so precise without any conscious effort, any choosing of foods or calorie control, but just eating "normally". That's what I mean by a set point. There seems to be for some people, at some times, a strong unconcscious drive to maintain a particular weight.
  • DebSozo
    DebSozo Posts: 2,578 Member
    ^My body did it without me "trying" for 40+ years.