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If it's all CICO - why can't you outrun a bad diet?

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  • moe0303
    moe0303 Posts: 934 Member
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    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    I keep wanting to define the terms as such:

    "bad diet" -- diet where the calories in are higher than your actual TDEE
    outrun -- eat fewer calories than you burn.

    Therefore, we can rephrase: "You can't have a diet where the calories in are higher than your TDEE and still eat fewer calories than you burn."

    So, a truism. ;-)

    No. Because this thread must continue.

    o:)
  • moe0303
    moe0303 Posts: 934 Member
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    For what it's worth, the way I heard it said was "You can't outrun the fork." which I think would be a little easier to disprove.
  • Christine_72
    Christine_72 Posts: 16,049 Member
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    moe0303 wrote: »
    For what it's worth, the way I heard it said was "You can't outrun the fork." which I think would be a little easier to disprove.

    Yeah that makes more sense.

    When I think of a "bad diet", I think of poor nutrition, not calories.
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    edited May 2016
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    In the saying it clearly means calories/amount, though.
  • Christine_72
    Christine_72 Posts: 16,049 Member
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    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    In the saying it clearly means calories/amount, though.

    Yeah I know. They need to change the saying :tongue:
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    edited May 2016
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    I'm good with that. ;-)
  • 100df
    100df Posts: 668 Member
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    moe0303 wrote: »
    For what it's worth, the way I heard it said was "You can't outrun the fork." which I think would be a little easier to disprove.

    Yeah that makes more sense.

    When I think of a "bad diet", I think of poor nutrition, not calories.

    Before MFP "bad diet" meant poor nutrition to me. Now I think of "bad diet" as poor nutrition and more calories than I burn. No doubt that more calories than I burn is bad for me!

    I think my nutrition is better now. Could be better, I am working on it. When I used to say it was bad nutritionally, it wasn't as bad as I imagined. The "too many calories consumed" was the very bad part.
  • Carlos_421
    Carlos_421 Posts: 5,132 Member
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    moe0303 wrote: »
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    I keep wanting to define the terms as such:

    "bad diet" -- diet where the calories in are higher than your actual TDEE
    outrun -- eat fewer calories than you burn.

    Therefore, we can rephrase: "You can't have a diet where the calories in are higher than your TDEE and still eat fewer calories than you burn."

    So, a truism. ;-)

    No. Because this thread must continue.

    o:)

    I'd much rather it die.
  • aliencheesecake
    aliencheesecake Posts: 570 Member
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    parfia wrote: »
    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.....

    HOnestly, I don't think it IS all CICO. I have read several things lately that support the idea that the type of calories do matter. Your body processes sugar differently than protein, etc etc. I also read quite a bit, (today actually) that suggests that exercise for weight loss is not really productive. Of course you still exercise, but calorie restriction is and portion control is where it's at. I always tell people, also, no matter how much I exercise, I can out eat it. ;)
  • DanSTL82
    DanSTL82 Posts: 156 Member
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    Most people are not going to exercise enough to burn off overeating. It's technically possible, but when one McDonald's meal for dinner can put you over your calorie goal by 1,000 calories or more, most people aren't going to take the time/effort to jog that off (which would take hours).
  • meganjcallaghan
    meganjcallaghan Posts: 949 Member
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    it IS all CICO...and i DO outrun what most would consider a "bad" diet. I typically eat like 3/4 of my calories in chocolate, cake and ice cream every day. Am I putting on weight? nope. I still eat less calories than my TDEE due to what I run every day.
  • Carlos_421
    Carlos_421 Posts: 5,132 Member
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    parfia wrote: »
    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.....

    HOnestly, I don't think it IS all CICO. I have read several things lately that support the idea that the type of calories do matter. Your body processes sugar differently than protein, etc etc. I also read quite a bit, (today actually) that suggests that exercise for weight loss is not really productive. Of course you still exercise, but calorie restriction is and portion control is where it's at. I always tell people, also, no matter how much I exercise, I can out eat it. ;)

    The processing of sugar vs protein vs fat vs alcohol has nothing to do with fat storage/loss, though.
    Sure, sugar may be processed differently but as it's processed it releases a set amount of energy. The same is true of protein, etc.
    If you take in more of this energy than you burn then it is stored as fat. If you burn more than you take in (regardless of source) then your body will release energy from fat stores (fat loss).

    It's ALL about CICO when it comes to fat loss.
  • J72FIT
    J72FIT Posts: 5,948 Member
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    parfia wrote: »
    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.....

    HOnestly, I don't think it IS all CICO. I have read several things lately that support the idea that the type of calories do matter. Your body processes sugar differently than protein, etc etc. I also read quite a bit, (today actually) that suggests that exercise for weight loss is not really productive. Of course you still exercise, but calorie restriction is and portion control is where it's at. I always tell people, also, no matter how much I exercise, I can out eat it. ;)

    It is all about CICO, I bolded the part where even you deep down think so, regardless of the other nonsense you may have read...
  • Tydeclare44
    Tydeclare44 Posts: 572 Member
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    Well, there's two sides to this argument IMO.

    One, if all that matters is pure weight loss (fat and muscle), then CICO is mathmatically correct. Eg. The biggest loser. They eat low calories and have a high output trough exercise and drop a tremendous amount of weight.

    However, if you follow these contestants for a few years after the competition, most have regained a substantial amount of weight. In fact, some now weight more than they did before they started the biggest loser. When looking at their TDEE post-show, even if they eat to maitenence for a person at their weight, they are burning far less calories than their counterparts from their constant low-calorie diets. Thus, their metabolism gets shot from years of calorie restriction, and therefore they would have to, a you say, exercise off 3000 calories a day (which is absolutely mindboggling). Some of this can be attributed to the muscle loss caused by chronic low calorie dietng (More muscle=higher TDEE).

    All in all, that's why I recoommed Intermittent fasting as a weight loss protocol for it's effects on hormone production (Freeflowing HGH increases for example) and insulin sensitivity. It puts less emphasis on calorie restriction, thus preserving muscle. But I digress, as this is not a debate on what method is best.
  • J72FIT
    J72FIT Posts: 5,948 Member
    edited May 2016
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    Well, there's two sides to this argument IMO.

    One, if all that matters is pure weight loss (fat and muscle), then CICO is mathmatically correct. Eg. The biggest loser. They eat low calories and have a high output trough exercise and drop a tremendous amount of weight.

    However, if you follow these contestants for a few years after the competition, most have regained a substantial amount of weight. In fact, some now weight more than they did before they started the biggest loser. When looking at their TDEE post-show, even if they eat to maitenence for a person at their weight, they are burning far less calories than their counterparts from their constant low-calorie diets. Thus, their metabolism gets shot from years of calorie restriction, and therefore they would have to, a you say, exercise off 3000 calories a day (which is absolutely mindboggling). Some of this can be attributed to the muscle loss caused by chronic low calorie dietng (More muscle=higher TDEE).

    All in all, that's why I recoommed Intermittent fasting as a weight loss protocol for it's effects on hormone production (Freeflowing HGH increases for example) and insulin sensitivity. It puts less emphasis on calorie restriction, thus preserving muscle. But I digress, as this is not a debate on what method is best.

    CICO is not a diet, it is an energy equation. If you lose weight CI<CO, if you gain weight CI>CO. In both instances CICO governs all. Nothing in your post refutes that...
  • J72FIT
    J72FIT Posts: 5,948 Member
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    All in all, that's why I recoommed Intermittent fasting as a weight loss protocol for it's effects on hormone production (Freeflowing HGH increases for example) and insulin sensitivity. It puts less emphasis on calorie restriction, thus preserving muscle. But I digress, as this is not a debate on what method is best.

    All the potential benefits of IF can be attained through exercise. IF is a great tool for controlling calories, but nothing more...
  • Tydeclare44
    Tydeclare44 Posts: 572 Member
    edited May 2016
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    J72FIT wrote: »

    CICO is not a diet, it is an energy equation. If you lose weight CI<CO, if you gain weight CI>CO. In both instances CICO governs all. Nothing in your post refutes that...

    I am not disputing that CICO is a way to lose weight. I simply brought up a perspective that CICO can't completely explain.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/02/health/biggest-loser-weight-loss.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=photo-spot-region&region=top-news&WT.nav=top-news&_r=1

    One has to ask is CICO is the most efficent way to lose fat and retian muscle. To each their own, and if it works for you, then that's awesome and stick to that. But obesity wouldnt be such an epidemic if it was that easy. Weight loss is not purely willpower.
  • J72FIT
    J72FIT Posts: 5,948 Member
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    J72FIT wrote: »

    CICO is not a diet, it is an energy equation. If you lose weight CI<CO, if you gain weight CI>CO. In both instances CICO governs all. Nothing in your post refutes that...

    I am not disputing that CICO is a way to lose weight. I simply brought up a perspective that CICO can't completely explain.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/02/health/biggest-loser-weight-loss.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=photo-spot-region&region=top-news&WT.nav=top-news&_r=1

    CICO is not a way to lose weight, it is an energy equation. You are confusing CICO with counting calories...
  • Tydeclare44
    Tydeclare44 Posts: 572 Member
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    J72FIT wrote: »

    CICO is not a way to lose weight, it is an energy equation. You are confusing CICO with counting calories...

    Ok, you can pick apart grammar all day, or you can accept the point I'm attempting to make. Many people use CICO as a method to count calories, and do not understand the difference. Call it a mathematical equation, call it whatever you want, but please debate my main paoint rather than my grammar.