Low Cal or Low Carb????
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meganjcallaghan wrote: »technically low carb is low calorie..if you cut out calorie dense foods and eat less of them then you are doing low calorie…
personally, I would just eat low calorie and stay within your carb macro …carbs are not the devil….
whaa? low carb isn't the same as low calorie. you could eat meats and fats all day er'day and quite quickly end up over your calorie goal.
I personally couldn't or wouldn't want to do low carb and certainly don't think it's necessary to lose weight...but one of the reasons low carb does work is that a lot of calorie laden foods are eliminated from the diet. Yes, it's possible to make up for that with fat, etc...but most people don't...this is why so many people have great success with low carb diets without having to count calories.
Personally, I did calorie counting because it was ultimately a better teacher in RE to learning about what my body needs from an energy standpoint. Most people who low carb put weight back on in large part because they never really learn about energy needs and energy balance which are necessary for maintaining weight.
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I personally found myself feeling very deprived and hungry on low carb (and sick of eating the same foods over and over). I find it easier to do low calorie.0
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I've been doing low carb for 2 months now and I haven't seen any real benefits to it yet. For 2 weeks I did <20g of carbs and I was miserable. Not hungry, but horrible depression and confusion, irritability and just felt awful. Yeah, yeah, I know "keto flu, you'll get over it",,,, no, I didn't. It was awful and I can't live like that. So for the past month and a half, I have kept my carbs at between 50 and 100g a day which is the so-called "sweet spot" for weight loss. Well, it's not working for me. I've been eating at a substantial calorie deficit. I gave up sugar and soda, most processed foods, everything white, all junk foods and most fruits. I drink two liters of water a day. One cup of coffee a day. I measure, I track. At almost 300 lbs, you would think that changing to this kind of lifestyle would warrant a change, well it hasn't. I'm not convinced that "low-carb" is effective at all. I'm changing today, adding in more calories from healthy sources and also adding more complex carbs. You have to find what works for you. It's like an ongoing experiment to see what works for your body. Best of luck
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ThePhoenixIsRising wrote: »Sam_I_Am77 wrote: »Low carb is not low calorie. First of all 1 gram of fat represents 9 calories while 1 gram of carbohydrate represents 4 calories. So, replacing carbs with fat is not low calorie and you can easily overshoot your calorie goals while doing low-carb. Remember, you put on extra calories by eating in a surplus of what your body requires to function based on your activity level. If you're going to do low-carb, that's fine, but understand what your calorie requirements are for you to lose weight. Also, don't just shoot for 1200 like some sheep do because 1200 is likely far too low for most women. You want to lose weight on as many calories possible for successful long-term weight management.
Carbs aren't this horrible thing either, people can lose weight with carbohydrates.
No, no its not. WHY DO YOU THINK LOW CARB WORKS? Because you feel full, causing you to eat less and then stay under your calorie allowance. That's all it is OP. That is why I prefer low carb over low calorie.
I can easily over eat on fat bombs, I love fried chicken skin, and heavy cream in all my soups was heavenly! The cals build fast!
Definitely. I've never really understood the people that go around eating fat bombs and drinking cream. I read a post the other day where a guy was drinking 8 oz of heavy cream per day and couldn't understand why he wasn't seeing weight loss.
If I only get a measly 2000 calories/day, I'm not going to drink them (unless it's alcoholic) or use them on many rich and unfilling foods. But everyone's a bit different when it comes to appetite.0 -
No, no its not. WHY DO YOU THINK LOW CARB WORKS? Because you feel full, causing you to eat less and then stay under your calorie allowance. That's all it is OP. That is why I prefer low carb over low calorie.
Honestly, low carb works for a couple reasons.
1. You have people that are use to eating like *kitten* and doing nothing, to following a plan with some good strucuture.
2. It forces people to cut out the crap like sugar sodas, candy, chips, ice cream, fast food, pizzas, <insert food type here>, etc, etc.
3. Some people don't handle carbs well and feel better on a low-carb diet, so they stick to it then.
4. People that understand basic nutrition use it to manipulate their diet to achieve certain body composition goals.
If you require eating 1500 calories, for example, for maintenance and if you consistently eat over that, even if the calories come strictly from Fat and Protein it doesn't matter. Surplus calories will result in weight loss, period. Not everybody feels satiated while on a low-carb diet.
Low-carb is a fine way to go if you can manage it properly; I'm not saying that there's anything wrong with it. It's just typically very difficult to do for an extended period of time.0 -
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Even if you do low carb you will still be required to maintain a caloric deficit. I would START by figuring out a reasonable caloric intake, and from there you can make adjustments to macronutrients to suit your preferences/satiety.
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chriscrosse wrote: »I find that minimizing refined carbs (most grains, breads, pasta, crackers…) means fewer cravings and more calorie room for protein. I have read that the refined carbs spike blood sugar making you feel more hungry etc. It is easier to maintain a calorie deficit without trying to find room for the white stuff. Plus it retrains your brain and palate to be happier with less sweet stuff. South beach phase one meals are great for diving into weight loss because they incorporate a lot of food choices and good carbs like beans and veg. There's no fruit during this phase but all food is eventually phased back in so you can eat what you choose in moderation. I have tried everything and this is what worked for me. I maintained a 40# weight loss for 8 years and got off track and now I'm back at it. Good luck!
i eat all the carbs and have zero issues with weight loss..so I am going with a no on this one...0 -
I've done low carb in the past and had great success with it until i kept regaining the weight back after going back to normal eating...the last time i tried low carb i didn't lose a pound... I've been on MFP for almost 2 months and I'm just limiting everything I eat, Calories, Fat, Carbs, Sugar, sodium & Protein and I'm down just about 17lbs now...Everyone is different ..for me balance is key, not one or the other0
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1) Teeth capable of decently chewing meat
2) Digestive tracts capable of processing meat
3) Tools to enable a reliable consumption of meat
(among others)
Firstly, know that hominids to have evolved up to 2.4 million years ago, with anatomically modern humans estimated to have evolved up to 200,000 years ago, but we can reasonably go back 4 million years, and up to 7 million if you really want to stretch (that point is less reasonable for our purposes, however).
Onward...
http://www.cast.uark.edu/local/icaes/conferences/wburg/posters/pungar/satalk.htm
http://www.manticmoo.com/articles/jeff/scholarly/an-evolving-human-dentition.php
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/research/directory/teeth_hillson
(Humans would not have been able to reliably chew meat until relatively recently.)
http://nature.berkeley.edu/miltonlab/pdfs/meateating.pdf (ignore the hypothesis; the discussion of the gut is the focus here)
http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/guest-blog/2012/07/23/human-ancestors-were-nearly-all-vegetarians/
(Human guts did not evolve to adequately process meat until relatively recently.)
I have to go now, so I can't give you papers about tools, but you can look this stuff up yourself. The main point is that meat-eating does not appear to have been absolutely common until around 200,000 years ago.0 -
The general ignorance about research into human evolution is disheatening. We don't know everything, but we're not as clueless as so many folks seem to think we are.
Either way, there is no research to indicate that 'human' diets even possibly could have significantly comprised meat for even half our history, let alone most of it, so it wouldn't change my claim that we consumed high-carb diets for most of our history.0 -
Sam_I_Am77 wrote: »No, no its not. WHY DO YOU THINK LOW CARB WORKS? Because you feel full, causing you to eat less and then stay under your calorie allowance. That's all it is OP. That is why I prefer low carb over low calorie.
Honestly, low carb works for a couple reasons.
.
2. It forces people to cut out the crap like sugar sodas, candy, chips, ice cream, fast food, pizzas, <insert food type here>, etc, etc.
Only issue is that they tend to go *too* low carb and also significantly decrease fruit and vegetable - and plants in general consumption, which are energy-dense foods. We get our energy primarily from carbs, which are primarily plants. That's why a low-carb diet results in feeling like complete s--- and isn't sustainable for most.
As a general rule, you shouldn't reduce any macronutrient below 20% of your general intake. Certain populations, particularly those adapted to super-cold climates, are unusually efficient at metabolizing lipids, and some, such as those whose ancestors maintained mostly herbivorous diets, are unusually bad at breaking down animal proteins, so their requirements will differ, but generally anywhere between 40% to 60% carbs is best, depending on population-wide NEAT levels.0 -
why don't you just eat at a caloric deficit?0
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I've started what I'm calling Low-ish carb. Limiting the refined carbs to 1-2 servings/day. Trying to stay under 90 grams of carbs. Figure the days I exercise I'll throw in an extra serving. Low-ish carb has REALLY helped me in keeping my calories below goal which I have been struggling with. Definitely less hungry too.0
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Barring any medical conditions, I would do low calorie. If you have trouble feeling full with your deficit, lower your carbs and up your fats and proteins. It's all about finding something that will be sustainable for you. No matter what you do, if you don't make it a lifestyle and go back to your old eating habits, you will most likely gain back any loss.0
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1) Teeth capable of decently chewing meat
2) Digestive tracts capable of processing meat
3) Tools to enable a reliable consumption of meat
(among others)
Firstly, know that hominids to have evolved up to 2.4 million years ago, with anatomically modern humans estimated to have evolved up to 200,000 years ago, but we can reasonably go back 4 million years, and up to 7 million if you really want to stretch (that point is less reasonable for our purposes, however).
Onward...
http://www.cast.uark.edu/local/icaes/conferences/wburg/posters/pungar/satalk.htm
http://www.manticmoo.com/articles/jeff/scholarly/an-evolving-human-dentition.php
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/research/directory/teeth_hillson
(Humans would not have been able to reliably chew meat until relatively recently.)
http://nature.berkeley.edu/miltonlab/pdfs/meateating.pdf (ignore the hypothesis; the discussion of the gut is the focus here)
http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/guest-blog/2012/07/23/human-ancestors-were-nearly-all-vegetarians/
(Human guts did not evolve to adequately process meat until relatively recently.)
I have to go now, so I can't give you papers about tools, but you can look this stuff up yourself. The main point is that meat-eating does not appear to have been absolutely common until around 200,000 years ago.
Your argument is 100% dependent on humans having evolved from apes. Not a stich of actual scientific evidence exists for cross species evolution. Sorry. But this does not strengthen your argument that humans were not originally meat eaters. I didn't go on to read the other links, but guess it's an evolutionary argument too?
I know, don't mean to open a can of worms, but the fact remains, humans were originally meat eaters (any recieps for cave man cookies or cakes? Nope). The Old Testament talks a good deal about meat eating too.
That said, most healthy people can lose weight on a calorie deficit alone. Low carb is one way to lose weight, and it works best for me. But it's not for everyone. Most Americans can't/won't give up their processed carbs. If you can lose and eat your cake too, why not?
I personally lost 120lbs with LC 11 years ago and have maintained with a range of carbs in my diet. I've recently gone back to LC to lose 10 more lbs. I was eating at a 25% deficit with regular exercise (mostly weight training) for 4 months with no loss. I know my body does best on LC. There is no "one size fits all" approach to fitness. Find what works for YOU and what you can stick to.0
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