Gen
New member
Your diet is the primary driver ...
As an aside though, Steve, why!? Isn't a calorie a calorie? Why shouldn't we be able to lose through exercise deficit alone?
Your diet is the primary driver ...
Your diet is the primary driver and you have not been doing that for 3 weeks.
As an aside though, Steve, why!? Isn't a calorie a calorie? Why shouldn't we be able to lose through exercise deficit alone?
I have been eating the same foods for as long as I can remember, and quantities - it's only the last few days I have been writing it down and working it out.
I would just like to get down to a (UK) 12, at the moment I am a 16. I do actually feel slightly more toned than I did before working out an hour each day on my dvd so I guess that's one thing to be pleased about, and I have definitely improved on the abs side of things, they aren't 'as' difficult as they were when I started! (But they still hurt lol)
I never said you couldn't. A deficit is a deficit no matter how you slice it, you're right.
In the context of why I said that, it was basically to say she just started paying attention to nutrition and in general, you can't out exercise a poor/uncontrolled diet.
Its just that I keep reading that losing weight is in the diet, not the exercise. I've read that burning 500 calories will not lose the same amount that a diet deficient in 500 calories will (another thread here actually).
Even studies don't seem to agree; some seem to come to the conclusion that diet is more important, others that lots of activity can keep it in check. So, if I ran 35 miles a week eating maintenence would I lose the same amount as if I did no exercise and ate 500 calories below maintenence every day? Or is it just one of those things that varies from person to person and they don't have much of an idea why?
Well for starters, these aren't apples to apples comparisons.
For instance, take two people. Person 1 burns 500 calories by lifting weights. Person 2 eats 500 less calories. Both are in 500 calorie deficits. More than likely though they won't lose the same amount of weight for the simple fact that weight is comprised of a bunch of stuff; muscle, glycogen, water, etc. Weight training influences things such as your endocrine system that can potentially alter fat oxidation. So and and so forth.
It goes well beyond the simplistic "500 calories from eating less vs 500 calories burned exercising"
So when you keep those sorts of things in mind, it's sort of silly to compare the two.
But from the bird's eye level... a deficit is a deficit.
See above. It isn't so simple.