The ugly question that must be asked
terence
Posts: 119
I've never read anything about this topic and, yet, it must play a critical part in one's weight loss. If you are feint of heart, suffer from apoplexy, loss of visual purple, or similar ailments, please read no further >>>>>>>>>>>> :noway:
Question 1: What part does the volume/weight of our excreta play in weight loss?
Question 2: Is the volume/weight of said excrement fixed in relation to calorie input and energy output.
Question 3: Are some types of food more efficient in processing our general intake, thereby expelling a greater proportion of that intake as excreta?
In Question 3, I am thinking of fiber, however there may be other food groups that are more expropriate (my word).
Last week, I did a test. I partook of a high-fiber diet for four days. I ate high-fiber cereal for two meals each day except for one day when the cereal represented all three main meals. Apart from that, I ate fruit and little else.
Except for a little wind pain on the first and second days, nothing extraordinary happened until Day 4. Then, over a period of 30 hours, there were six separate evacuations (No ... not from my building as a result of the wind! ). All but one of those events was of reasonable volume. I should mention that I was unaware that there had been any prior storage as I had been as regular as the taxman before and during my research. I should also add that this was not diarrhea, nor was it unpleasant in any way - just good, old-fashioned bowel movements. And that leads to ...
Question 4: Was this just happenstance or have I unwittingly stumbled upon a fairly basic phenomenon?
Question 5: My waist measurement decreased by almost an inch during the week. Coincidence? (Queue: 'Twilight Zone' theme)
Apologies, again, to the sensitive and expressionable (mine again) among us, but I find this fascinating and I'm seriously interested in the answers. I've never seen this discussed.
Question 1: What part does the volume/weight of our excreta play in weight loss?
Question 2: Is the volume/weight of said excrement fixed in relation to calorie input and energy output.
Question 3: Are some types of food more efficient in processing our general intake, thereby expelling a greater proportion of that intake as excreta?
In Question 3, I am thinking of fiber, however there may be other food groups that are more expropriate (my word).
Last week, I did a test. I partook of a high-fiber diet for four days. I ate high-fiber cereal for two meals each day except for one day when the cereal represented all three main meals. Apart from that, I ate fruit and little else.
Except for a little wind pain on the first and second days, nothing extraordinary happened until Day 4. Then, over a period of 30 hours, there were six separate evacuations (No ... not from my building as a result of the wind! ). All but one of those events was of reasonable volume. I should mention that I was unaware that there had been any prior storage as I had been as regular as the taxman before and during my research. I should also add that this was not diarrhea, nor was it unpleasant in any way - just good, old-fashioned bowel movements. And that leads to ...
Question 4: Was this just happenstance or have I unwittingly stumbled upon a fairly basic phenomenon?
Question 5: My waist measurement decreased by almost an inch during the week. Coincidence? (Queue: 'Twilight Zone' theme)
Apologies, again, to the sensitive and expressionable (mine again) among us, but I find this fascinating and I'm seriously interested in the answers. I've never seen this discussed.
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Bumping to see responses.0
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OMG chrissy that has to be the cutest dog ever. What breed is he/she? Boxer?0
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Ummm... no idea. All I can really think of as a response is that I don't want to rely on bowel movements to account for losing weight. I don't want to "lose" calories - I know I can burn them with exercise. I don't [ideally] care about losing pounds, I care about losing inches. I'm sure bowel movements cause you to lose inches. My question is, can you keep up this high-fiber diet and bowel movements for the rest of your life? Or once you're done with all of your weight/inches lost, will you just bloom up again if you ease up on the fiber?
Someone below mentioned those cleansing things, and I agree. This seem more momentary than long-termed. Unless, of course, you combine it with exercise and proper diet, perhaps... but really, I've no medical knowledge to base this on, so I'm really just thinking out loud.0 -
Interesting...I am curious what the more learned among us have to say. Ever read any of the colon cleansing info?0
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i call this cleansing...those inches are probably bloated inches...and i used to do a cleansing once a month where i would eat nothing but fruits, veggies and nuts for a few days...now i just incorporate 3 fruits and 3 veggies into my diet... drinking water also helps and deff any wheat greats with fiber in them is going to help u poo.....but what works the best for me are the fruits and veggies....:bigsmile:
p.s. the cleansing will only bring u down a certain amount and i personally believe that certain amount is what u technically weigh anyway because i dont count poo as a person and our weight lmao...but u cant just cleanse ur way to all the way skinny0 -
interesting... how much "leftovers" we are lugging around inside our bodies!!0
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interesting... how much "leftovers" we are lugging around inside our bodies!!0
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I have read in Prevention and Health magazine that for every gram of fiber you ingest you are tying up 7 calories. ... So if you eat 30 g of fiber - you will excrete 210 calories. Not sure how acurate this is but I read it from farily credible magazines.0
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Excellent questions for I've always wondered that myself. I do know that when I adhere to sensible eating with the recommended daily fiber intake, exercise a minimum of 30-40 mins/day six days a week, and drink plenty of water, within three days things begin to happen very regularly. There is always left over in our body (spakle or paste as the medical community calls it) so continually eating healthly and exercising will assure a healthy rotation and the release of any overflow.0
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This goes along with all of the colon cleansing/body cleansing theories out there. However, it can't be considered real weight loss. If you go back to eating minimal fiber you'd most likely get back the bloat you lost. You ingested more fiber-a laxative, so of course you're going to have more bowel movements. Fiber is actually a bulk laxative, so the fact that your stools weren't loose is par for the course. That said, imagine how good you would feel if you incorporated more fiber/fruit into your daily diet (not as a test)! In fact there is a diet called The Fiber 35 (or something like that) dedicated to this very subject. Hope this helps.0
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My question is, can you keep up this high-fiber diet and bowel movements for the rest of your life? Or once you're done with all of your weight/inches lost, will you just bloom up again if you ease up on the fiber?
Yes, I'd like to know that too.0 -
I have read in Prevention and Health magazine that for every gram of fiber you ingest you are tying up 7 calories. ... So if you eat 30 g of fiber - you will excrete 210 calories. Not sure how acurate this is but I read it from farily credible magazines.
You mean "tying up" as in "little parcels"? That was the way I understood it. So, within certain limits, one would assume that eating lots of fiber would parcel it up and send it out before it has a chance to take up residence. Oui?
[What will those people at UPS in their lovely brown uniforms think of next?]0 -
Thanks for posting these interesting questions, and in a lighthearted manner. PML at some of it...!six separate evacuations (No ... not from my building as a result of the wind!).
I'm no expert here, but in my humbel opinion I reckon that seeing as you were putting so much fibre into your body that fibre had to come out again. There is usually a delay with the digestive system, which explains why it didn't happen during the experiment. The inch loss could be attributed to the fact you weren't eating other higher cal foods while on this experiment.
Are or will the results be published on the net? I would be interested in reading it.0 -
Melther was pretty much right on the money.
At any given time, there's quite a bit of partially digested food in our system. Call it waste, or what ever, it's basically what's left over after the nutrients have been sucked out of food, and it also incorporates some of the toxins that our liver and kidneys expel.
Eating a good amount of fiber can help keep this process moving, and every once in a while it's not a bad Idea to help the process along with extra fiber, but in general it doesn't help you to constantly be pushing waste out of your system faster than normal. Obviously if you have BM issues, then fiber can be a big help, but for people who have 1 to 2 normal BM's a day, it shouldn't be necessary. If you feel bloated or "backed up" then yeah, add a little fiber, that may help, or it could be caused by other issues too. Generally speaking the body knows how to efficiently remove waste, as long as you eat a relatively healthy diet, you shouldn't need to help the process by ingesting high volumes of fiber.
Some people don't digest certain food types very well, this is something you should talk over with your doctor and have tested if you feel like you have a problem with certain food types (bloating, pain, discomfort in the intestines), it may be an alergy, or a deficiency in intestinal bacteria, or some other "plumbing problem". Otherwise, having all that waste in there is natural, very safe, and shouldn't be considered a bad thing.0 -
talking of bowel movements......how come a 9month old has about 5-7BMS a day?0
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That said, imagine how good you would feel if you incorporated more fiber/fruit into your daily diet (not as a test)!
Yes, that was the plan if the test worked. But I wasn't sure whether or not my results were due to the fiber variable.0 -
wooooo
Hold on guys your getting yourselves VERY confused. Let me break this down.
1. Food goes into the stomach, passess throught the colon, the ONLY thing that enters the Colon is water.
2. there are only 2 ways to loose fat.
a. Sweat
b. Urin
How does Fat come out of your urin???!!??!?!?!
I've never had greasy pee... LOL
Actually Fat is Metabolised by your cells, the Waste from that is cleaned out of your blood by your liver, then transfered into your bladder and out your body in your urin.
So no you don't have greasy pee, but you do have that strong smelling dark pee.
But wait... what about the fat in my stool?
That fat was never actually digested. it just passed through.
SO how does Fiber get rid of fat?
Fiber doesn't.
It pushes fat that you ate through your intesten before you candigest it.
Am I storing waste in my intestines.
NO There is NO scientific reason why you would ever have to "cleanse" your intestine.
Infact it could be harmfull. You have lots of GOOD bacteria in your guts that you need to digest products. it's best to keep them happy and inside.
HEY but I increased my fiber intake and lost 5 lbs!!!
Yes you did, but you didn't loose fat. you lost water, remember how I said that the only thing that enters the stomach (besides digestive fluids) is water. Well Fiber needs lots of water in it to be digested... So water rushes into your digestive tract, and comes out in your stool.... did you loose weight? Sure, but it's just water weight.0 -
Thanks for posting these interesting questions, and in a lighthearted manner. PML at some of it...!0
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Melther was pretty much right on the money.
At any given time, there's quite a bit of partially digested food in our system. Call it waste, or what ever, it's basically what's left over after the nutrients have been sucked out of food, and it also incorporates some of the toxins that our liver and kidneys expel.
Eating a good amount of fiber can help keep this process moving, and every once in a while it's not a bad Idea to help the process along with extra fiber, but in general it doesn't help you to constantly be pushing waste out of your system faster than normal. Obviously if you have BM issues, then fiber can be a big help, but for people who have 1 to 2 normal BM's a day, it shouldn't be necessary. If you feel bloated or "backed up" then yeah, add a little fiber, that may help, or it could be caused by other issues too. Generally speaking the body knows how to efficiently remove waste, as long as you eat a relatively healthy diet, you shouldn't need to help the process by ingesting high volumes of fiber.
Some people don't digest certain food types very well, this is something you should talk over with your doctor and have tested if you feel like you have a problem with certain food types (bloating, pain, discomfort in the intestines), it may be an alergy, or a deficiency in intestinal bacteria, or some other "plumbing problem". Otherwise, having all that waste in there is natural, very safe, and shouldn't be considered a bad thing.
I knew Superman would save the day! :flowerforyou:
*fist bump*0 -
I'm afraid that you've confused me, Tanklily.1. Food goes into the stomach, passess throught the colon, the ONLY thing that enters the Colon is water.0
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While we're on this kinda gross topic, I'll add that I had always had bowel movement issues... usually constipation/ not going nearly enough, and then when I did go, it was diaherrea or hard stools, even bloody. I know, gross, but this was an issue that had plagued me since I remember, and at times I even had irritable bowel syndrome. But ever since I started eating clean and getting a lot of fiber through whole foods, I do not have this problem at all, I am pretty much completely regular. That is one of the many reasons I love clean eating.0
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My son has megacolon so I've done a lot of research on this subject. The main thing that I've learned is that we have a very long food tube, which measures up to 30-33 feet long from mouth to *kitten*. The usual passage time is 18-72 hours, which shows that the whole digestion process is a slow one. So basically, even if you are "regular" most likely you will have poop in your colon at any given time.
Dietary fiber tends to increase the bulk of the stool, softens it, and likely enhances motility reducing transit time. (according to Dr.Robert Collins) Insoluble fiber does not dissolve or gel in water and is poorly fermented. Insoluble fiber adds bulk to the stool directly. (Insoluble fiber includes wheat bran, corn bran, whole grains, dried beans and peas, popcorn, seeds, nuts, most fruits and veggies, especially carrots, white potatoes, artichokes, broccoli, leeks, and parsnips.) Soluble fiber dissolves in water, becomes a soft gel, and is easily fermented. This would include the pectin in fruit, which retain water adding to bulk and softening. Colon bacteria action on soluble fiber creates gas and helps to increase fecal mass. (Soluble fiber includes psyllium, oat bran, whole oats, rice bran, died beans, chick peas, black-eyed peas, lentils and virtually all fruits and vegies, but especially citrus, apples, pears, sweet potatoes, carrots, okra, cauliflower, and corn.) Some high fiber substances may contain both soluable and insoluble fibers.
So basically what we are eating can increase or decrease the motility of poop. My doctor told me that BM in our colons can be a major reason for our weight fluctuations, along with other factors, and that's why it's recommended to not weigh yourself everyday.0 -
That's interesting, ilike2moveit.
I knew this topic would be rich in content.0 -
OMG chrissy that has to be the cutest dog ever. What breed is he/she? Boxer?
Katwood - we're hijacking a bit but....she's a Victorian Bulldog - will look very similiar to an English - she's our baby!!! We've had her a month and we're all smitten with her. The absolute sweetest personality we've ever had in a pup.0 -
This will really warp your mind but your digestive tract isn't considered "inside" your body. Ya ya it's under your skin, but we are more like donuts... then soft balls. nutriance needs to pass through the stomach, intestine, digestive wall.
The only thing that inters your intestins from your body is water and digestive fluids, Food obviously inters and exits, through your mouth and bottom respectivly.
the point is, Fat does NOT go from your thighs into your blood stream and then some how into your digestive tract where fiber pushes it out of your body.
Fat in your tissue, heart, hips, butt, boobs ext. MUST be metabolized. ((unless it is being extreted threw the skin in sweat, but this is an entirly different process)) The waste from that passes out through unrin after being processed by your liver.
Fat that you eat, Hamburger. lets say. Goes into your digestive tract. Depending on how quickly you pass it among other things determans how much of that fat is absorbed into your body/blood stream.
Fat that isn't absorbed, continues through your intestines, colon ext and exits.
So Greasy stools arn't a sign of weight loss. They are a sign of poor fat absorbtion.
Fiber requres some water to digest, so water leaves your body goes into your intestins/digestive system.0 -
I can get a major cleansing by eating a Big Mac. Only in my case it's called diarrhea :sick: :bigsmile: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:0
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A semi-related question I was curious about yesterday after a morning run, the quote below made me think of it:
"Fat in your tissue, heart, hips, butt, boobs ext. MUST be metabolized. ((unless it is being extreted threw the skin in sweat, but this is an entirly different process)) "
This could be age or some other more natural process, but I've noticed that during my intense workouts in recent weeks that not only am I sweating considerably more than ever before (for many years I was very athletic, played very competitive soccer, etc so was used to working hard) and that there is ....erm.... odour that I never had before. It is what I would expect (from being around other sweating athletes) a normal hot & sweaty aroma but I was curious if I am sweating more because I am burning fat?
When I was doing all the athletics in previous years I was always very lean with little/no fat to burn, I wondered if that could be the difference. Just a curiousity, nothing that will change whether I continue to work hard.
Thoughts?0 -
I am not sure that it is correct to say that a high fiber diet only makes you lose water weight. Eating more fiber keeps you full longer, and therfore you eat fewer calories. Ofcourse if you lose five pounds in a week, that is obviously not all from fat some of it is bound to be water weight. But I think increasing your fiber and protein intake is usually going to make a person lose weight because they just keep you full longer. I should also mention, that I have to eat more than the recommended amount of fiber daily or I get constipated. That is a just a weird thing about my body.0
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Belldandy: Yes eating more fiber will decrease your appitite and give you the fat feeling... which causes weight loss. It is also nessisary and good for you. But in no direct way does fiber "push or clean" fat from your body (boobs, butt, thights, heart..) it only pushes out the fat you havn't absorbed yet.
Rip girl
Lots of things come out of your sweat, extra hormones, pharamones, toxins, waste products, fat, salt. Tons and tons. however the fat that is in sweat has little to do with weight loss... it's just your bodies natural lubricants. The odor comes from bacteria... and occasionaly can come from the Amonea and Uria that is in your sweat. If you feel like your sweat has an odor even when it's fresh, this is a strong indication that you need to drink more water.
So then if you think of Sauna's they draw some tiny percentage of fat out of you in the form of lubricants your skin makes and needs... but most weight loss from sweating is water weight.
There are lots of factors that control how much you sweat and how readily you sweat. 80% of it is just Are you hot? But some of it can be genetic factors, as well as physical fitness and hydration.
I think Lots of sweat is a good thing. After a good sweaty workout and a shower your skin just seems brighter, doesn't it?
Also, my mother says that she sweats more easily now after she has been through menopause. And sweating during menopause is very common.
Also it's important to note that Metabolism Waste like Lactic Acid and CO2 are also in Sweat... So in that way you have almost a direct link from Fat metabolism to sweat!0 -
This "water weight' and "water retention" thingy has always intrigued me. I'll have to work up another question.0
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