What have you learned are myths, since joining MyFitnessPal?
Replies
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Let's see..
Breakfast isn't necessary, your metabolism doesn't "speed up" or "slow down" depending on the times you eat or how frequently, fasting for short period is actually beneficial, a calorie is a calorie, regardless of where it's from, "starvation mode" is mostly bull****..
I'm sure there's more, but that's the most prominent few.0 -
That women shouldn't lift weights because it will make them bulky. That Mc Donalds, Taco Bell, (insert fast food corporation here) made me fat.0
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That (sugar, fat, sodium, diet soda, <insert your pick here>), is THE cause of (weight gain, failure to lose weight, osteoporosis, general poor health <insert your pick here>).0
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Cardio machines overestimate! I did not burn 1200 calories in 60 minutes, it's more like 400. lol0
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everything everyone has said is a myth to someone else. I spent so much time listening and taking advice from others, that I gained weight based on the advice. I stopped...got angry...took stock in what was happening and asked myself...what if this advice is wrong for me? And it was. I have learned that things that work and are right for some people's bodies may not be necessary right for mine, and that's okay.0
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You must give up "unhealthy" foods if you want to lose weight.
Women shouldn't lift weights or they'll look like The Hulk.
People generally understand sarcasm.0 -
You can lose weight while eating junk food. While there are more nutritious options, a calorie is just a calorie. Really.
This has made losing weight a total breeze. I always stupidly struggled to eat "healthy" diet food when I didn't need to.0 -
"carbs are bad"
"starvation mode"0 -
If you gain weight it's water if you lose weight it's 100% fat.0
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that I can lose weight by keeping the nasty sweet stuff, the fast food crud in my diet. that keeping it out will cause me to go into overdrive and binge like crazy.
Lifestyle change is more than weight loss it is about changes to the diet {keeping the fast food and sugar crud out} so my buddy and me don't come down with diabetes, clogged arteries, stroke, and heart disease.0 -
when i first got on MFP, I felt i was in the Twilight Zone, that a website promoting fitness had people promoting junk food. That was very hard for me to wrap my little head around. I get it now. But it took me awhile to get it.0
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Mentioned that my walking 2 hrs/day 5 times/wk is too much. It only equates to 7.5 miles. Back in time I was cycling appx. 200 mi/wk. Makes no sense to me, but that's cool.0
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I have learned that for most topics if somebody throws out a question you will find people who passionately believe the exact opposite of each other and will debate it endlessly.
I have learned in most longer threads there has to be at least one person who feels the need to be a jerk just for the sake of being a jerk and they're best ignored. If you engage that takes over the topic and then you never really do get to see advice from people who want to offer you their wisdom.
I have learned that the majority of the people accused of being "bullies" actually know their stuff so you should listen to them. The reason why they're so direct is that they've answered that same question 600,000 times and 99/100 the OP doesn't actually want the answer they're giving. Just yesterday I read a thread where the OP got it and changed her mind. That didn't stop 100 other people from trying to still convince her she was wrong because they couldn't be bothered to read all the posts to see her response. (Side note: would be nice if the OP could edit their original post at any time so they could add on additional comments there in response to all the replies.)
I have learned there is no one right answer that fits everybody. What may be "myths" to other people are things that I do need to follow in order for me to lose weight at my age and at my fitness level. Conversely there are probably things that work for me that wouldn't for somebody else. You read the advice, you hopefully use some common sense, and then you see what works for you.0 -
What I have learned is a myth is that I can eat the healthiest food (generally agreed upon by most people), in the correct volume generally agreed upon by most people, at the right time of day, at the right frequency, with the right spices/supplements, in combination with vitamins etc, at a calorie deficit level, a calorie maintenance level, a calorie surplus level......all this in many permutations, and I won't lose an ounce of weight without constant exercise and hydration. It is exhaustively complex to me. And it is damn hard, and I hate the day I tried my first chocolate eclaire.0
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i learned that not everybody understands sarcasm.
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You can't speed up or slow down your own metabolism except by gaining or losing muscle or fat: you can't 'damage' your metabolism by dieting.
Your Metabolism is determined by how energy expensive it is to pump blood around your body, run the blood cleaning filters and the gut and the intestine and respiration.
You cannot change this. Of course at very low weights essential services will shut down and heart muscle will be used to fuel the body, leading to death by organ failure - but ultimately you cannot "Slow" your metabolism. It's just the rent you pay on your size body.0 -
I don't have to be hungry all the time to lose weight.0
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Hi all. I find this site and many of its posters to be very informative.
Since joining MyFitnessPal, I've come to learn that a lot of the things I've been taught about nutrition and exercise (Since Elementary School.) have been false.
For me, I would say the two huge items have been "You gain weight if you eat after 6:00," and "Muscle weighs more than fat."
What have you learned since joining MyFitnessPal.
Hmmm. Maybe I haven't learned anything.
I must admit, I still currently held the notion that a given quantity of muscle (mass) weighed more than a given quantity of fat (mass). Is that incorrect?
Now, I'm assuming that you aren't referring to whether a given weight of muscle weighs more than the same weight of fat (e.g. 1lb of muscle weighs more than1lb of fat), right?
I mean no one would think that, correct?
People like to be pedantic on this topic. When someone says "muscle weighs more than fat", we all know that they really mean "muscle is denser than fat", as you correctly identified, but for some reason, people love to jump on the semantics of this. It does get thrown around a lot when someone is supposedly eating at a deficit as a reason why they aren't losing weight, which is usually not the case (aside from small newbie gains, you can't gain muscle at a deficit).
You CAN gain muscle at a deficit. What I think you mean is that you can't gain weight at a deficit (unless it's water).
And muscle does weigh more than fat (don't know about pedantic - it's all semantics to me )
But what will I have left without my semantics?!?!?!?!?!
Muscle doesn't weigh more than fat :flowerforyou:
I found that people use :flowerforyou: in a very passive aggressive manner, and I love it.0 -
Almost... but it's not the 'weight' you're finding... you weigh equal amounts of weights and measure the volume in order to find the DENSITY of a substance.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness industry for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
Screw *most of everything people say on the boards ( there are a lot of know it all's in here), do your own research and just "do what works for you"!
There's lots to learn from people on here who are "in the know". You just have to find the right ones who don't just spout a bunch of BS.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness industry for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
That's kind of an insult to the intelligence of the people on this site. People DO know how to research, and there IS a lot of false information on here from people who think their way of losing weight is the ONLY way. It's very aggravating.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness industry for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
Edit: I need a break from the stupid0
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Myth 1: strength training will significantly increase your metabolic you are burning more calories over a 24 hour period, compared to 30 minute steady state cardio. The operative myth word here being significantly .
Myth 2: If you use bodyweight exercises to gain strength you will eventually get to a plateau where you will have to start using weights to continue gaining strength.
Myth 3: you need 1g protein per 1lb lean mass to maintain muscle mass.
Myth 3: Yoga (and Pilates for that matter) does nothing really for strength or cardio; it's more to do with s-t-r-e-t-c-h-i-n-g.
sits back in Lotus position to watch the fun (I take it this thread is meant to have a little bit of fun; no?).
:flowerforyou: <
passive/aggressive.0 -
That women are in love with the word 'toning'
LOL, some of us (myself included) hate that word.
Hee hee! I LOVE that word - and I believe it exists! Look how toned I am! <sarcasm>0 -
Water is a good example. Take a cup of water and measure it's density. Freeze it and the density will reduce. But the volume of water is still the same.
Yeah, not quite... water is one of the few substances which expands, ie increases its volume on changing state from liquid to solid. The density DOES decrease but only because the volume of the water has INCREASED (inversely proportional relationship). If you've ever put a plastic bottle of water in the freezer and had it burst - this is because the volume of the water has increased.
That's why in the winter you have to ensure the temp of your house doesn't drop below freezing - the water in the radiators and the heating system expands on freezing and can burst the pipes.
It's something to do why the rearrangement of the molecules taking up more space in their crystalised form. I think.
Hope that's cleared it up, sorry if it sounded confusing! :flowerforyou:0 -
I've learned there is no one right solution that fits everyone. No-one here is an expert in everything!
You have to experiment and find out what works for your own body.
It's been good to hear evidence from experiments people have done.0 -
I have been following this thread and it has exhausted me lol.
Im new to weight loss and I have misunderstood alot of things.
So as long as I take in less calories than I burn I will lose weight? Regardless of what I eat and when I eat?
Also is starvation mode a myth?0 -
Hi all. I find this site and many of its posters to be very informative.
Since joining MyFitnessPal, I've come to learn that a lot of the things I've been taught about nutrition and exercise (Since Elementary School.) have been false.
For me, I would say the two huge items have been "You gain weight if you eat after 6:00," and "Muscle weighs more than fat."
What have you learned since joining MyFitnessPal.
I have learned that apparently cardio is the devil incarnate, lifting heavy is the only way to go and running will eat all my muscles up.
Fortunately, I realize that the same people don't know what they are talking about and I learned how to laugh at them behind my computer screen.0 -
that everyone is different and there is no cookie cutter method for success, but many people will adamantly try to pigeon hole you into their way or you are seen as doing it "wrong".
Cenafan, on a sidenote, where did you get your ticker from? Really good idea those little piccies!!0 -
I've learned that 99% of MFP users who have lost loads of weight now believe they know it all and are the fitness guru's of the www.0
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I have been following this thread and it has exhausted me lol.
Im new to weight loss and I have misunderstood alot of things.
So as long as I take in less calories than I burn I will lose weight? Regardless of what I eat and when I eat?
Also is starvation mode a myth?
You'll get various answers about both of those questions.0
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