Health & Fitness
Dear Community,
Our tech team has launched updates to The Nest today. As a result of these updates, members of the Nest Community will need to change their password in order to continue participating in the community. In addition, The Nest community member's avatars will be replaced with generic default avatars. If you wish to revert to your original avatar, you will need to re-upload it via The Nest.
If you have questions about this, please email help@theknot.com.
Thank you.
Note: This only affects The Nest's community members and will not affect members on The Bump or The Knot.
Weight loss: is it basic math or is it more complex?
What do you think? is it as simple as burn/don't eat 3500 calories = lose one pound, or is it much more complex?
If you think it's more complex, what do you think affects weight loss?
I'm inceasingly of the opinion that, once you figure out the amount of calories you need to eat, the rest is fairly straightforward. I'm not sure metabolism slows down dramatically or any of that. Whenever I've had trouble losing weight, it's vanished when I started properly tracking calories and measuring exercise intensity.
2012 Races:
Mar 24: Great Human Race 5K. April 28: 5K for Fitness
Re: Weight loss: is it basic math or is it more complex?
My home office. Joeyzlovieg's hubby made it for me. I love it!
I think these things from my personal experience:
Metabolism changes drastically depending on the amount of exercise I do. It has also changed dramatically with age.
Weight loss for me, unlike a lot of other people, is more about the exercise than the food. If I'm eating great but doing nothing, the number never moved. If I stopped running and working out but kept eating well, I would gain weight - not a lot, but gain, nonetheless.
I think it's a very personal thing, this weight loss. I think you have to find what works for you through trial and error.
Yes,I'm smiling...I'm a marathoner!
Bloggy McBloggerson
CO Nestie Award Winner-Prettiest Brain-Back to Back!
2011 Bests
5K-22:49 10K-47:38 Half Mary-1:51:50
2012 Race Report
1/1-New Year's 5K-22:11
2/11-Sweetheart Classic 4-mile-29:49
3/24-Coulee Chase 5K-21:40
5/6-Colorado Marathon-4:08:30
5/28-Bolder Boulder 10K
5 whole feet of unsuccessful decision making
Blog: Loki's Kitchen*Loki Life*All About BMR
Wisely and Slow (My Husband's Running Blog)
Not sure if this will all make sense, but I don't think there is a one-size-fits all answer to that question. I need to focus on food to lose weight; exercise alone won't do much. So on a basic level, it is calories in vs. calories out, but there's ways to approach this to make weight loss more effective and work faster for me. I know I need to reduce simple sugar intake, drink enough water and have protein through out the day; then the pounds fly off instead of creep away. Exercise is also initially more about keeping my stress levels down, even though I know muscle uses calories more efficiently in the long run.
However DH can eat the same diet without changes, and just add running to his routine and see pounds come off; so obviously being male (hormones? % of muscle?) makes a difference.
It's a GIRL!
<a href="http://s37.photobucket.com/albums/e65/kari_lynn222/?action=view
I think that in a general sense, it is just calories in vs. calories out, but that there is a whole "system" affecting that.
For example, I don't really think that eating more protein or less carbs (or even the same amount of calories in vegetables and candy) makes a difference when you are just looking at straight numbers. But eating a balanced, varied diet gives your body the support (vitamins, minerals, etc) you need to feel your best, making you much more likely to have productive workouts, sleep better, and sustain a healthy lifestyle long-term.
Being able to eat more healthy food and less empty calories also makes me a much more fun person to be around - I am a total crankypants when I'm hungry.
I think that for most people, it's much more than basic math. This is a really interesting book on the topic:
http://www.amazon.com/Why-We-Get-Fat-Vintage/dp/0307474259/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1334004517&sr=8-1
I also really like this book:
http://www.amazon.com/The-Metabolic-Effect-Diet-Actually/dp/0061834890/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1334004557&sr=1-1
Yup-its way more than basic math for me.
If I am working out 5 days a week with lots of cardio/some weights, I lose weight even if I cheat sometimes.
If I don't work out, I start gaining after a week or two.