Weight and working out (5 Viewers)

Mucca Mad Boys

Well-Known Member
Everyone starting their new year diets today???

This is a decent read, not really anything new but a decent summary of where the science is at presently. Interesting that the two dissenting voices in the article are both described as 'right leaning'. When did views on weight loss become something that's aligned to your wider political beliefs?


This is useful but articles like this need to highlight that people should track their calories more. A lot of people will shock themselves how much they’re overeating if they were to track things accurately and honestly.

In 2023, I worked with a PT and before we started I guesstimated that on an average day, intake was 1800-2200 kcal a day. Tracking the calories the week before starting the program, it was closer to 2,600 per day which over weeks and months adds up to a lot. A lot of people who are v overweight will claim to eat v little calories and they will be completely wrong. They’re not lying, their perspective was just wrong.

2025 was not a good year for my health and fitness goals. This year I want to put it back into focus.
 

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SBAndy

Well-Known Member
Everyone starting their new year diets today???

This is a decent read, not really anything new but a decent summary of where the science is at presently. Interesting that the two dissenting voices in the article are both described as 'right leaning'. When did views on weight loss become something that's aligned to your wider political beliefs?


The ‘political beliefs’ bit is really down to ‘personal responsibility vs societal responsibility’.

Think it’s a bit of both really - people are in denial about both the cost of healthy food and the time availability to cook. They use it as an excuse not to bother. The article cites that healthy food is double the cost “per calorie” than unhealthy food but the missing part of this equation is that unhealthy food is engineered in such a way that you are meant to over-consume.

Equally, societal responsibility is relay to reduce pressure on the health service and this feeds into that, which is why they should make more attempt to prevent people over-eating, etc.
 

fernandopartridge

Well-Known Member
The ‘political beliefs’ bit is really down to ‘personal responsibility vs societal responsibility’.

Think it’s a bit of both really - people are in denial about both the cost of healthy food and the time availability to cook. They use it as an excuse not to bother. The article cites that healthy food is double the cost “per calorie” than unhealthy food but the missing part of this equation is that unhealthy food is engineered in such a way that you are meant to over-consume.

Equally, societal responsibility is relay to reduce pressure on the health service and this feeds into that, which is why they should make more attempt to prevent people over-eating, etc.

Yeah, there definitely needs to be better education on nutritional balance. It's easier to restrict calories on a nutritionally balanced diet than not, yet a lot of 'diet' manufactured food is anything but nutritionally balanced.
 

Mucca Mad Boys

Well-Known Member
Yeah, there definitely needs to be better education on nutritional balance. It's easier to restrict calories on a nutritionally balanced diet than not, yet a lot of 'diet' manufactured food is anything but nutritionally balanced.
Are you telling me that Diet Coke is not nutritionally balanced?!
 

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