The Clean Eating Myth

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  • ndj1979
    ndj1979 Posts: 29,139 Member
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    ndj1979 wrote: »

    lOL typical..

    reference study and then when asked for said study say "I don't have the time to find them" yet, you have all day to post on here but you don't have ten minutes to find a study?

    Burden of proof falls on the claimant. If you want to claim they exist, then it's up to you to provide them.

    Furthermore, you can't be "arsed [sic] to spend all day looking for them", but you expect us to?

    Oh looky here, I found it. Article + link to study.

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/tarahaelle/2015/05/12/why-you-cant-lose-weight-but-your-best-friend-can-on-the-same-diet/

    Forbes is not a peer reviewed source...
  • Chrysalid2014
    Chrysalid2014 Posts: 1,038 Member
    edited May 2015
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    ndj1979 wrote: »
    ndj1979 wrote: »

    lOL typical..

    reference study and then when asked for said study say "I don't have the time to find them" yet, you have all day to post on here but you don't have ten minutes to find a study?

    Burden of proof falls on the claimant. If you want to claim they exist, then it's up to you to provide them.

    Furthermore, you can't be "arsed [sic] to spend all day looking for them", but you expect us to?

    Oh looky here, I found it. Article + link to study.

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/tarahaelle/2015/05/12/why-you-cant-lose-weight-but-your-best-friend-can-on-the-same-diet/

    Forbes is not a peer reviewed source...

    The link to the study itself is included in the article. Guess you didn't read that far (second paragraph):

    http://diabetes.diabetesjournals.org/content/early/2015/05/06/db14-1881

    Interesting quote from the article:

    "Contrary to the popular idea that cutting 3,500 calories equates to losing a pound, the researchers found the loss of one pound equated to anywhere from 1,560 to 3,000 calories depending on the person."
  • refuseresist
    refuseresist Posts: 934 Member
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    If I go to Poland, I can't pronounce the names of most foods. Does that mean all their food is dirty?
    I knew they were shifty :/
  • FunkyTobias
    FunkyTobias Posts: 1,776 Member
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    ndj1979 wrote: »

    lOL typical..

    reference study and then when asked for said study say "I don't have the time to find them" yet, you have all day to post on here but you don't have ten minutes to find a study?

    Burden of proof falls on the claimant. If you want to claim they exist, then it's up to you to provide them.

    Furthermore, you can't be "arsed [sic] to spend all day looking for them", but you expect us to?

    Oh looky here, I found it. Article + link to study.

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/tarahaelle/2015/05/12/why-you-cant-lose-weight-but-your-best-friend-can-on-the-same-diet/

    Methinks that you don't understand what "deficit" means.

    The "thrifty" phenotype downregulated energy expenditure in response to underfeeding, so they did not have the same deficit.





  • Chrysalid2014
    Chrysalid2014 Posts: 1,038 Member
    edited May 2015
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    ndj1979 wrote: »

    lOL typical..

    reference study and then when asked for said study say "I don't have the time to find them" yet, you have all day to post on here but you don't have ten minutes to find a study?

    Burden of proof falls on the claimant. If you want to claim they exist, then it's up to you to provide them.

    Furthermore, you can't be "arsed [sic] to spend all day looking for them", but you expect us to?

    Oh looky here, I found it. Article + link to study.

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/tarahaelle/2015/05/12/why-you-cant-lose-weight-but-your-best-friend-can-on-the-same-diet/

    Methinks that you don't understand what "deficit" means.

    The "thrifty" phenotype downregulated energy expenditure in response to underfeeding, so they did not have the same deficit.

    So basically it means there is no way to calculate deficit, barring the acquisition of a metabolic chamber. But it does show that people at the same starting weight who cut the same amount of calories and exercise the same amount could lose wildly different amount of weight...

    Then they spent the next six weeks consuming only a liquid diet of Ensure that contained 50 percent of of the calories required to maintain their weight (individualized to each person) and not exercising. Contrary to the popular idea that cutting 3,500 calories equates to losing a pound, the researchers found the loss of one pound equated to anywhere from 1,560 to 3,000 calories depending on the person.

    “We all have our own internal fuel efficiencies when it comes to our bodies’ abilities to handle calories,” Freedhoff said. “This isn’t in and of itself news, of course. Ten different people with the same degree of caloric excess or restriction will vary in the amount of weight they’ll gain or lose as a consequence.


    So getting back to ndj's original premise, we would need a metabolic chamber to ensure the deficit was exactly the same. Only then could we answer the question. Perhaps someone could propose this to the scientists.

  • julieabarnes46
    julieabarnes46 Posts: 1 Member
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    I personally do not care what the doctors or anyone else says. It definitely made a difference for me! I had tried everything to drop the last 7 pounds. For months I was working out like a madwoman, staying within my correct calorie limit, etc. Until I switched to eating clean, it would NOT go away. Within 3 weeks of eating clean the last 7 were gone. Like a miracle for me. :)
  • psuLemon
    psuLemon Posts: 38,391 MFP Moderator
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    jagober23 wrote: »
    I personally do not care what the doctors or anyone else says. It definitely made a difference for me! I had tried everything to drop the last 7 pounds. For months I was working out like a madwoman, staying within my correct calorie limit, etc. Until I switched to eating clean, it would NOT go away. Within 3 weeks of eating clean the last 7 were gone. Like a miracle for me. :)

    Do you use a food scale? And how consistent is your food diary?
  • jessupbrady
    jessupbrady Posts: 508 Member
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    ndj1979 wrote: »
    ndj1979 wrote: »

    lOL typical..

    reference study and then when asked for said study say "I don't have the time to find them" yet, you have all day to post on here but you don't have ten minutes to find a study?

    Burden of proof falls on the claimant. If you want to claim they exist, then it's up to you to provide them.

    Furthermore, you can't be "arsed [sic] to spend all day looking for them", but you expect us to?

    Oh looky here, I found it. Article + link to study.

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/tarahaelle/2015/05/12/why-you-cant-lose-weight-but-your-best-friend-can-on-the-same-diet/

    Forbes is not a peer reviewed source...

    The link to the study itself is included in the article. Guess you didn't read that far (second paragraph):

    http://diabetes.diabetesjournals.org/content/early/2015/05/06/db14-1881

    Interesting quote from the article:

    "Contrary to the popular idea that cutting 3,500 calories equates to losing a pound, the researchers found the loss of one pound equated to anywhere from 1,560 to 3,000 calories depending on the person."


    I get people lose differently.... but, how does this study answer the original question about clean eating vs non-clean eating.

    I would make the assumption that this would just mean the original question would assume that both people had the "thrifty" phenotype?

  • LiftAllThePizzas
    LiftAllThePizzas Posts: 17,857 Member
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    bhawk102 wrote: »
    What people should understand is that processed foods don't really fill you up that much. You end up craving more and more and thus go over the calorie limits. Sure you can watch your portions with them and not eat as much, but you still end up hungry whereas if you are eating healthier foods higher in nutrition especially protein and fiber you don't get hungry as quickly.

    Speak for yourself. Many of us who are not just a lump on the couch have calorie goals which would be difficult or impossible to meet without some calorie dense foods.
  • FunkyTobias
    FunkyTobias Posts: 1,776 Member
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    ndj1979 wrote: »

    lOL typical..

    reference study and then when asked for said study say "I don't have the time to find them" yet, you have all day to post on here but you don't have ten minutes to find a study?

    Burden of proof falls on the claimant. If you want to claim they exist, then it's up to you to provide them.

    Furthermore, you can't be "arsed [sic] to spend all day looking for them", but you expect us to?

    Oh looky here, I found it. Article + link to study.

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/tarahaelle/2015/05/12/why-you-cant-lose-weight-but-your-best-friend-can-on-the-same-diet/

    Methinks that you don't understand what "deficit" means.

    The "thrifty" phenotype downregulated energy expenditure in response to underfeeding, so they did not have the same deficit.

    So basically it means there is no way to calculate deficit, barring the acquisition of a metabolic chamber. But it does show that people at the same starting weight who cut the same amount of calories and exercise the same amount could lose wildly different amount of weight...

    Then they spent the next six weeks consuming only a liquid diet of Ensure that contained 50 percent of of the calories required to maintain their weight (individualized to each person) and not exercising. Contrary to the popular idea that cutting 3,500 calories equates to losing a pound, the researchers found the loss of one pound equated to anywhere from 1,560 to 3,000 calories depending on the person.

    “We all have our own internal fuel efficiencies when it comes to our bodies’ abilities to handle calories,” Freedhoff said. “This isn’t in and of itself news, of course. Ten different people with the same degree of caloric excess or restriction will vary in the amount of weight they’ll gain or lose as a consequence.


    So getting back to ndj's original premise, we would need a metabolic chamber to ensure the deficit was exactly the same. Only then could we answer the question. Perhaps someone could propose this to the scientists.


    And once again you're getting off topic. The response to the deficit has nothing to do with "clean" vs "unclean".


  • BuckyArden33
    BuckyArden33 Posts: 146 Member
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    clean eating seems to be the only way for me
  • Hollywood_Porky
    Hollywood_Porky Posts: 491 Member
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    Glad to return to this and see a healthy debate. Sleeping on it overnight also gave me one perspective (concern) with regard to how I answered the question and my interpretation of the original OP. Well a couple.

    1) I was too negative in my response - the tone of my response was litigious. I apologize for that. I guess I have a very passionate view on this subject - and deeply personal - with many things about food validated over the years that make me respond in such a way that (after sleeping on it) is negative rather than positive. There is a bottom-line for me - and responding in a more objective and less emotional way would better serve the argument and discussion - even with all the proof in my medical file et al available.

    2) If I took better time to read @ndj1979 OP more closely, he was discussing two people who would have negligible (or no) medical issues - not read in my estimation that medical issues were on the table.

    For number 2 - I would say that either would lose the weight - but I must asterisk (*) this by stating the odds of one losing more weight than the other would definitely fall on the "clean" eater - that is, one who minimizes the intake of added sugar and processed food. Obviously, we have cases where that would not be true in the world - but since I am a data analyst, I focus on an "odds-based" approach. What's the most conservative method to lose weight and to lose fat over the long run? In my estimation, it would have to be a long-term "clean" eating approach - with an emphasis on making the diet as part of a lifestyle over the long haul.

    @mamapeach910 made a great point earlier - there's really two things - one you can lose the weight fast (short-term fix) or you can think long-term about diet and lose the weight (fat) over the long haul. The body will adapt to the food you eat - hence my passion for sticking more with the "clean" approach rather than what I perceive to be an alternative that would increase the odds of gaining the fat pounds back over time. I would rather eat "clean" to preserve the outcome I reached than revert to a method that would increase the chances of regaining the fat.

    @Chrysalid2014 and others - great contributions. I think this has been and always will be a great discussion. I consider it a timeless discussion - because this is a battle that will always be waged. The outcomes-based approach suggests eating a diet that is very nutritious to gain the best odds of success but that doesn't mean it's an end-all-be-all. Variances exist and must be accounted for in the process. Just glad to be part of it.
  • psuLemon
    psuLemon Posts: 38,391 MFP Moderator
    edited May 2015
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    Glad to return to this and see a healthy debate. Sleeping on it overnight also gave me one perspective (concern) with regard to how I answered the question and my interpretation of the original OP. Well a couple.

    1) I was too negative in my response - the tone of my response was litigious. I apologize for that. I guess I have a very passionate view on this subject - and deeply personal - with many things about food validated over the years that make me respond in such a way that (after sleeping on it) is negative rather than positive. There is a bottom-line for me - and responding in a more objective and less emotional way would better serve the argument and discussion - even with all the proof in my medical file et al available.

    2) If I took better time to read @ndj1979 OP more closely, he was discussing two people who would have negligible (or no) medical issues - not read in my estimation that medical issues were on the table.

    For number 2 - I would say that either would lose the weight - but I must asterisk (*) this by stating the odds of one losing more weight than the other would definitely fall on the "clean" eater - that is, one who minimizes the intake of added sugar and processed food. Obviously, we have cases where that would not be true in the world - but since I am a data analyst, I focus on an "odds-based" approach. What's the most conservative method to lose weight and to lose fat over the long run? In my estimation, it would have to be a long-term "clean" eating approach - with an emphasis on making the diet as part of a lifestyle over the long haul.

    @mamapeach910 made a great point earlier - there's really two things - one you can lose the weight fast (short-term fix) or you can think long-term about diet and lose the weight (fat) over the long haul. The body will adapt to the food you eat - hence my passion for sticking more with the "clean" approach rather than what I perceive to be an alternative that would increase the odds of gaining the fat pounds back over time. I would rather eat "clean" to preserve the outcome I reached than revert to a method that would increase the chances of regaining the fat.

    @Chrysalid2014 and others - great contributions. I think this has been and always will be a great discussion. I consider it a timeless discussion - because this is a battle that will always be waged. The outcomes-based approach suggests eating a diet that is very nutritious to gain the best odds of success but that doesn't mean it's an end-all-be-all. Variances exist and must be accounted for in the process. Just glad to be part of it.

    If both people, without medical conditions, both have the same 500 calorie deficit, how is it mathematically possible that the one who eats "cleaner" will lose more?


    I am a financial analyst, so I love numbers. So I am trying to figure out how one can lose more if it's not mathematically possible?
  • Chrysalid2014
    Chrysalid2014 Posts: 1,038 Member
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    ndj1979 wrote: »
    ndj1979 wrote: »

    lOL typical..

    reference study and then when asked for said study say "I don't have the time to find them" yet, you have all day to post on here but you don't have ten minutes to find a study?

    Burden of proof falls on the claimant. If you want to claim they exist, then it's up to you to provide them.

    Furthermore, you can't be "arsed [sic] to spend all day looking for them", but you expect us to?

    Oh looky here, I found it. Article + link to study.

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/tarahaelle/2015/05/12/why-you-cant-lose-weight-but-your-best-friend-can-on-the-same-diet/

    Forbes is not a peer reviewed source...

    The link to the study itself is included in the article. Guess you didn't read that far (second paragraph):

    http://diabetes.diabetesjournals.org/content/early/2015/05/06/db14-1881

    Interesting quote from the article:

    "Contrary to the popular idea that cutting 3,500 calories equates to losing a pound, the researchers found the loss of one pound equated to anywhere from 1,560 to 3,000 calories depending on the person."


    I get people lose differently.... but, how does this study answer the original question about clean eating vs non-clean eating.

    I would make the assumption that this would just mean the original question would assume that both people had the "thrifty" phenotype?

    It doesn't answer the question. The question is impossible to answer due to all the uncontrollable variables. Unless theoretically you put the same person in a metabolic chamber, maintained the same calorie defict, did clean and non clean eating and repeated several times and then compared the weight loss.
    But even then it wouldn't be accurate because his metabolism and other variables may change in accordance with the amount of weight he loses over time.
  • FunkyTobias
    FunkyTobias Posts: 1,776 Member
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    How exactly does the "body adapt to the food you eat"?
  • girlviernes
    girlviernes Posts: 2,402 Member
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    psulemon wrote: »

    So how can you say Ted's situation applies but Sara's does not?

    I saw greater weight loss/fat loss when I incorporated the foods I love.

    I say Ted's situation is a better example as he tried both methods, clean and dirty, and lost weight with the former but not with the latter even though he was (on paper anyway) in a calorie deficit both times. As you say it's impossible to calculate his exact calorie deficit without taking into account the impact of the type of CI on the CO (you said: "having a high carb/junk food diet, could have led to elevated insulin levels, lowering his over calories out") but doesn't that just give even more credence to the clean eating philosophy?

    Other people who say they have gained weight eating clean haven't said they were in a calorie deficit. I think a lot of newcomers get confused when some clean eating people say they don't have to count calories. That just means they aren't writing them down; it doesn't mean they aren't in a deficit.

    you need to wake up to your bias. i posted in this thread about both losing weight eating clean and later losing more weight eating in a more flexible manner. the examples abound. That you only take Ted's example seriously is very telling.

    things are rarely "proven" in science, but this certainly can me tested in meaningful ways. hopefully the studies will be conducted. In the meantime there really isn't any good evidence to suggest clean eating in and of itself leads to better weight loss.
  • jessupbrady
    jessupbrady Posts: 508 Member
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    bhawk102 wrote: »
    What people should understand is that processed foods don't really fill you up that much. You end up craving more and more and thus go over the calorie limits. Sure you can watch your portions with them and not eat as much, but you still end up hungry whereas if you are eating healthier foods higher in nutrition especially protein and fiber you don't get hungry as quickly.

    Actually, I do worse on diets that restrict what I can eat because I start craving those foods more. It doesn't matter how full I am. Also, as a stress-eater I have an exceptionally hard time with being told not to eat a specific food type and tend to binge on them and undo everything I gained to begin with.

    What people should understand is that there are different diets that cater to the uniqueness of different people, how they respond to certain foods, or the lack thereof.