How to be ok with it all?
Replies
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0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »I get that this all gets tedious; I’ve been on this site logging for over 600 days, and sometimes there are things I’d rather be doing with those 10-15 minutes a day it takes to log my food and exercise. But look at it from this big picture perspective – our bodies seek fattening food and store fat because our prehistoric selves went most of their lives without knowing where and when their next meal would come from. Imagine scratching out your existence day in and day out, scavenging for food, just a bad luck incident or two away from starving to death or being weakened by hunger to the point where you would get killed by predators, either animals or humans. Now fast forward thousands of years, and appreciate the nature of your burden – you are surrounded by such an overabundance of food resources that you actually have to force yourself to limit how much you eat!
Appreciate where we are in terms of human development, eat one of those delicious cakes (but not the entire box), log it, and enjoy the rest of your day as a contemporary, civilized human being
Do you really think that it would make any difference if our "prehistoric selves" had had an abundance of food? There is no evidence to support such a notion.
I’m a little taken aback that you don’t know the basic evolutionary principles behind these types of biological characteristics.
We don't know much about our "prehistoric selves" other than finding a few old bones. Everything else is pretty much speculation, and we certainly don't know what would have happened if our "prehistoric selves" had had an abundance of food. Perhaps they all would've gotten fat and died of heart failure.
We don't have to go back in time to learn about our prehistoric selves. I've worked in international development for 20 years. Look at some of the global indicators for malnutrition in the poorest communities worldwide -- there's all the evidence you need.
So we're fat because children in Africa are starving?
*sigh* No. I don't understand why you say we don't have evidence about how humans lived in prehistory when there are many living examples today of people living exactly the way we lived during the Stone Age.
I don't have a problem with that, but the original claim was that prehistoric man was somehow different from what we are today, but because they couldn't find enough food, they evolved into a being that stores more fat than is required. There is not evidence to support the claim that they didn't already have the ability to store fact and certainly no evidence to claim that if they were overfed that they would lose the ability to store fat.0 -
melaniecheeks wrote: »Can you find a way to enjoy it? Feel a sense of satisfaction when you've completed a day's logging? Give yourself a high-five when you go to the gym (better style, find an activity that you like doing)
I love the positivity of this response... and I totally agree. You have to do like any addict would and take it one day at a time. I don't think ppl should be telling you to grow up, everyone has battles we know nothing about. I concur, working out... eating healthy... these things are hard for those of us who have not been in shape all our lives. Hang in there.. celebrate small goals and remind yourself of all the reasons you are gonna be happier when you lose the weight. eventually it becomes an annoying routine logging/gym/logging/gym/logging/gym... and eventually it makes you proud and happy and accomplished, WHAT DO YOU HAVE TO LOSE?
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I've had to accept that it sucks and it's going to be tough to stick with this. I've gone up and down a bit as I've had to get used to a new way of dealing with food and I've had days when I got frustrated and ate and didn't log it. One thing that's helped is the whole One Day at a Time approach. I'm just going to try and eat better today. And also trying to make friends with the emotional side of eating. If I'm frustrated and want chocolate, why am I frustrated? I'm trying to take that time to kind of hang out with the frustration and deal with it, rather than smothering it in Milky Way. So it's not just accepting that eating better and exercising is hard, but accepting that dealing with the emotions that make me want to eat can be hard. Don't know if that makes sense, but once I stopped waiting to 'feel like' eating better and just accepted that it would suck it got... not better, but more acceptable.0
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I want to add that when I first started eating healthy food, I did hate it. I missed the things I was accustomed to eating. I was jealous of people chowing down on cheeseburgers and pasta in white sauces, etc. Bitterly pissed.
I got over it. I don't believe it's an "I grew up" issue because I don't think people who eat junk are necessarily immature, but I did have a sort of "spoiled" side that liked eating junk. It threw little temper tantrums and I had to ignore it just like you ignore a spoiled child. It also calmed down and stopped throwing fits when I got used to eating better food, just like a spoiled child cuts the crap after being ignored for a while.
If you stick with it, it gets easier.0 -
TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »I get that this all gets tedious; I’ve been on this site logging for over 600 days, and sometimes there are things I’d rather be doing with those 10-15 minutes a day it takes to log my food and exercise. But look at it from this big picture perspective – our bodies seek fattening food and store fat because our prehistoric selves went most of their lives without knowing where and when their next meal would come from. Imagine scratching out your existence day in and day out, scavenging for food, just a bad luck incident or two away from starving to death or being weakened by hunger to the point where you would get killed by predators, either animals or humans. Now fast forward thousands of years, and appreciate the nature of your burden – you are surrounded by such an overabundance of food resources that you actually have to force yourself to limit how much you eat!
Appreciate where we are in terms of human development, eat one of those delicious cakes (but not the entire box), log it, and enjoy the rest of your day as a contemporary, civilized human being
Do you really think that it would make any difference if our "prehistoric selves" had had an abundance of food? There is no evidence to support such a notion.
I’m a little taken aback that you don’t know the basic evolutionary principles behind these types of biological characteristics.
We don't know much about our "prehistoric selves" other than finding a few old bones. Everything else is pretty much speculation, and we certainly don't know what would have happened if our "prehistoric selves" had had an abundance of food. Perhaps they all would've gotten fat and died of heart failure.
We don't have to go back in time to learn about our prehistoric selves. I've worked in international development for 20 years. Look at some of the global indicators for malnutrition in the poorest communities worldwide -- there's all the evidence you need.
So we're fat because children in Africa are starving?
*sigh* No. I don't understand why you say we don't have evidence about how humans lived in prehistory when there are many living examples today of people living exactly the way we lived during the Stone Age.
I don't have a problem with that, but the original claim was that prehistoric man was somehow different from what we are today, but because they couldn't find enough food, they evolved into a being that stores more fat than is required. There is not evidence to support the claim that they didn't already have the ability to store fact and certainly no evidence to claim that if they were overfed that they would lose the ability to store fat.
I don't think that's the argument. The idea is more like: prehistoric man lived under conditions where food was scarce, so being able to store fat efficiently aided in survival, and those with that ability were more likely to live and pass on their genes than those who did not tend to store fat well/deal well with conditions of scarcity.
In theory, if we spent a lot of time under conditions of surplus where tending to become obese led you to be less able to survive and pass on your genes, natural selection would select against those who seemed inclined to become obese IF the effect was to kill them off before they reproduced or made it less likely that their children would survive until adulthood (the latter being more likely in a primitive world with a problem with a surplus of calories plus inactivity).
What you stated sounds like Lamarckianism.0 -
TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »I get that this all gets tedious; I’ve been on this site logging for over 600 days, and sometimes there are things I’d rather be doing with those 10-15 minutes a day it takes to log my food and exercise. But look at it from this big picture perspective – our bodies seek fattening food and store fat because our prehistoric selves went most of their lives without knowing where and when their next meal would come from. Imagine scratching out your existence day in and day out, scavenging for food, just a bad luck incident or two away from starving to death or being weakened by hunger to the point where you would get killed by predators, either animals or humans. Now fast forward thousands of years, and appreciate the nature of your burden – you are surrounded by such an overabundance of food resources that you actually have to force yourself to limit how much you eat!
Appreciate where we are in terms of human development, eat one of those delicious cakes (but not the entire box), log it, and enjoy the rest of your day as a contemporary, civilized human being
Do you really think that it would make any difference if our "prehistoric selves" had had an abundance of food? There is no evidence to support such a notion.
I’m a little taken aback that you don’t know the basic evolutionary principles behind these types of biological characteristics.
We don't know much about our "prehistoric selves" other than finding a few old bones. Everything else is pretty much speculation, and we certainly don't know what would have happened if our "prehistoric selves" had had an abundance of food. Perhaps they all would've gotten fat and died of heart failure.
We don't have to go back in time to learn about our prehistoric selves. I've worked in international development for 20 years. Look at some of the global indicators for malnutrition in the poorest communities worldwide -- there's all the evidence you need.
So we're fat because children in Africa are starving?
*sigh* No. I don't understand why you say we don't have evidence about how humans lived in prehistory when there are many living examples today of people living exactly the way we lived during the Stone Age.
I don't have a problem with that, but the original claim was that prehistoric man was somehow different from what we are today, but because they couldn't find enough food, they evolved into a being that stores more fat than is required. There is not evidence to support the claim that they didn't already have the ability to store fact and certainly no evidence to claim that if they were overfed that they would lose the ability to store fat.
Sorry...came home from work, had dinner, got distracted, lost interest.0 -
life is not fair. You cant be a spoiled brat and eat whatever you want. Eat normally and not overeat is what you have to do. Yep, laziness and being a glutton. You get enough to eat, you just want more. I am in the same boat. Suck it up, eat the right amount of calories, accept it is this way for life. Overspend, go bankrupt. Overeat, get fat.0
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Just sucked it up because I realized that it works and I'd rather log my food than be overweight. I don't mind it anymore.0
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Change your attitude and you'll change you life.
Instead of "hating" having to control your eating be grateful that you have the ability to control it.
Begin by actively trying to see the positives and what you're grateful for and eventually they will come with ease = the attitude shift.0 -
I would like to eat anything and stay lean like my brothers but my body dosen't work like that and I don't want to be overweight so I have to put in the extra work, If I don't I'm a fat *kitten*.0
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I want to add that when I first started eating healthy food, I did hate it. I missed the things I was accustomed to eating. I was jealous of people chowing down on cheeseburgers and pasta in white sauces, etc. Bitterly pissed.
I got over it. I don't believe it's an "I grew up" issue because I don't think people who eat junk are necessarily immature, but I did have a sort of "spoiled" side that liked eating junk. It threw little temper tantrums and I had to ignore it just like you ignore a spoiled child. It also calmed down and stopped throwing fits when I got used to eating better food, just like a spoiled child cuts the crap after being ignored for a while.
If you stick with it, it gets easier.
If you stick with eating a variety of foods in moderation that fit your caloric requirements, it does get easier, it does work, and you live a much happier life without being bitterly pissed over someone else's cheeseburgers and pasta.
That seems to be a mature and effective approach to me.
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I get it. I totally agree with you. I hate weighing and measuring and tracking BUT until I got committed to doing this to the best of my ability I was never ever successful at weight loss. I have a long way to go and I am bouncing around between 25 to 30 lbs lost. I have to get on here everyday and put things down good and bad to keep moving forward.
Good luck to you0 -
It isn't going to work if you just get angry and have a negative attitude about it. I used to be pretty overweight... but I have lost 70+ pounds. At first, it was hard.... I tried everything. Pills, juice cleanses, Slim Fast, South Beach diet. None of those things really worked for me. What worked was making small changes. I would choose to skip out on fast food for a healthier option. I started going for walks (which eventually led to more intense workouts.) One thing I never did... log food.
+Perhaps logging food isn't your thing. It is supposed to be a tool to help you, but if it is overwhelming you, maybe you need to take smaller steps. You don't have to lose the weight by tomorrow... take some time to figure out what works for you. I promise this gets easier! Once you figure it out, you really do learn to adapt to your new lifestyle. Just make sure not to completely cut out the things you enjoy!0 -
rebeccag0604 wrote: »It isn't going to work if you just get angry and have a negative attitude about it.
I dunno about that. I feel pretty negatively about diet, cultural expectation, and a lot of the baggage surrounding diet and the female role in our society, but as long as I'm eating at a calorie deficit, the weight keeps coming off no matter how cranky about it I am.
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To answer OP.
Because if I don't do this for myself, no one else will.0 -
I sort of think of it like an alcoholic, or a Diabetic. In other words, no, it's not really fair that we can't just relate to that substance in a normal way. But too bad, life's not really fair. ( Understand, I'm not being harsh on you, this is how I've had to teach myself to think about it) You do what you need to do in order to get the results you desire, and sometimes it's really hard.0
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Hate our bodies? This chemistry of ours has contributed to human beings evolving over millions of years and becoming pretty amazing animals unlike any other. Instead of being angry, how about revel in how incredible that actually is and quit taking your inner monologue so seriously.0
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lemurcat12 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »I get that this all gets tedious; I’ve been on this site logging for over 600 days, and sometimes there are things I’d rather be doing with those 10-15 minutes a day it takes to log my food and exercise. But look at it from this big picture perspective – our bodies seek fattening food and store fat because our prehistoric selves went most of their lives without knowing where and when their next meal would come from. Imagine scratching out your existence day in and day out, scavenging for food, just a bad luck incident or two away from starving to death or being weakened by hunger to the point where you would get killed by predators, either animals or humans. Now fast forward thousands of years, and appreciate the nature of your burden – you are surrounded by such an overabundance of food resources that you actually have to force yourself to limit how much you eat!
Appreciate where we are in terms of human development, eat one of those delicious cakes (but not the entire box), log it, and enjoy the rest of your day as a contemporary, civilized human being
Do you really think that it would make any difference if our "prehistoric selves" had had an abundance of food? There is no evidence to support such a notion.
I’m a little taken aback that you don’t know the basic evolutionary principles behind these types of biological characteristics.
We don't know much about our "prehistoric selves" other than finding a few old bones. Everything else is pretty much speculation, and we certainly don't know what would have happened if our "prehistoric selves" had had an abundance of food. Perhaps they all would've gotten fat and died of heart failure.
We don't have to go back in time to learn about our prehistoric selves. I've worked in international development for 20 years. Look at some of the global indicators for malnutrition in the poorest communities worldwide -- there's all the evidence you need.
So we're fat because children in Africa are starving?
*sigh* No. I don't understand why you say we don't have evidence about how humans lived in prehistory when there are many living examples today of people living exactly the way we lived during the Stone Age.
I don't have a problem with that, but the original claim was that prehistoric man was somehow different from what we are today, but because they couldn't find enough food, they evolved into a being that stores more fat than is required. There is not evidence to support the claim that they didn't already have the ability to store fact and certainly no evidence to claim that if they were overfed that they would lose the ability to store fat.
I don't think that's the argument. The idea is more like: prehistoric man lived under conditions where food was scarce, so being able to store fat efficiently aided in survival, and those with that ability were more likely to live and pass on their genes than those who did not tend to store fat well/deal well with conditions of scarcity.
In theory, if we spent a lot of time under conditions of surplus where tending to become obese led you to be less able to survive and pass on your genes, natural selection would select against those who seemed inclined to become obese IF the effect was to kill them off before they reproduced or made it less likely that their children would survive until adulthood (the latter being more likely in a primitive world with a problem with a surplus of calories plus inactivity).
What you stated sounds like Lamarckianism.
My point is that we don't know what Stone Age man was like. He could've been just like us, for all we know. Actually, considering that the animals in store fat also, it is most likely that they were like us. The problem with thinking that natural selection would lead to less obesity is that obesity tends to get worse as people age, so the children of the obese are likely to survive anyway.0 -
Once I realized that losing weight was just counting calories and being at the correct deficit, it was actually kind of a relief to me. I am a "list maker" kind of person, I enjoy them and completing my diary for the day is just another list. One I will probably have to make for the rest of my life. Its better than being fat. Also, you dont have to live without any of your favorite foods! Just smaller amounts.
I love this. What a great way to look at losing weight; being at the correct deficit. I'll have to keep reminding myself of this.0 -
This is such a great question with SO MANY excellent responses.
I find it helpful to think of myself and much of my behaviour as simply a collection of habits.
Some good, some not so good, most I didn't choose or decide to make part of my life, they just sort of... happened.
And the great thing is that once I became aware of them, I now have a choice on which habits I like and which I'd like to change.
But first you have to figure out what those habits are and sort through them, like a bunch of stuff you have in the attic.
Make a mental 'keep' box and a 'needs attention' box.
Then pick one thing. An easy thing!
Like, at lunch I always order the bacon cheese burger from the diner on the corner.
Instead, order something else. It doesn't have to be lettuce with no dressing, just choose something a bit healthier.
And repeat.
It takes an average of 66 days of repetitions to form a new habit. Less if the habit is an easy change, more if it's something really hard.
So, if the change you decide to make is to order the grilled chicken burger for lunch, that might become automatic after just a couple of weeks.
If you're trying to train your brain to choose the dry lettuce instead, it might take over a year.
So choose wisely
The really awesome thing is that you CAN and WILL change. Which is amazing to me.
Slowly, deliberately, mindfully, you can create who you want to be.
The reason you're struggling and fighting against all this right now is that you're looking at ALL your habits at once and are being told 'everything you do must be changed'.
Well, no one can deal with a whole attic full of stuff at once.
But you CAN deal with ONE thing. Maybe two.
I find that I can handle about 2 'medium difficulty' changes at once- I usually pick one 'food' thing and one 'exercise' thing, like "I'm gonna walk to the whatever place instead of taking the car".
Repeat until it's automatic and you've left the house and didn't even think about the car keys.
Then pick the next thing.
The things you do right now all started out as something else. They're not 'who you are' they're just what you're used to right now.
And you know, you might find yourself in some pretty weird and unexpected situations down the road.
Like, I've had to come to terms with the fact that I now LOVE kale. I'm not proud of it, it's weird, but I friggin loooove the stuff. I...uhm, I get kale cravings. Ok, I've said it. There.
Somewhere down the road you might eat a cake and think 'ugh, I'm not sure I can finish this thing' then have a moment of 'what just happened and who just said that??!!!'0 -
In case anyone's interested in reading more about habits and how we change them, here're some links:
http://www.brainpickings.org/2014/01/02/how-long-it-takes-to-form-a-new-habit/
http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2012/09/25/william-james-on-habit/
http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2013/11/27/the-psychology-of-self-control/
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You're not being patient enough. I absolutely believe that you can live in that reality. Hundreds of thousands of people all over the world live in that reality. The difference is that they have made it their life and you (and me) are still "on a diet." We screwed up somewhere along the way and now we have to change the way we do things and change the way we think about things. But that can happen for us. It will take time. It's not going to happen immediately just because we want it to We will have to put in the effort and the time at reframing the way we think about food and resetting our body and our taste buds so it likes healthy foods. And we have create new habits for ourselves with exercise. But I absolutely believe you can live in that reality. It's why it's called a lifestyle change. We use that term as a way of saying we intend on keeping the weight off… but a true lifestyle change isn't that you keep doing the same things for the rest of your life… it happens when you just naturally choose to take a walk when you get stressed instead of watching TV with a tub of ice cream. When you naturally look for fruits or veggies to satisfy your midnight munchies. When you naturally stop eating at an appropriate calorie level because your body is satisfied.
That's how I make peace with it. I know that it's possible. I just have to get there. And it happens a little piece at a time.0 -
TimothyFish wrote: »lemurcat12 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »I get that this all gets tedious; I’ve been on this site logging for over 600 days, and sometimes there are things I’d rather be doing with those 10-15 minutes a day it takes to log my food and exercise. But look at it from this big picture perspective – our bodies seek fattening food and store fat because our prehistoric selves went most of their lives without knowing where and when their next meal would come from. Imagine scratching out your existence day in and day out, scavenging for food, just a bad luck incident or two away from starving to death or being weakened by hunger to the point where you would get killed by predators, either animals or humans. Now fast forward thousands of years, and appreciate the nature of your burden – you are surrounded by such an overabundance of food resources that you actually have to force yourself to limit how much you eat!
Appreciate where we are in terms of human development, eat one of those delicious cakes (but not the entire box), log it, and enjoy the rest of your day as a contemporary, civilized human being
Do you really think that it would make any difference if our "prehistoric selves" had had an abundance of food? There is no evidence to support such a notion.
I’m a little taken aback that you don’t know the basic evolutionary principles behind these types of biological characteristics.
We don't know much about our "prehistoric selves" other than finding a few old bones. Everything else is pretty much speculation, and we certainly don't know what would have happened if our "prehistoric selves" had had an abundance of food. Perhaps they all would've gotten fat and died of heart failure.
We don't have to go back in time to learn about our prehistoric selves. I've worked in international development for 20 years. Look at some of the global indicators for malnutrition in the poorest communities worldwide -- there's all the evidence you need.
So we're fat because children in Africa are starving?
*sigh* No. I don't understand why you say we don't have evidence about how humans lived in prehistory when there are many living examples today of people living exactly the way we lived during the Stone Age.
I don't have a problem with that, but the original claim was that prehistoric man was somehow different from what we are today, but because they couldn't find enough food, they evolved into a being that stores more fat than is required. There is not evidence to support the claim that they didn't already have the ability to store fact and certainly no evidence to claim that if they were overfed that they would lose the ability to store fat.
I don't think that's the argument. The idea is more like: prehistoric man lived under conditions where food was scarce, so being able to store fat efficiently aided in survival, and those with that ability were more likely to live and pass on their genes than those who did not tend to store fat well/deal well with conditions of scarcity.
In theory, if we spent a lot of time under conditions of surplus where tending to become obese led you to be less able to survive and pass on your genes, natural selection would select against those who seemed inclined to become obese IF the effect was to kill them off before they reproduced or made it less likely that their children would survive until adulthood (the latter being more likely in a primitive world with a problem with a surplus of calories plus inactivity).
What you stated sounds like Lamarckianism.
My point is that we don't know what Stone Age man was like. He could've been just like us, for all we know. Actually, considering that the animals in store fat also, it is most likely that they were like us. The problem with thinking that natural selection would lead to less obesity is that obesity tends to get worse as people age, so the children of the obese are likely to survive anyway.
Of course they were like us. They were humans too. Evolution doesn't change that fast. Humans 200,000 years ago and humans today have the same ability to store fat if we consume too many calories. The fact is, there are many people today who live much like humans lived 200,000 years ago and biologically they're no different than you and me. I don't know why you're even bothering to argue this point. It's ridiculous.0 -
0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »lemurcat12 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »I get that this all gets tedious; I’ve been on this site logging for over 600 days, and sometimes there are things I’d rather be doing with those 10-15 minutes a day it takes to log my food and exercise. But look at it from this big picture perspective – our bodies seek fattening food and store fat because our prehistoric selves went most of their lives without knowing where and when their next meal would come from. Imagine scratching out your existence day in and day out, scavenging for food, just a bad luck incident or two away from starving to death or being weakened by hunger to the point where you would get killed by predators, either animals or humans. Now fast forward thousands of years, and appreciate the nature of your burden – you are surrounded by such an overabundance of food resources that you actually have to force yourself to limit how much you eat!
Appreciate where we are in terms of human development, eat one of those delicious cakes (but not the entire box), log it, and enjoy the rest of your day as a contemporary, civilized human being
Do you really think that it would make any difference if our "prehistoric selves" had had an abundance of food? There is no evidence to support such a notion.
I’m a little taken aback that you don’t know the basic evolutionary principles behind these types of biological characteristics.
We don't know much about our "prehistoric selves" other than finding a few old bones. Everything else is pretty much speculation, and we certainly don't know what would have happened if our "prehistoric selves" had had an abundance of food. Perhaps they all would've gotten fat and died of heart failure.
We don't have to go back in time to learn about our prehistoric selves. I've worked in international development for 20 years. Look at some of the global indicators for malnutrition in the poorest communities worldwide -- there's all the evidence you need.
So we're fat because children in Africa are starving?
*sigh* No. I don't understand why you say we don't have evidence about how humans lived in prehistory when there are many living examples today of people living exactly the way we lived during the Stone Age.
I don't have a problem with that, but the original claim was that prehistoric man was somehow different from what we are today, but because they couldn't find enough food, they evolved into a being that stores more fat than is required. There is not evidence to support the claim that they didn't already have the ability to store fact and certainly no evidence to claim that if they were overfed that they would lose the ability to store fat.
I don't think that's the argument. The idea is more like: prehistoric man lived under conditions where food was scarce, so being able to store fat efficiently aided in survival, and those with that ability were more likely to live and pass on their genes than those who did not tend to store fat well/deal well with conditions of scarcity.
In theory, if we spent a lot of time under conditions of surplus where tending to become obese led you to be less able to survive and pass on your genes, natural selection would select against those who seemed inclined to become obese IF the effect was to kill them off before they reproduced or made it less likely that their children would survive until adulthood (the latter being more likely in a primitive world with a problem with a surplus of calories plus inactivity).
What you stated sounds like Lamarckianism.
My point is that we don't know what Stone Age man was like. He could've been just like us, for all we know. Actually, considering that the animals in store fat also, it is most likely that they were like us. The problem with thinking that natural selection would lead to less obesity is that obesity tends to get worse as people age, so the children of the obese are likely to survive anyway.
Of course they were like us. They were humans too. Evolution doesn't change that fast. Humans 200,000 years ago and humans today have the same ability to store fat if we consume too many calories. The fact is, there are many people today who live much like humans lived 200,000 years ago and biologically they're no different than you and me. I don't know why you're even bothering to argue this point. It's ridiculous.
Because someone else made the claim that we're fat because Stone Age man had to look for food. I wanted to point out that it doesn't make any sense.0 -
TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »lemurcat12 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »I get that this all gets tedious; I’ve been on this site logging for over 600 days, and sometimes there are things I’d rather be doing with those 10-15 minutes a day it takes to log my food and exercise. But look at it from this big picture perspective – our bodies seek fattening food and store fat because our prehistoric selves went most of their lives without knowing where and when their next meal would come from. Imagine scratching out your existence day in and day out, scavenging for food, just a bad luck incident or two away from starving to death or being weakened by hunger to the point where you would get killed by predators, either animals or humans. Now fast forward thousands of years, and appreciate the nature of your burden – you are surrounded by such an overabundance of food resources that you actually have to force yourself to limit how much you eat!
Appreciate where we are in terms of human development, eat one of those delicious cakes (but not the entire box), log it, and enjoy the rest of your day as a contemporary, civilized human being
Do you really think that it would make any difference if our "prehistoric selves" had had an abundance of food? There is no evidence to support such a notion.
I’m a little taken aback that you don’t know the basic evolutionary principles behind these types of biological characteristics.
We don't know much about our "prehistoric selves" other than finding a few old bones. Everything else is pretty much speculation, and we certainly don't know what would have happened if our "prehistoric selves" had had an abundance of food. Perhaps they all would've gotten fat and died of heart failure.
We don't have to go back in time to learn about our prehistoric selves. I've worked in international development for 20 years. Look at some of the global indicators for malnutrition in the poorest communities worldwide -- there's all the evidence you need.
So we're fat because children in Africa are starving?
*sigh* No. I don't understand why you say we don't have evidence about how humans lived in prehistory when there are many living examples today of people living exactly the way we lived during the Stone Age.
I don't have a problem with that, but the original claim was that prehistoric man was somehow different from what we are today, but because they couldn't find enough food, they evolved into a being that stores more fat than is required. There is not evidence to support the claim that they didn't already have the ability to store fact and certainly no evidence to claim that if they were overfed that they would lose the ability to store fat.
I don't think that's the argument. The idea is more like: prehistoric man lived under conditions where food was scarce, so being able to store fat efficiently aided in survival, and those with that ability were more likely to live and pass on their genes than those who did not tend to store fat well/deal well with conditions of scarcity.
In theory, if we spent a lot of time under conditions of surplus where tending to become obese led you to be less able to survive and pass on your genes, natural selection would select against those who seemed inclined to become obese IF the effect was to kill them off before they reproduced or made it less likely that their children would survive until adulthood (the latter being more likely in a primitive world with a problem with a surplus of calories plus inactivity).
What you stated sounds like Lamarckianism.
My point is that we don't know what Stone Age man was like. He could've been just like us, for all we know. Actually, considering that the animals in store fat also, it is most likely that they were like us. The problem with thinking that natural selection would lead to less obesity is that obesity tends to get worse as people age, so the children of the obese are likely to survive anyway.
Of course they were like us. They were humans too. Evolution doesn't change that fast. Humans 200,000 years ago and humans today have the same ability to store fat if we consume too many calories. The fact is, there are many people today who live much like humans lived 200,000 years ago and biologically they're no different than you and me. I don't know why you're even bothering to argue this point. It's ridiculous.
Because someone else made the claim that we're fat because Stone Age man had to look for food. I wanted to point out that it doesn't make any sense.
No one said that.
0 -
0somuchbetter0 wrote: »Of course they were like us. They were humans too. Evolution doesn't change that fast. Humans 200,000 years ago and humans today have the same ability to store fat if we consume too many calories. The fact is, there are many people today who live much like humans lived 200,000 years ago and biologically they're no different than you and me. I don't know why you're even bothering to argue this point. It's ridiculous.
No they were'nt humans. They were Neanderthals. Their DNA is 99.7% like our human DNA. By way of comparison, Chimpanzee DNA is 99.8% like our DNA. Neanderthal man of 200,000 was significantly different from us. Hugely different? Probably not, but significantly different in enough ways that they went extinct and we did not. We adapted, they did not. Evolution most certainly does change that fast. Their bodies were adapted differently and the shape of their face and pelvic areas was significantly different from ours.
http://humanorigins.si.edu/evidence/human-fossils/species/homo-neanderthalensis
http://www.livescience.com/28036-neanderthals-facts-about-our-extinct-human-relatives.html
http://humanorigins.si.edu/evidence/human-fossils/species/homo-heidelbergensis0 -
0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »lemurcat12 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »I get that this all gets tedious; I’ve been on this site logging for over 600 days, and sometimes there are things I’d rather be doing with those 10-15 minutes a day it takes to log my food and exercise. But look at it from this big picture perspective – our bodies seek fattening food and store fat because our prehistoric selves went most of their lives without knowing where and when their next meal would come from. Imagine scratching out your existence day in and day out, scavenging for food, just a bad luck incident or two away from starving to death or being weakened by hunger to the point where you would get killed by predators, either animals or humans. Now fast forward thousands of years, and appreciate the nature of your burden – you are surrounded by such an overabundance of food resources that you actually have to force yourself to limit how much you eat!
Appreciate where we are in terms of human development, eat one of those delicious cakes (but not the entire box), log it, and enjoy the rest of your day as a contemporary, civilized human being
Do you really think that it would make any difference if our "prehistoric selves" had had an abundance of food? There is no evidence to support such a notion.
I’m a little taken aback that you don’t know the basic evolutionary principles behind these types of biological characteristics.
We don't know much about our "prehistoric selves" other than finding a few old bones. Everything else is pretty much speculation, and we certainly don't know what would have happened if our "prehistoric selves" had had an abundance of food. Perhaps they all would've gotten fat and died of heart failure.
We don't have to go back in time to learn about our prehistoric selves. I've worked in international development for 20 years. Look at some of the global indicators for malnutrition in the poorest communities worldwide -- there's all the evidence you need.
So we're fat because children in Africa are starving?
*sigh* No. I don't understand why you say we don't have evidence about how humans lived in prehistory when there are many living examples today of people living exactly the way we lived during the Stone Age.
I don't have a problem with that, but the original claim was that prehistoric man was somehow different from what we are today, but because they couldn't find enough food, they evolved into a being that stores more fat than is required. There is not evidence to support the claim that they didn't already have the ability to store fact and certainly no evidence to claim that if they were overfed that they would lose the ability to store fat.
I don't think that's the argument. The idea is more like: prehistoric man lived under conditions where food was scarce, so being able to store fat efficiently aided in survival, and those with that ability were more likely to live and pass on their genes than those who did not tend to store fat well/deal well with conditions of scarcity.
In theory, if we spent a lot of time under conditions of surplus where tending to become obese led you to be less able to survive and pass on your genes, natural selection would select against those who seemed inclined to become obese IF the effect was to kill them off before they reproduced or made it less likely that their children would survive until adulthood (the latter being more likely in a primitive world with a problem with a surplus of calories plus inactivity).
What you stated sounds like Lamarckianism.
My point is that we don't know what Stone Age man was like. He could've been just like us, for all we know. Actually, considering that the animals in store fat also, it is most likely that they were like us. The problem with thinking that natural selection would lead to less obesity is that obesity tends to get worse as people age, so the children of the obese are likely to survive anyway.
Of course they were like us. They were humans too. Evolution doesn't change that fast. Humans 200,000 years ago and humans today have the same ability to store fat if we consume too many calories. The fact is, there are many people today who live much like humans lived 200,000 years ago and biologically they're no different than you and me. I don't know why you're even bothering to argue this point. It's ridiculous.
Because someone else made the claim that we're fat because Stone Age man had to look for food. I wanted to point out that it doesn't make any sense.
No one said that.
Do you not think that is what was said with the following statement? "But look at it from this big picture perspective – our bodies seek fattening food and store fat because our prehistoric selves went most of their lives without knowing where and when their next meal would come from."
That sure looks like it to me.0 -
TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »lemurcat12 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »I get that this all gets tedious; I’ve been on this site logging for over 600 days, and sometimes there are things I’d rather be doing with those 10-15 minutes a day it takes to log my food and exercise. But look at it from this big picture perspective – our bodies seek fattening food and store fat because our prehistoric selves went most of their lives without knowing where and when their next meal would come from. Imagine scratching out your existence day in and day out, scavenging for food, just a bad luck incident or two away from starving to death or being weakened by hunger to the point where you would get killed by predators, either animals or humans. Now fast forward thousands of years, and appreciate the nature of your burden – you are surrounded by such an overabundance of food resources that you actually have to force yourself to limit how much you eat!
Appreciate where we are in terms of human development, eat one of those delicious cakes (but not the entire box), log it, and enjoy the rest of your day as a contemporary, civilized human being
Do you really think that it would make any difference if our "prehistoric selves" had had an abundance of food? There is no evidence to support such a notion.
I’m a little taken aback that you don’t know the basic evolutionary principles behind these types of biological characteristics.
We don't know much about our "prehistoric selves" other than finding a few old bones. Everything else is pretty much speculation, and we certainly don't know what would have happened if our "prehistoric selves" had had an abundance of food. Perhaps they all would've gotten fat and died of heart failure.
We don't have to go back in time to learn about our prehistoric selves. I've worked in international development for 20 years. Look at some of the global indicators for malnutrition in the poorest communities worldwide -- there's all the evidence you need.
So we're fat because children in Africa are starving?
*sigh* No. I don't understand why you say we don't have evidence about how humans lived in prehistory when there are many living examples today of people living exactly the way we lived during the Stone Age.
I don't have a problem with that, but the original claim was that prehistoric man was somehow different from what we are today, but because they couldn't find enough food, they evolved into a being that stores more fat than is required. There is not evidence to support the claim that they didn't already have the ability to store fact and certainly no evidence to claim that if they were overfed that they would lose the ability to store fat.
I don't think that's the argument. The idea is more like: prehistoric man lived under conditions where food was scarce, so being able to store fat efficiently aided in survival, and those with that ability were more likely to live and pass on their genes than those who did not tend to store fat well/deal well with conditions of scarcity.
In theory, if we spent a lot of time under conditions of surplus where tending to become obese led you to be less able to survive and pass on your genes, natural selection would select against those who seemed inclined to become obese IF the effect was to kill them off before they reproduced or made it less likely that their children would survive until adulthood (the latter being more likely in a primitive world with a problem with a surplus of calories plus inactivity).
What you stated sounds like Lamarckianism.
My point is that we don't know what Stone Age man was like. He could've been just like us, for all we know. Actually, considering that the animals in store fat also, it is most likely that they were like us. The problem with thinking that natural selection would lead to less obesity is that obesity tends to get worse as people age, so the children of the obese are likely to survive anyway.
Of course they were like us. They were humans too. Evolution doesn't change that fast. Humans 200,000 years ago and humans today have the same ability to store fat if we consume too many calories. The fact is, there are many people today who live much like humans lived 200,000 years ago and biologically they're no different than you and me. I don't know why you're even bothering to argue this point. It's ridiculous.
Because someone else made the claim that we're fat because Stone Age man had to look for food. I wanted to point out that it doesn't make any sense.
No one said that.
Do you not think that is what was said with the following statement? "But look at it from this big picture perspective – our bodies seek fattening food and store fat because our prehistoric selves went most of their lives without knowing where and when their next meal would come from."
That sure looks like it to me.
You do realize that "prehistoric selves" goes back a long, long way, beyond man to whatever little creatures we evolved from, right?
Man evolved over the course of millions of years from simpler life forms through evolution. Part of that evolutionary path entailed the survival of creatures that were able to store fat to survive the inevitable periods of famine experienced by animals and later, hunter / gatherer neanderthals and humans. As mankind evolved, it became less susceptible to environmental threats like droughts, due to the emergence of agriculture and animal domestication, but this is only a recent development, it began maybe 12,000 years ago. Even then (and now in some parts of the world), droughts and war made for scarce resources, and the fat storing capability was still integral to survival.
Now fast forward to today, where billions of 1st world humans have an abundance of food, and no one need go any significant period of time without food if they choose not to. Many of us eat a tremendous quantity of food above what is required to survive, and this excess is stored as fat. Our digestive systems don’t have a calendar and don’t understand that it is 2015, but rather still thinks that it is 12,015 BC or 120,150 BC.
0 -
0somuchbetter0 wrote: »Of course they were like us. They were humans too. Evolution doesn't change that fast. Humans 200,000 years ago and humans today have the same ability to store fat if we consume too many calories. The fact is, there are many people today who live much like humans lived 200,000 years ago and biologically they're no different than you and me. I don't know why you're even bothering to argue this point. It's ridiculous.
No they were'nt humans. They were Neanderthals. Their DNA is 99.7% like our human DNA. By way of comparison, Chimpanzee DNA is 99.8% like our DNA. Neanderthal man of 200,000 was significantly different from us. Hugely different? Probably not, but significantly different in enough ways that they went extinct and we did not. We adapted, they did not. Evolution most certainly does change that fast. Their bodies were adapted differently and the shape of their face and pelvic areas was significantly different from ours.
http://humanorigins.si.edu/evidence/human-fossils/species/homo-neanderthalensis
http://www.livescience.com/28036-neanderthals-facts-about-our-extinct-human-relatives.html
http://humanorigins.si.edu/evidence/human-fossils/species/homo-heidelbergensis
200,000 years ago homo sapiens lived at the same time as neanderthals.0 -
TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »lemurcat12 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »0somuchbetter0 wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »I get that this all gets tedious; I’ve been on this site logging for over 600 days, and sometimes there are things I’d rather be doing with those 10-15 minutes a day it takes to log my food and exercise. But look at it from this big picture perspective – our bodies seek fattening food and store fat because our prehistoric selves went most of their lives without knowing where and when their next meal would come from. Imagine scratching out your existence day in and day out, scavenging for food, just a bad luck incident or two away from starving to death or being weakened by hunger to the point where you would get killed by predators, either animals or humans. Now fast forward thousands of years, and appreciate the nature of your burden – you are surrounded by such an overabundance of food resources that you actually have to force yourself to limit how much you eat!
Appreciate where we are in terms of human development, eat one of those delicious cakes (but not the entire box), log it, and enjoy the rest of your day as a contemporary, civilized human being
Do you really think that it would make any difference if our "prehistoric selves" had had an abundance of food? There is no evidence to support such a notion.
I’m a little taken aback that you don’t know the basic evolutionary principles behind these types of biological characteristics.
We don't know much about our "prehistoric selves" other than finding a few old bones. Everything else is pretty much speculation, and we certainly don't know what would have happened if our "prehistoric selves" had had an abundance of food. Perhaps they all would've gotten fat and died of heart failure.
We don't have to go back in time to learn about our prehistoric selves. I've worked in international development for 20 years. Look at some of the global indicators for malnutrition in the poorest communities worldwide -- there's all the evidence you need.
So we're fat because children in Africa are starving?
*sigh* No. I don't understand why you say we don't have evidence about how humans lived in prehistory when there are many living examples today of people living exactly the way we lived during the Stone Age.
I don't have a problem with that, but the original claim was that prehistoric man was somehow different from what we are today, but because they couldn't find enough food, they evolved into a being that stores more fat than is required. There is not evidence to support the claim that they didn't already have the ability to store fact and certainly no evidence to claim that if they were overfed that they would lose the ability to store fat.
I don't think that's the argument. The idea is more like: prehistoric man lived under conditions where food was scarce, so being able to store fat efficiently aided in survival, and those with that ability were more likely to live and pass on their genes than those who did not tend to store fat well/deal well with conditions of scarcity.
In theory, if we spent a lot of time under conditions of surplus where tending to become obese led you to be less able to survive and pass on your genes, natural selection would select against those who seemed inclined to become obese IF the effect was to kill them off before they reproduced or made it less likely that their children would survive until adulthood (the latter being more likely in a primitive world with a problem with a surplus of calories plus inactivity).
What you stated sounds like Lamarckianism.
My point is that we don't know what Stone Age man was like. He could've been just like us, for all we know. Actually, considering that the animals in store fat also, it is most likely that they were like us. The problem with thinking that natural selection would lead to less obesity is that obesity tends to get worse as people age, so the children of the obese are likely to survive anyway.
Of course they were like us. They were humans too. Evolution doesn't change that fast. Humans 200,000 years ago and humans today have the same ability to store fat if we consume too many calories. The fact is, there are many people today who live much like humans lived 200,000 years ago and biologically they're no different than you and me. I don't know why you're even bothering to argue this point. It's ridiculous.
Because someone else made the claim that we're fat because Stone Age man had to look for food. I wanted to point out that it doesn't make any sense.
No one said that.
Do you not think that is what was said with the following statement? "But look at it from this big picture perspective – our bodies seek fattening food and store fat because our prehistoric selves went most of their lives without knowing where and when their next meal would come from."
That sure looks like it to me.
Not in the least.0
This discussion has been closed.
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