What if the person ate 3 meals a day?
4?
6?
12?
At what number does dividing up your calories for the day makes a difference? Why does 3 meals mean less than 4 or less than 12? If you eat 2000 calories a day and you require 3500 a day to maintain, you are going to lose an average of 3 pounds that week right? They debunked the myth that smaller/more frequent meals are better than 3 meals a day.
I just don't know if I agree with you here based on recent studies.
but you are right, this is about skipping meals. They strongly suggest eating breakfast but after breakfast, do you believe it makes a difference to eat lunch? What about dinner? What snack? When? What time? This is where I am starting to question the idea.
Jeri - i'm not arguing with you about 3 or more meals ... i think we're on the same page. I'm just arguing against your analogy because that assumes you can do less than 3 meal. If your body enters starvation mode, you won't be burning the same amount of calories as you would normally. You now have another variable that needs to be added into the equation.
i believe the magic number is 5 hours. You should never go (during waking hours) more than 5 hours without eating. This can easily be accomplished with 3 meals ... or more. Not with less. I prefer 5-6 meals / day, but that's easy for me because I work at home. I think it has helped me maintain my weight, but I'm not going to argue hard for it over 3-meals / day because, if you eat at good times and properly, it doesn't make a difference.
edit: yes, my girlfriend told me that if you go for more than 5 hours, you can run into problems and is one of the main causes of obesity ... especially skipping breakfast.
K, let me try to define "starvation mode". It's a bit tricky ... basically your metabolism slows down below it's normal baseline. So, when you introduce more calories, the body will store them as fat as it assumes it will not get fed soon. This is really bad if you are consuming your normal calories.
The catch however, is that if your normal diet is currently a low calorie diet to lose weight (i believe the maximum is 50% below your recommended intake), this will slow your progress, but you will still lose weight. The big problem with a low-caloric diet is that your metabolism is slowed (a study showed 40% decrease in metabolic rate at 50% reduced calories) is that if you eat a larger meal, at any time, you are drastically hurting your weight loss goals because those calories won't be burned like they would with a normal caloric diet.