Fitness and Weightloss
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@matteo-nunziati said in Fitness and Weightloss:
ok, I'm 1.75mt/68Kg (5.74 feet/150lbs), not talking for personal experience, but I've a friend which is on diet. He travels a lot for the company, lot of business lunches and the so... he gone quite fat.
now his girlfriend is a biomulecolar chemist, not the most common work in Italy, so she applied to a nutritional science master and has started putting her biomulecoral knowledge in it.
study result: eat 75% FATS, 25% proteins. Avoid any part of carbs.
effects: you loose weight, your blood aligns with correct ranges then...
your metabolism slows down, you loose weight slower and slower up to an almost full stop.
solution: every 3 month have a super all-you-can-eat sesson, metabolism restart running, you continue with the 75-25 diet, your weight goes down.his breakfast was bacon and eggs! (ok in Italy this is not a breakfast, is an offense to breakfast, but this is just taste !)
my friend has lost something like 15Kg (33lbs) in 3 months in a steadily manner with no sport activity.
Now sport is good for other reasons, but you can loss weight even if you are constrained to eat sht, just avoid carbs rich sht.JUST A STORY, DO NOT TRY IT AT HOME WITHOUT A BIOMOLECULAR CHEMIST ON YOUR SIDE!
You need carbs to live. There are good carbs and there are bad carbs. Sweet potatoes, those are some of the best carbs you can eat. The benefit of cutting out carbs completely, is that you are avoiding the bad ones (cookies, cake, etc.). But you should be eating some carbs (sweet potatoes).
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A life without cake is a life without living.
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@Tim_G actually you need water, oxigen, nitrogen other few things and energy to live and catalysts for reactions.
water and oxigen comes from different media (for the most).
Nitrogen comes from proteins.
Vitamins provide catalysts.
Your body fat is used under aerobic activity to provide energy if no carb is present. This is how you lose weight when you walk: you do not put enough carbs in your body for the walk and you start burning fats. If you put enough carbs you do not loss weight, you just stop add it. -
@Tim_G
This is a pretty well known strategy. It is essentially the goal of any low carb diet. It induces a state called ketosis. Some diets are more extreme than others in pursuing the effect. The version @matteo-nunziati describes is on one end of the spectrum.Also keep in mind it is difficult to avoid carbs altogether. Basically all vegetables include at least some. You may not typically think about your carb intake when eating green beans but it's there.
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@matteo-nunziati said in Fitness and Weightloss:
@Tim_G actually you need water, oxigen, nitrogen other few things and energy to live and catalysts for reactions.
water and oxigen comes from different media (for the most).
Nitrogen comes from proteins.
Vitamins provide catalysts.
Your body fat is used under aerobic activity to provide energy if no carb is present. This is how you lose weight when you walk: you do not put enough carbs in your body for the walk and you start burning fats. If you put enough carbs you do not loss weight, you just stop add it.You can still eat less energy than you burn without cutting the good carbs.
Your body needs protein, fat, and carbs. It's not good to cut any of them out. What matters is the percentage of each that you consume, and the foods that that contain them.
If you want to lose fat, a good general rule is:
- 12 calories per pound of body weight.
- 1 gram of protein per pound of body weight. (chicken, lean beef, fish, turkey)
- 20% of your calories from FAT. (nuts, avocado, some oils - (make sure to count the fat in meats and eggs))
- The rest of calories from GOOD carbs. (sweet potatoes, rice, fruit (no more than two fruits a day))
If you're very overweight, use your goal body weight to base your calories and protein on instead of your actual weight.
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@NDC said in Fitness and Weightloss:
@Tim_G
This is a pretty well known strategy. It is essentially the goal of any low carb diet. It induces a state called ketosis. Some diets are more extreme than others in pursuing the effect. The version @matteo-nunziati describes is on one end of the spectrum.Also keep in mind it is difficult to avoid carbs altogether. Basically all vegetables include at least some. You may not typically think about your carb intake when eating green beans but it's there.
If you cut out carbs, you're in for a rough ride. Not only is it unhealthy to cut out essential carbs, but you'll most likely end up caving eventually... and gain your weight back.
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@NDC said in Fitness and Weightloss:
@Tim_G
This is a pretty well known strategy.Many things in life are well known, many well known things are not good.
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@Tim_G said in Fitness and Weightloss:
@NDC said in Fitness and Weightloss:
@Tim_G
This is a pretty well known strategy. It is essentially the goal of any low carb diet. It induces a state called ketosis. Some diets are more extreme than others in pursuing the effect. The version @matteo-nunziati describes is on one end of the spectrum.Also keep in mind it is difficult to avoid carbs altogether. Basically all vegetables include at least some. You may not typically think about your carb intake when eating green beans but it's there.
If you cut out carbs, you're in for a rough ride. Not only is it unhealthy to cut out essential carbs, but you'll most likely end up caving eventually... and gain your weight back.
As far as a "crash diet" strategy goes the zero carbs all protein and fats one is the way to go. Once you get into ketosis your body just RIPS through fat. Good F*(@! luck keeping it up over any length of time though. Also this is the diet that is best known for having people gain weight - if you screw up, your body drops out of ketosis and just SLAMS all that fat and protein into fat cells.
Source: I work with athletes at an olympic level + chat with nutritionists. Do not recommend (the diet).
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Also, worth mentioning... is that if you find a diet and exercise that works, you can stick to, and gives good results without killing your health... then by all means do it.
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@Tim_G
I am in no way advocating that level of extreme. Nor do I think was @matteo-nunziati hence the disclaimer at the end of his post.
I personally bounced off a low-carb diet at one point probably because it was encouraging a point further along the line than was good for me.
Just adding some context for those interested in how/why something like that works.
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For anyone interested in a program that works, check out The Truth About Strength Training. Note, it's not just about strength training.
I've personally done it a few times, and I've recommended it a number of times and heard positive results. And no, I'm not affiliated in any way. I'm just pointing out a program that works, without any kind of extreme restrictions. In fact, all you do is eat well, exercise, and of course get decent sleep.... you may have to cut some bad habits, but you can have some cheat meals
When I have a question, he's good with answering back too.... even to this day. I bought it years ago.
I'd give my copy out for free, but that's illegal, and I really respect the time and info inside of it. It's definitely worth it, even if just for the info alone.
People spend more than this on a case of beer... why not spend it on something that is actually good for your body instead?
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@NDC yeah! I just know she did this on the basis of some chemical reasoning. My only chemistry exam at university was madness. Also the diet is expected to be a 6-9 month bootstrap then you have to rearrange your food for the long term.
Just mentioned as it is possible to loss weight even if you cannot manage so much your food and you have no time to sport.
She first tested it something like 2 years back on herself and now she is in "mainteinance mode". Med Checkups are all ok and weight stabilized.
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@NDC said in Fitness and Weightloss:
yes! that's it exactly. I now also recall both the name of the induced effect and that he actually did urine tests to check his state.
And no, do not do this at home!
@Tim_G what is a bad/good carb? I'm aware of good/bad fats but not carbs. can you elaborate a bit?! thanks!
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Striving for daily.
Today I walked to the event my daughter had.
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I admit that the last two years with NTG has had me 'health' worried as I am sitting all day, and when I do get up it's generally to hit the snacks or such.
Since getting a Fitbit Charge 2 though, I've been pushing myself more and more over what I have been trying to accomplish since the start of 2017. One nice thing it has is an hourly reminder to move. So every our it 'inspires' me to get at least 250 steps in.
More moving. If I carry my phone it'll register the number of floors climbed. It does register the Elliptical.
I'm moving more, I try to move every hour now,.. and several days this week I hit the 250sph goal over the 12 hours I have it running.
Surprisingly though, I've not gained more weight,.. so I'm still the same as I was when I started NTG...
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Well done! Doing some good work! Only wish I could do it!
Years ago I used to hit the gym every other day, swim, run, weights etc and could eat whatever I wanted... but then... work started! Since then... FAT. Hate it!Thanks for the inspiration.
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After four months of pretty extremely healthy eating in Europe and pretty regular exercise, it is going to be a huge challenge being back in Texas; but we are making a big effort to at least go for a really healthy food approach.
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I am currently at 270 lbs / 122.47 kg and at 5' 8" that's overweight. Cut 3 sodas down to 1 and it will be for lunch. Cut the snacks. Portion control on food and a walk around the block everyday.
Goal is after 2 years for me to be at my ideal weight of 150 lbs / 68 kg.
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@NerdyDad said in Fitness and Weightloss:
Goal is after 2 years for me to be at my ideal weight of 150 lbs / 68 kg.
That's the way to do it. A realistic approach!
People try to do that in only months, and if they do, it doesn't last long before they are worse off than when they started.
Slow and steady will get you there for sure... no sudden drastic changes.
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@Tim_G said in Fitness and Weightloss:
@NerdyDad said in Fitness and Weightloss:
Goal is after 2 years for me to be at my ideal weight of 150 lbs / 68 kg.
That's the way to do it. A realistic approach!
People try to do that in only months, and if they do, it doesn't last long before they are worse off than when they started.
Slow and steady will get you there for sure... no sudden drastic changes.
I'll need yall to hold me accountable. I'll try to put in routine updates about how things are going.