• @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    The title is correct in that it doesn’t really confirm anything. It depends on what exercises you’re doing and how much you eat. It also doesn’t look at mental health at all. Is yoga included or just aerobics in that? What about heavy weights vs high rep low weights. 🤷‍♂️

    • @[email protected]
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      81 year ago

      It’s all irrelevant. Calories in, calories out is all the matters for weight loss. Exercise isn’t needed to lose weight. Changing eating habits is 100% the only solution.

      Exercise can help you build muscle mass, which can help with weight loss/keeping weight off, but if you’re eating more calories than your body needs you’ll gain weight. It’s also seemingly why people have this misconception about metabolism slowing down around 30. Most people (from the US at least) become significantly more sedentary when they leave college, get settled and start a family (coincidentally late 20s to early 30s) which results in loss of muscle mass. The way they used to eat isn’t sustainable and they gain fat.

      • @[email protected]
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        -31 year ago

        What you’re saying is to treat your body like a machine and ignore everything else. You’re not wrong in that it’s calories in and calories out, but if you’re running and feeling great and you do it long enough to get the runners high, you’ll be addicted to exercise and you’re less likely to eat. You also feel better. As I said, we’re complicated or diets would work long term. That article doesn’t really say anything.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          That’s not how that works. lol. Am runner. Can confirm. It may take a bit after I run to want food but I promise I want LOTS of food. The longer I do it, the more I want healthy, nutritious, whole foods, as opposed to processed shit too. I feel better when I eat healthy, I run faster, I can workout longer, I don’t get tired as easily. I KNOW when I haven’t been eating right, or especially enough, because my body tells me.

          The reason diets don’t last is because people view them as something temporary to get through, instead of the life changes that are needed. It’s hard (I lost about 50lb in 2016c and have kept it off since). It’s a huge commitment to stay healthy. Especially in USA. I get it. Not everyone want to commit to it. But none of that changes reality. The only way to lose weight is to consume less calories than you expend.