Cardio makes you fat: "Women: Running into Trouble"

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Replies

  • ken1994
    ken1994 Posts: 495 Member
    bump for later
  • Di3012
    Di3012 Posts: 2,247 Member
    But obviously you're right. Looking at my own progress, I'm a total weightloss write off. I've still got some left to lose, and consequently I have no experience at all in weight management, and must defer to those young blokes who've lost a couple of pounds but don't have much left to lose....

    In all honesty it is easier to lose if you're 100+ lbs from normal. You can't claim much experience in weight management if you got that bad in the first place. Even if there is some sort of illness or metabolic condition, you still have to over eat a great deal for quite some time. While you can give decent advice to someone with a lot to lose, I can't see your experience being helpful to a healthy person trying to lean out or get fit.

    How dare you speak to somebody like that, I think you are completely and utterly out of order!!!

    I cannot see YOUR experience being helpful to somebody who has a lot to lose to be honest and your attitude stinks. I suggest you look carefully at your interaction with others before you even speak to them.

    Good God, what the hell is going on here!!!!!!!!!!!
  • nanasgt
    nanasgt Posts: 33
    Hmmmm....
  • Kara_xxx
    Kara_xxx Posts: 635 Member
    If, for a moment, you disregard the general unpleasantness and one-upmannship of the last few pages....

    The statement that it's easier to lose weight the more there is spare is a simple fact of life.

    If you're 300lb you can drop 10lb in a couple of weeks easy.

    If you're 125lb trying to drop 10lb it'll be a damn site harder, because it's a greater proportion of your overall weight.

    If the 125 ounder and the 300 pounder do the same actiities, the 300 pounder will be burning far more calories by sheer fact of their body weight alone.
  • victoria4321
    victoria4321 Posts: 1,719 Member
    But obviously you're right. Looking at my own progress, I'm a total weightloss write off. I've still got some left to lose, and consequently I have no experience at all in weight management, and must defer to those young blokes who've lost a couple of pounds but don't have much left to lose....

    In all honesty it is easier to lose if you're 100+ lbs from normal. You can't claim much experience in weight management if you got that bad in the first place. Even if there is some sort of illness or metabolic condition, you still have to over eat a great deal for quite some time. While you can give decent advice to someone with a lot to lose, I can't see your experience being helpful to a healthy person trying to lean out or get fit.

    How dare you speak to somebody like that, I think you are completely and utterly out of order!!!

    I cannot see YOUR experience being helpful to somebody who has a lot to lose to be honest and your attitude stinks. I suggest you look carefully at your interaction with others before you even speak to them.

    Good God, what the hell is going on here!!!!!!!!!!!

    Its very simple. It takes more food to maintain 300lbs of body mass. Just eating at the same calorie amount as someone smaller will cause weight loss. It was easier for me to lose weight 30lbs ago as well. I'm talking in a purely physiological sense. I'm not sure what kind of emotional problems are at stake and that wasn't the concern.


    And what Kara said.
  • mmapags
    mmapags Posts: 8,934 Member
    If it wasn't for the self righteous indignation and the condescending cynicism around here there thread would have been done a long time ago!
  • hmuh
    hmuh Posts: 379 Member
    Bwaaaahaha. Thanks for the laughs :)
  • tlhorsley
    tlhorsley Posts: 141 Member
    bumping to read later as I am sure in the many pages of replies to this it is going to be some fun reading
  • Di3012
    Di3012 Posts: 2,247 Member
    But obviously you're right. Looking at my own progress, I'm a total weightloss write off. I've still got some left to lose, and consequently I have no experience at all in weight management, and must defer to those young blokes who've lost a couple of pounds but don't have much left to lose....

    In all honesty it is easier to lose if you're 100+ lbs from normal. You can't claim much experience in weight management if you got that bad in the first place. Even if there is some sort of illness or metabolic condition, you still have to over eat a great deal for quite some time. While you can give decent advice to someone with a lot to lose, I can't see your experience being helpful to a healthy person trying to lean out or get fit.

    How dare you speak to somebody like that, I think you are completely and utterly out of order!!!

    I cannot see YOUR experience being helpful to somebody who has a lot to lose to be honest and your attitude stinks. I suggest you look carefully at your interaction with others before you even speak to them.

    Good God, what the hell is going on here!!!!!!!!!!!

    Its very simple. It takes more food to maintain 300lbs of body mass. Just eating at the same calorie amount as someone smaller will cause weight loss. It was easier for me to lose weight 30lbs ago as well. I'm talking in a purely physiological sense. I'm not sure what kind of emotional problems are at stake and that wasn't the concern.


    And what Kara said.

    This is NOT the issue or what was being discussed. YOU moved it into that area and told someone how, because they lad lost a lot of weight and should not have got to that weight in the first place, they were not really qualified to advise others.

    Don't try to tell me about calorie deficits either, because that is taking the attention away from what is really going on here.
  • Tsfppb
    Tsfppb Posts: 3
    I am so happy to see someone being so negative ;) don't just be mean to everyone else to make yourself feel like there was a reason you hated to run/bike/stairclimb... cardio works and yes if you over do it or if you assume that sense you ran you can eat whatever you want you wont lose weight. Might even gain weight. BUT its not the cardio its the mindset that causes the issues. The same thing can happen with weights, sports, or any other kind of exercise. Eat right, workout and you will be healthy, do only one and its like giving yourself a 50% chance of being healthy.
  • scottb81
    scottb81 Posts: 2,538 Member
    I have to laugh when somebody still has the sheer audacity to continue returning here to defend this article and to insult the intelligence of people who do understand physiology and at the same time train with lots of cardio. Also, if the contents of this article in any way demonstrate your basic understanding of physiology then I encourage you to leave this forum, as you have threatened to do. The statements below, quoted from the article are simply wrong. They are beyond wrong and are the exact opposite of truth. If you believe these things then you are not helping anybody here but rather filling those that do come here for help with a bunch of nonsense.
    Think about it this way: the body is a responsive, adaptive machine evolved for survival. If running on a regular basis, the body senses excessive energy expenditure and adjusts to compensate. Remember, no matter what dreamy nonsense we invent about how we hope the body works, its endgame is always survival. Start wasting energy running and the body reacts by slowing the metabolism to conserve energy.
    Yeah, that’s the ticket. If we exercise the body slows the metabolism. So if we want to speed up the metabolism we should just stay in bed all day.
    Training at a consistently plus-65 percent heart rate adapts the body to save as much body fat as possible.
    Again, as I said earlier this statement is simply stupid. The body burns fat at all intensities. It burns less a percentage of fat at a higher intensity. It does not train itself to store more fat. Even a moderately sized person with 10% bodyfat has around 15 lbs of fat on their body. That’s enough to fuel the body for over 500 miles running even if they burned exclusively fat.
    That’s right, after regular training, fat cells stop releasing fat during moderate-intensity activities like they once did. . . . To this end, the body even sets into motion a series of reactions that make it difficult for muscle to burn fat at all.
    So, according to the author the end result of extensive endurance training is that the body stops burning fat for energy and begins to burn only carbohydrates and protein? Trying to respond to a whopper like this is like trying to tell a flat earther that the world is round.
    No more muscle because too much steady-state cardio triggers the loss of muscle.
    As Jynus explained it is not cardio that triggers the loss of muscle (whatever that means to the author). It is not using a muscle that causes it to atrophy. If you have been lifting weights and stop lifting them to do only cardio your muscle size and strength will decrease. If you have been lifting weights and stop lifting them to do nothing your muscle size and strength will decrease. Can anybody deduce what those last two sentences have in common?

    If you have not been lifting weights and start doing cardio your muscle size and strength will not decrease unless your diet is overly restrictive and you are starving yourself. If you have not been lifting weights and do not do any cardio your muscle size and strength will not decrease unless your diet is overly restrictive and you are starving yourself. Can anybody deduce what those last two sentences have in common?
    Oh yeah — say good bye to bone density too
    Another profoundly ignorant statement from the author. Any exercise you do will increase bone density in the part of the body being loaded assuming one is not starving themselves at the same time.

    The only rational response to this article can be summed up in this quote.
    Mr. Madison, what you've just said is one of the most insanely idiotic things I have ever heard. At no point in your rambling, incoherent response were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone in this room is now dumber for having listened to it. I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul.

    Again, this post is not directed at everyone that defends weight lifting in a fitness program. Resistance training is good. This post is directed at the one or two that continually come back here to insult people on endurance training programs by attempting to defend the idiotic ideas written in the article.
  • missb92
    missb92 Posts: 200 Member
    bump
  • WendyTerry420
    WendyTerry420 Posts: 13,274 Member
    The intensity of the workout is what makes the difference. You won't change the shape you're in if you don't increase the intensity. If you run or use a treadmill, build up more speed each time. Doing the right exercises for your body type is what will shape you up.
  • wackyfunster
    wackyfunster Posts: 944 Member
    Also, that marathon runner has quite a bit of fat in the abdominal area (more than me after 2 months of >3k cal workout days bulking up, me being a sedentary guy who spends 12+ hours a day sitting in front of a computer, and pretty much just does 3 hours of weights/week),

    LOL!

    oh wait... you weren't trolling. In that case... A man with less body fat than a woman!? What sorcery is this?
    Lolli, ridiculous isn't it - that bolded posting I mean LOL.

    To the one that posted the bolded posting above, you need to get outdoors and run some matey, you'll know exactly what I mean in a few years time - seriously I am not mucking about here.

    Don't proudly tell the world you sit in front of the computer for 12 hours per day and do such a small amount of training, rather than think you a very excellent person they more than likely will thank God they are not in your shoes.
    I work hard to support my wonderful family, and make quite a decent living doing it. Admittedly, having a serious career plus side investments plus a newborn doesn't leave me a whole lot of free time for fitness, but I wouldn't trade my life with anyone. I do look forward to having some more time once the baby starts sleeping through the night :)

    Re: man vs. woman body fat, a woman at 18% body fat will be comparable to a man at 8%... I don't see what the point of that comment was, just pointing out that a female bodybuilder who spent the same (or less) time working out would be abs lean, rather than a little pudgy.
  • I agree - exercise can't make you thick,
    just pay attention to nutrition! Look through this info, I think its quit suitable to this topic. http://youcure.me/blog/4245 !
  • mmapags
    mmapags Posts: 8,934 Member
    I have to laugh when somebody still has the sheer audacity to continue returning here to defend this article and to insult the intelligence of people who do understand physiology and at the same time train with lots of cardio. Also, if the contents of this article in any way demonstrate your basic understanding of physiology then I encourage you to leave this forum, as you have threatened to do. The statements below, quoted from the article are simply wrong. They are beyond wrong and are the exact opposite of truth. If you believe these things then you are not helping anybody here but rather filling those that do come here for help with a bunch of nonsense.
    Think about it this way: the body is a responsive, adaptive machine evolved for survival. If running on a regular basis, the body senses excessive energy expenditure and adjusts to compensate. Remember, no matter what dreamy nonsense we invent about how we hope the body works, its endgame is always survival. Start wasting energy running and the body reacts by slowing the metabolism to conserve energy.
    Yeah, that’s the ticket. If we exercise the body slows the metabolism. So if we want to speed up the metabolism we should just stay in bed all day.
    Training at a consistently plus-65 percent heart rate adapts the body to save as much body fat as possible.
    Again, as I said earlier this statement is simply stupid. The body burns fat at all intensities. It burns less a percentage of fat at a higher intensity. It does not train itself to store more fat. Even a moderately sized person with 10% bodyfat has around 15 lbs of fat on their body. That’s enough to fuel the body for over 500 miles running even if they burned exclusively fat.
    That’s right, after regular training, fat cells stop releasing fat during moderate-intensity activities like they once did. . . . To this end, the body even sets into motion a series of reactions that make it difficult for muscle to burn fat at all.
    So, according to the author the end result of extensive endurance training is that the body stops burning fat for energy and begins to burn only carbohydrates and protein? Trying to respond to a whopper like this is like trying to tell a flat earther that the world is round.
    No more muscle because too much steady-state cardio triggers the loss of muscle.
    As Jynus explained it is not cardio that triggers the loss of muscle (whatever that means to the author). It is not using a muscle that causes it to atrophy. If you have been lifting weights and stop lifting them to do only cardio your muscle size and strength will decrease. If you have been lifting weights and stop lifting them to do nothing your muscle size and strength will decrease. Can anybody deduce what those last two sentences have in common?

    If you have not been lifting weights and start doing cardio your muscle size and strength will not decrease unless your diet is overly restrictive and you are starving yourself. If you have not been lifting weights and do not do any cardio your muscle size and strength will not decrease unless your diet is overly restrictive and you are starving yourself. Can anybody deduce what those last two sentences have in common?
    Oh yeah — say good bye to bone density too
    Another profoundly ignorant statement from the author. Any exercise you do will increase bone density in the part of the body being loaded assuming one is not starving themselves at the same time.

    The only rational response to this article can be summed up in this quote.
    Mr. Madison, what you've just said is one of the most insanely idiotic things I have ever heard. At no point in your rambling, incoherent response were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone in this room is now dumber for having listened to it. I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul.

    Again, this post is not directed at everyone that defends weight lifting in a fitness program. Resistance training is good. This post is directed at the one or two that continually come back here to insult people on endurance training programs by attempting to defend the idiotic ideas written in the article.

    Maybe it's a matter of interpretation of some of the posts but honestly Scott, I don't see anyone defending this article in recent posts. I pretty much agree with all you said above. What I don't really get is the nastiness and the defensiveness coming specifically from Meerkat and Di312. You or I or anyone can disagree about ideas but the personal attacks and way over the top responses are just plain uncalled for. As far as what I can read, pretty much the concensus is that the article is BS.
    "No one is saying tons of cardio will make you gain weight. No one is saying don't run. No one is saying cardio doesn't have some health benefits." From DavPul's post. Now he believes that you will look better if your focus is strength training. Ok, so that's his opinion. He didn't insult anyone. Just stated his opinion and never said the article was valid. I just don't get the high emotional response level from some posters. Maybe a little maturity might be in order
  • scottb81
    scottb81 Posts: 2,538 Member
    A high level of maturity does not include this.
    . I have noticed that the people who support what you have said tend to be very fit, while the ones adamantly opposed tend to have '50 pounds to go' on their tickers.

    That is personally insulting me despite the fact that it's not true and I'm sure it was insulting to others also.
  • mmapags
    mmapags Posts: 8,934 Member
    A high level of maturity does not include this.
    . I have noticed that the people who support what you have said tend to be very fit, while the ones adamantly opposed tend to have '50 pounds to go' on their tickers.

    That is personally insulting me despite the fact that it's not true and I'm sure it was insulting to others also.

    Ok, I can see that. How about some of Meerkat's snide and condescending remarks? Your take on those?
  • scottb81
    scottb81 Posts: 2,538 Member
    Also, recent statements such as this are defending the article.
    It doesn't help that the article's headline is written like a Slate attention grabbing piece. "Cardio makes you fat(ty)" would have been 100% improvement. 1000% improvement would been, "If you want to look toned (or cut, buff, ripped, whatever) cardio is absolutely proven to not be the best way to go about it."

    The article is pure unadulterated crap. The topic of the article is not that you should do resistance training to achieve a look. I can agree with that. The topic is that cardio will prevent you from achieving that look and at the same time is injurious to your long term health.
  • scottb81
    scottb81 Posts: 2,538 Member
    [/quote]

    Ok, I can see that. How about some of Meerkat's snide and condescending remarks? Your take on those?
    [/quote]There was a fair bit of give and take sarcasm between several individual posters for the last several days. It wasn't until today that this was generalized to say, "Everyone that doesn't agree with my opinion and training methods is 50 lbs overweight."
  • mmapags
    mmapags Posts: 8,934 Member
    Also, recent statements such as this are defending the article.
    It doesn't help that the article's headline is written like a Slate attention grabbing piece. "Cardio makes you fat(ty)" would have been 100% improvement. 1000% improvement would been, "If you want to look toned (or cut, buff, ripped, whatever) cardio is absolutely proven to not be the best way to go about it."

    The article is pure unadulterated crap. The topic of the article is not that you should do resistance training to achieve a look. I can agree with that. The topic is that cardio will prevent you from achieving that look and at the same time is injurious to your long term health.

    His opinion. Agree, disagree but I see no insult here. He is saying that cardio is not the best for developing muscle structure and improving appearance. Ok. Some will agree, some will disagree. I don't see this as insulting. You may agree to disagree.
  • mmapags
    mmapags Posts: 8,934 Member
    [/quote]

    Ok, I can see that. How about some of Meerkat's snide and condescending remarks? Your take on those?
    [/quote]There was a fair bit of give and take sarcasm between several individual posters for the last several days. It wasn't until today that this was generalized to say, "Everyone that doesn't agree with my opinion and training methods is 50 lbs overweight."
    [/quote]

    Here you and I will have to agree to disagree. In my opinion, the majority of the snidenss and overreaction came for Meerkat, Di and Ruthiecass. I thought Cris Anderson went out of his way to remain civil even after repeated attacks from Meerkat. Also, Jynus, who can be somewhat of a tool from time to time, kept his composure and put forth his point of view in what looked to me like a respectful way. I understand that remark from Whacky rubbed you the wrong way and I can't really defend it. It fed the fire. I can see how you would be offended by it. From my point of view, you are hitting that hard and whitewashing others. We may just have to agree to disagree on this.
  • Jynus
    Jynus Posts: 519 Member
    hey scott. I'll snip the essay you wrote to save space. I get what you're trying to say. But I'll attempt to rationalize the article a lil clearer in what I think the author is trying to say. And why it might not totally be BS.

    recently there was a study on macro ratio and BMR from harvard. What was found was that equal calories but different macros caused different shifts in BMR for people. So what that means take 2 identical people with 2 identical diets. Shift the macros for both of them but keep the same calories as when they were maintaining, and one would start to gain weight, the other lose. So there are mechanisms in the body to deal with BMR shifts. And I think this is what the author was hypothesizing on. Could exercise also cause shifts to the bodies BASE BMR so that your goals just become harder and harder to achieve?

    The crutch on all this is does loooooooong amounts of cardio cause thyroid changes to the body that negatively impact BMR? (I don't know, I would love to see a study on this either way) I hope we both can agree that for joe average just starting out is not the person you, i or he is talking about. cardio WILL help them if thats their path of choice, as it burns calories and does not have the ill effects talked about. (the lack of resistance training is another story, but i digress) But the article is for people who are at a point where they are close to their goal weight after shedding a ton, and are doing crazy amounts of cardio to just try and drop those last 5-10lbs. And wondering why it's so hard. It's not like the laws of thermodynamics have changed with energy in vs energy out, and I would assume that they monitored their diet enough that little has changed. That leaves the body, it could be the thing thats changing, to match energy in.

    Could it be possible that the body is just adapting, making thyroid changes to continually drop the Bodies base BMR to adjust to the workload to maintain stasis?

    Another interesting study was a test to see if skinny people who claim to eat anything and never gain weight really can eat anything and never gain weight. Took like 30 people, and fed them all 5k calories a day with no other changes in their routine. Results? Nothing surprising here, it was discovered skinny people just eat far less than fat people, as EVERY skinny person gained a crapton of weight. HOWEVER, what was also noted was that the way the weight was gained was different. Most just added a ton of fat. But there was a couple who added lean mass. And they also discovered that the body changed its BMR for everyone too. one by as much as 30%. Again with no change in exercise, just adding calories, and the body just suddenly burning more per day to try to adapt with zero change in any other daily behaviour.

    TLDR
    Basically where I'm trying to go with this is that the body is able to change it's calorie burn. It's not a constant thing. And it does so to achieve some sort of stasis to match what outside variables are happening around it. So it's entirely possible that low calories and craaaazy amouts of cardio, when you get to a certain level of bodyweight, causes it to just adapt and make further progress almost impossible. 1 proposed method of doing this is what the article is sugusting, the body will alter thyroid production to lower BMR. to note, this is only in that certain segment of population we're talking about, lost weight with crazy amounts of cardio only and at normal weight trying to drop those last few lbs of fat. If you're starting out, this does not apply to you.

    edit: And I should also stress while I fully believe this is true from my own experiences and the vast majority of people I see constantly posting wondering why they are only eating 1200 calories a day and not losing those last few lbs of fat, which assuming energy in vs energy out and if they are burning like 600+ calories a day doing exercise, they should not be stalling. (look in this site, it's full of them) I have zero proof of it however, so for all I know there are factors that are missing and it's something else.
  • Cindym82
    Cindym82 Posts: 1,245 Member
    Well lets see, I have hypothyroidism and my endo actually told me to DO cardio because I was lifting too much and causing my body to freak out. People with hypothyroid can not to high intensity workouts so this whole thing is BS. Every doc out there will tell you to do weight training AND cardio
  • Di3012
    Di3012 Posts: 2,247 Member
    I have to laugh when somebody still has the sheer audacity to continue returning here to defend this article and to insult the intelligence of people who do understand physiology and at the same time train with lots of cardio. Also, if the contents of this article in any way demonstrate your basic understanding of physiology then I encourage you to leave this forum, as you have threatened to do. The statements below, quoted from the article are simply wrong. They are beyond wrong and are the exact opposite of truth. If you believe these things then you are not helping anybody here but rather filling those that do come here for help with a bunch of nonsense.
    Think about it this way: the body is a responsive, adaptive machine evolved for survival. If running on a regular basis, the body senses excessive energy expenditure and adjusts to compensate. Remember, no matter what dreamy nonsense we invent about how we hope the body works, its endgame is always survival. Start wasting energy running and the body reacts by slowing the metabolism to conserve energy.
    Yeah, that’s the ticket. If we exercise the body slows the metabolism. So if we want to speed up the metabolism we should just stay in bed all day.
    Training at a consistently plus-65 percent heart rate adapts the body to save as much body fat as possible.
    Again, as I said earlier this statement is simply stupid. The body burns fat at all intensities. It burns less a percentage of fat at a higher intensity. It does not train itself to store more fat. Even a moderately sized person with 10% bodyfat has around 15 lbs of fat on their body. That’s enough to fuel the body for over 500 miles running even if they burned exclusively fat.
    That’s right, after regular training, fat cells stop releasing fat during moderate-intensity activities like they once did. . . . To this end, the body even sets into motion a series of reactions that make it difficult for muscle to burn fat at all.
    So, according to the author the end result of extensive endurance training is that the body stops burning fat for energy and begins to burn only carbohydrates and protein? Trying to respond to a whopper like this is like trying to tell a flat earther that the world is round.
    No more muscle because too much steady-state cardio triggers the loss of muscle.
    As Jynus explained it is not cardio that triggers the loss of muscle (whatever that means to the author). It is not using a muscle that causes it to atrophy. If you have been lifting weights and stop lifting them to do only cardio your muscle size and strength will decrease. If you have been lifting weights and stop lifting them to do nothing your muscle size and strength will decrease. Can anybody deduce what those last two sentences have in common?

    If you have not been lifting weights and start doing cardio your muscle size and strength will not decrease unless your diet is overly restrictive and you are starving yourself. If you have not been lifting weights and do not do any cardio your muscle size and strength will not decrease unless your diet is overly restrictive and you are starving yourself. Can anybody deduce what those last two sentences have in common?
    Oh yeah — say good bye to bone density too
    Another profoundly ignorant statement from the author. Any exercise you do will increase bone density in the part of the body being loaded assuming one is not starving themselves at the same time.

    The only rational response to this article can be summed up in this quote.
    Mr. Madison, what you've just said is one of the most insanely idiotic things I have ever heard. At no point in your rambling, incoherent response were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone in this room is now dumber for having listened to it. I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul.

    Again, this post is not directed at everyone that defends weight lifting in a fitness program. Resistance training is good. This post is directed at the one or two that continually come back here to insult people on endurance training programs by attempting to defend the idiotic ideas written in the article.

    Maybe it's a matter of interpretation of some of the posts but honestly Scott, I don't see anyone defending this article in recent posts. I pretty much agree with all you said above. What I don't really get is the nastiness and the defensiveness coming specifically from Meerkat and Di312. You or I or anyone can disagree about ideas but the personal attacks and way over the top responses are just plain uncalled for. As far as what I can read, pretty much the concensus is that the article is BS.
    "No one is saying tons of cardio will make you gain weight. No one is saying don't run. No one is saying cardio doesn't have some health benefits." From DavPul's post. Now he believes that you will look better if your focus is strength training. Ok, so that's his opinion. He didn't insult anyone. Just stated his opinion and never said the article was valid. I just don't get the high emotional response level from some posters. Maybe a little maturity might be in order

    Where did I say ANYTHING that has been nasty?

    quote me.
  • waskier
    waskier Posts: 254 Member
    bump
  • Di3012
    Di3012 Posts: 2,247 Member


    Ok, I can see that. How about some of Meerkat's snide and condescending remarks? Your take on those?
    There was a fair bit of give and take sarcasm between several individual posters for the last several days. It wasn't until today that this was generalized to say, "Everyone that doesn't agree with my opinion and training methods is 50 lbs overweight."

    Scott that in itself is BS too, 100% agree pmsl. I am not overweight at all and did all cardio - but that aspect has been chosen to be conveniently ignored as has all the other people who lost weight which included no weights but only cardio. This is exactly why this thread has lost all credibility, it has become spiteful and unnecessary now.
  • Jynus
    Jynus Posts: 519 Member
    Well lets see, I have hypothyroidism and my endo actually told me to DO cardio because I was lifting too much and causing my body to freak out. People with hypothyroid can not to high intensity workouts so this whole thing is BS. Every doc out there will tell you to do weight training AND cardio
    the article wasn't talking about people like you.
  • Heaven71
    Heaven71 Posts: 706 Member
    I mostly run and do very little of anything else, far from fat.

    My boss, in his 70s runs and that's all he does and has done for years. Slim as slim can get and he eats lunch out everyday! He runs 3 times a week, 3-4 miles.
  • kaotik26
    kaotik26 Posts: 590 Member
    Ummm, I have hypothyroidism and running is sure not what caused it. Actually my doctor said that any kind of cardio exercise will probably improve the issue. Also I have been running the last couple weeks and that along with the diet the weight is melting off as well as inches. Regardless, running is great for your body anyway whether you want to lose weight or just get some exercise. I think the author of this article is full of S***