It’s not fair. It’s not fair
that, “The weight reduced individual will be requiring about 20% less (sic) calories
per day relative to somebody of that weight who’s never lost weight would
eat…in order to keep at that weight.” That’s what Rudolf Leibel, MD,
Co-Director of the New York Obesity Research Center at Columbia University
Medical Center said in “Choices,” one of 4 hour-long videos in
the 2014 PBS series, “Weight of the Nation.”
“Individuals losing weight are not metabolically the same as they were
before they lost weight,” Dr. Leibel said. I know. It’s not fair, but that’s
the way it is…if you believe “a
calorie is a calorie,” as Dr. Leibel apparently does. You will be consigned
to accept this depressing fact and live with it. Worse still, you must be
resigned to either 1) be fat because you will naturally want to eat as much as the
person “who’s never lost weight” (because they don’t have to), or
2) you will eat 20% fewer calories and
be hungry all the time. Your choice!
Dr. Leibel’s example: “Consider
two individuals – same gender, same age, exactly the same body weight – one of
whom is at that body weight as a result of let’s say a 10 or 15% weight
reduction, the other who’s been at that weight for their entire adult life. If
that reduced weight individual goes out to lunch with her friend, and they
both order the same meal, that will represent 20% overeating for
the weight-reduced individual, and be quite normal for the individual who’s not
in that state. Twenty percent might seem like a little, but 20% excess calorie intake a year will account for
the inexorable weight gain.” There, he said it again: “excess calories.”
But what if “calories don’t
count”? I’m not joking. If you haven’t heard this before, just Google it. I got
20 million hits, many, on the first few pages, from sites that I respect. But I
don’t need to search the Internet to know that I don’t need to “count”
calories (or eat 20% fewer) to keep the weight off or not regain
the weight I’ve lost. I know I can do that by
changing the foods I eat;
by eating fewer processed carbohydrates; by eating high quality proteins and fats instead.
They will be more satiating, and I will naturally
eat less without hunger.
Sound too good to be true? Well,
if you don’t want to accept this, then you are welcome to wallow in self-pity
and eat the “balanced diet” that the USDA and BIG PHARMA and the medical
establishment dictate. You can ignore their conflicts of interest. You can also
ignore your glucose meter and what is best for YOUR health. You can follow the
HHS/USDA Dietary
Guidelines for Americans, which continues to closely mirror the
catastrophic “diabesity” epidemic trendline
since they were first published in 1980, following the “Dietary
Goals” of 1977.
You can also rely on the
American Heart Association’s exhortation since 1961 that you avoid saturated
fat and dietary cholesterol and instead eat their recommended highly processed
vegetable and seed oils produced by the same USDA-subsidized AGRIBUSINESSES
that made the trans-fat laden Crisco
and corn-oil margarines.
It’s your choice. So, whom are
you going to believe, me or your heart doctor? ;-) Okay, THAT’s not fair
either. If you already have heart disease, I won’t blame you for following your
specialist’s advice, even if he or she doesn’t know sh*t about nutrition. But,
just for laughs ask if they know 1) that in 2014 the Dietary Guidelines Advisory
Committee declared “dietary cholesterol…is no longer a nutrient of concern for
over-consumption” and 2) that Ancel Keys, the author of the “diet-heart
hypothesis,” said later in life “we’ve known that all along.
Cholesterol in the diet doesn’t matter at all unless you happen to be a
chicken or a rabbit.”
Then there’s this quote of “updated findings”
from Dr. William Castelli, Director of the famous Framingham Study, published
in Archives
of Internal Medicine: “In Framingham, Massachusetts, the more saturated fat one ate, the
more cholesterol one ate, the more calories one ate, the lower people’s serum
cholesterol. . . we found that the people who ate the most cholesterol, ate the
most saturated fat, and ate the most calories weighed the least and were the
most physically active.” Confounding, isn’t it? Whom are you going to believe?
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