Originally posted by: L3p3rM355i4h
Originally posted by: Skoorb
Hah, like that's healthy.Originally posted by: L3p3rM355i4h
you suckers with your diets. I eat 5k calories a day and still weigh 165.
Like gigapet mentioned it won't last, and the longer you go without caring about your diet the harder it will be to break the habit. I was forced to adopt a healthier approach at 16 and while I was chubbier than most people my age at that time I'm now massively thinner, because my approach has become a real lifestyle, whereas now people finally are chubbing up and realizing that they can't stick to a proper approach.
I tried eating a normal diet, and I started losing weight. either I'll balloon out like my dad did, or I'll stay as skinny as I am now, like my Grandfather.
I know people who lost a lot of weight on Atkins. It's the only diet I've ever seen that consistently worked in the real world. But you know, someone publishes an article somewhere that 0.002% of the population can't lose weight on it - and *boom* Fatty McFatterson is right back watching American Idol reruns while eating canned cake frosting with his bare hands again.Originally posted by: notfred
Yes, like every other diet fad before it, it's seen the end of its 15 minutes. It was the easiest diet ever and most fat Americans STILL couldn't stick to it.
Less calories consistently works. Always has, always will 🙂It's the only diet I've ever seen that consistently worked in the real world.
Originally posted by: Landroval
Originally posted by: L3p3rM355i4h
Originally posted by: Skoorb
Hah, like that's healthy.Originally posted by: L3p3rM355i4h
you suckers with your diets. I eat 5k calories a day and still weigh 165.
Like gigapet mentioned it won't last, and the longer you go without caring about your diet the harder it will be to break the habit. I was forced to adopt a healthier approach at 16 and while I was chubbier than most people my age at that time I'm now massively thinner, because my approach has become a real lifestyle, whereas now people finally are chubbing up and realizing that they can't stick to a proper approach.
I tried eating a normal diet, and I started losing weight. either I'll balloon out like my dad did, or I'll stay as skinny as I am now, like my Grandfather.
Have you actually measured the calories you consume (and over an extended period of time)? 5k is quite a lot, unless you are sucking down lard 😉 On that note, one of my brothers is over 30, eats like a horse (although less than he did 10 years ago), rarely exercises and has no visible body fat.
Originally posted by: L3p3rM355i4h
Originally posted by: Landroval
Originally posted by: L3p3rM355i4h
Originally posted by: Skoorb
Hah, like that's healthy.Originally posted by: L3p3rM355i4h
you suckers with your diets. I eat 5k calories a day and still weigh 165.
Like gigapet mentioned it won't last, and the longer you go without caring about your diet the harder it will be to break the habit. I was forced to adopt a healthier approach at 16 and while I was chubbier than most people my age at that time I'm now massively thinner, because my approach has become a real lifestyle, whereas now people finally are chubbing up and realizing that they can't stick to a proper approach.
I tried eating a normal diet, and I started losing weight. either I'll balloon out like my dad did, or I'll stay as skinny as I am now, like my Grandfather.
Have you actually measured the calories you consume (and over an extended period of time)? 5k is quite a lot, unless you are sucking down lard 😉 On that note, one of my brothers is over 30, eats like a horse (although less than he did 10 years ago), rarely exercises and has no visible body fat.
search for the how many calories do you consume a day thread. It'll suprise you.
Originally posted by: L3p3rM355i4h
BK and subway probably not healthy. oh well. Gotta have fun with life.
True of course - what I meant was that Atkins really did help the people I know lose weight - people who were never able to do it with the other diets they tried, and people who by and large don't exercise.Originally posted by: Skoorb
Less calories consistently works. Always has, always will 🙂It's the only diet I've ever seen that consistently worked in the real world.
Originally posted by: phantom309
True of course - what I meant was that Atkins really did help the people I know lose weight - people who were never able to do it with the other diets they tried, and people who by and large don't exercise.Originally posted by: Skoorb
Less calories consistently works. Always has, always will 🙂It's the only diet I've ever seen that consistently worked in the real world.
Shoot, I lost 25 lbs on my own "beef jerky, Concerta and cigars" diet a couple years ago. Nobody wanted to be around me, but man I looked great.
Originally posted by: FoBoT
i like to eat steak
Originally posted by: Jzero
Originally posted by: notfred
Yes, like every other diet fad before it, it's seen the end of its 15 minutes. It was the easiest diet ever and most fat Americans STILL couldn't stick to it.
That's because nobody read the freakin' book. They just heard from their friend "You just eat steak and bacon all the time and in two weeks you'll be Charles Atlas."
At the end of the day, Atkins is supposed to be about a lifestyle change - an exercise regimen coupled with determining how much you should eat and exercise in order to maintain your target weight, but once the masses (no pun intended) caught on, they stopped reading after 30 pages.....and that's if they even picked up the book.
I still see carb counts all over everything though.
Originally posted by: dullard
After the first 6 months, people who strictly follow the Atkins diet (yes, this is the people who read the book) on average gain weight back slowly.
Originally posted by: Chiropteran
Originally posted by: dullard
After the first 6 months, people who strictly follow the Atkins diet (yes, this is the people who read the book) on average gain weight back slowly.
Nope, impossible. If you are strickly following the diet you would know that as soon as you start gaining back weight you have to reduce carbs further. Unless being on atkins for 6 months gives your body the magical ability to turn fat into carbs, you aren't going to start gaining weight.
What may happen is that 6 months down the line people think "great I lost a lot of weightI can start eating normal again" And they return to the eating style that gave them the weight problem in the first place.
Actually the whole Atkin's "science" is wrong. That argument is false. People on Atkins simply eat less. Less mass, less calories, less. That is why they lose weight. Yes, strict followers are gaining weight on average. "On average" means that some may lose or maintain, but it isn't typical to do that.Originally posted by: Chiropteran
Nope, impossible. If you are strickly following the diet you would know that as soon as you start gaining back weight you have to reduce carbs further. Unless being on atkins for 6 months gives your body the magical ability to turn fat into carbs, you aren't going to start gaining weight.
It's the same reason most diets fail. It's not the diet, but the person. People get comfortable with their weight loss and then fall off the wagon.Yes, and that's exactly the mistake I made when I first went on the diet a few years back. I lost 70 pounds over a period of 9 months, but then I got lazy.
Originally posted by: Skoorb
It's the same reason most diets fail. It's not the diet, but the person. People get comfortable with their weight loss and then fall off the wagon.Yes, and that's exactly the mistake I made when I first went on the diet a few years back. I lost 70 pounds over a period of 9 months, but then I got lazy.
Originally posted by: dullard
Actually the whole Atkin's "science" is wrong. That argument is false. People on Atkins simply eat less. Less mass, less calories, less. That is why they lose weight. Yes, strict followers are gaining weight on average. "On average" means that some may lose or maintain, but it isn't typical to do that.
Originally posted by: Chiropteran
Originally posted by: dullard
Actually the whole Atkin's "science" is wrong. That argument is false. People on Atkins simply eat less. Less mass, less calories, less. That is why they lose weight. Yes, strict followers are gaining weight on average. "On average" means that some may lose or maintain, but it isn't typical to do that.
Oh really? Well then great, why don't you tell United Nations about this, because it's great news that they can just send tubs of fat to starving nations in order to feed them instead of balanced foods including carbohydrates.
Atkins isn't about eating less. That is the very first thing you learn, so I guess you have zero knowledge of the diet. You can eat as much as you want, as long as it has no carbs. If it has a few carbs you can still eat a little, as long as your total carb consumption per day is under X, where X is 20 to start and gradually increases.
That's what the diet says, but dullard isn't wrong about it being eating less. When you're brutally limited on food choices you DO end up eating less. The diet may say you can eat 15 eggs and 12 hamburger patties for dinner, but it's disgusting, so the end result is less calories.Atkins isn't about eating less. That is the very first thing you learn, so I guess you have zero knowledge of the diet. You can eat as much as you want, as long as it has no carbs.