If calories are the most important, then do you think someone who, for arguments' sake and to make it easy, ate 1400 cal. of cookies a day would stay the same weight as someone who, with all else equal, ate 1400 cal. of fruits, veggies, good carbs, etc? I really don't think so. I think if you eat 1400 cal or a lot of the wrong thing, you WILL gain weight vs if you ate the same amount but of good stuff. I like sweets but I never eat over my calorie limit and I exercise...and I've gained 10 lbs.
Any arguments? Because I hope that's the case. Otherwise I will never lose weight.
1. Weight and fat are too entirely different things.
2. If there are 3500 calories in a pound of fat, how does your body add fat *magically* from junk food if calories are accounted for. For example:
Diet A = 1500 calories of sugar
Diet B = 1500 calories of protein
There are two individuals consuming each diet respectively, who
are identical. Each have a maintenance intake of 1500 calories.
Using your theory, individual 1 will gain weight. Individual 2 probably
won't.
So for starters, what are they gaining? And secondly, if it's fat, where's it coming from since the rules of thermodynamics are rather binding?
I know that when your blood sugar spikes after eating sugar/bad carbs, it ends up being stored as fat regardless of calories.
You know this, huh?
I think you better check your physiology on that one.
You have to realize that this claim you are making is like saying, "I know that if these bricks weren't here making up these walls, that roof would still be right were it is."
Calories are energy. Fat is stored energy. How do you gain fat if you aren't eating a surplus of energy?
And how is it that insulin makes you fat?
Using the insulin model of lipogenesis is outdated and ignores the last ~20years of research.
You do realize while insulin is raised, and the body is at an energetic deficit, the body has to provide energy from somewhere, and ultimately this somewhere is fat.
I have trouble getting 1500 calories period. From what I read I should be getting 1800. Regardless of if it fills you up or if you get hungry, my point is that both situations are 1400 cal. If you ate 1400 cal of each category and didn't eat anymore that day, I think you'd GAIN weight w/the cookie diet.
And yes it would probably take more calories to digest the good stuff. Plus the blood sugar spike w/the cookie diet would make you store more fat.
What are these magical building blocks that are used to add fat to your body when you are in a caloric deficit?
I need to watch out for them.
So 1400 cal of different things is NOT the same.
Certainly is.
A calorie is a calorie no matter which way you slice it. It can be nothing else, just as a kilogram can be nothing but a kilogram.
Now if you were to say not all macronutrients (protein, carbs, fats) act the same in the body.... than you'd make sense.
Sorry I should have stuck with the topic. My mistake. Bend me over and spank me!