One can of soda = 15 lbs. of weight
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Not really as you'd gain weight your CO would change causing a slight decrease in gain for the year. Good news is after your body reached its current tdee +150 that soda become maintenance. Unless people keep building on more and more eventually you will hit CI=CO.0
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:looks at diet soda can on desk:
Nope, not 150 Calories.
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Mister_Ladyfingers wrote: »It's true. One serving of organic steel cut oatmeal* has 150 calories. Times 365, in one year, that's 54,750 calories. One pound of body weight is 3,500 calories. 54,750 divided by 3,500 is 15 lbs!
So the solution is clear. By cutting out organic, steel cut oats we can end ALL TEH OBESITIES!!!!!!!!
*country choice organic steel cut
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johnnylakis wrote: »Mister_Ladyfingers wrote: »It's true. One serving of organic steel cut oatmeal* has 150 calories. Times 365, in one year, that's 54,750 calories. One pound of body weight is 3,500 calories. 54,750 divided by 3,500 is 15 lbs!
So the solution is clear. By cutting out organic, steel cut oats we can end ALL TEH OBESITIES!!!!!!!!
*country choice organic steel cut
Love sarcasm, yes!!0 -
punkrockgoth wrote: »I'm wondering what OP was trying to accomplish by posting this. I mean, at 400+ posts, he's not exactly a n00b.
I call trolling.
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TheOriginalSam13 wrote: »That would mean 365 cans of soda = 15 pounds, not one can.
One can of soda per day for one year0 -
johnnylakis wrote: »:looks at diet soda can on desk:
Nope, not 150 Calories.
So, a professor who has 0 to do with nutrition looks over a bunch of nutritional studies and makes claims most likely not supported by the studies she looked over. And that is called a study in the title of the article.0 -
They do say that soda triggers your brain to want more sugar0
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I'm not sure its fact but I heard it a few times in my travels0
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They do say that soda triggers your brain to want more sugar
Who's "they"? Hopefully "they" have something more than anecdotes or a study which doesn't distinguish between correlation and causation.
I see a lot of fat people in the gym. Are they fat because they're in the gym, or are they in the gym because they're fat? I see fat people drinking diet soda. Are they fat because they drink diet soda, or are they drinking the diet soda to cut their calories down and lose weight?0 -
They said the aliens had probes0
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Probes??0
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That's what I heard0
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I like people who equate 150C of soda with 150C of broccoli. Soda is pure sugar, will spike insulin levels, and will leave you crashed after a couple hours. Broccoli is full of fiber which will make you feel less hungry so you'll eat less throughout the day.
There are no 'cheats' to weight loss. If you eat processed crap, you are going to have a harder time losing weight. People love to deny that here, and I'm not sure why. It's not that you won't lose weight. It's just so much easier if you eat things like fruits, veggies, and chicken breasts than microwaving lean cuisine. Done both. It's not even a contest.
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GoldenLuv23 wrote: »I like people who equate 150C of soda with 150C of broccoli. Soda is pure sugar, will spike insulin levels, and will leave you crashed after a couple hours. Broccoli is full of fiber which will make you feel less hungry so you'll eat less throughout the day.
There are no 'cheats' to weight loss. If you eat processed crap, you are going to have a harder time losing weight. People love to deny that here, and I'm not sure why. It's not that you won't lose weight. It's just so much easier if you eat things like fruits, veggies, and chicken breasts than microwaving lean cuisine. Done both. It's not even a contest.
So I have not lost all me weight eating processed "crap", who da thunk?0 -
GoldenLuv23 wrote: »I like people who equate 150C of soda with 150C of broccoli. Soda is pure sugar, will spike insulin levels, and will leave you crashed after a couple hours. Broccoli is full of fiber which will make you feel less hungry so you'll eat less throughout the day.
There are no 'cheats' to weight loss. If you eat processed crap, you are going to have a harder time losing weight. People love to deny that here, and I'm not sure why. It's not that you won't lose weight. It's just so much easier if you eat things like fruits, veggies, and chicken breasts than microwaving lean cuisine. Done both. It's not even a contest.
Aside from the water retention associated with a diet higher in sodium, please explain the scientific/physiological principles by which your body evaluates your food choices and would derive a greater caloric deficit from 1500 calories of fruit and vegetables as opposed to 1500 calories which included microwaved lean cuisines and soda. Peer-reviewed studies greatly appreciated, kthx.
People love to deny that here because science. Plain and simple.0 -
Sorry bro, our bodies actually need a certain number of calories each day.
You are assuming that people are eating EXACTLY the number of calories they need each and every day, and are adding on exactly 150 extra from a can of soda. That's just not the case.
Most people are overeating on each and every single meal. Doesn't matter where; people are overeating total calories. They could be eating an extra 150 calories worth of veggies a day and it wouldn't matter because "oh noes! 15 pounds a year!".
And the ones who are actually tracking calories, would account for the calories in said soda.
So your intended "point" is moot.0 -
rainbowbow wrote: »Sorry bro, our bodies actually need a certain number of calories each day.
You are assuming that people are eating EXACTLY the number of calories they need each and every day, and are adding on exactly 150 extra from a can of soda. That's just not the case.
Most people are overeating on each and every single meal. Doesn't matter where; people are overeating total calories. They could be eating an extra 150 calories worth of veggies a day and it wouldn't matter because "oh noes! 15 pounds a year!".
And the ones who are actually tracking calories, would account for the calories in said soda.
So your intended "point" is moot.
Exactly.
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GoldenLuv23 wrote: »I like people who equate 150C of soda with 150C of broccoli. Soda is pure sugar, will spike insulin levels, and will leave you crashed after a couple hours. Broccoli is full of fiber which will make you feel less hungry so you'll eat less throughout the day.
There are no 'cheats' to weight loss. If you eat processed crap, you are going to have a harder time losing weight. People love to deny that here, and I'm not sure why. It's not that you won't lose weight. It's just so much easier if you eat things like fruits, veggies, and chicken breasts than microwaving lean cuisine. Done both. It's not even a contest.
The equation works as a retort to the OP. Seems reasonable enough to me as well that governments telling people to get their "5 a day" and to force feed on huge portions of fruit and veggies they otherwise wouldn't eat as much of is just as likely to create a population that eats a hundred or more calories a day than they would have consumed otherwise.
And "hard" is relative. It's hard for me to eat food I don't like. It's hard for me to deny myself foods I do like. Doing what I can adhere to has been key for me. It's not a "cheat" in my world to choose chocolate instead of wasting my time and calories on fruit or whatever.0 -
stevencloser wrote: »johnnylakis wrote: »:looks at diet soda can on desk:
Nope, not 150 Calories.
So, a professor who has 0 to do with nutrition looks over a bunch of nutritional studies and makes claims most likely not supported by the studies she looked over. And that is called a study in the title of the article.
The article is then published in a Elsevier pub ... not quite the zenith of academia.0 -
GoldenLuv23 wrote: »I like people who equate 150C of soda with 150C of broccoli. Soda is pure sugar, will spike insulin levels, and will leave you crashed after a couple hours. Broccoli is full of fiber which will make you feel less hungry so you'll eat less throughout the day.
There are no 'cheats' to weight loss. If you eat processed crap, you are going to have a harder time losing weight. People love to deny that here, and I'm not sure why. It's not that you won't lose weight. It's just so much easier if you eat things like fruits, veggies, and chicken breasts than microwaving lean cuisine. Done both. It's not even a contest.
150 calories from any source is a comparable discussion ... equal measurements of units of energy. That does not mean that the nutritional profile of the foods is comparable nor does it mean that 150 calories of broccoli is necessarily the best option for a person without looking at how the nutrition of that one food fits into the overall diet.0 -
I do like the general idea of the math, or at least what I got from it. However, if 365 cans of soda equals only 15lbs of my body weight that doesn't really speak much for the completely remove all soda from your diet view some people in my family and group of friends have. I will be playing around with some numbers myself because this seems interesting to me.0
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150 calories of any food consumed daily will result in that amount of gain if that is the food that puts you over maintenance. If you maintain at X calories per day on average but consume X+150 (from any source), you gain.0
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johnnylakis wrote: »It's true. One can of soda has 150 calories. Times 365, in one year, that's 54,750 calories. One pound of body weight is 3,500 calories. 54,750 divided by 3,500 is 15 lbs!
You also burn caloires every day and to gain that weight you would have to eat over 3,500 a day.You gain weight only in one day.0 -
This is why I plan to consume ONLY one can is soda a day. That will put me over 2k a day under my calorie needs. -2k x 365 days means I'll lose 4 k pounds in a year with Soda! Amazing. And true.
(Math not to scale)0 -
dalielahdawn wrote: »This is why I plan to consume ONLY one can is soda a day. That will put me over 2k a day under my calorie needs. -2k x 365 days means I'll lose 4 k pounds in a year with Soda! Amazing. And true.
(Math not to scale)
You win MFP!0
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