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08-27-2011, 12:05 PM
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#1
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Gator Country's Ring of Honor
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 62,227
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"Obese people really don't eat a lot."
I read this frequently. And indeed, obese people I work with assure me that they really don't eat a lot. So ? And what follows ? That they should eat more than they do to lose weight ?
While it may be true that the majority of obese people don't shovel down untold thousands of calories a day. obese people that I work with are most assuredly getting enough calories to at least maintain, if not gradually increase their existing weight.
Case in point: I'm working with a 45-year old female who wants to lose fifty pounds in relatively short order. Her BMR is just a smidge over 1,600 calories and she's not terribly active. And like the typical American, she eats four of five times a day, so it's frightfully easy for her to get the 1,700 or 1,800 calories she probably needs to maintain her existing weight, to say nothing of those days where she goes overboard in social settings.
This is one thing that actually irritates me, the admonition from so-called experts, even certified nutritionists, to up calories in obese people to help them lose weight. They need fewer, not more calories.
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08-27-2011, 12:29 PM
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#2
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Gator Country Silver
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Wherever I am I doing fine. I am here for a good not a long time.
Posts: 12,576
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And who exactly is telling people who are eating enough to maintain their weight as is that they should be eating more to lose weight?
Can you provide examples because this just sounds ridiculous?
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08-27-2011, 12:32 PM
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#3
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Gator Country Silver
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Wherever I am I doing fine. I am here for a good not a long time.
Posts: 12,576
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A couple of thoughts on your other points.
Obesity is often not even as big as many think. Especially for shorter individuals.
It also is very easy to put in more than enough calories without even thinking you eat a lot. No matter how many meals you eat a day.
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08-27-2011, 12:34 PM
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#4
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All American
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 1,773
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Probably a mixture of bad food, bad habits (eating too late in the PM), sedentary lifestyle, etc.
I have worked with more overweight vegetarians than you can shake a stick at. While eating a vegetarian diet doesn't guarantee a healthy lifestyle, these girls camp out on Taco Bell bean burritos. They eat late, don't exercise, etc.
Fewer calories is a start.
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08-27-2011, 01:14 PM
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#5
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Gator Country's Ring of Honor
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 62,227
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Quote:
Originally Posted by LeafUF
And who exactly is telling people who are eating enough to maintain their weight as is that they should be eating more to lose weight?
Can you provide examples because this just sounds ridiculous?
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Whereas there may be factoids in this article that may be correct, but overall can be EASILY misconstrued:
http://google.com/reader/shared/chri...c=CLa335bAsqkC
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08-27-2011, 01:15 PM
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#6
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Gator Country's Ring of Honor
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 62,227
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Quote:
Originally Posted by adamgator96
Probably a mixture of bad food, bad habits (eating too late in the PM), sedentary lifestyle, etc.
I have worked with more overweight vegetarians than you can shake a stick at. While eating a vegetarian diet doesn't guarantee a healthy lifestyle, these girls camp out on Taco Bell bean burritos. They eat late, don't exercise, etc.
Fewer calories is a start.
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Fewer calories is the end of it pretty much. It doesn't matter what foods you eat. And it doesn't matter when you eat them. We have become obsessed (to our detriment) with food choices and meal timing.
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08-27-2011, 01:18 PM
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#7
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Gator Country's Ring of Honor
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 62,227
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Quote:
Originally Posted by LeafUF
A couple of thoughts on your other points.
Obesity is often not even as big as many think. Especially for shorter individuals.
It also is very easy to put in more than enough calories without even thinking you eat a lot. No matter how many meals you eat a day.
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I have two trainees, both middle-aged women, who are 50-100 pounds overweight.
And it's hard to see where they put it. They don't look enormous in their clothes.
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08-27-2011, 01:25 PM
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#8
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Gator Country's Ring of Honor
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08-27-2011, 02:49 PM
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#9
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Gator Country Silver
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Wherever I am I doing fine. I am here for a good not a long time.
Posts: 12,576
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dreamliner
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Had to scroll pretty far down to find what you are talking about and what I did find was some stupid blog article. Hardly someone I would consider an authority. While I agree that advice in the blog was awful I really find it hard to believe that there is a large number of nutritionists telling people to up their calories when they come across the example in your OP.
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08-27-2011, 03:02 PM
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#10
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Gator Country's Ring of Honor
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 62,227
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Quote:
Originally Posted by LeafUF
Had to scroll pretty far down to find what you are talking about and what I did find was some stupid blog article. Hardly someone I would consider an authority. While I agree that advice in the blog was awful I really find it hard to believe that there is a large number of nutritionists telling people to up their calories when they come across the example in your OP.
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Yes, but it represents a two-fold problem:
(1) The guy's Paul Chek certified. I think Chek's a looney, but he carries a LOT of weight in the field of fitness and nutrition and the sentiment is widespread.
(2) With nutritionists this typically comes in the form of eating six or more meals a day to 'ramp up' the metabolism. This, in my experience, generally leads to an increase in calories and more failure and frustration. Nutritionists of all people ought to know better.
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08-27-2011, 04:57 PM
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#11
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Premium Member
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 2,386
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you pay for a college degree or something out of a crackerjack box and and simply telling fat people to cut down on how much they pile into their fat mouths seems too simplistic. people think there is magic out there that can overcome what is simply too much volume of intake.
learn to be hungry, it wont kill you.
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08-27-2011, 11:38 PM
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#12
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All American
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 1,565
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One of the simplest concepts in exercise...Caloric Intake < Caloric Expenditure= Caloric/Weight Loss....
Im with you guys..people try and get too fancy with losing weight....all you have to do is make sure you burn off more than what you take in....
One thing that has always blown my mind with obese people, or even largely overweight people, is this....we burn a lot of calories daily just by doing general activities (walking through your house, to your car, sleeping, laughing, having sex, etc)......now I don't know the exact number of calories burned doing those activities but to think that these obese people have to not only eat enough to offset the calories burned for general activities, they also have to eat like 1 or 2000 more caloires to put on the extra weight....I guess that shouldn't blow me away since I know how Americans eat but it does....
Whenever I watch the TLC shows that document some 600 or 700 lb person who is bed ridden because they are so big they can't get outta bed, the person they are living with (spouse, friend, etc) is BRINGING THEM THE FOOD TO THEIR ROOM!!! Not only is it more often than not bad food, but they don't make the obese person even get up to get the food! Being 600 lb doesnt happen overnight....
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08-28-2011, 12:18 AM
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#13
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Gator Country's Ring of Honor
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 62,227
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Quote:
Originally Posted by LoyalGatorFan
One of the simplest concepts in exercise...Caloric Intake < Caloric Expenditure= Caloric/Weight Loss....
Im with you guys..people try and get too fancy with losing weight....all you have to do is make sure you burn off more than what you take in....
One thing that has always blown my mind with obese people, or even largely overweight people, is this....we burn a lot of calories daily just by doing general activities (walking through your house, to your car, sleeping, laughing, having sex, etc)......now I don't know the exact number of calories burned doing those activities but to think that these obese people have to not only eat enough to offset the calories burned for general activities, they also have to eat like 1 or 2000 more caloires to put on the extra weight....I guess that shouldn't blow me away since I know how Americans eat but it does....
Whenever I watch the TLC shows that document some 600 or 700 lb person who is bed ridden because they are so big they can't get outta bed, the person they are living with (spouse, friend, etc) is BRINGING THEM THE FOOD TO THEIR ROOM!!! Not only is it more often than not bad food, but they don't make the obese person even get up to get the food! Being 600 lb doesnt happen overnight....
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Well, you'd think so on general activity, but that's just the thing, most of us don't burn very many calories above Basal Metabolic Rate. As an example, if an average-sized man were to walk for an hour continuously he'd burn ... a whopping 183 calories.
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08-29-2011, 08:50 AM
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#14
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知らぬが仏
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 14,406
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dreamliner
I read this frequently. And indeed, obese people I work with assure me that they really don't eat a lot. So ? And what follows ? That they should eat more than they do to lose weight ?
While it may be true that the majority of obese people don't shovel down untold thousands of calories a day. obese people that I work with are most assuredly getting enough calories to at least maintain, if not gradually increase their existing weight.
Case in point: I'm working with a 45-year old female who wants to lose fifty pounds in relatively short order. Her BMR is just a smidge over 1,600 calories and she's not terribly active. And like the typical American, she eats four of five times a day, so it's frightfully easy for her to get the 1,700 or 1,800 calories she probably needs to maintain her existing weight, to say nothing of those days where she goes overboard in social settings.
This is one thing that actually irritates me, the admonition from so-called experts, even certified nutritionists, to up calories in obese people to help them lose weight. They need fewer, not more calories.
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Many reasons for obesity. Obviously too many calories taken in and not enough energy burned is at the root. But like other overweight folk, for me it was first a lack of exercise and second, periods of time in my life, such as toward the end of the semester where I'd pull all nighters and my eating habits totally went to sh##. I literally felt myself gaining weight at those times.
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I never said most of the things I said. --Yogi Berra
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08-29-2011, 10:22 AM
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#15
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All American
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 1,773
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jdrgator
Many reasons for obesity. Obviously too many calories taken in and not enough energy burned is at the root. But like other overweight folk, for me it was first a lack of exercise and second, periods of time in my life, such as toward the end of the semester where I'd pull all nighters and my eating habits totally went to sh##. I literally felt myself gaining weight at those times.
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The all-nighters will absolutely wreck a healthy diet. I was working on 11-day episodes with travel all over the country, so I was up late and up early. Getting back to the hotel at 10pm or later and starving was a recipe for disaster, because I didn't want to deprive myself of a good meal (I felt I'd earned it and needed the "down" time). There usually aren't a lot of healthy options after 10pm.
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08-29-2011, 10:29 AM
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#16
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Gator Country Silver
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Wherever I am I doing fine. I am here for a good not a long time.
Posts: 12,576
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by adamgator96
The all-nighters will absolutely wreck a healthy diet. I was working on 11-day episodes with travel all over the country, so I was up late and up early. Getting back to the hotel at 10pm or later and starving was a recipe for disaster, because I didn't want to deprive myself of a good meal (I felt I'd earned it and needed the "down" time). There usually aren't a lot of healthy options after 10pm.
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Travel is a killer. I am on the road about 50% of the time and living off per diem. Eating out for every meal plus for me often changing time zones and not sleeping much means I end up eating crap. Fortunately for me I am disciplined enough at home that I don't do much damage.
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08-29-2011, 12:03 PM
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#17
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Gator Country's Ring of Honor
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 62,227
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Leaf, I'm glad you brought up eating out. You may be in a different category, but I have noticed that whenever a trainee tells me they've 'fallen off the wagon', the context ALWAYS seems to be eating out.
First (again acknowledging that some are in a different category), I want to ask people, why are you eating out so much ? Do you HAVE to eat out as much as you do ?
Second, is it possible that you are using eating out as an occasion to pig-out ? If so, why ? Is it necessary to gorge when you go to a restaurant ?
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08-29-2011, 01:40 PM
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#18
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Gator Country Gold
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Neptune Beach, Florida
Posts: 21,372
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As a single male I find myself eating out more often than staying in. I'm not real sure why I do it, but I guess I get a little bored just staying home. Also, I travel for my job quite a bit and I guess I keep the habit up when I come home.
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08-29-2011, 03:55 PM
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#19
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Gator Highlights
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: California
Posts: 9,484
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I try not to go out to eat, but its cheaper than making meals.
When i do go out to eat, I limit myself and track the calories.
When it comes to restaurants, i dont trust their calorie counts and judge portion sizes instead in order to get a general idea.
To me, from a calorie stand point. 500 calories in tacos is no different than a 500 calorie salad made at home.
Sure it may not be as healthy, but calorie wise its all the same.
Sent from my iPhone using GatorCountry
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08-29-2011, 04:06 PM
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#20
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Gator Country's Ring of Honor
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 62,227
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There you go. It is clearly possible to control calories when eating out. It's just that people tend to use eating out as an occasion to load up on calories and then pretend that it was beyond their control.
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