01-05-2014 21:47
01-05-2014 21:47
I don't understand how Fitbit can endorse running your body at a deficit it makes little to no sense, please take the time to educate yourself or visit a dietitian before continuing to lower to metabolic rate.
This is kind of a interesting read I came across recently check it out!
The idea that the body works on a simple calories in/calories out (ci/co) model is one of the most pervasive myths that I hear. This particular myth is extremely damning to us fats since the idea is that:
If you just eat less, exercise more and create a caloric deficit (ie: do not give your body the amount of fuel it requires to function), you will lose weight and therefore be more healthy. If you fail to lose weight, it just means that you lack the will-power to create a caloric deficit over a long enough period of time.
I’ve already talked about the , so today let’s just talk calories in and out.
It sounds really logical, especially if you don’t understand how the human body actually works.
First, it turns out that accurately calculating the calories out side of the equation is at best an awfully indirect science producing questionable results.
The Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) formula is one of the most popular used to determine how many calories we burn at rest. But the formula doesn’t account for muscle mass, which utilizes more calories than other body tissue at rest. Except that there is controversy about just how many calories a pound of muscle utilizes – some reputable scientists say that it burns 35, some say 10. Also, most methods used to measure muscle mass are fairly imprecise, or really expensive, so very few people have access to a correct measurement even if we could use that number to get an accurate BMR, which we can’t.
Besides which, a BMR-type calculation would be reasonable if we were a lawnmower. We can calculate the fuel needs of a lawnmower and then have a reasonable expectation of how much grass it can mow and what will happen when the fuel runs out.
Ready for a blinding flash of the obvious? Our bodies are not lawnmowers. The way that we utilize fuel (calories) and what happens when we run out is vastly different and extremely individualized and affected by all kinds of things including:
What concerns me even more is that semi-starvation is advocated based on the idea (really, the desperate hope) that a starved body will burn excess fat for fuel. That’s not necessarily the case. Your body is really good at surviving. It is not so good at fitting into a cultural ideal of beauty. The body doesn’t think of calories as evil things that take it farther from an arbitrary standard of beauty, it thinks of calories as fuel to do its job. When you give your body less calories than it needs to perform its basic function it does not think “look how disciplined you are to underfeed me so that we can become smaller”. It thinks “Holy **ahem**, I’m starving. I have to do something!”
Let’s go back to the lawnmower example:
If I give my lawnmower half of the gas it needs to cut my lawn, it will simply stop working half-way through. If tomorrow I only give it 1/2 of the fuel it needs, only 50% of my lawn will get cut. My lawnmower will never adapt to use less fuel, it just stops working.
If I give my body half the fuel that it needs just to lay in bed all day, and proceed to run on a treadmill it doesn’t stop – it adapts. My body can’t imagine a scenario in which it needs food, there is food, but I’m intentionally starving it, so it interprets this situation as “I’m starving, there is no food, and I have to run away from something”.
If I continue to underfeed my body while making physical demands it will likely drop weight at first while adapting to function on fewer calories, even if that means performing those functions (you know: thinking, breathing, heartbeat, walking etc) non-optimally. If I continue underfeeding for the long-term I will experience negative impacts (see below). If I stop underfeeding my body there is a good chance that my body will maintain it’s adapted lower level, at least for a while, while possibly also resetting my natural set point to a higher weight permanently while storing anything it can as fat. My body is trying to help me out – what it has learned is that I live in an environment where sometimes starvation happens at the same time that massive physical labor is required, so it’s storing up fuel for the next starvation/high physical activity period. If I continue to do this over time (as in the case of yo-yo dieting), then the damage to my metabolic rate, my natural set point, and my body’s functions can be severe.
And that doesn’t even touch the psychological toll that underfeeding your body takes on you. In the Minnesota Semi-Starvation Study participants who were restricted to 1,560 calories per day for 12 weeks experienced depression (up to and including serious self-mutilation), hysteria, marked food preoccupation, disordered eating patterns, guilt about eating, decline is physiological processes, concentration, comprehension and judgment, and a 40% drop in BMR. For many the disordered eating continued for 5 months or more after the study was concluded.
So while semi-starvation (also known as dieting) seems like a reasonable weight loss technique if you believe in a ci/co equation, I have to judge it on three standards:
Validity of Methodology
Fail. The fact that I can’t accurately calculate how many calories my body will expend or predict how my body will respond to prolonged starvation makes this methodology invalid.
Probability of Success
Fail. The use of caloric deficit has a success rate of 5% over 5 years – that’s within the margin of error for most studies and is an unacceptable success rate for me.
Acceptability of Risks
Fail. I’m risking my current excellent physical and psychological health for a chance at a smaller body. That, for me, is an unacceptable risk.
Which is why I’m sticking to my plan of engaging in healthy behaviors, giving my body the fuel it needs, and letting it determine what size it’s going to be.
Credit below- dances with fat
01-06-2014 03:11
01-06-2014 03:11
Interesting post, my diet has been a pretty much starvation diet of Protein shake, Brown rice with sweet corn or chicken breast for about 1 year now.
I was 420lbs im now 280 lbs, through out the diet i have never been low on energy, or felt hungry, this is prolly due to the complex carbs, i have been able to perform 2 hours of cardio and 10 mile hikes almost daily with the exeption of weather.
Every bodys is different, we all react differently to thing both mentally and physically, so I guess it trial and error mixed in with alot of research and the focus to stick to you plan.
01-06-2014 18:46
01-06-2014 18:46
Please cite your source or where you got this article. If you are going to try and post something as "truth" you need to have enough integrity to post the source. Was it a scholarly paper? Was it peer reviewed? Or is it just some guys personal viewpoint they posted on their website (which your post sounds like IMO)? Sounds like grade A bs to me. There is no way someone who is overweight can go in to "starvation mode". You want to see starvation mode just look to third-world countries, those individuals are truly in starvation mode.
And yes, I do subscribe to the calories in vs. out camp. I have been watching my calories and exercising more for the past 7 months and have lost over 65lbs so far.
04-02-2014 16:08
04-02-2014 16:08
I just have to ask how you lost? I have been on a 800 - 1100 calorie a day diet with less than 20% fat, for about 7 weeks now, and am at the same weight i was at when I started. I am totally desperate. Can anyone help?
04-02-2014 17:07
04-02-2014 17:07
She mentioned "Dances with Fat" at the bottom. Dances with fat is a moridly obese fat activist that believes in HAES and doesn't believe that being obese comes with health complications.
04-02-2014 22:13
04-02-2014 22:13
Gee, how would you propose to lose fat if you don't eat less than you burn.
That is a deficit by the way.
Now extreme, sure.
There is no question about how much energy muscle at rest uses, barely more than fat. You use it of course, lots more.
Like the person above that has lost a lot of weight, that's great, and you wonder where the eating level will have to be to continue to lose, since you must eat less as you weigh less, or you'll have to move around a whole lot more. Hoping to never get sick.
Lot's of studies referenced in here.
http://www.t-nation.com/diet-fat-loss/truth-about-metabolic-damage
Recent study here as to the why it happens and what it spells for the future.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2i_cmltmQ6A
And a more recent study that shows just how metabolically efficient they became, and despite the claim by researcher above, the ability to slowly recover by stopping the diet for 3 months.
http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0004377