Cardio isn't for "fat burning".
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People these days eat straight up crap. Chips, soda, hot dogs, McDonald's, and everything else. Never a veggie or a fruit oh how about some old fashioned water and a good run around the block. Take account for the things you consume or they will consume you with obesity and disease.
Incorrect. While some of these foods are higher in saturated fats there's nothing inherently wrong with them. Mostly they're just calorie dense. If you don't have high cholesterol or health issues that prevent you from having these then eating them is fine. Just don't comprise your entire diet of them.
Cardio is to make you healthier. It can improve so much of your life. It makes it easier for me to do high altitude hiking, lowers my blood pressure, cholesterol , and my HDL was 100 on my last checkup. It does burn fat but that's as explained in the opening post when you do longer lower intensity zoned endurance.
Also worth noting. It does not make you skinny. Professional marathon runners are skinny on purpose because you lose about 2 seconds per mile for each extra pound you carry. Light weight = greater speed. Your net calories determine your size. That is all.
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For low intensity exercises, is it body fat or dietary fat burned, or both?0
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AdorkableRegal wrote: »Okay, then if Cardio isn't for fat burning what exercise do you recommend?
none
calorie deficit coupled with some kind of exercise regimen1 -
People these days eat straight up crap. Chips, soda, hot dogs, McDonald's, and everything else. Never a veggie or a fruit oh how about some old fashioned water and a good run around the block. Take account for the things you consume or they will consume you with obesity and disease.
so 100% of people eat this way?????????? How do you know this? Have you studied the eating habits of every person on the planet?0 -
ForecasterJason wrote: »For low intensity exercises, is it body fat or dietary fat burned, or both?
That actually makes no real sense. Once fat is in your blood stream it's continually absorbed and released by fat cells based on a number of factors such as the presence of insulin and energy requirements of the body. It would be like pumping gas into a half full tank and then driving off. It doesn't matter weather it was the new gas or the old gas once it's in the tank it all just gets mixed together.1 -
ForecasterJason wrote: »For low intensity exercises, is it body fat or dietary fat burned, or both?
The fuel being utilized for a particular activity is irrelevant...you are in a constant state of flux between fat storage and fat oxidation...when your net oxidation exceeds storage, you will get leaner and lose weight. You put yourself in a net deficit position by consuming less energy than you expend.1 -
cwolfman13 wrote: »ForecasterJason wrote: »For low intensity exercises, is it body fat or dietary fat burned, or both?
The fuel being utilized for a particular activity is irrelevant...you are in a constant state of flux between fat storage and fat oxidation...when your net oxidation exceeds storage, you will get leaner and lose weight. You put yourself in a net deficit position by consuming less energy than you expend.
Agreed, especially the bolded part. IMO, that's something most people either don't realize or don't give enough credence to.1 -
In other news...the sky is up0
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remove
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Isn't there an increase in a person's metabolic rate from consistent/daily/weekly exercising? This is a huge plus in my book just to exercise (but I am a bit old) LOL
As the above poster said above, I have lost weight, maintained and gained weight whilst exercising.
IMHO I think TV shows, magazines, internet jargon, make it out to believe that you must "exercise to loose weight", or at least that is the way it comes across. So people jump on MFP setup a calorie deficit and jump right on the forums and always ask "how many calories do I need to burn a day to loose weight", or "what type of cardio do I need to do to loose XXX pounds by XXX date?"
Who actually asks how can I improve my cardiovascular health to compliment my weight loss? Not very many.
yes, you get an increase in calories burned, but the point that niner is making is that this is small and that consistent calorie deficit is really the answer....0 -
took me more years than I care to mention to figure this out.1
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ForecasterJason wrote: »For low intensity exercises, is it body fat or dietary fat burned, or both?
You'll do better if you just think of it as energy. During lower intensity exercises the body will pull some from the muscle cells themselves, and some from blood stream. The blood stream energy will be replenished by energy stored in your liver. Once that is used up it will then use stored body fat for energy. This is released into your blood and is no different than the dietary fat that you've eaten that day which might be remaining. It doesn't wait until your totally out of energy so the stored fat/energy is mixed in with things you may have eaten recently.
There are strategies for helping your body to prefer stored fat over glycogen but that includes starting the exercise in a fasted state and doing 90+ minutes of exercise. You can run out of glycogen energy storage in your cells too but that's all really outside the scope of this discussion.1 -
RUN_LIFT_EAT wrote: »You can't outrun a bad diet.
I can out run anything!!!*
*As long as it's really, really slow.1 -
Isn't there an increase in a person's metabolic rate from consistent/daily/weekly exercising? This is a huge plus in my book just to exercise (but I am a bit old) LOL
As the above poster said above, I have lost weight, maintained and gained weight whilst exercising.
IMHO I think TV shows, magazines, internet jargon, make it out to believe that you must "exercise to loose weight", or at least that is the way it comes across. So people jump on MFP setup a calorie deficit and jump right on the forums and always ask "how many calories do I need to burn a day to loose weight", or "what type of cardio do I need to do to loose XXX pounds by XXX date?"
Who actually asks how can I improve my cardiovascular health to compliment my weight loss? Not very many.
*raises hand*
In fact I cared more about this than the actual weight but they're both side-kicks and fixing one helps the other. That is I first cared about getting less winded at 11k+ feet and that triggered my desire to fix other things. Generally however..... "Wedding in 6 weeks! ZOMG!"
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CindyFooWho wrote: »Being in good cardio vascular health makes you feel fantastic. And that should be enough
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Isn't there an increase in a person's metabolic rate from consistent/daily/weekly exercising? This is a huge plus in my book just to exercise (but I am a bit old) LOL
As the above poster said above, I have lost weight, maintained and gained weight whilst exercising.
IMHO I think TV shows, magazines, internet jargon, make it out to believe that you must "exercise to loose weight", or at least that is the way it comes across. So people jump on MFP setup a calorie deficit and jump right on the forums and always ask "how many calories do I need to burn a day to loose weight", or "what type of cardio do I need to do to loose XXX pounds by XXX date?"
Who actually asks how can I improve my cardiovascular health to compliment my weight loss? Not very many.
yes, you get an increase in calories burned, but the point that niner is making is that this is small and that consistent calorie deficit is really the answer....
Oh I know this... I am just chatting...sorry.
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Isn't there an increase in a person's metabolic rate from consistent/daily/weekly exercising? This is a huge plus in my book just to exercise (but I am a bit old) LOL
As the above poster said above, I have lost weight, maintained and gained weight whilst exercising.
IMHO I think TV shows, magazines, internet jargon, make it out to believe that you must "exercise to loose weight", or at least that is the way it comes across. So people jump on MFP setup a calorie deficit and jump right on the forums and always ask "how many calories do I need to burn a day to loose weight", or "what type of cardio do I need to do to loose XXX pounds by XXX date?"
Who actually asks how can I improve my cardiovascular health to compliment my weight loss? Not very many.
*raises hand*
In fact I cared more about this than the actual weight but they're both side-kicks and fixing one helps the other. That is I first cared about getting less winded at 11k+ feet and that triggered my desire to fix other things. Generally however..... "Wedding in 6 weeks! ZOMG!"
I guess I should stop posting again..0 -
In other news...the sky is up
You say this, but go ahead and peruse this forum to see the many "Should I start with cardio or strength training to lose weight?", or "How do I get toned abs?", or "I workout an hour everyday, why am I not losing weight?" threads.
Yes, it should be common knowledge, but this website and it's forum alone shows that it isn't.0
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