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If it's all CICO - why can't you outrun a bad diet?
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ForecasterJason wrote: »[In this situation I was not talking about people on MFP; I'm referring to the general population.
You are claiming that lots of people eat only "junk."
Maybe that's so.
How does that contribute to the conversation? Do you think that most of them are doing so because they think exercise will provide the micros they are allegedly missing out on?0 -
TV shows like the Biggest Loser give people the idea that you can exercise your fat away. I am lazy so it fascinates me how these people who are overweight and out of shape exercise intensely for hours. I don't know where their endurance comes from. While my endurance has increased greatly, it isn't nearly like that.
To burn 1000 calories via exercise it would take me more hours of walking than I am willing to do.
Endurance is directly proportional to the promise of lots of money. That's like biology 101, duhhh.9 -
This is purely for debate purposes - if weight loss is purely calories in and calories out, why can't you 'outrun a bad diet' - surely if you run enough to burn off the calories of a bad dietary intake, you can for all intents and purposes outrun a bad diet?
If a person is in a caloric deficit surely they will lose irrespective of what their food intake is.
begin.....0 -
stevencloser wrote: »TV shows like the Biggest Loser give people the idea that you can exercise your fat away. I am lazy so it fascinates me how these people who are overweight and out of shape exercise intensely for hours. I don't know where their endurance comes from. While my endurance has increased greatly, it isn't nearly like that.
To burn 1000 calories via exercise it would take me more hours of walking than I am willing to do.
Endurance is directly proportional to the promise of lots of money. That's like biology 101, duhhh.
So endurance is more in your mind than what your body is physically capable of.0 -
Too much "thinkin" and not enough "doin". That's what I see.3
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I can't believe there are 7 pages on this topic. It's like debating on whether the Earth is round.
*scratches head*3 -
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lemurcat12 wrote: »ForecasterJason wrote: »[In this situation I was not talking about people on MFP; I'm referring to the general population.
You are claiming that lots of people eat only "junk."
Maybe that's so.
How does that contribute to the conversation? Do you think that most of them are doing so because they think exercise will provide the micros they are allegedly missing out on?
FWIW, I know based on my TDEE and activity level that I could eat a diet that's mostly all junk food to my heart's content (what my appetite allows) and I wouldn't gain a significant amount of weight. I would say in this regard that no, I could not outrun this kind of diet because it would be detrimental to my health, regardless of the fact that I wouldn't really gain weight.
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To me a 'bad diet' means a Way Of Eating that gives me worse health.
A 'good diet' means a WOE that leads to better health.
One could find a WOE that would lead to a 50 pound weight loss yet have increased their risk of a premature death.2 -
annaskiski wrote: »Well you do burn at least a thousand calories just going about your normal day. A lot of the posts stating how difficult it is to burn off X000 calories seem to be ignoring that. Personally i dislike the statement in the title - I think it tends to be limiting to individuals who could utilize exercise as their primary weight control tool. Depending on "how bad" my diet is, a bit of exercise just might be exactly what I need to get my weight to where I want it.
No one's claiming that you can't burn 1000 calories in a couple hours of intense exercise. But I often see stuff like:
'Mowing the lawn 45min. 750 calories....'
Wow, really? (ok, maybe with a push mower).
I don't burn more than 400 cal in an hour run according to my HRM, but yes, I know that other people can burn much more. (and I would die if I ran more than an hour).
But I see so often people post that they can't lose weight, and then post 2000-3000 calorie burns for walking, some aerobics, etc.
Not even for a push mower (I assume this is a reel mower, no power)...Harvard Medical School gives that 488 calories an hour for a 185 lb person. Maybe they were super heavy and then mowing uphill both ways.1 -
So anyway, after the cheeseburger discussion yesterday made me voraciously hungry, we went out to Red Robin, and I got the burger with the guac, bacon and swiss cheese. I thought, I will eat half, plus the side of broccoli, because that will fit into my calories for the day. No. I crammed all glorious 1,011 calories down my piehole in about three minutes. It was glorious. I didn't even lift last night...so sleepy. Then this morning I stepped on the scales expecting to get a lot of bad news from water retention or worse...and I had dropped down 1.2 lbs. from my previous low weight. The burger diet! It works!!!7
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Burgers and snickers diet!! FTW!!2
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Christine_72 wrote: »Ok what if you eat at maintenance everyday, but burn off 500 calories through exercise to lose 1lb a week. Would this be classed as outrunning a "bad" diet?
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GaleHawkins wrote: »To me a 'bad diet' means a Way Of Eating that gives me worse health.
A 'good diet' means a WOE that leads to better health.
One could find a WOE that would lead to a 50 pound weight loss yet have increased their risk of a premature death.
I think the only one that qualifies for everyone would be starvation.1 -
jmbmilholland wrote: »annaskiski wrote: »Well you do burn at least a thousand calories just going about your normal day. A lot of the posts stating how difficult it is to burn off X000 calories seem to be ignoring that. Personally i dislike the statement in the title - I think it tends to be limiting to individuals who could utilize exercise as their primary weight control tool. Depending on "how bad" my diet is, a bit of exercise just might be exactly what I need to get my weight to where I want it.
No one's claiming that you can't burn 1000 calories in a couple hours of intense exercise. But I often see stuff like:
'Mowing the lawn 45min. 750 calories....'
Wow, really? (ok, maybe with a push mower).
I don't burn more than 400 cal in an hour run according to my HRM, but yes, I know that other people can burn much more. (and I would die if I ran more than an hour).
But I see so often people post that they can't lose weight, and then post 2000-3000 calorie burns for walking, some aerobics, etc.
Not even for a push mower (I assume this is a reel mower, no power)...Harvard Medical School gives that 488 calories an hour for a 185 lb person. Maybe they were super heavy and then mowing uphill both ways.
I don't mow often, but occasionally will mow a relative's place that has a short hill (maybe 20-25 feet at the highest) with about 200% grade and is very wide (about 150 feet). A 2nd similar hill on the other side of the property is almost as steep, taller, but not as wide. When I mow that, it is using a push mower (gas powered) and it is difficult. A riding mower would be dangerous, though I've actually seen it done on the less steep of the hills (I would not try this). The guy would sit with his body hanging off of the mower on the uphill side to balance the weight so it wouldn't flip.0 -
GaleHawkins wrote: »To me a 'bad diet' means a Way Of Eating that gives me worse health.
A 'good diet' means a WOE that leads to better health.
One could find a WOE that would lead to a 50 pound weight loss yet have increased their risk of a premature death.
I think the only one that qualifies for everyone would be starvation.
Why do you say that?0 -
midwesterner85 wrote: »jmbmilholland wrote: »annaskiski wrote: »Well you do burn at least a thousand calories just going about your normal day. A lot of the posts stating how difficult it is to burn off X000 calories seem to be ignoring that. Personally i dislike the statement in the title - I think it tends to be limiting to individuals who could utilize exercise as their primary weight control tool. Depending on "how bad" my diet is, a bit of exercise just might be exactly what I need to get my weight to where I want it.
No one's claiming that you can't burn 1000 calories in a couple hours of intense exercise. But I often see stuff like:
'Mowing the lawn 45min. 750 calories....'
Wow, really? (ok, maybe with a push mower).
I don't burn more than 400 cal in an hour run according to my HRM, but yes, I know that other people can burn much more. (and I would die if I ran more than an hour).
But I see so often people post that they can't lose weight, and then post 2000-3000 calorie burns for walking, some aerobics, etc.
Not even for a push mower (I assume this is a reel mower, no power)...Harvard Medical School gives that 488 calories an hour for a 185 lb person. Maybe they were super heavy and then mowing uphill both ways.
I don't mow often, but occasionally will mow a relative's place that has a short hill (maybe 20-25 feet at the highest) with about 200% grade and is very wide (about 150 feet). A 2nd similar hill on the other side of the property is almost as steep, taller, but not as wide. When I mow that, it is using a push mower (gas powered) and it is difficult. A riding mower would be dangerous, though I've actually seen it done on the less steep of the hills (I would not try this). The guy would sit with his body hanging off of the mower on the uphill side to balance the weight so it wouldn't flip.
That's not a push mower.
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jofjltncb6 wrote: »kmbrooks15 wrote: »You could outrun it, but it may not be healthy to do so. Eating 1500 calories of crap and burning 2000 calories will still cause weight loss, but you will likely be unhealthy because of the lack of vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients necessary.
Is crap in the MFP database? What is the nutritional profile of crap? Also, it seems unhealthy to eat crap. You should probably seek professional help for the compulsion that is leading you to eat crap instead of food. That sounds like a serious and potentially dangerous problem.
You leave my dog out of this! I can't help he likes to turdburgle the other dogs second harvest2
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