Anonymous wrote:I think you can change your body’s set point to an extent via habits. When I was in college I ate very poorly and didn’t exercise, was around 190+ lbs. After college I started exercising and eating healthier and ever since then I have hovered 165-175. It’s not a huge change but it feels like my new set point. I am a 5’11 male for reference.
Anonymous wrote:\Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no such thing, which is why the vast majority who lose weight, and doesn't matter if it's WW, Jenny Craig, Noom, Optifast or the new injectable meds, gain the weight back
Are you’d saying there’s no such thing as a set point weight or no such thing as resetting it?
I was told in a college class by a anesthesiology professor that it took 6 months to reset a set point.
But later told there's no such thing as resetting it because fat cells never die, they just shrink unless surgically removed.
So does that mean liposuction would make you feel less hungry??
In theory, yes. In practice, no -- because it wouldn't remove enough cells to affect this.
So you're saying fat cells are what make you hungry??
Isn't that what fairly recent science shows? Recent as in several years, but still not that old.
IDK. I haven't heard this theory before. It sounds suspect. Perhaps the amount of fat cells present play a role; but I'm not buying the assertion that they themselves cause hunger.
Leptin helps prevent hunger.
This hormone doesn’t affect your hunger levels and food intake from meal to meal. Instead, it acts to alter food intake and control energy usage over a long time to help maintain your weight.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:no such thing as resetting it (NP)
True.
Just get used to being hungry for life.
Most people never experience real hunger. Real hunger starts days after you last meal. Perhaps even well over a week or two.
What most people refer to as hunger is just mental cravings. Those can be controlled or "reset" if one wants to call it that.
BS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no such thing, which is why the vast majority who lose weight, and doesn't matter if it's WW, Jenny Craig, Noom, Optifast or the new injectable meds, gain the weight back
Are you’d saying there’s no such thing as a set point weight or no such thing as resetting it?
I was told in a college class by a anesthesiology professor that it took 6 months to reset a set point.
But later told there's no such thing as resetting it because fat cells never die, they just shrink unless surgically removed.
So does that mean liposuction would make you feel less hungry??
In theory, yes. In practice, no -- because it wouldn't remove enough cells to affect this.
So you're saying fat cells are what make you hungry??
Isn't that what fairly recent science shows? Recent as in several years, but still not that old.
IDK. I haven't heard this theory before. It sounds suspect. Perhaps the amount of fat cells present play a role; but I'm not buying the assertion that they themselves cause hunger.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no such thing, which is why the vast majority who lose weight, and doesn't matter if it's WW, Jenny Craig, Noom, Optifast or the new injectable meds, gain the weight back
Are you’d saying there’s no such thing as a set point weight or no such thing as resetting it?
I was told in a college class by a anesthesiology professor that it took 6 months to reset a set point.
But later told there's no such thing as resetting it because fat cells never die, they just shrink unless surgically removed.
So does that mean liposuction would make you feel less hungry??
In theory, yes. In practice, no -- because it wouldn't remove enough cells to affect this.
So you're saying fat cells are what make you hungry??
Isn't that what fairly recent science shows? Recent as in several years, but still not that old.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no such thing, which is why the vast majority who lose weight, and doesn't matter if it's WW, Jenny Craig, Noom, Optifast or the new injectable meds, gain the weight back
Are you’d saying there’s no such thing as a set point weight or no such thing as resetting it?
I was told in a college class by a anesthesiology professor that it took 6 months to reset a set point.
But later told there's no such thing as resetting it because fat cells never die, they just shrink unless surgically removed.
So does that mean liposuction would make you feel less hungry??
In theory, yes. In practice, no -- because it wouldn't remove enough cells to affect this.
So you're saying fat cells are what make you hungry??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no such thing, which is why the vast majority who lose weight, and doesn't matter if it's WW, Jenny Craig, Noom, Optifast or the new injectable meds, gain the weight back
Are you’d saying there’s no such thing as a set point weight or no such thing as resetting it?
I was told in a college class by a anesthesiology professor that it took 6 months to reset a set point.
But later told there's no such thing as resetting it because fat cells never die, they just shrink unless surgically removed.
So does that mean liposuction would make you feel less hungry??
In theory, yes. In practice, no -- because it wouldn't remove enough cells to affect this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:no such thing as resetting it (NP)
True.
Just get used to being hungry for life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:no such thing as resetting it (NP)
True.
Just get used to being hungry for life.
Most people never experience real hunger. Real hunger starts days after you last meal. Perhaps even well over a week or two.
What most people refer to as hunger is just mental cravings. Those can be controlled or "reset" if one wants to call it that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:no such thing as resetting it (NP)
True.
Just get used to being hungry for life.
Most people never experience real hunger. Real hunger starts days after you last meal. Perhaps even well over a week or two.
What most people refer to as hunger is just mental cravings. Those can be controlled or "reset" if one wants to call it that.