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Thread: Low Fat vs Low Card For Weight Loss

  1. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by monkeywrench View Post
    That is what most people don't understand. 80% of weight loss is eating a healthy diet. 1 1/2 years ago I started a macro diet and lost 60 lbs in a year. Maintaining but still watching what I eat.
    There's a few caveats with this post. Age and activity level being huge ones. I'd say that diet becomes increasingly more important as you age, because your ability to recover diminishes. When you're young, you can out work a bad diet and recover fast enough to do it again the next day. As you age though, this changes drastically. Bad habits stack up over years and you find yourself in a place where you can't recover fast enough to outdo a poor diet.

    I think the importance of a healthy diet in young people is in establishing a behavior pattern to take them later in life, not so much an acute effect, not that there won't be one.

    To say someone lost 60lbs in a year, without qualifying that statement with a weight, height and age stat is misleading. Losing 10lbs at 40 years old at a reasonable BMI is much harder than losing 50lbs at 20 at an inflated BMI. I've very much come to appreciate and respect of aging on the active person. I would encourage all young guys, those under 40, so seriously check their habits and see where changes need to be made.
    Last edited by bp7178; 03-19-19 at 23:27.

  2. #12
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    I 42 years old, 6'3" male! Not very active! Fitness pal takes all that in consideration!
    Last edited by monkeywrench; 03-20-19 at 06:06. Reason: Adding

  3. #13
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    Also BMI is a outdated! I weigh 205 lbs. By BMI standards I am overweight! I had two nephews finish usmc basic in January. They entered at 205 lbs (18 years old) they finished and weighed 225 lbs. By BMI they are overweight.

    But they lost inches. Muscle is heavier than fat! BMI does not take this in consideration. Everyone uses excuses and want to blame something other than themselves for the poor results or the lack of.

  4. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by monkeywrench View Post
    Also BMI is a outdated! I weigh 205 lbs. By BMI standards I am overweight! I had two nephews finish usmc basic in January. They entered at 205 lbs (18 years old) they finished and weighed 225 lbs. By BMI they are overweight.

    But they lost inches. Muscle is heavier than fat! BMI does not take this in consideration. Everyone uses excuses and want to blame something other than themselves for the poor results or the lack of.
    BMI is not outdated, it's just misused. It's useful for large numbers of people, it's of lesser to no value to individuals and actually penalizes those who workout regularly. That's were they went wrong, bu fact remains, few in the population are outside the BMI due to higher levels of muscle mass. I'm obese by BMI standards. More have woken up to the fact the BMI should not be applied to individuals in isolation and are looking at actual body comp, but yes it's been frustrating trying to educate people, some who have the education to know better, about the BMI.
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  5. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by monkeywrench View Post
    Also BMI is a outdated! I weigh 205 lbs. By BMI standards I am overweight! I had two nephews finish usmc basic in January. They entered at 205 lbs (18 years old) they finished and weighed 225 lbs. By BMI they are overweight.

    But they lost inches. Muscle is heavier than fat! BMI does not take this in consideration. Everyone uses excuses and want to blame something other than themselves for the poor results or the lack of.
    IIRC, 205lbs is the border line of overweight for someone who is 6'-3". But, you can be 205 lbs skinny fat, or you can be 205 lbs muscular and cut. You're going off on a tangent about BMI but you missed my point. If you're a sedentary fat person who has lots of weight to loose, you will drop weight with a lot less effort than someone who is active and relatively lean who is trying to drop the last few percentage points of body fat.

    This is where the importance of diet really comes into it, especially as you get older.

    By your own admittance you're a not very active middle age man who was heavy and likely carrying a high percentage of body fat. Managing your food resulted in weight loss. Of course it did. You were basically doing nothing, then you did the most important thing you could to loose weight, manage your food intake, which resulted in weight loss.

    A pound of muscle and a pound of fat weigh the same. They're both a pound.

  6. #16
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    I just turned 35 last week. I tried the RP diet about 18 months ago and while I wasn’t a fan of the macro structure around meals, it did offer me the introduction I needed when it came to what foods I should be eating and when, based around my workout times.

    As of now, I simply count Macro’s using the MFP app and I pretty much eat what I want but track it as honestly as I can. I’m 6’1” and lately I’ve been between 201-205 lbs, playing the long game when it comes to weight loss. Right now, I get 2255 cals/day broken down into a 40%c/30%p/30%f ratio (226g/C; 170g/P; 75g/F) and I leave quite a bit of the fat on the table most days and I eat pretty close to the same meals day in day out during the week. I’m pretty lenient with what I eat/drink on the weekends.

    As a side note, when I was still diving commercially, for my height I was allowed to get as heavy as 238# before Doc Serio would have recommended that I be pulled out of rotation to lose weight. Granted, I’ve never been that fat in my life, but a little over a year ago I was 220 and I felt like a complete slob. For now, I’m simply dieting to reboot my eating habits for the longhaul and be more aware of what category most foods fall into so I can make better eating decisions at meal times. My goal is to weight between 195-200 without much effort through “maintenance” eating.
    Last edited by SavageBrew84; 03-20-19 at 13:42.

  7. #17
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    DID YOU KNOW: The weight loss industry is worth roughly $66 billion ?
    And this site says that I can lose it with a help of cannabis .
    They https://www.marijuanabreak.com/cbd/cbdistillery-review say
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  8. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by themonk View Post
    Anyone interested in Keto I would encourage to look up Dr. Dom D’Agostino. He is a professor at the University of South Florida and does research on ketosis for the DOD.
    Just finished week 1 on keto. Already feel fuller longer, lost 4 pounds, and I get to eat cheesy eggs with bacon and avocado every morning. I call that winning.

  9. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by tumbler View Post
    Just finished week 1 on keto. Already feel fuller longer, lost 4 pounds, and I get to eat cheesy eggs with bacon and avocado every morning. I call that winning.
    Keto dropped me ten pounds over two weeks (a couple cheats too many put half back on, need to stand closer to the salad bowl as I start Week 3), and going reduced-carb moving toward keto has taken my arthritic, Hutt-like mother from almost 360 to just under 320 over the past six months.

    Anybody here tried Stephanie Laska's "Dirty Lazy Keto" cookbooks? I'm thinking it'll be an easier time to keep the Evil Old One herded down the right path if we can get her to thinking of those high-carb things she's addicted to as "something that she can have once in a while for special occasions" rather than a "you have to give up everything all the time"--after all, we all get the craving for a burger and fries or a milkshake every now and again, right?
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  10. #20
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    All I read was the title, my response LOW CARB.

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