I’m a complete innocent in all this. I’ve never needed to lose weight before, hence appealing for help here. And I don’t know anything about Vilhjálmur Stefánsson or ketogenic diets in general.
I do know that sloth and gluttony aren’t the explanation, because I have been a slothful glutton for most of my life and I never gained much weight, nor lost it in the long periods when I was a sporty glutton. That’s gone wrong recently, hence my search for reasons and techniques.
Wikipedia seems to imply that Vilhjálmur Stefánsson was interested in eskimo-style all-meat diets.
exfatloss seems to be deliberately holding the amount of protein low, and that does seem to be a load-bearing part of his approach. Also the anti-polyunsaturated fats bit, which I find intriguing because it’s such a good theory, and yet it makes predictions which don’t seem to be true.
Ultimately the new GLP-1 agonist weightloss drugs.....
I’m irritatingly fat, not dying of morbid obesity. I wouldn’t touch such things with someone else’s bargepole, absent twenty years of widespread use and researchers motivated to find the unintended consequences.
Chemical patches as a remedy for chemical poisoning is ok, if it’s the best we can do, but unless the problem is some permanent environmental contaminant, I’m sure we can do better than that!
Stefánsson’s “The Fat of the Land” is not really worth reading for any scientific insight today, but it’s entertaining early 1900s anthropology.
I don’t have much of an opinion on any specific diet approach, but I can tell you my own experience with weight loss: I’ve always been between 15-25% bodyfat, yoyoing around. This routine isn’t ideal, so I too am a ‘victim’ of the weight gain phenomenon.
I have no satisfying answers for “why are we getting fatter” or “what makes caloric deficits so hard to maintain”. I appreciate the diet blogging community that tries to tackle these questions with citizen science.
You may be interested in the what Tucker Goodrich is doing, he’s been reviewing the literature, and it’s probably the Linoleic acid.
He’s pointed at the research on the direct stimulation of the endocanabinoid system by omega6.
He’s interviewed someone who studied Tributyl tin, an obesogen present at relevant doses in all of our environments, it also happens to agonize the same receptors omega6s do, and also has canabinoid activity.
Imagine trying to lose weight while smoking weed all day every day.
I’m a complete innocent in all this. I’ve never needed to lose weight before, hence appealing for help here. And I don’t know anything about Vilhjálmur Stefánsson or ketogenic diets in general.
I do know that sloth and gluttony aren’t the explanation, because I have been a slothful glutton for most of my life and I never gained much weight, nor lost it in the long periods when I was a sporty glutton. That’s gone wrong recently, hence my search for reasons and techniques.
Wikipedia seems to imply that Vilhjálmur Stefánsson was interested in eskimo-style all-meat diets.
exfatloss seems to be deliberately holding the amount of protein low, and that does seem to be a load-bearing part of his approach. Also the anti-polyunsaturated fats bit, which I find intriguing because it’s such a good theory, and yet it makes predictions which don’t seem to be true.
I’m irritatingly fat, not dying of morbid obesity. I wouldn’t touch such things with someone else’s bargepole, absent twenty years of widespread use and researchers motivated to find the unintended consequences.
Chemical patches as a remedy for chemical poisoning is ok, if it’s the best we can do, but unless the problem is some permanent environmental contaminant, I’m sure we can do better than that!
Stefánsson’s “The Fat of the Land” is not really worth reading for any scientific insight today, but it’s entertaining early 1900s anthropology.
I don’t have much of an opinion on any specific diet approach, but I can tell you my own experience with weight loss: I’ve always been between 15-25% bodyfat, yoyoing around. This routine isn’t ideal, so I too am a ‘victim’ of the weight gain phenomenon.
I have no satisfying answers for “why are we getting fatter” or “what makes caloric deficits so hard to maintain”. I appreciate the diet blogging community that tries to tackle these questions with citizen science.
You may be interested in the what Tucker Goodrich is doing, he’s been reviewing the literature, and it’s probably the Linoleic acid. He’s pointed at the research on the direct stimulation of the endocanabinoid system by omega6. He’s interviewed someone who studied Tributyl tin, an obesogen present at relevant doses in all of our environments, it also happens to agonize the same receptors omega6s do, and also has canabinoid activity.
Imagine trying to lose weight while smoking weed all day every day.