KaraCooks
New member
Here's the thing.
Food intake is the key to losing weight. Bottom line. You can exercise until you fall over, but if you eat more than you burn, you're not going to lose.
However, adding exercise to the equation changes the balance in many ways. Mathematically speaking, the additional calorie burn *when combined with controlled eating* can speed weight loss. The increase in metabolism from being regularly active help burn additional calories. Exercise shifts the direction of weight loss to be more towards fat loss and less towards muscle loss. The more muscle you maintain, the better off you are in the long run, since muscle is metabolically active - so you're again increasing your burn rate. Ideally you'd combine strength/resistance exercise with cardio, instead of doing one or the other.
And, of course, there are other health benefits to exercise overall that are above and beyond calorie burn.
You can lose weight by not exercising and controlling your food. But at some point you'll hit the "skinny fat" stage where you might be skinny, but you're also flabby and have less muscle and less strength.
Most people want that fit look - what the magazines refer to as "toned" - and THAT look is one you can't get w/out adding in exercise as well.
If you want to do some research on the matter, start with Lyle McDonald's site on building strength, fat loss, etc. His articles are all well researched and put things in simple and readable terms for the layperson.
Food intake is the key to losing weight. Bottom line. You can exercise until you fall over, but if you eat more than you burn, you're not going to lose.
However, adding exercise to the equation changes the balance in many ways. Mathematically speaking, the additional calorie burn *when combined with controlled eating* can speed weight loss. The increase in metabolism from being regularly active help burn additional calories. Exercise shifts the direction of weight loss to be more towards fat loss and less towards muscle loss. The more muscle you maintain, the better off you are in the long run, since muscle is metabolically active - so you're again increasing your burn rate. Ideally you'd combine strength/resistance exercise with cardio, instead of doing one or the other.
And, of course, there are other health benefits to exercise overall that are above and beyond calorie burn.
You can lose weight by not exercising and controlling your food. But at some point you'll hit the "skinny fat" stage where you might be skinny, but you're also flabby and have less muscle and less strength.
Most people want that fit look - what the magazines refer to as "toned" - and THAT look is one you can't get w/out adding in exercise as well.
If you want to do some research on the matter, start with Lyle McDonald's site on building strength, fat loss, etc. His articles are all well researched and put things in simple and readable terms for the layperson.
