A calorie is a calorie ...

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Replies

  • leanjogreen18
    leanjogreen18 Posts: 2,492 Member
    lizery wrote: »
    Maybe this belongs in the debate forum but doesn't pretty much everyone know whats at the CORE of a "healthy diet"?

    Perhaps I'm wrong.

    Maybe. I posted in food and nutrition as it's an article about food and nutrition and was not posted as a topic to debate, rather a reference for conversation.

    However, debate ensued. Or critical defensive conversation, if that's what you want to call debate ...

    In my experience (in life and as a health care professional), many people actual DON'T know what the core of a healthy diet should look like.

    Heck, malnourishment in obese and morbidly obese people is common.

    I was actually wondering if MY question belongs in the debate forum:)

    I personally think that most people know the BASICS/CORE of a healthy diet regardless of how they actually eat.
  • crackpotbaby
    crackpotbaby Posts: 1,297 Member
    lizery wrote: »
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    lizery wrote: »
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    Yep, different foods have different calories and different nutrient contents, and what you eat in your overall diet matters.

    Don't quite understand the title, as IMO that has nothing to do with the fact that a calorie is a calorie. Calorie is not a synonym for "food" in that phrase.

    Because there are soooooo many posts on here were users advocate others eating whatever junk they want because 'a calorie is a calorie', so long as there is a deficit.

    As I've said in other threads, I really think claims like this are a misunderstanding of what's said. As someone who has said "a calorie is a calorie" and (when asked) "yes, if you want to, you can eat whatever you choose and still lose weight," I always add "but of course for health and nutrition what you eat matters" and also "what you eat could make it easier or harder to stick to your calorie goal." I have seem MANY such threads and have yet to see one where that's not said early on and by many posters or where anyone disagrees with that advice. I really think the claim that people are being told nutrition/satiety are irrelevant is a strawman.

    I'll also say that I think this supposed disagreement between what one "wants" to eat/think tastes good and what is nutritionally satisfying is a little bit of an assumption, and IMO a sad one. What I WANT to eat is what fits my nutrition goals, as well as what just happens to appeal in the moment, and there's no conflict between what I think tastes good and those goals. I can prioritize BOTH eating what I want and hitting nutritional requirements.
    Those posts reek of ignorance regarding nutrition and general health. I find that very frustrating particularly when that advice is given with the implication of calories all being equal (in a great sense than measured unit of energy).

    Well, in that I think you are wrong about what the posts say, can't comment on these posts that supposedly claim nutrition doesn't matter.
    But I certainly was not using calorie as a synonym for food or implying is is. It was in reference to the way the phase is used frequently on the forums in a same calories, equal results for your body kind of way. That's all.

    But that assumes it is being used as a synonym for food.

    Steak including 100 calories of energy, broccoli including the same, and olive oil including the same are all different foods and have different effects on satiety, nutrition, etc. (or let's compare 2 meals of 500 calories and they will be different, obviously). But the CALORIES are not different, as a calorie is just a unit of energy. There's no such thing as a "steak calorie" vs. a "broccoli calorie." That's why I say that when you think "a calorie is a calorie" means it makes no difference whether you eat a meal of pasta with shrimp and vegetables, plus olive oil, a meal of steak and fries with a salad, or a meal of lentils and spinach and some rice and butter, or any number of other things, you are wrong. Those meals might be different beyond calorie differences -- they might have more or less effect on lasting satiety, on satisfaction, on whether the day meets overall nutrient requirements, etc. But that doesn't mean a calorie is not a calorie.

    You seem to think that someone who says a calorie is not a calorie means something that is never meant, and that's why I find this frustrating. I really think it's a misunderstanding that ought to be cleared up.

    Question: what do you actually think you and I are disagreeing about here?

    Um ... semantics.

    Someone flagged my comment saying this was a disagreement about semantics?

    Are you actually kidding?!
  • crackpotbaby
    crackpotbaby Posts: 1,297 Member
    In case you're unsure, semantics is 'the branch of linguistics and logic concerned with meaning. The two main areas are logical semantics, concerned with matters such as sense and reference and presupposition and implication, and lexical semantics, concerned with the analysis of word meanings and relations between them. The meaning of a word, phrase, or text.'

    Whoever flagged it as such, please explain how my comment was abusive.

    ...............

  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    lizery wrote: »
    lizery wrote: »
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    lizery wrote: »
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    Yep, different foods have different calories and different nutrient contents, and what you eat in your overall diet matters.

    Don't quite understand the title, as IMO that has nothing to do with the fact that a calorie is a calorie. Calorie is not a synonym for "food" in that phrase.

    Because there are soooooo many posts on here were users advocate others eating whatever junk they want because 'a calorie is a calorie', so long as there is a deficit.

    As I've said in other threads, I really think claims like this are a misunderstanding of what's said. As someone who has said "a calorie is a calorie" and (when asked) "yes, if you want to, you can eat whatever you choose and still lose weight," I always add "but of course for health and nutrition what you eat matters" and also "what you eat could make it easier or harder to stick to your calorie goal." I have seem MANY such threads and have yet to see one where that's not said early on and by many posters or where anyone disagrees with that advice. I really think the claim that people are being told nutrition/satiety are irrelevant is a strawman.

    I'll also say that I think this supposed disagreement between what one "wants" to eat/think tastes good and what is nutritionally satisfying is a little bit of an assumption, and IMO a sad one. What I WANT to eat is what fits my nutrition goals, as well as what just happens to appeal in the moment, and there's no conflict between what I think tastes good and those goals. I can prioritize BOTH eating what I want and hitting nutritional requirements.
    Those posts reek of ignorance regarding nutrition and general health. I find that very frustrating particularly when that advice is given with the implication of calories all being equal (in a great sense than measured unit of energy).

    Well, in that I think you are wrong about what the posts say, can't comment on these posts that supposedly claim nutrition doesn't matter.
    But I certainly was not using calorie as a synonym for food or implying is is. It was in reference to the way the phase is used frequently on the forums in a same calories, equal results for your body kind of way. That's all.

    But that assumes it is being used as a synonym for food.

    Steak including 100 calories of energy, broccoli including the same, and olive oil including the same are all different foods and have different effects on satiety, nutrition, etc. (or let's compare 2 meals of 500 calories and they will be different, obviously). But the CALORIES are not different, as a calorie is just a unit of energy. There's no such thing as a "steak calorie" vs. a "broccoli calorie." That's why I say that when you think "a calorie is a calorie" means it makes no difference whether you eat a meal of pasta with shrimp and vegetables, plus olive oil, a meal of steak and fries with a salad, or a meal of lentils and spinach and some rice and butter, or any number of other things, you are wrong. Those meals might be different beyond calorie differences -- they might have more or less effect on lasting satiety, on satisfaction, on whether the day meets overall nutrient requirements, etc. But that doesn't mean a calorie is not a calorie.

    You seem to think that someone who says a calorie is not a calorie means something that is never meant, and that's why I find this frustrating. I really think it's a misunderstanding that ought to be cleared up.

    Question: what do you actually think you and I are disagreeing about here?

    Um ... semantics.

    Someone flagged my comment saying this was a disagreement about semantics?

    Are you actually kidding?!

    FTR, it wasn't me.
  • leanjogreen18
    leanjogreen18 Posts: 2,492 Member
    WinoGelato wrote: »
    lizery wrote: »
    In case you're unsure, semantics is 'the branch of linguistics and logic concerned with meaning. The two main areas are logical semantics, concerned with matters such as sense and reference and presupposition and implication, and lexical semantics, concerned with the analysis of word meanings and relations between them. The meaning of a word, phrase, or text.'

    Whoever flagged it as such, please explain how my comment was abusive.

    ...............

    A lot of people misuse the flag system. Don't sweat it.

    Also, not me. :smile:

    ^^^This.

    I'm not sure why but people flag the silliest things.
  • crzycatlady1
    crzycatlady1 Posts: 1,930 Member
    WinoGelato wrote: »
    lizery wrote: »
    In case you're unsure, semantics is 'the branch of linguistics and logic concerned with meaning. The two main areas are logical semantics, concerned with matters such as sense and reference and presupposition and implication, and lexical semantics, concerned with the analysis of word meanings and relations between them. The meaning of a word, phrase, or text.'

    Whoever flagged it as such, please explain how my comment was abusive.

    ...............

    A lot of people misuse the flag system. Don't sweat it.

    Also, not me. :smile:

    ^^^This.

    I'm not sure why but people flag the silliest things.

    Yep, pretty common occurance. And not me 3 lol :)
  • Christine_72
    Christine_72 Posts: 16,049 Member
    In all fairness to the OP, there are plenty of posts flying around here saying "I pay no attention to macros/micros, i only watch calories", or "only want friends who don't eat clean or healthy" or something like that.
  • GrowingGlow
    GrowingGlow Posts: 10 Member
    Great article! I've always been annoyed by the people who truly think a calorie is just a calorie (implying nutrition doesn't matter) probably because it always comes from someone who isn't really as healthy or in shape as they claim to be, and think they know it all. I've never heard someone with an amazing physique say it.
    Dieting is about healthier food choices and staying in your macros of protein, fat, and carbs while aiming for a calorie goal. It's not just about a number on a scale. You could gain muscle mass, loose fat, look a thousand times better, and not loose much weight or even gain it. If you're just a calorie for a calorie kinda person, try eating nothing but sugar and butter for six months. Guaranteed you would look gross, get rotten stinky teeth, and probably die.
  • robertw486
    robertw486 Posts: 2,401 Member
    This may or may not be related to the topic, but this has been bugging me lately. Why is "eating healthy" often attached to "dieting and losing weight"? Many people don't give a fly about nutrition until they decide to diet, then suddenly things that were "meh, not too healthy but whatever" suddenly become "if I eat this once I will drop dead", although in many cases health is not the primary driver for their weight loss, which is why this is confusing to me. Is it a case of all or nothing and going all in? Do people feel like they shouldn't bother with nutrition unless they're losing weight? Could this be the reason why there is so much focus on a calorie not being a calorie (in a sense of using calories as a proxy for foods) in the dieting culture but not so much in the general food culture? I wonder if this is how this whole "you can only lose weight on nutritious foods" thing got started, as is often the case with any idea taken to an extreme.

    In my mind, nutrition has always been a stand-alone concept and just one modular part of health. Asking if a calorie is a calorie in a nutritional sense sounded like an odd question to me when I first decided to do internet dieting. That's why I gravitated towards flexible dieting and latched onto it as soon as I found it, because it keeps the two concepts separate like they are in my mind. Probably because this is my first time dieting and I did not have a pre-existing dieting baggage.

    Using sunscreen and having a good posture are not prerequisites for dieting, so why would nutrition be? A nutritious diet being a good thing is a given. I don't feel this disclaimer needs to be made every time someone asks if they could eat anything they want within their calories, but I make it anyway because people tend to find the most bizarre ways of misunderstanding. I don't like it. Telling a grown up "to eat their vegetables" feels insulting to their intelligence. That's also why I don't like these dish comparisons. They remind me too much of early grade school pictures of "good" and "bad" comparisons.

    I feel the issue is not whether or not nutrition is important, and it's shocking how many people interpret it that way, but if foods need to be micromanaged on an individual level vs as a part of the overall diet.


    IMO this would be an excellent topic for the debate section, or for input in one of the general sections. It does seem that health for many is connected to weight, and they disregard that only certain things are impacted by weight.




    As for the original link and thought from @lizery I personally think it gives a really good visual representation of how calories are only equal in the energy measurement sense. Yes, in terms of a measure of energy a calorie is a calorie. But in all of those calories the form of input for humans is food. Even if the overall nutritional content as far as macros and micros was the same, the satiety, enjoyment, preparation and many other factors come into the picture.

    We don't live on units of measure, we live on food. And that is why even when people can fulfill the nutrition needs it becomes very much more individual as far as what foods satisfy any given person and help them stay on track.
  • KatzeDerNacht22
    KatzeDerNacht22 Posts: 200 Member
    If you think nutrients are so important, eat nothing but broccoli for 6 months vs. someone who eats a diet consisting of the foods they like within their calorie needs.

    Eating just one single thing can't possible provide with enough nutrients, your example is flawed there.
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