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Why do people deny CICO ?
Replies
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neanderthin wrote: »“It's the fact that some here deny that nutrition has anything to do with weight loss.”
Nutrition doesn’t have anything to do with weight loss. Maybe I’m wrong? Can you source that for me?
Where are the posts that say nutrition doesn’t matter for health, which is what I think you’re trying to say?
That's pretty funny, thanks. Cheers.
Sorry, not trying to be funny, there’s always a chance I could be wrong so keep that option open. Also, I’m trying to simplify for myself what you’re saying because it’s confusing to me but I think I understand now.
Hey, your story about weight gain while eating basically whole foods still falls within the purview of CICO. My weight gain was a similar story. Anyway, I do hope you find success losing weight, if that's why your here. Cheers0 -
neanderthin wrote: »neanderthin wrote: »“It's the fact that some here deny that nutrition has anything to do with weight loss.”
Nutrition doesn’t have anything to do with weight loss. Maybe I’m wrong? Can you source that for me?
Where are the posts that say nutrition doesn’t matter for health, which is what I think you’re trying to say?
That's pretty funny, thanks. Cheers.
Sorry, not trying to be funny, there’s always a chance I could be wrong so keep that option open. Also, I’m trying to simplify for myself what you’re saying because it’s confusing to me but I think I understand now.
Hey, your story about weight gain while eating basically whole foods still falls within the purview of CICO. My weight gain was a similar story. Anyway, I do hope you find success losing weight, if that's why your here. Cheers
Thanks so much 😊 I’m almost to goal weight now but I’ve had some trouble with diet breaks but I’ll get there. It’s been a long road but worth it. Also wishing you the best on your journey.0 -
Because people like easy. And it isn't always easy to measure/weigh, and log everything you eat until you develop the habit.2
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Opalescent_Topaz wrote: »Because people like easy. And it isn't always easy to measure/weigh, and log everything you eat until you develop the habit.
I think you should choose a method that is easiest for you
I did calorie counting and it was easy enough for me - admittedly I did it fairly loosely and didnt weigh/measure everything (eg all the bananas I eat are roughly same size so I didnt weigh each one)
My husband on the other hand lost weight purely by eating less and changing what he ate/drank - changed to no sugar versions of drinks, jellies etc and cut down on between meal snacking.
Both of us of course lost weight by CICO - ie taking in less calories than we were burning out - but used different methods to acheive that.
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Overall, yes, it will work. Calories in and out is all that matters when losing weight. Eating healthy however can increase the speed of weightloss, limit plateaus you may experience, help maintain muscle during weightloss, give more energy for workouts etc. Eating healthy helps accelerate fat loss. What most people want to lose isn't weight but fat percentage. You can weigh more but be shredded or weigh less but still have a high fat percentage for your weight (generally meaning your weaker than you look because you loss muscle along with the fat).1
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AyameShimitsu wrote: »Overall, yes, it will work. Calories in and out is all that matters when losing weight. Eating healthy however can increase the speed of weightloss, limit plateaus you may experience, help maintain muscle during weightloss, give more energy for workouts etc. Eating healthy helps accelerate fat loss. What most people want to lose isn't weight but fat percentage. You can weigh more but be shredded or weigh less but still have a high fat percentage for your weight (generally meaning your weaker than you look because you loss muscle along with the fat).
The types of foods you eat can increase satiety and help you stick with your deficit, but healthy foods do not burn more fat than 'unhealthy' foods. It is actually the foods that you don't eat - your deficit - that determines how much and how fast you lose weight.
Everything you say after that is true.6 -
AyameShimitsu wrote: »Overall, yes, it will work. Calories in and out is all that matters when losing weight. Eating healthy however can increase the speed of weightloss, limit plateaus you may experience, help maintain muscle during weightloss, give more energy for workouts etc. Eating healthy helps accelerate fat loss. What most people want to lose isn't weight but fat percentage. You can weigh more but be shredded or weigh less but still have a high fat percentage for your weight (generally meaning your weaker than you look because you loss muscle along with the fat).
The types of foods you eat can increase satiety and help you stick with your deficit, but healthy foods do not burn more fat than 'unhealthy' foods. It is actually the foods that you don't eat - your deficit - that determines how much and how fast you lose weight.
Everything you say after that is true.
In other words, if CI<CO, mass goes down, and if CI>CO, mass goes up. Calories in and calories out.
Deficit = fat loss; Surplus = fat gain. Calories in and calories out.
Yes two people the same height and same mass can have different amounts of lean mass and fat mass. They will each gain fat if in surplus and lose fat in deficit. Let's see..... calories in and out again.
I think I'm on to something.
How come nobody told me about this before....
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AyameShimitsu wrote: »Overall, yes, it will work. Calories in and out is all that matters when losing weight. Eating healthy however can increase the speed of weightloss, limit plateaus you may experience, help maintain muscle during weightloss, give more energy for workouts etc. Eating healthy helps accelerate fat loss. What most people want to lose isn't weight but fat percentage. You can weigh more but be shredded or weigh less but still have a high fat percentage for your weight (generally meaning your weaker than you look because you loss muscle along with the fat).
Some foods have a higher TEF.
Some foods are more sating. (Which ones? Somewhat individual.)
Better nutrition, sure: Maybe more energy, less loss of lean mass alongside fat loss.
Compliance with calorie goal can loom larger as a practical matter, though.
Not going to be shredded (or stronger) without strength-challenging exercise, though.
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I recently ran into a friend who looked like she’d lost weight.
I asked her “Have you lost weight?”
“Yes” she replied.
“How did you do it?” I asked. Silently hoping she was going to give me the scoop on the secret pill or app or macro ratio or miracle diet.
“I just ate less”. She replied.
That pretty much sums it up.
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I recently ran into a friend who looked like she’d lost weight.
I asked her “Have you lost weight?”
“Yes” she replied.
“How did you do it?” I asked. Silently hoping she was going to give me the scoop on the secret pill or app or macro ratio or miracle diet.
“I just ate less”. She replied.
That pretty much sums it up.
When asked how I lost weight, I answer that I finally figured out what caused me to get so fat in the first place. After getting control of that, losing weight (aka: CI-CO) has been effortless.
Statements like the one posted by @AyameShimitsu, "Calories in and out is all that matters when losing weight," are so incomplete that they are just wrong. I label them as being too simplistic because it is the same as saying, "eat less and exercise more." Straining to consume restricted amounts of the same old foods that caused obesity in the first place is prone to failure and leads to a lifetime of unhealthy yo-yo dieting with the added misfortune of being miserable and anxiety ridden for many.
Energy In <less> Energy Out is a simple mathematical formula that broadly describes a biological process with many complicated variables. Finding out the how and why causes of the in-balance for each of us individually is what really matters in making the changes needed to get the simple equation back into balance.
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I recently ran into a friend who looked like she’d lost weight.
I asked her “Have you lost weight?”
“Yes” she replied.
“How did you do it?” I asked. Silently hoping she was going to give me the scoop on the secret pill or app or macro ratio or miracle diet.
“I just ate less”. She replied.
That pretty much sums it up.
When asked how I lost weight, I answer that I finally figured out what caused me to get so fat in the first place. After getting control of that, losing weight (aka: CI-CO) has been effortless.
Statements like the one posted by @AyameShimitsu, "Calories in and out is all that matters when losing weight," are so incomplete that they are just wrong. I label them as being too simplistic because it is the same as saying, "eat less and exercise more." Straining to consume restricted amounts of the same old foods that caused obesity in the first place is prone to failure and leads to a lifetime of unhealthy yo-yo dieting with the added misfortune of being miserable and anxiety ridden for many.
Energy In <less> Energy Out is a simple mathematical formula that broadly describes a biological process with many complicated variables. Finding out the how and why causes of the in-balance for each of us individually is what really matters in making the changes needed to get the simple equation back into balance.
I DO know that when I competed, to get down to single digit body fat percentage, I could absolutely eat no junk.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
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Been in fitness for 35+ years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
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I DO know that when I competed, to get down to single digit body fat percentage, I could absolutely eat no junk.
Same! The Junk always lit up the reward center of my brain and lead to an overeat - which is exactly what the JUNK foods are designed to do, so therefore, the brain worked perfectly.
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A professor of nutrition wanted to prove that it is the total amount of calories that dictate weight loss. He lost weight eating junk food, but ran a calorie deficit.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vTi5ugF9Bdk1
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