How are calories processed after eating?

I have been wondering about this. Lets say for example I sleep 8 hours then get up and decide to do some cardio. It is really hard, so I am thinking it is because there are no calories to burn. OK so then lets say I eat a 500 calorie breakfast. I don't think the calories are instantly going into my system. The food needs to digest to release them. So I read something about waiting 30 min after eating to work out. Still seems a little harder than at night but not as bad as when I try to do it before eating.
I know things vary a lot depending on types of food and such but is there a general process to kind of go by... like most calories are getting into my system after _____ amount of time?
Also: what calories is exercise burning... old ones stored in fat or newly ingested ones.

Reason I'm asking is I've always heard no pain no gain, so does that mean the workout in the morning BEFORE eating burns more fat since it is harder and I even sweat much quicker or am I burning muscle and doing harm if I do that?

Thanks, I am a beginner please don't beat me up this time! LOL

Replies

  • Pearsquared
    Pearsquared Posts: 1,656 Member
    I have no scientific explanation for why it is sometimes harder to workout in the morning. For me, it has always been a hydration issue if I'm having trouble exercising in the morning. Drinking plenty before working out in the morning has helped.
  • Steve_ApexNC
    Steve_ApexNC Posts: 210 Member
    the book nutrition for dummies would be an excellent read for you. It will cover everything you want to know about how your body handles food.

    No pain no gain. Um. Sorta. Workouts will no doubt create discomfort but true pain is your bodies way of telling you something is wrong. Don't ignore pain. Now, workout when u want. I like evenings. It makes no difference. Persistence and consistency is what counts.

    Also, the real goal of fitness should be the most amount of adaptation for the least amount of stress. There is a point in workouts where your body will get all it can adapt to. Beyond that is just asking for injury. Progress up over time. You are not a world class athlete, don't try to workout like one. Start at begging level and slowly progress up. Again, persistence and consistency over time. And bt time I mean months not days or weeks.
  • amusedmonkey
    amusedmonkey Posts: 10,330 Member
    edited February 2016
    Energy is a complex combination of many sources (fat from fat cells, glycogen from liver and muscles, protein in muscles, blood glucose, other body tissue, ketones..etc). You usually use multiple sources of energy with a bigger percentage of one source over another depending on the situation, and the body even stores and burns energy at the same time. If the burned energy is more than the stored you lose weight.

    At rest you are predominantly burning fat. When you do cardio, the higher your heart rate the more carbs you are burning because, though not as concentrated per unit of weight as fat, carbs need less oxygen to be converted to energy. If you do a long and/or hard workout in the morning on an empty stomach you can potentially deplete a lot of these stored carbs so your performance can suffer while your body is trying to use more of the slower sources of energy like proteins, that's why it can feel harder. If you feel you do best exercising after eating then do that. It really doesn't matter which source your body burns predominantly because if you are eating fewer calories than your body burns everything balances out and you end up burning fat in all cases.

    How long does it take for food to convert to energy? It depends on many factors like the type of macronutrients it has, the type of food, the volume of food, what you are doing, the levels of your hormones, absorption rate, temperature, what your diet looks like overall, your unique physiology...etc, so it's hard to give an exact answer. Even one food can give you some of its energy sooner and the rest of it later.

    The only thing you need to know, really, is that excess calories lead to weight gain and a calorie deficit leads to fat loss. Any other micro-management stuff like fasted cardio, meal timing..etc are not really that important or necessary for the average dieter.

    "No pain no gain" basically means you need to put in some effort to get results, can't do it by randomly wishing it without making some changes. It doesn't mean you need to deliberately make yourself tired to get results. A workout after a sleepless night feels harder, doesn't mean it burns more fat than a workout with adequate sleep. Your perceived exertion is not a measure for the amount of fat burned. So feel free to eat your breakfast if it helps you perform better and don't focus on minute details that have near negligible effects on your weight loss.
  • jgnatca
    jgnatca Posts: 14,464 Member
    edited February 2016
    Whey protein and the sugars hit your system the fastest. Next digested are the carbs, then protein, and finally fats which may take half the day to metabolize. Eating a meal with all the macros present will give you sustained food energy through the day with any gaps filled with your own fat stores.

    The only pain that I look forward to is the burning sensation from a sustained, difficult lift. That will turn in to muscle in a few days.

    For performance I'm thinking hydration is critical.