I've been dieting at a deficit for a while now. Nothing special or trendy. Keeping my protein-carb-fat ratio 40-40-20, eating whole grains, lean meats, taking a multi-vit, avoiding processed and packaged stuff, drinking immense amounts of water and avoiding sodium (but intaking enough to sustain me, of course). I am now 169 pounds down from 200. I'm an 18 year-old 5'9" male.
With much regret, today, I broke as the day drew to an evening. I ate a ridiculous amount of carb rich foods, albeit, most was whole wheat or grain, but still, quite a bit. I'm not feeling too bad about it, it happens rarely, and tomorrow'll be better, and maybe this "cheat day" will reboost my metabolism back to normal levels, as it has slown down slightly from the dieting (I can generally "feel it")
As someone once said on this forum, "The difference between 90% adherence and 100% adherence is negligible". Words to live by. I'm not going to let this bad day discourage me from continuing on, although I will avoid looking at the scale tomorrow to see that 0.1 pound increase in weight
Anyway, I was curious as to whether or not the human body has a max or cap/limit as to how many calories it will absorb per period of time. I mean, somehow I don't think it's possible that someone can gain 5 pounds of fat in 2 hours because he ate 2.5 Kg of carbohydrates (eating 33 Klondike sandwiches, 75g in each, for example, which is possible, people eat like 50 hot dogs in a row during competitions)
So my question is, will your body process all of those carbohydrates and store them as fat? Or does it have a certain rate of absorbency and lets a certain percentage of the carbohydrates flush down your system and out of your body?
With much regret, today, I broke as the day drew to an evening. I ate a ridiculous amount of carb rich foods, albeit, most was whole wheat or grain, but still, quite a bit. I'm not feeling too bad about it, it happens rarely, and tomorrow'll be better, and maybe this "cheat day" will reboost my metabolism back to normal levels, as it has slown down slightly from the dieting (I can generally "feel it")
As someone once said on this forum, "The difference between 90% adherence and 100% adherence is negligible". Words to live by. I'm not going to let this bad day discourage me from continuing on, although I will avoid looking at the scale tomorrow to see that 0.1 pound increase in weight
Anyway, I was curious as to whether or not the human body has a max or cap/limit as to how many calories it will absorb per period of time. I mean, somehow I don't think it's possible that someone can gain 5 pounds of fat in 2 hours because he ate 2.5 Kg of carbohydrates (eating 33 Klondike sandwiches, 75g in each, for example, which is possible, people eat like 50 hot dogs in a row during competitions)
So my question is, will your body process all of those carbohydrates and store them as fat? Or does it have a certain rate of absorbency and lets a certain percentage of the carbohydrates flush down your system and out of your body?
Last edited: