I don't even think there is much debate. Alcohol calories cannot be stored as fat...only used as energy, and not every calorie is uable by the body since it is a toxin. So your 120 pour of wine is more like 60 calories. Your body will use what it can as quickly as it can, and if it can't be used, it will be converted to acetic acid and excreted. The thing is, your body pretty much stops burning any other energy ingested as it tries to get rid of the alcohol and this only counts for pure alcohol...no mixed cocktails. |
You cut 3500 calories from what?
From your 7000, 20000, 50000? Do you think it matters? |
I sometime eat two candy bars in a day and often eat one. I'm 5'7" and 115lbs. It's just that you can't eat candy bars AND three full meals a day. I also walk a ton and weight lift. Weight lifting is great for weight loss. |
My point was, if your plate starts out with one cup of steamed plain green beans (not sauteed in butter or olive oil), and you overeat the steamed green beans, that's not going to be a lot of extra calories. Instead of sauteeing the green beans in butter or oil, you can steam them and season them with no salt seasonings. If you struggle with portion control, have you tried those portion control plates? Or tried weighing and measuring food? I tried that once, and I was completely surprised by how much a 1/4 cup actually is. Or how much 2 tablespoons actually is. It really makes a difference. |
You cut 3500 calories a week, or 500 calories a day, from either eating less or exercising more. And yes, it matters. You will lose 1 pound a week. |
That’s it for me. Portion control, and when I did weigh and measure everything out it was a shockingly small amount of food. What wasn’t shocking is that I didn’t stick with that diet for long. |
Nobody cares. Stop telling people how to lose or do anything when it comes to their weight. Most people know and don’t care. |
So do you know what calorie compensation is, or not? Because you seem to be missing the point and pushing sad old diet culture tropes instead. |
So you don’t think it matters how many calories you eat. So if I normally eat 28000 calories a week but cut 3500 and my sister normally eats 14000 calories a week but also cut 3500 we both lose weight at the same rate? |
DP. Based on a quick Google search, you don’t seem to be using that phrase in the say that studies from, e.g. NIH use it. Are you sure you know what it means? |
500 calories a day is a lot! Particularly if you don’t eat candy or drink your calories. |
No, it is not all calories in/out. You appear stuck in the 90s, having ignored all the advances in endocrinology, obesity research and neuroscience of the last 25 years. I highly recommend re-educating yourself from the brainwashing you are parroting here, or at least just shutting up with the calories in/out mantra you are parroting. Start here, and for the assertion you need to get over, you can skip ahead to 35:00. And don’t for one minute come back here and tell us you are more knowledgeable on human metabolism than Dr. Lustig and his colleagues working in the field. Don’t let the big science-y words scare you, I’m sure you are up to the task of expanding your women’s magazines understanding of the topics discussed here: https://youtu.be/dFOaBrujDHo |
This is such dangerously inaccurate advice, shame on you. Cutting alcohol WILL yield terrific results for health because alcohol is essentially poison with zero nutritional value and well established links to many kinds of cancer as well as heart disease. Anyone trying to reduce weight and improve health should absolutely begin with purging alcohol from their regular diet. Period. |
Same! I'm 170 lbs at 5'5 and I never drink soda juice and alcohol is rarely like once a month. Candy bars? Never. Sometimes I have a piece of dark chocolate after dinner. There's no Frappuccino addiction to cut out. I have to measure freaking teaspoons of olive oil on my roasted vegetables to lose weight. It's a cruel joke. |
Agree with this. The estimates for calorie burn from exercise are all over the place and highly inaccurate. The treadmills at my gym show calorie burn, but one of the trainers told me the other day that the calorie burn is based on a 28-year-old, 180 pound man. That’s not me. Consider exercise what you do for your health, but when it comes to wait loss, it’s about what you eat and how much. Most people over-estimate how many calories they are burning and under-estimate how much they are eating. Track calories using My Fitness Pal or another app. For a few weeks, track every bite you put in your mouth to get an accurate handle on how many calories you are actually taking in. What you are eating makes a difference - not just what, but how much. The person who mentioned nibbling while making kids’ lunches is right - it’s the sneaky calories that add up. It doesn’t have to be french fries and candy bars, you can gain wait from healthy food too, if you are eating too much of it. |