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Getbig Main Boards => Gossip & Opinions => Topic started by: Mayday on December 14, 2025, 12:54:20 AM
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What is the consensus here currently on this? A decade ago there were a few hardcore thinkers saying a calorie is a calorie when eating
Just wondering if those people have come around and realize how many issues eating fat causes.
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I thought saturated fat was actually good for you and seed oils, sugar and grains are actually the devil. It's all very confusing, but my blood work is excellent in terms of LDL and HDL. I eat a lot of saturated fat and avoid margarine, seed oils, sugar. I am not sure if any if it adds up. As I said it's very confusing
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I thought saturated fat was actually good for you and seed oils, sugar and grains are actually the devil. It's all very confusing, but my blood work is excellent in terms of LDL and HDL. I eat a lot of saturated fat and avoid margarine, seed oils, sugar. I am not sure if any if it adds up. As I said it's very confusing
This is true.
It's not confusing at all.
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What is the consensus here currently on this? A decade ago there were a few hardcore thinkers saying a calorie is a calorie when eating
Just wondering if those people have come around and realize how many issues eating fat causes.
From an energy standpoint, a calorie is a calorie.
From a nutritional and health standpoint all food is not equal.
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This is true.
It's not confusing at all.
Great, I've been on the fence about grains though.
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I thought saturated fat was actually good for you and seed oils, sugar and grains are actually the devil. It's all very confusing, but my blood work is excellent in terms of LDL and HDL. I eat a lot of saturated fat and avoid margarine, seed oils, sugar. I am not sure if any if it adds up. As I said it's very confusing
Who the fuck uses margarine?
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Who the fuck uses margarine?
LOL 😂
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From an energy standpoint, a calorie is a calorie.
From a nutritional and health standpoint all food is not equal.
Of course, as foods have different vitamins and minerals in them. Eating a low cal diet will always result in weight loss though. Eating a diet with various types of foods will eliminate vitamin deficiencies. No need to count cards, fat or protein.
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"According to the National Data Lab (NDL), most of the calorie values in the USDA and industry food tables are based on an indirect calorie estimation made using the so-called Atwater system. In this system, calories are not determined directly by burning the foods. Instead, the total caloric value is calculated by adding up the calories provided by the energy-containing nutrients: protein, carbohydrate, fat and alcohol. Because carbohydrates contain some fiber that is not digested and utilized by the body, the fiber component is usually subtracted from the total carbohydrate before calculating the calories."
Source: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-do-food-manufacturers/ (https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-do-food-manufacturers/)
Translation- the calorie content you see on a label is a best guess scenario as to how much energy it provides your body. It doesn't take into account how your body breaks down that particular nutrient. I guarantee you that if you consume 100gms of raw cane sugar (100% carb and a total of 400 calories) vs 44 grams of olive oil (100% fat and also 400 calories) you will absolutely have a different metabolic response. Over time, the high fat diet would make you lean, the low fat, high carb diet would make you fat, assuming you weren't burning tons of calories a day.
So, regarding foods- a calorie is definitely not just a calorie.
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I think the "a calorie is a calorie" thing was used by some to irritate the stupid who couldn't understand the extended argument where you will lose weight if you eat below what you burn and certain foods don't magically make you fat regardless of calorie amounts. "CICO" and so on :D It's of course more complicated than that when it comes to body composition.
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I think the "a calorie is a calorie" thing was used by some to irritate the stupid who couldn't understand the extended argument where you will lose weight if you eat below what you burn and certain foods don't magically make you fat regardless of calorie amounts. "CICO" and so on :D It's of course more complicated than that when it comes to body composition.
I believe it was used to justify a poster's diet of vodka and cardboard.
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"According to the National Data Lab (NDL), most of the calorie values in the USDA and industry food tables are based on an indirect calorie estimation made using the so-called Atwater system. In this system, calories are not determined directly by burning the foods. Instead, the total caloric value is calculated by adding up the calories provided by the energy-containing nutrients: protein, carbohydrate, fat and alcohol. Because carbohydrates contain some fiber that is not digested and utilized by the body, the fiber component is usually subtracted from the total carbohydrate before calculating the calories."
Source: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-do-food-manufacturers/ (https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-do-food-manufacturers/)
Translation- the calorie content you see on a label is a best guess scenario as to how much energy it provides your body. It doesn't take into account how your body breaks down that particular nutrient. I guarantee you that if you consume 100gms of raw cane sugar (100% carb and a total of 400 calories) vs 44 grams of olive oil (100% fat and also 400 calories) you will absolutely have a different metabolic response. Over time, the high fat diet would make you lean, the low fat, high carb diet would make you fat, assuming you weren't burning tons of calories a day.
So, regarding foods- a calorie is definitely not just a calorie.
pretty sure the diet of 400 cals in total would make you lean regardless.
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Who the fuck uses margarine?
Tons of people
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Layne "liar" Norton used to go really big on "a calorie is a calorie"
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This is true.
It's not confusing at all.
This.
A calorie is a measurement of energy.
The ammount of energy required to raise 1 kilogram of water 1°C. So if your goal is to raise the temperature of water then yes. A calorie is a calorie, doesn't matter what the source of the calorie is.
But the debate about "a calorie is just a calorie" in bodybuilding has nothing to do with raising the temperature of kilogram of water. Because you feed your body 3 kinds of calories; fat, protein and carbohydrates. Consuming carbohydrates triggers a hormone- insulin- release which makes it harder for your body to burn other calories, mostly fat calories. Carbs compete with fat as a fuel source causing your body to burn carbs for energy and store fat. Then the ensuing insulin resistance that comes with eating too many carbs makes it harder for your body to use carbs efficiently.
Your body requires fat and protein for health, maintain bodily functions including building muscle, repairing injuries, healthy joints and nervous system. On the other hand you can go the rest of your life without eating a single carbphydrate and not suffer any ill effects.
If a calorie were a calorie then drinking 3000 calories of Coca-Cola would get you the same results as eating 3000 calories of orange roughy and we know thats not the case.
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everything we eat is made up of nitrogen carbon oxygen hydrogen
Of body is 96% those 4 elements
Thats pretty much it
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Move into body composition.
I always found it a bit odd that carbs apparently make you fat yet every track and field and endurance athlete gobbles down carbs like crazy and are the highest performing and generally leanest people, especially when compared to average sports people.
In club rides the A graders would be lean as hell, weekend warriors typically fat. At the end of a ride we'd be at a cafe and A graders might have a coffee and their sugar bottle. Weekend warriors would smash croissants, egg and bacon rolls, full fat coffee. A lot of spin classes the same, average joe finishes then smashes avacado on toast then complains they aren't losing weight dhe to carbs.
In general population it seems carbs make you fat yet they're all doing low carbs. Therefore logically eating less of something, you eat more of something else and you get fat despite the same calories.
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we eat way too much... one decent meal a day is enough for anyone
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Tons of people
Good job avoiding it then.
Must be rough.
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Move into body composition.
I always found it a bit odd that carbs apparently make you fat yet every track and field and endurance athlete gobbles down carbs like crazy and are the highest performing and generally leanest people, especially when compared to average sports people.
In club rides the A graders would be lean as hell, weekend warriors typically fat. At the end of a ride we'd be at a cafe and A graders might have a coffee and their sugar bottle. Weekend warriors would smash croissants, egg and bacon rolls, full fat coffee. A lot of spin classes the same, average joe finishes then smashes avacado on toast then complains they aren't losing weight dhe to carbs.
In general population it seems carbs make you fat yet they're all doing low carbs. Therefore logically eating less of something, you eat more of something else and you get fat despite the same calories.
Don't believe anything a fat person tells you about his diet
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Move into body composition.
I always found it a bit odd that carbs apparently make you fat yet every track and field and endurance athlete gobbles down carbs like crazy and are the highest performing and generally leanest people, especially when compared to average sports people.
In club rides the A graders would be lean as hell, weekend warriors typically fat. At the end of a ride we'd be at a cafe and A graders might have a coffee and their sugar bottle. Weekend warriors would smash croissants, egg and bacon rolls, full fat coffee. A lot of spin classes the same, average joe finishes then smashes avacado on toast then complains they aren't losing weight dhe to carbs.
In general population it seems carbs make you fat yet they're all doing low carbs. Therefore logically eating less of something, you eat more of something else and you get fat despite the same calories.
An endurance athlete who stops exercising gets fat on carbs. It's all about insulin sensitivity.
I was a competitive cyclist for years- and sub 8% body fat as measured by a local university. When I stopped racing I started getting fat. My diet didn't change but my energy requirements did. But I finally dropped the carbs and went full keto when i realized I didn't like looking like the Michelin Man. My fat levels dropped to where I was when racing regularly. I don't do keto anymore though because of the uric acid issues it created for me. Now i have 40% carbs but have to limit them in total calories.
I have never seen a person on keto stay fat. it is practically impossible to over eat on fats and protein. But the moment you add carbs the sky is the limit. Your insulin starts spiking non stop. These weekend warriors that you describe are shoveling down starches and sugars when no on is looking, lol
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This.
A calorie is a measurement of energy.
The ammount of energy required to raise 1 kilogram of water 1°C. So if your goal is to raise the temperature of water then yes. A calorie is a calorie, doesn't matter what the source of the calorie is.
But the debate about "a calorie is just a calorie" in bodybuilding has nothing to do with raising the temperature of kilogram of water. Because you feed your body 3 kinds of calories; fat, protein and carbohydrates. Consuming carbohydrates triggers a hormone- insulin- release which makes it harder for your body to burn other calories, mostly fat calories. Carbs compete with fat as a fuel source causing your body to burn carbs for energy and store fat. Then the ensuing insulin resistance that comes with eating too many carbs makes it harder for your body to use carbs efficiently.
Your body requires fat and protein for health, maintain bodily functions including building muscle, repairing injuries, healthy joints and nervous system. On the other hand you can go the rest of your life without eating a single carbphydrate and not suffer any ill effects.
If a calorie were a calorie then drinking 3000 calories of Coca-Cola would get you the same results as eating 3000 calories of orange roughy and we know thats not the case.
http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=702009.0
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An endurance athlete who stops exercising gets fat on carbs. It's all about insulin sensitivity.
I was a competitive cyclist for years- and sub 8% body fat as measured by a local university. When I stopped racing I started getting fat. My diet didn't change but my energy requirements did. But I finally dropped the carbs and went full keto when i realized I didn't like looking like the Michelin Man. My fat levels dropped to where I was when racing regularly. I don't do keto anymore though because of the uric acid issues it created for me. Now i have 40% carbs but have to limit them in total calories.
I have never seen a person on keto stay fat. it is practically impossible to over eat on fats and protein. But the moment you add carbs the sky is the limit. Your insulin starts spiking non stop. These weekend warriors that you describe are shoveling down starches and sugars when no on is looking, lol
welcome to the world of gout!!
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I always found it a bit odd that carbs apparently make you fat
Worse is the insulin hypothesis of fat gain, that it's insulin that makes you fat. It's way more complicated than that. Some of the GLP-1 drugs actually make your body produce more insulin if you need it yet weight loss is seen. And increased insulin sensitivity. Though at the same time it's true if you bombard your body with insulin while getting fat sensitivity will go down but it's a bit context dependent. There are some bodybuilders who have been taking exogenous insulin injections for decades yet are very insulin sensitive. Take growth hormone and your insulin sensitivity goes down while your body produces more insulin yet you get leaner :D
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what is the score with GDA's?
anyone?
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what is the score with GDA's?
anyone?
Berberine could be worthwhile. The other ingredients in the typical formulas might not do much.
I saw this GDA a while back which is supposed to sort of work differently than other GDAs by actually increasing insulin, geared towards muscle gain rather than fat loss.
https://masupps.com/product/insuligen/
But there's Novorapid and Humalog if it's insulin you want, very potent GDAs :D