Have a stored rant that I was thinking about posting to this thread.
I believe that “calories in, calories out” is fair-to-middling literally true, but a connotative disaster. It ignores quality of life, health, and life itself. That last refers to very fat people who were put on very low calorie diets and died of heart failure.
It is reliably dumped on people who have trouble losing weight.
As far as I can tell, not losing weight is at least both people getting sick from pushing their weight too low—ordinary illnesses, which I assume is the body not sending enough calories to the immune system—and that it’s more willpower than people want to put into the project.
I’ve also got a little evidence that there may be an emotional piece—I lowered my anxiety level, found I had much less desire to eat when I wasn’t hungry, and lost about fifteen pounds without putting a lot of effort into it. Since then I’ve cycled back into wanting to eat when I wasn’t hungry and seem to be heading out of it again, but I haven’t been checking my weight.
On the research side, there’s the ACE (Adverse Childhood Experience) Study00017-8/abstract), which found a correlation with the number of very bad childhood experiences and obesity.
I’m a lot less sure about what’s going on with health, diet, and weight than most people seem to be, and a lot more sure that a lot of what’s going on is status issues.
Have a stored rant that I was thinking about posting to this thread.
I believe that “calories in, calories out” is fair-to-middling literally true, but a connotative disaster. It ignores quality of life, health, and life itself. That last refers to very fat people who were put on very low calorie diets and died of heart failure.
It is reliably dumped on people who have trouble losing weight.
As far as I can tell, not losing weight is at least both people getting sick from pushing their weight too low—ordinary illnesses, which I assume is the body not sending enough calories to the immune system—and that it’s more willpower than people want to put into the project.
I’ve also got a little evidence that there may be an emotional piece—I lowered my anxiety level, found I had much less desire to eat when I wasn’t hungry, and lost about fifteen pounds without putting a lot of effort into it. Since then I’ve cycled back into wanting to eat when I wasn’t hungry and seem to be heading out of it again, but I haven’t been checking my weight.
On the research side, there’s the ACE (Adverse Childhood Experience) Study00017-8/abstract), which found a correlation with the number of very bad childhood experiences and obesity.
I’m a lot less sure about what’s going on with health, diet, and weight than most people seem to be, and a lot more sure that a lot of what’s going on is status issues.