"Why You Should Stop Exercising to Lose Weight"

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Replies

  • crvynatrlbeauty
    crvynatrlbeauty Posts: 40 Member
    I came across this article on my MSN homepage and thought it'd be interesting to hear the views of the group. :smile:
  • fitmom4lifemfp
    fitmom4lifemfp Posts: 1,572 Member
    I refuse to even click the link. Click bait or stupidity

    That^^.
  • jemhh
    jemhh Posts: 14,261 Member
    I agree with the article and don't think the title is misleading. People should exercise for maintaining/improving health and fitness, as well as for enjoyment. Not seeing anything wrong here.
  • bagge72
    bagge72 Posts: 1,377 Member
    I just skimmed the article, because it definitely is a click bait title, but I think it goes along with what a lot of people say on here. Eat less to lose weight, and exercise for health. Using just exercise to lose weight, doesn't always work because if you don't track what you are eating, you may never burn enough to compensate for that.
  • andrea4736
    andrea4736 Posts: 211 Member
    It's the way it's worded. It doesn't say you should stop exercising IN ORDER to lose weight. It's saying you shouldn't view exercise solely as a means of weight loss.
  • JeromeBarry1
    JeromeBarry1 Posts: 10,179 Member
    edited March 2017
    The workout of sprinting, 30 seconds 4 to 6 times per session, 2 to 3 times per week, burns more fat than the workout of low intensity steady state cardio for 3 hours a week. I don't even want to believe that, but I'm going to try it.

    That's almost to the point of not working out at all.
  • newheavensearth
    newheavensearth Posts: 870 Member
    I used to exercise without a caloric deficit at my highest weight. Of course I didn't lose anything, so I learned that exercise alone won't produce weight loss. So I switched gears to cleaning up my diet and creating a deficit, and weight loss followed. Now it's food first, exercise to feel good and look better.
  • fitmom4lifemfp
    fitmom4lifemfp Posts: 1,572 Member
    andrea4736 wrote: »
    It's the way it's worded. It doesn't say you should stop exercising IN ORDER to lose weight. It's saying you shouldn't view exercise solely as a means of weight loss.

    Obviously they worded it that way intentionally, to get people's curiosity up. Who views exercise solely as a means of weight loss? It's intentionally misleading, and that is why it is clickbait.
  • kgirlhart
    kgirlhart Posts: 5,185 Member
    I just kind of skimmed the article. But I agree. I think diet is more important for weight loss than exercise and exercise is more important for fitness. I can see how someone would read the title and think that it is saying if you want to lose weight you should stop exercising.
  • Need2Exerc1se
    Need2Exerc1se Posts: 13,575 Member
    andrea4736 wrote: »
    It's the way it's worded. It doesn't say you should stop exercising IN ORDER to lose weight. It's saying you shouldn't view exercise solely as a means of weight loss.

    Obviously they worded it that way intentionally, to get people's curiosity up. Who views exercise solely as a means of weight loss? It's intentionally misleading, and that is why it is clickbait.

    A lot of people do. It's the same people who post about being jealous of people who are thin and can 'eat only junk'. A lot of people associate healthy habits only with weight loss whether it's balanced diet or exercise. If you are thin you don't need either of these things because they are purely ways to lose weight.
  • fitmom4lifemfp
    fitmom4lifemfp Posts: 1,572 Member
    andrea4736 wrote: »
    The amount of people who think exercise is the only way to lose weight is actually pretty scary.

    No, people that think exercise is ONLY useful for losing weight. That's what the title is implying as I read it. Two different things. Even you and I are interpreting it differently. I seriously don't know anyone that thinks that. See how screwy the wording is? You could also read it as "Stop exercising....to lose weight". So stop exercising and you'll lose. So much wrong with that title, LOL!

  • andrea4736
    andrea4736 Posts: 211 Member
    andrea4736 wrote: »
    The amount of people who think exercise is the only way to lose weight is actually pretty scary.

    No, people that think exercise is ONLY useful for losing weight. That's what the title is implying as I read it. Two different things. Even you and I are interpreting it differently. I seriously don't know anyone that thinks that. See how screwy the wording is? You could also read it as "Stop exercising....to lose weight". So stop exercising and you'll lose. So much wrong with that title, LOL!

    Ahhhhh, gotcha! Lol.
  • FattieBabs
    FattieBabs Posts: 542 Member
    I went straight tothe comments! Have a very bad hip and exercise difficult. Have lost 14 lbs to date by dieting alone but note that I am now walking quicker so may look at gentle exercise too now, but I am proof that diet alone works. That said, exercise will strengthen and make me fitter :-)
  • newheavensearth
    newheavensearth Posts: 870 Member
    andrea4736 wrote: »
    It's the way it's worded. It doesn't say you should stop exercising IN ORDER to lose weight. It's saying you shouldn't view exercise solely as a means of weight loss.

    Obviously they worded it that way intentionally, to get people's curiosity up. Who views exercise solely as a means of weight loss? It's intentionally misleading, and that is why it is clickbait.

    I used to be one of those people. Who are those people? Speaking for myself, confused and misinformed by every piece of diet and nutrition info out there, ranging from the medical community to broscience. I learned nothing about portion control, meal planning, calorie control and psychological coping for my binge and emotional eating issues until Weight Watchers and MFP. Exercise was the only thing I knew I could accomplish and get right. Really, I lost count of how many times I felt I failed my diet du jour, but every time I finished a workout I felt I was on top of the world. So that's why exercise came first on my life and diet second. But now that I know better, it's the other way around. And there are many in my life who still think "she lost weight exercising" because I eat what I like within reason, but they don't understand the amount of work and restraint I put into controlling my food intake and issues. This myth still is out there- eat what you want, burn it off. Nope.
  • French_Peasant
    French_Peasant Posts: 1,639 Member
    annacole94 wrote: »
    That's the point of the article - exercise for health, eat for weight.

    Reminds me of this story from James Fell's FB feed:

    several years ago I was at the allergy doc's office with my daughter. The doctor was quite overweight, and somehow the subject of my new writing career came up. He grabbed his belly and said, "I've been wanting to do something about this for years. Inspire me!"

    I took a moment, then said, "Find an activity you're passionate about. Throw time and effort and even money into it. Just keep trying to get better. After a while, you'll realize that what you eat can either make you better at it, or worse. Then you'll be ready to tackle that side of it as well." I didn't say anything about weight loss.

    A year later we returned to his office and he was in great shape. He had a photo on his wall of him riding a mountain bike down a steep grade.

    As someone who was inspired to get her mountain bike back down from the garage wall by people on this site, this is a great story!

    However, I have found that even something like running, which I thought I hated, can become something I love--or something like the feel of heavy weights in my hand, which had never even crossed my mind before (regrettably).

    I have a hard time thinking of exercise in these binary, black-and-white calories because to me it is all part and parcel of being healthy and looking nice. Even the concern about weight has slowly dropped off my radar...I've barely lost any weight since I started lifting, but I've dropped from a 12/14 to a 6/8 pants size. Plus I can outrun the zombies should the zombie apocalypse occur. B)
  • Need2Exerc1se
    Need2Exerc1se Posts: 13,575 Member
    andrea4736 wrote: »
    The amount of people who think exercise is the only way to lose weight is actually pretty scary.

    No, people that think exercise is ONLY useful for losing weight. That's what the title is implying as I read it. Two different things. Even you and I are interpreting it differently. I seriously don't know anyone that thinks that. See how screwy the wording is? You could also read it as "Stop exercising....to lose weight". So stop exercising and you'll lose. So much wrong with that title, LOL!

    But title does not say that. You are inferring things that aren't really there. Granted it's a headline and the purpose of a headline is to draw readers in, but it's a pretty far stretch to say it suggests you'll lose weight if you stop exercising.

    Just out of curiosity, what headline would give an article advising that we not use exercise as a means to lose weight?
  • annacole94
    annacole94 Posts: 994 Member
    edited March 2017
    I've tried to like running, but I don't. And my body is really ill suited for running (a childhood of pneumonia and bronchitis makes it challenging to breathe, mismatched legs make it stressful on my knees and hips, and I generally just... don't like it). I like biking to work. It feels like accomplishing something, it's less frustrating than driving or busing, and it doesn't take much extra time out of my day.

    Exercise is important. Click-bait is the way life is now - it's pretty much a requirement to drive traffic and they wouldn't do it if it didn't work. And I do think that anyone that can tap into making exercise and enjoyable hobby has a much better chance of sticking with it, whatever it is.
  • TheRambler
    TheRambler Posts: 387 Member
    weight is important but health is MOST important.

    calorie deficit + working out + nutrients & vitamins = track to best health
  • Rubbish in my opinion. Making a blanket statement on human beings in general is never accurate. Some people's only motivation to exercise is to burn the extra calories so they will lose weight and still be able to eat more than some tiny calorie amount. Some people start out only doing it for that reason but come to enjoy it and stick with it because it brings them joy, relaxation, stress relief etc.... For people who do not enjoy their chosen exercise? Those people may not stick to it long term no matter WHY the began to start with. The key is to find an exercise you ENJOY. Be it walking, dancing, cycling, skating, trampoline jumping, swimming, mountain climbing, running, etc... If you don't like it your initial motivation most likely will not be enough to keep you at it.
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