So... Fruit will make me FAT?
Replies
-
Yes, It's the fruit. It has always been the fruit.
This is why I'm grateful I avoid fruit and eat McDonald's daily. Gotta take care of yourself, ya know?
We need to treat our bodies like the temples they are! Good for you!
Hey! I even had an NSV the other day! I woke up and craved ZERO fruit! I made a mad dash to McDonald's and had two Sausage McMuffins.0 -
I wouldn't say that the fruit is making you fat, however I did a trial and error to decide which fruits reacted with body and caused a gain or loss. I usually stay with the low glycemic fruits as I gained weight on the higher glycemic fruits. good luck0
-
So glad you posted this. Was just wondering about the sugar as well.0
-
I'm sure that's from the people who are scared to eat any carbs.
I have been eating a banana and a apple or peach or other type of fruit every day for the past month and I've lost almost 10#.
I did cut white flour noodles / rice /bread and potatoes from my diet and switched to whole wheat.0 -
I work with a doctor who says apples are equivalent to a snickers bar. *eye roll*0
-
I agree with most people on here. If you eat at a deficit, you will lose weight. And it's very hard to eat enough fruit to go over your deficit. Do you realize how much fruit you would have to eat to reach 2000 calories a day in fruit? You'd have to eat:
594 grapes
35 1/2 cups honeydew
19 cups mango
42 1/2 small oranges
24 1/2 cups pineapple
2,000 raspberries
520 medium strawberries
So it would be very hard to be able to eat 2000 calories of nothing but fruit.
http://www.fitsugar.com/Calories-Fresh-Fruit-85004600 -
Yes. But only if you eat this many fruit:
...... for lunch....... :laugh:0 -
Fruit is nutritious. As long as you eat within calories you won't gain weight.
Don't live on it. Just be sure to get protein and essential fats too.0 -
anything can make you fat if you're over on calories.0
-
Ignore the sugar counts on MFP. While calorie counts are important as long as you stay away from the refined sugars, you should be ok. Without going into detail about sucrose, fructose, and glucose, the simple rule of thumb is : naturally occuring sugars in fruits, veggies, or even honey are healthy sugars. Eat a balanced diet and you will be fine. My diet has been a little fruit heavy lately, but ive still dropped nearly 10lbs over the last week or so sticking with fruit, veggies, lean meats, low fat dairy and whole fiber.
One word of caution, fruit juice is healthy in moderation, ie 8 oz glass of OJ. But since juices don't fill you up, or keep you feeling full like actual fruit does, you can end up drinking away a lot of your calories on juice, where they might be better spent on actually fruit that is much more filling.0 -
I'll say it again....
Nobody ever got fat by eating too many fruits and vegetables.0 -
I was told yesterday that eating fruit will make me fat.
only if it's bananas.
oh no, i had one with breakfast!!! :laugh:0 -
I agree with what everyone else is saying here. Anything in excess will cause weight gain. I also wanna add that the fibers in fruit help your blood sugar even out and the fiber in fruit is what is good for you. That is why you should always eat your fruit and not drink it. I used to make smoothies of just fruit until I learned this now if I have a smoothie (which is a rare occasion) I have mostly veggies and add some fruits in for sweetness. Even a machine like a vitamix that doesn't remove the fiber but blends it up with the fruit compromises how the fiber is supposed to work because it pretty much pulverizes it.
I am always over in my sugar too because of fruit and greek yogurt. Just maintain your calorie goal day to day and you should be fine.0 -
Yes, It's the fruit. It has always been the fruit.
Villainy!0 -
You'd have to eat A LOT of fruit...so yes it's possible, I suppose.
I was told that a long time ago - "cut back on your fruit! It's full of sugar!" But really? Come on. Ten pieces of fruit is better than ten pieces of cake... :]0 -
Prolonged caloric surpluses cause fat accumulation. Fruit, within a hypocaloric diet, does not.
So if you're eating a caloric surplus and getting fatter, it's the diet in its entirety causing the fat gain rather than some evil singular food item. I would stop listening to your carbophobic friend.
Listen to the man with the pretty abs. He knows what he's talking about.
LOL! I know that's right0 -
I eat fruit everyday. People are afraid of sugar. Fruit is fine. Choose low glycemic over high glycemic but enjoy your fruit.0
-
I created a "Fruit, Vegetables, and Nuts" food category to separate the stats from these items. I'm not going to sweat going over my sugar because I ate some fresh fruit! It would be nice if MFP had a category to designate if a food's sugar was natural or refined...0
-
Please ignore 90% of the dieting advice you get out in the "real world" so far within a month, I was told, not to eat more than 250 calories in a meal (including dinner!) not to eat fruit, not to drink milk (because milk is bad for you pssh) not to eat yogurt, no carbs, to eat only 800 calories per day, to do detoxes with fruit water (but wait fruit is bad!) LOL so yes, just ignore them please You can eat what ever you want as long as it fits into your calorie budget... especially fruit, even clean diets eat fruit Its healthy, and an essential part of the food pyramid Just make sure you log it just like everything else0
-
The nutso sitting next to me at work is constantly on about fructose and glucose and "fat burning mode" and how one slice of canteloupe is going to give me diabetes and sugar is white poison and carbs give you "belly fat"
Then he merrily mixes up a batch of miracle protein bro juice in a comically large shaker. Never mind the fillers and junk science that went into that garbage, it's definitely the apples that'll kill you.
I usually give him a "cool story bro" sometimes it shuts him up. Sometimes he'll find an obscure study in a 2002 issue of Men's Health that backs him up.
The difference is I don't need a half baked psuedoscientific article on a widely discredited study to know that he's a moron.0 -
Prolonged caloric surpluses cause fat accumulation. Fruit, within a hypocaloric diet, does not.
So if you're eating a caloric surplus and getting fatter, it's the diet in its entirety causing the fat gain rather than some evil singular food item. I would stop listening to your carbophobic friend.
Listen to the man with the pretty abs. He knows what he's talking about.0 -
Eating almost anything too much could make you fat. This is a dumb concept.0
-
BUMP... Because there is some good info in the responses :happy: and I sarcasm! :laugh:0
-
Absolutely not!
The sugars in this program clumps processed sugars as well as natural sugar. Which contrary to some beliefs, they are not the same in my opinion. If that were so, vegetarians and vegans would have serious weight problems. Even the Us Dept of Health suggests that your biggest portions of what you eat should be fruits and veggies. I've been watching documentaries about food, doing research and getting educated on nutrituion, and they have made me rethink everything about food.
So, keep eating those fruits and veggies, your doing fine.0 -
I'm struggling with this myself because I'm trying to eat mostly fruits and vegetables and if I have to eliminate fruit, then that seriously restricts my options. I read a book recently by Jorge Cruse, who talks a lot about sugar -- I'd explain his theory, but I don't fully understand it myself. He recommends limiting sugar to 25 grams per day (100 calories). This isn't very much and it would effectively eliminate almost all fruit. I think the key is whether you have issues with insulin - if you have belly fat, then assume that you do. Fruit has sugar (fructose), but it also has fiber, which slows down the absorption. If you eat it with protein & fat, it further slows down the rate of absorption and prevents your blood sugar from spiking -- which is the goal. If your blood sugar spikes, you secrete insulin, which makes you hungry and causes you to store fat. I have a smoothie in the morning with coconut milk (fat), protein powder and a cup of fruit. I used to do two cups. I also try to stick to berries. If you like apples, you might try having a small apple with a fat/protein source or only eating half the apple. I hope this helps. I don't adopt any of the theories as gospel -- everything works for somebody, but not everything works for everybody. (Don't discredit me because of the 0 pounds weight loss -- the original weight was several years ago and I just got back on this website -- I lost about 4 pounds last week.)0
-
Absolutely not!
The sugars in this program clumps processed sugars as well as natural sugar. Which contrary to some beliefs, they are not the same in my opinion. If that were so, vegetarians and vegans would have serious weight problems. Even the Us Dept of Health suggests that your biggest portions of what you eat should be fruits and veggies. I've been watching documentaries about food, doing research and getting educated on nutrituion, and they have made me rethink everything about food.
So, keep eating those fruits and veggies, your doing fine.
Cognitive dissonance0 -
YES IT WILL.
I was at my goal weight (128 lbs) on Weight Watchers - not recommended; it's like MFP, but not as good and it costs money - when they changed their programme to encourage members to eat more fruit . . . and, although I stayed on program, I ballooned up to 142 lbs!
Fruit is good. Eat it. It also has calories. Remember that.0 -
If you eat too much of anything it can affect weight gain.
This.
There's nuance and hormones and biochemistry to consider. But boil it all down, and the above is true.0 -
YES IT WILL.
I was at my goal weight (128 lbs) on Weight Watchers - not recommended; it's like MFP, but not as good and it costs money - when they changed their programme to encourage members to eat more fruit . . . and, although I stayed on program, I ballooned up to 142 lbs!
Fruit is good. Eat it. It also has calories. Remember that.
Because that is the only way you could possibly blame fruit on its own for your weight gain.
But, yes, it has calories and WW making it "free" was a stupid move.0 -
If it puts you over your TDEE, yes.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 426 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions