Intermittent Fasting

13

Replies

  • L1zardQueen
    L1zardQueen Posts: 8,753 Member
    Show us one study that shows people eating less than they burn and gaining weight, and one that shows people eating more than they burn and losing weight. Do not bodybuilders inject insulin and get to sub 5% bodyfat.

    bodybuilders use insulin to build mass
    https://www.bodybuilding.com/content/the-muscle-building-messenger-complete-guide-to-insulin.html
    Also, they get a disgusting fat belly from using insulin. That's how you can tell that they are taking insulin.

    Need a study, an actual study, not something from Bodybuildingdotcom. Those guys are still at 5% bodyfat. Please explain their very low body fat.
  • GottaBurnEmAll
    GottaBurnEmAll Posts: 7,722 Member
    Monk_E_Boy wrote: »
    Monk_E_Boy wrote: »
    Sloth2016 wrote: »
    Well two perfectly logical explanations exist:

    1. The body's hormones are capable of creating or destroying matter and energy at the whim of the intermittent fasting participant.
    2. Some people in the study's sample were insulin resistant, and the reduction in insulin caused a reduction in their appetite, and subsequently a reduction in caloric intake that was not captured by the study.

    If I were a gambling man, which I am, I would lay my money on number 2.

    Also, those of us who are insulin resistant, 100 cals of candy will have different effects on our appetite (and balance, and heart rate, and the jack - hammer that it can trigger inside of our crania) than 100 cals of broccoli, but those differences do not include a greater metabolic advantage in terms of the energy derived from eating one vs. the other.


    1.) see my previous response.
    2.) insulin is not an appetite hormone (although ghrelin is). It’s a storage hormone, and there’s nothing inherently WRONG with it. Without it, humans wouldn’t have made it this far.
    But, high levels of it for prolonged periods of time can make our cells resistant to its effects, so our body has to produce MORE insulin in order to get the same effect (like how it takes more and more alcohol to get the same amount of drunk over time). This creates a vicious circle.
    IF helps break the cycle by lowering insulin levels for prolonged periods of time, slowly allowing your cells to once again become sensitive to its effects (like if you haven’t had a drink in a year, you’re back to getting that same amount of drunk with much less alcohol).

    What is your source for claims in 2 being the cause of insulin resistance? All medical sources I've read state otherwise.

    That high levels over prolonged periods of time create resistance? Isn’t that how most things work in the body? Alcohol, drugs, sustained loud noises, etc.?

    So you have no source.
  • L1zardQueen
    L1zardQueen Posts: 8,753 Member
    Show us one study that shows people eating less than they burn and gaining weight, and one that shows people eating more than they burn and losing weight. Do not bodybuilders inject insulin and get to sub 5% bodyfat.

    bodybuilders use insulin to build mass
    https://www.bodybuilding.com/content/the-muscle-building-messenger-complete-guide-to-insulin.html
    Also, they get a disgusting fat belly from using insulin. That's how you can tell that they are taking insulin.

    Need a study, an actual study, not something from Bodybuildingdotcom. Those guys are still at 5% bodyfat. Please explain their very low body fat.

    Then go look for one. They are far away from 5% bodyfat. They probably take a bunch of other steroids to reduce the amount of fat while keeping that large amount of muscle. Usually bodybuilders "cut" before a show, meaning they go on very disciplined diets to reduce the amount of fat in a short time. Getting to 5% bodyfat is extremely hard but totally possible (for a man) if you eat right and train hard.

    I'm looking, help me out.
  • Monk_E_Boy
    Monk_E_Boy Posts: 28 Member
    kimny72 wrote: »
    Monk_E_Boy wrote: »
    kimny72 wrote: »
    Monk_E_Boy wrote: »
    Monk_E_Boy wrote: »
    I guess I should point out that Calorie Reduction is, in fact, a part of a successful IF regimen. What I’m arguing, is that the idea of Calorie Reduction As Primary... is exactly what its acronym spells out.
    Simply reducing calories in (and/or increasing calories out) only works in the short term. We don’t have a weight loss problem in this country, we have a weight re-gain problem. If you don’t address the hormonal aspect of obesity, you won’t be able to fix the problem long-term.

    If simply managing calories so that you eat less than you burn only works short term, what produces the energy that causes weight gain long term?

    And what is the mechanism by which hormones in and of themselves lead to obesity?

    Without getting too complicated:
    Eating (which for this conversation will be shorthand for “putting something in your mouth that isn’t water/black coffee/tea”) raises insulin up from your personal baseline.
    When insulin is up, its job is to store energy. First it refills your glucose (short term storage), and whatever is leftover goes to your fat cells (long term storage). If your fat cells are all too full, new fat cells will be made for extra storage room.
    While insulin is raised above your personal baseline, your body can’t effectively access your storage. When insulin is baselined, your body ‘can’ effectively access your storage.
    The amount of storage you have built up will largely determine what your personal baseline of insulin is. More storage, higher baseline. Your insulin baseline can also be thought of as the body’s control mechanism for its weight set point, which it will defend vigorously.
    So, “eating” often keeps insulin above its baseline. It tells your body to store the incoming energy, without giving your body a chance to access the energy it has already stored. Any energy out, by design of your non-baselined insulin, will largely be provided by the energy you just recently “ate”, as opposed to the energy you’ve been storing.
    You tell your body to store energy every time you eat, if you eat often throughout the day that means you’re storing and not pulling from your storage, and over time you need more and more room to store your energy.

    What exactly is your medical background? Or can you point us to resources that led you to adopt this particular understanding of how the endocrine system works?

    I have absolutely ZERO medical training, and I wholeheartedly apologize if me sharing what I’ve learned has led you (or anyone else) to think otherwise. I’m not any sort of an expert in anything.
    I first got interested in learning more about IF when I found Dr. Jason Fung on YouTube. Since that day I’ve just been doing a lot of reading, listening to different people who have probably forgotten more about science than I’ll ever learn, and trying to piece it all together in a way that I can understand and articulate.
    You can attack me if you like, but I’d much rather you refute or clarify any of the points I’ve been making. I’m still very much trying to learn more about how it all works, the more information the better!

    Honestly, every doctor, endocrinologist, diabetes counselor, and diabetic I've ever met would refute what you're saying. You are saying the endocrine system works differently than endocrinologists have seen it work in the lab and in their patients. If you are going to state as fact that a bodily system works differently than those that specialize in it report it to work, it's up to you to show your work.

    And to be clear, I'm not attacking you, I'm disagreeing with what you are stating as fact.

    To be fair, I’m stating things as I understand them.
    So far you’ve said that many professionals would disagree with me, which is fine, except that you haven’t said what they’d disagree with. Everything?
    I’ve seen lots of studies talk about energy balance without going any deeper, but (and this just an example) if calories in versus calories out is truly the end all be all, shouldn’t diet soft drinks with zero calories have made a positive impact? Why do type 2 diabetics gain weight when they start taking insulin doses? Why do the overwhelming majority of eat less / move more diets fail in the long term? (and if the answer is willpower, why have we as a society become so morally defunct over the past 50 years or so?)
    Haven’t you ever thought there might be more to it?
  • L1zardQueen
    L1zardQueen Posts: 8,753 Member
    Monk_E_Boy wrote: »
    kimny72 wrote: »
    Monk_E_Boy wrote: »
    kimny72 wrote: »
    Monk_E_Boy wrote: »
    Monk_E_Boy wrote: »
    I guess I should point out that Calorie Reduction is, in fact, a part of a successful IF regimen. What I’m arguing, is that the idea of Calorie Reduction As Primary... is exactly what its acronym spells out.
    Simply reducing calories in (and/or increasing calories out) only works in the short term. We don’t have a weight loss problem in this country, we have a weight re-gain problem. If you don’t address the hormonal aspect of obesity, you won’t be able to fix the problem long-term.

    If simply managing calories so that you eat less than you burn only works short term, what produces the energy that causes weight gain long term?

    And what is the mechanism by which hormones in and of themselves lead to obesity?

    Without getting too complicated:
    Eating (which for this conversation will be shorthand for “putting something in your mouth that isn’t water/black coffee/tea”) raises insulin up from your personal baseline.
    When insulin is up, its job is to store energy. First it refills your glucose (short term storage), and whatever is leftover goes to your fat cells (long term storage). If your fat cells are all too full, new fat cells will be made for extra storage room.
    While insulin is raised above your personal baseline, your body can’t effectively access your storage. When insulin is baselined, your body ‘can’ effectively access your storage.
    The amount of storage you have built up will largely determine what your personal baseline of insulin is. More storage, higher baseline. Your insulin baseline can also be thought of as the body’s control mechanism for its weight set point, which it will defend vigorously.
    So, “eating” often keeps insulin above its baseline. It tells your body to store the incoming energy, without giving your body a chance to access the energy it has already stored. Any energy out, by design of your non-baselined insulin, will largely be provided by the energy you just recently “ate”, as opposed to the energy you’ve been storing.
    You tell your body to store energy every time you eat, if you eat often throughout the day that means you’re storing and not pulling from your storage, and over time you need more and more room to store your energy.

    What exactly is your medical background? Or can you point us to resources that led you to adopt this particular understanding of how the endocrine system works?

    I have absolutely ZERO medical training, and I wholeheartedly apologize if me sharing what I’ve learned has led you (or anyone else) to think otherwise. I’m not any sort of an expert in anything.
    I first got interested in learning more about IF when I found Dr. Jason Fung on YouTube. Since that day I’ve just been doing a lot of reading, listening to different people who have probably forgotten more about science than I’ll ever learn, and trying to piece it all together in a way that I can understand and articulate.
    You can attack me if you like, but I’d much rather you refute or clarify any of the points I’ve been making. I’m still very much trying to learn more about how it all works, the more information the better!

    Honestly, every doctor, endocrinologist, diabetes counselor, and diabetic I've ever met would refute what you're saying. You are saying the endocrine system works differently than endocrinologists have seen it work in the lab and in their patients. If you are going to state as fact that a bodily system works differently than those that specialize in it report it to work, it's up to you to show your work.

    And to be clear, I'm not attacking you, I'm disagreeing with what you are stating as fact.

    To be fair, I’m stating things as I understand them.
    So far you’ve said that many professionals would disagree with me, which is fine, except that you haven’t said what they’d disagree with. Everything?
    I’ve seen lots of studies talk about energy balance without going any deeper, but (and this just an example) if calories in versus calories out is truly the end all be all, shouldn’t diet soft drinks with zero calories have made a positive impact? Why do type 2 diabetics gain weight when they start taking insulin doses? Why do the overwhelming majority of eat less / move more diets fail in the long term? (and if the answer is willpower, why have we as a society become so morally defunct over the past 50 years or so?)
    Haven’t you ever thought there might be more to it?

    I think it is mostly due to all the misinformation that is thrown about. You need to be in a calorie deficit, you need to count calories or whatever gets you into a deficit. When one puts the weight back on, it's most likely that they didn't understand how weight loss occurs. A deficit.
  • mmapags
    mmapags Posts: 8,934 Member
    Monk_E_Boy wrote: »
    kimny72 wrote: »
    Monk_E_Boy wrote: »
    kimny72 wrote: »
    Monk_E_Boy wrote: »
    Monk_E_Boy wrote: »
    I guess I should point out that Calorie Reduction is, in fact, a part of a successful IF regimen. What I’m arguing, is that the idea of Calorie Reduction As Primary... is exactly what its acronym spells out.
    Simply reducing calories in (and/or increasing calories out) only works in the short term. We don’t have a weight loss problem in this country, we have a weight re-gain problem. If you don’t address the hormonal aspect of obesity, you won’t be able to fix the problem long-term.

    If simply managing calories so that you eat less than you burn only works short term, what produces the energy that causes weight gain long term?

    And what is the mechanism by which hormones in and of themselves lead to obesity?

    Without getting too complicated:
    Eating (which for this conversation will be shorthand for “putting something in your mouth that isn’t water/black coffee/tea”) raises insulin up from your personal baseline.
    When insulin is up, its job is to store energy. First it refills your glucose (short term storage), and whatever is leftover goes to your fat cells (long term storage). If your fat cells are all too full, new fat cells will be made for extra storage room.
    While insulin is raised above your personal baseline, your body can’t effectively access your storage. When insulin is baselined, your body ‘can’ effectively access your storage.
    The amount of storage you have built up will largely determine what your personal baseline of insulin is. More storage, higher baseline. Your insulin baseline can also be thought of as the body’s control mechanism for its weight set point, which it will defend vigorously.
    So, “eating” often keeps insulin above its baseline. It tells your body to store the incoming energy, without giving your body a chance to access the energy it has already stored. Any energy out, by design of your non-baselined insulin, will largely be provided by the energy you just recently “ate”, as opposed to the energy you’ve been storing.
    You tell your body to store energy every time you eat, if you eat often throughout the day that means you’re storing and not pulling from your storage, and over time you need more and more room to store your energy.

    What exactly is your medical background? Or can you point us to resources that led you to adopt this particular understanding of how the endocrine system works?

    I have absolutely ZERO medical training, and I wholeheartedly apologize if me sharing what I’ve learned has led you (or anyone else) to think otherwise. I’m not any sort of an expert in anything.
    I first got interested in learning more about IF when I found Dr. Jason Fung on YouTube. Since that day I’ve just been doing a lot of reading, listening to different people who have probably forgotten more about science than I’ll ever learn, and trying to piece it all together in a way that I can understand and articulate.
    You can attack me if you like, but I’d much rather you refute or clarify any of the points I’ve been making. I’m still very much trying to learn more about how it all works, the more information the better!

    Honestly, every doctor, endocrinologist, diabetes counselor, and diabetic I've ever met would refute what you're saying. You are saying the endocrine system works differently than endocrinologists have seen it work in the lab and in their patients. If you are going to state as fact that a bodily system works differently than those that specialize in it report it to work, it's up to you to show your work.

    And to be clear, I'm not attacking you, I'm disagreeing with what you are stating as fact.

    To be fair, I’m stating things as I understand them.
    So far you’ve said that many professionals would disagree with me, which is fine, except that you haven’t said what they’d disagree with. Everything?
    I’ve seen lots of studies talk about energy balance without going any deeper, but (and this just an example) if calories in versus calories out is truly the end all be all, shouldn’t diet soft drinks with zero calories have made a positive impact? Why do type 2 diabetics gain weight when they start taking insulin doses? Why do the overwhelming majority of eat less / move more diets fail in the long term? (and if the answer is willpower, why have we as a society become so morally defunct over the past 50 years or so?)
    Haven’t you ever thought there might be more to it?

    I think it is mostly due to all the misinformation that is thrown about. You need to be in a calorie deficit, you need to count calories or whatever gets you into a deficit. When one puts the weight back on, it's most likely that they didn't understand how weight loss occurs. A deficit.

    And diet soda doesn't magically create one. So, no I don't think there is more to it. What tools one uses can be different but it all comes down to energy balance.
  • Monk_E_Boy
    Monk_E_Boy Posts: 28 Member
    Sloth2016 wrote: »
    Monk_E_Boy wrote: »
    Monk_E_Boy wrote: »
    Monk_E_Boy wrote: »
    I guess I should point out that Calorie Reduction is, in fact, a part of a successful IF regimen. What I’m arguing, is that the idea of Calorie Reduction As Primary... is exactly what its acronym spells out.
    Simply reducing calories in (and/or increasing calories out) only works in the short term. We don’t have a weight loss problem in this country, we have a weight re-gain problem. If you don’t address the hormonal aspect of obesity, you won’t be able to fix the problem long-term.

    If simply managing calories so that you eat less than you burn only works short term, what produces the energy that causes weight gain long term?

    And what is the mechanism by which hormones in and of themselves lead to obesity?

    Without getting too complicated:
    Eating (which for this conversation will be shorthand for “putting something in your mouth that isn’t water/black coffee/tea”) raises insulin up from your personal baseline.
    When insulin is up, its job is to store energy. First it refills your glucose (short term storage), and whatever is leftover goes to your fat cells (long term storage). If your fat cells are all too full, new fat cells will be made for extra storage room.
    While insulin is raised above your personal baseline, your body can’t effectively access your storage. When insulin is baselined, your body ‘can’ effectively access your storage.
    The amount of storage you have built up will largely determine what your personal baseline of insulin is. More storage, higher baseline. Your insulin baseline can also be thought of as the body’s control mechanism for its weight set point, which it will defend vigorously.
    So, “eating” often keeps insulin above its baseline. It tells your body to store the incoming energy, without giving your body a chance to access the energy it has already stored. Any energy out, by design of your non-baselined insulin, will largely be provided by the energy you just recently “ate”, as opposed to the energy you’ve been storing.
    You tell your body to store energy every time you eat, if you eat often throughout the day that means you’re storing and not pulling from your storage, and over time you need more and more room to store your energy.

    CDqD1KV.jpg

    You failed to describe how insulin acted independent of energy balance.

    Furthermore,


    https://weightology.net/insulin-an-undeserved-bad-reputation/

    Cute meme.
    Calories in versus calories out (or “energy balance”) is based entirely on a one compartment theory. That all the calories we eat go into one compartment, and that when we expend energy, we pull it out of that same compartment. The only problem with that theory, is that it’s wrong.
    Calories go in and get sent to different places, one of which is easy to get energy back out of, and one of them isn’t (unless your insulin is at baseline).
    No one is “creating or destroying matter”, all the calories are accounted for. You just can’t access a portion of them for fuel if your insulin isn’t baselined.
    And that, the act of storing energy as fat combined with not allowing access to said stored energy when above baseline, is how insulin affects obesity independently from energy balance.

    How are calories "accessed" or "not accessed"?

    Sooo, if the "compartment" is the known universe, some calories can be "willed" into an alternate parallel universe by skipping breakfast?

    Disclaimer: I’m just a guy that read stuff on the interwebs. (For comment section legal reasons I must include that information.)

    AS I UNDERSTAND IT: excess food energy is stored as fat. Insulin prevents the breakdown of fat for energy. Therefore if insulin levels are raised, the energy that has been stored as fat is unavailable at that time.
    I have no idea what you’re talking about with parallel universes.
  • L1zardQueen
    L1zardQueen Posts: 8,753 Member
    edited November 2018
    mmapags wrote: »
    Monk_E_Boy wrote: »
    Sloth2016 wrote: »
    Monk_E_Boy wrote: »
    Monk_E_Boy wrote: »
    Monk_E_Boy wrote: »
    I guess I should point out that Calorie Reduction is, in fact, a part of a successful IF regimen. What I’m arguing, is that the idea of Calorie Reduction As Primary... is exactly what its acronym spells out.
    Simply reducing calories in (and/or increasing calories out) only works in the short term. We don’t have a weight loss problem in this country, we have a weight re-gain problem. If you don’t address the hormonal aspect of obesity, you won’t be able to fix the problem long-term.

    If simply managing calories so that you eat less than you burn only works short term, what produces the energy that causes weight gain long term?

    And what is the mechanism by which hormones in and of themselves lead to obesity?

    Without getting too complicated:
    Eating (which for this conversation will be shorthand for “putting something in your mouth that isn’t water/black coffee/tea”) raises insulin up from your personal baseline.
    When insulin is up, its job is to store energy. First it refills your glucose (short term storage), and whatever is leftover goes to your fat cells (long term storage). If your fat cells are all too full, new fat cells will be made for extra storage room.
    While insulin is raised above your personal baseline, your body can’t effectively access your storage. When insulin is baselined, your body ‘can’ effectively access your storage.
    The amount of storage you have built up will largely determine what your personal baseline of insulin is. More storage, higher baseline. Your insulin baseline can also be thought of as the body’s control mechanism for its weight set point, which it will defend vigorously.
    So, “eating” often keeps insulin above its baseline. It tells your body to store the incoming energy, without giving your body a chance to access the energy it has already stored. Any energy out, by design of your non-baselined insulin, will largely be provided by the energy you just recently “ate”, as opposed to the energy you’ve been storing.
    You tell your body to store energy every time you eat, if you eat often throughout the day that means you’re storing and not pulling from your storage, and over time you need more and more room to store your energy.

    CDqD1KV.jpg

    You failed to describe how insulin acted independent of energy balance.

    Furthermore,


    https://weightology.net/insulin-an-undeserved-bad-reputation/

    Cute meme.
    Calories in versus calories out (or “energy balance”) is based entirely on a one compartment theory. That all the calories we eat go into one compartment, and that when we expend energy, we pull it out of that same compartment. The only problem with that theory, is that it’s wrong.
    Calories go in and get sent to different places, one of which is easy to get energy back out of, and one of them isn’t (unless your insulin is at baseline).
    No one is “creating or destroying matter”, all the calories are accounted for. You just can’t access a portion of them for fuel if your insulin isn’t baselined.
    And that, the act of storing energy as fat combined with not allowing access to said stored energy when above baseline, is how insulin affects obesity independently from energy balance.

    How are calories "accessed" or "not accessed"?

    Sooo, if the "compartment" is the known universe, some calories can be "willed" into an alternate parallel universe by skipping breakfast?

    Disclaimer: I’m just a guy that read stuff on the interwebs. (For comment section legal reasons I must include that information.)

    AS I UNDERSTAND IT: excess food energy is stored as fat. Insulin prevents the breakdown of fat for energy. Therefore if insulin levels are raised, the energy that has been stored as fat is unavailable at that time.
    I have no idea what you’re talking about with parallel universes.

    You do realize that insulin levels rise after meals and fall between meals right? And are low at night after the last meal and before breakfast? And how would insulin cause a net fat storage in a calorie deficit?

    What? JK
  • lowcarbmale
    lowcarbmale Posts: 145 Member
    fair enough
This discussion has been closed.