Funny things actually-fit people say
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I have a coworker who changes diet religions about once a month. She reads the diet books like some people read mysteries and she gets sucked into every one. She is in reasonably good shape by US standards and she thinks she owes that to what she has been doing for the last 2 or 3 weeks; It's like she doesn't remember she was extolling the virtues of completely different diet philosophy just weeks earlier. And this has been going on for a few years.3
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A friend of a friend is a successful personal trainer and has a ridiculously fit body. She is a proponent of reverse dieting. Unfortunately though, the way she promotes this is mostly telling overweight middle aged women that they should/could eat 2000-2500 calories per day. Period.
So they all feel freer to eat more calories, even though they are not professionals and have no clue how to actually do the process like she does it, and their exercise is Zumba or a little treadmill time. Of course they gain even more weight, and then sign up for her extremely expensive fitness training. Then they flip out when she suggests eating plans that are quite complex and strict.4 -
seltzermint555 wrote: »A friend of a friend is a successful personal trainer and has a ridiculously fit body. She is a proponent of reverse dieting. Unfortunately though, the way she promotes this is mostly telling overweight middle aged women that they should/could eat 2000-2500 calories per day. Period.
So they all feel freer to eat more calories, even though they are not professionals and have no clue how to actually do the process like she does it, and their exercise is Zumba or a little treadmill time. Of course they gain even more weight, and then sign up for her extremely expensive fitness training. Then they flip out when she suggests eating plans that are quite complex and strict.
I eat that amount and I'm in my sixties.
It's not outside the norm. The problem is most of those ladies likely don't actually keep track of their calories. The difference is that I log all food and use a food scale for 90% of my home-prepared meals.10 -
cmriverside wrote: »seltzermint555 wrote: »A friend of a friend is a successful personal trainer and has a ridiculously fit body. She is a proponent of reverse dieting. Unfortunately though, the way she promotes this is mostly telling overweight middle aged women that they should/could eat 2000-2500 calories per day. Period.
So they all feel freer to eat more calories, even though they are not professionals and have no clue how to actually do the process like she does it, and their exercise is Zumba or a little treadmill time. Of course they gain even more weight, and then sign up for her extremely expensive fitness training. Then they flip out when she suggests eating plans that are quite complex and strict.
I eat that amount and I'm in my sixties.
It's not outside the norm. The problem is most of those ladies likely don't actually keep track of their calories. The difference is that I log all food and use a food scale for 90% of my home-prepared meals.
Meh, maybe my post IS "woo". But I think these are women around 40-50 who are only somewhat overweight and not very active, and they're generally eating WAY under 2000 and this trainer gal (who is in her late 20s and spends her life literally working out) kind of misleads them into thinking they're just not eating enough. And they gain weight.9 -
everytime some jacked dude (and yeah, it's almost always a dude) on here insists that EVERYONE should be eating CLEAN or else their body will be riddled with TOXINZ and they'll always be FAT, i roll my eyes so hard i can watch the neurons in my frontal lobe die off.
Those aren't neurons, those are the TOXINZ. Eat clean and start every day with a shot of apple cider vinegar and you won't see them anymore.12 -
I read a thing about supplements that could probably be applied to any kind of weird fitness advice fit people give. It said that people who take supplements are actually healthier than people who don't. But it's only because supplement takers are often the kind of people who make overall more conscious decisions about what they are consuming and doing in their daily lives than most. Even if the supplements do zilch. Maybe even a placebo effect thing. I'm thinking you can apply that to any weird advice. Perhaps switching up her workout routine gives her the idea that she's burning more fat, but it's the idea alone keeps her going day after day and she's getting results even though it's definitely not due to her routine, but the simple fact that she's busting *kitten* all the time.8
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I'm confused about why this is funny... The body becomes incredibly efficient at doing the same thing every day, so if she were to continue the same workout routine every day and every week, her body would eventually become "used" to it and would not continue to show results.
I re-read the post and it seems like you read it as she had to switch the DAYS around to confuse the body, but I read it as she has to switch the ROUTINE around to "confuse the body", which is essentially true.
So yes, I suppose it's dumb if she thinks the day she does it on makes a difference, but if she's literally talking about switching up routine, she is correct.
"Getting used to workouts", "need to switch it up", "confuse the body" are all meaningless broscience buzzwords.
Your body does not need or do any of this.
The only way you will stop losing weight doing the same workout is if you do not adjust your calorie limit to still have a deficit once you reach maintenance levels.
That's not at all the same thing bros mean when they talk about this.
It's like they think the body has miniature brains all over it who think about the exercise (rather than just burning the energy), and it's totally pseudoscientific and woo.14 -
Bry_Fitness70 wrote: »quiksylver296 wrote: »I posted this in another thread yesterday. The manager of the Anytime Fitness I use had a female
in a side room, playing a VR video game, to get her heart rate up into the "fat burning zone."
Maybe an effective PT technique would be to sneak up behind your clients while they are working out and blast an air horn by their heads, that would spike their HR and burn a ton of extra calories!
And possibly cause them to drop a load in their underpants too!3 -
RMaxwell90 wrote: »I find the can't eat too late claim hilarious.
It always makes me think of Gremlins.
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I didn't know what "Woo" was until reading this thread. I thought that button was "Whoo Hoo!" or something similar. I apologize to anyone I have insulted in the past...
I think a lot of people must think this. I noticed there is a post in the success picture thread of a lady whos lost 300lbs and it gets woo'd! Ain't nothin woo about it.4 -
I had another one of those conversations today that started with a neighbor asking if I had lost weight (a little over 60 pounds, in maintenance over a month; I see this person 2 or 3 times a week) and asking how I did it, then critiquing what is wrong with eating whatever I want instead of cutting out certain foods that are diet killers (yes, bananas was on the list). I guess I have to put the weight back on and try again...12
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seltzermint555 wrote: »cmriverside wrote: »seltzermint555 wrote: »A friend of a friend is a successful personal trainer and has a ridiculously fit body. She is a proponent of reverse dieting. Unfortunately though, the way she promotes this is mostly telling overweight middle aged women that they should/could eat 2000-2500 calories per day. Period.
So they all feel freer to eat more calories, even though they are not professionals and have no clue how to actually do the process like she does it, and their exercise is Zumba or a little treadmill time. Of course they gain even more weight, and then sign up for her extremely expensive fitness training. Then they flip out when she suggests eating plans that are quite complex and strict.
I eat that amount and I'm in my sixties.
It's not outside the norm. The problem is most of those ladies likely don't actually keep track of their calories. The difference is that I log all food and use a food scale for 90% of my home-prepared meals.
Meh, maybe my post IS "woo". But I think these are women around 40-50 who are only somewhat overweight and not very active, and they're generally eating WAY under 2000 and this trainer gal (who is in her late 20s and spends her life literally working out) kind of misleads them into thinking they're just not eating enough. And they gain weight.
Don't worry about getting "woo"d. This originally had two meanings when rolled out and many people still think it means "Woo hoo!"2 -
Bodybuilders & trainers claiming that dumbbell lat pullovers will "expand the ribcage/make your chest/ribcage bigger"...I am not aware of any exercises that can alter someone's skeletal frame; this exercise does however work the serratus anterior.
Another stupid bro/bodybuilder one: "fish thins the skin...". Marc Lobliner did a hilarious video on this on youtube; yes changing a diet of steak/beef to low-no fat fish will definitely contribute to lowering kcals for a deficit (fatloss), but fish does not inherently have some magical physical properties that thin a person's skin (lol).4 -
Keto_Vampire wrote: »Bodybuilders & trainers claiming that dumbbell lat pullovers will "expand the ribcage/make your chest/ribcage bigger"...I am not aware of any exercises that can alter someone's skeletal frame; this exercise does however work the serratus anterior.
Another stupid bro/bodybuilder one: "fish thins the skin...". Marc Lobliner did a hilarious video on this on youtube; yes changing a diet of steak/beef to low-no fat fish will definitely contribute to lowering kcals for a deficit (fatloss), but fish does not inherently have some magical physical properties that thin a person's skin (lol).
I don't know; a lot of people are thin skinned about their bro-science beliefs...10 -
CarvedTones wrote: »I had another one of those conversations today that started with a neighbor asking if I had lost weight (a little over 60 pounds, in maintenance over a month; I see this person 2 or 3 times a week) and asking how I did it, then critiquing what is wrong with eating whatever I want instead of cutting out certain foods that are diet killers (yes, bananas was on the list). I guess I have to put the weight back on and try again...
Sounds like someone I know who claimed portion control, WW, and calorie counting didn't work for her, got gastric bypass, still lost slowly, then told me she was just fed up with the process. And is now selling the protein shakes she claims helped her lose weight and everyone must use to get in shape.2
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