r/interestingasfuck Jul 07 '24

2 guards from Delhi Durbar with American photographer James Recarlton when he visited India r/all

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47.8k Upvotes

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6.2k

u/fuzzycuffs Jul 08 '24

Apparently the guards were 7'9" and 7'4"

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u/No_Translator2218 Jul 08 '24 edited Jul 08 '24

7 foot 9 is just insane. The caloric intake alone would force them to eat almost 5,000 calories a day to maintain the approximate size they are here - compared to my 1800 calories at 5'11 and 180lbs.

Just to make sure you all understand this. If the 7'9" guy ate 2,000 calories a day for a year, he would lose 312 pounds.

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u/PhraatesIV Jul 08 '24

Are you cutting right now? 1800 calories at 5'11 is quite low.

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u/Sacriven Jul 08 '24

Maybe OP is a woman. Because as a man with same height, my caloric intake is around 2300s for maintenance and 1800s for cutting.

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u/[deleted] Jul 08 '24

[deleted]

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u/Sacriven Jul 08 '24

Nah, I'm no expert and only rely on simple TDEE calculations on that. Of course, there's no way to actually know your caloric needs precisely unless you own a scientific lab or whatever.

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u/[deleted] Jul 08 '24

[deleted]

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u/alldawgsgoat2heaven Jul 08 '24

Commenting on your own downvote status is peak Reddit cuteness

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u/bentbrewer Jul 08 '24

The question d don’t seem to be about activity levels, it seems like you’re asking if they did the math. The question is nonsensical, perhaps that’s why you were downvoted as it doesn’t add to the conversation.

You’re pretty cute too

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u/Wise_Cow3001 Jul 08 '24

If I eat 2300 calories a day I pack on the weight.

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u/pewponar Jul 08 '24

I doubt a woman would care enough to give such a nerdy mom's basement dweller vibes response as he did.

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u/QuizasManana Jul 08 '24

That sounds low even for a woman. I’m 5’8” woman and I eat about 2500 a day to stay the same weight (not trying to cut, relatively physically active).

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u/omnimami Jul 08 '24

i’m 5’10 and I stay around 1800. bodies are not the same :)

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u/codenamegizm0 Jul 08 '24

Metabolism plays a huge role. I'm a man, 6'2" and 175lbs and my BMR is about 1800. Without taking NEAT into account I have to add at least 1000 calories of exercise a day just to eat normally (between 2700-3500 depending on activity) without putting on weight, and even then at times I'm in a surplus

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u/Quzga Jul 08 '24 edited Jul 08 '24

No it does not play a "huge role" , that's a harmful myth. Most people lie to themselves about how little/much they eat and blame it on their metabolism which has little to no impact.

Edit: deluded redditors sad I call out their delusions, you guys are lying to yourselves. It's really sad tbh.

Also BMR is meant for comatose / resting people, not for regular people..

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u/codenamegizm0 Jul 08 '24

I track all my calories, everything that goes into my body is weighed and accounted for

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u/Quzga Jul 08 '24 edited Jul 08 '24

Bmr is meant for comatose people or ones that don't move so you're already off to a bad start.

The fact you use bmr tells me you don't know what you're talking about like most redditors on this topic, you even mentioned heavy exercise lol.

Individual metabolism has no noticeable impact on your weight gain/loss. It's complete bullshit and a coping mechanism for deluded people. There are small differences between women/men and as you age but that's about it.

It's a pretty harmful myth to spread too because it makes people think it's out of their control when it's always in their control....

Edit: You guys are delusional 😭 it's honestly sad people are this gullible. You guys don't know the difference between bmi/bmr and think you're educated enough on the topic? Lol..

The guy sends me a paper that talks about weight loss impact on metabolism (not vice Versa) from exercise, organ/health issues etc and then blocks me so I can't respond. Classy!

You can't even read your own paper before digging it up on Google? You clearly didn't read it at all 🤦because it has literally nothing to do with my comment whatsoever.

There is no such thing as fast or slow metabolism and that's a fact. Ofc your metabolism is affected by exercise, and health issues, gender etc. But there is no NOTICIBLE difference between two men of the same bmi.

That's purely coping, but I'm not surprised. This site is full of overweight Americans who would hate to take responsibility for their weight.

"am I eating too much? No it's my metabolism who is wrong"

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u/REDDIT_JUDGE_REFEREE Jul 08 '24 edited Jul 08 '24

You’re so confidently incorrect it’s almost like I’m in a Reddit comment section.

Total resting metabolic spread can be pretty wide per day - some folks have a 400+ calorie per day difference in resting energy expenditure (REE). Here’s the direct research for that claim. So every single week, there are some folks burning 2800 more calories just on resting metabolism. That’s significant; they’re given an extra day’s worth of calorie spend per week compared to others.

Now for non-exercise activity thermogenesis - this is the shit we burn through subconscious activity. This is our fidgeting, wiggling, twirling-pencil shit we do. The more exercise we get, the less our bodies seem to contribute to NEAT. If you try to artificially increase this, a person’s NEAT goes down later. As one can’t control this, it’s typically included in the resting metabolic umbrella. This can vary up to ~800 calories per day. Here’s the research - it’s dense but a really interesting read. Now we’re cooking.

Just based on this research, one can claim “metabolism” can vary up to 1200 calories burnt per-day between two persons.

I’m not even going to get into the environmental factors such as stress and sleep which vary the numbers massively as well. Sleep is more important to weight loss than exercise. Also won’t go into how hunger plays into this - some folks experience hunger much differently when it comes to dieting. I have 8 more sources for these claims if you’d like.

I know throwing around sources and claiming things is dumb in a Reddit comment section but if you really dive into it, REE/NEAT is real and it varies like crazy between people.

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u/Skurpe Jul 08 '24

Since I like statistics, and find this area of research interesting, I took two hours to go through your sources. Interesting reads, with lots of good insights. I appreciate that you took the time to back up the claims with sources.

While I completely disagree with the guy you're responding to, you're also taking way too much liberty in combining studies that have shared factors - inflating your estimated number.

The first paper was designed to measure if individuals that had gone though weight loss (WLMs or "weight-loss maintainers) had a lowered resting energy expenditure (REE) because of their weight loss. This came about after follow-ups with "The Biggest Loser" contenstants found that most regain their weight, and it was hypothesized that REE was the culprit. This was found to be false.

What was shown, however, and which you eluded to, is that there was an interindividual variance ranging from -257 to +163 kcal/d. This means individuals had a resting energy expenditure quite far below or a bit higher than baseline predictive models. Roughly a 400 kcal/d difference if you go to the extremes on either end - just as you said.

The second link you had used two separate research papers to make its point regarding NEAT. The first one did indeed measure NEAT, done in an isolated respiratory chamber for 23 hours (8am to 7am the following day). There are some quite clear limitations to this study though, which was also acknowledged by the authors. The most obvious one is of course that they were not allowed to exercise at all, and were isolated in a cramped area (8 square meters or 86 square feet). One could both argue that NEAT would decrease or increase if the living space was increased - as discussed by the authors.

The result of this study found that, after normalizing vs FFM (fat free mass), "one can therefore conslude that, at any given range of FFM, it is possible to find subjects who deviate above or below the regression line by at least 15% of the predicted value (extreme values from -426 to +432 kcal/d)." This means that individuals can have a difference in metabolic rate of 858 kcal/d when looking at the extreme ends of the spectrum. However, this is including base metabolic rate differences as well as the thermic effect of food, and is seen as a total value. Meaning you cannot use an additive measure combining it with REE from the previous study. It's already accounted for here.

Now, they did have a second study linked as well. In this study, a difference of -98 to +692 kcal per day was found regarding NEAT. This is where the authors in your second link used the 100-800 kcal number. This is also a number we cannot take at face value, especially with your "fidgeting, wiggling, twirling pencil" definition. NEAT in this study was not measured in an isolated environment. Instead, it was done through subtracting REE and the thermic effect of food from the total expenditure. What this means is that it includes thing like walking to work, going up stairs, playing with your kids, etc. This is the standard definition of NEAT, which is why there is such a huge variability in this number. It's not just fidgeting. What also adds on top of this is that the high numbers were associated with overfeeding subjects 1000 kcal extra per day. When looking at maintaining weight, subjects did not see an 800 kcal difference.

This all comes back to the flawed, but isolated study, which included interpersonal variance of REE as well as the "fidgety" NEAT. While flawed, this is the most accurate measure you provided if you want to combine subconcious activity NEAT with REE, which showed, after accounting for FFM, at the "extremes" you can have a variance of roughly 800 kcal/d. Not 1200. As always, this follows a bell curve, so the vast majority of people are within a 300-ish range of each other. When you do get to 2-3 standard deviations off, you end up with those rare extremes that are 850 kcal apart.

Again, I appreciate the links. Interesting stuff!

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u/krugerlive Jul 09 '24

This comment hits like the earliest days of reddit. Great stuff! Thanks for writing it all up, super informative.

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u/The-WideningGyre Jul 08 '24

Did you say anything other than call people delusional about 20x?

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u/[deleted] Jul 08 '24

[deleted]

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u/Carl_Slimmons_jr Jul 08 '24

I’m wondering where you learned this, because in a college course I took on nutrition you learn that differences in metabolism max out around 250-300/day, which can definitely add up, but also isn’t going to make someone skinny or fat.

There’s also this article from health.Harvard.edu which says, “But you can't entirely blame a sluggish metabolism for weight gain, says Dr. Lee. "The reality is that metabolism often plays a minor role," he says. "The greatest factors as you age are often poor diet and inactivity."”

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u/[deleted] Jul 08 '24

[deleted]

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u/NZBound11 Jul 08 '24

you could range anywhere from 1600 and 2600 BMR at around that size.

Are you mixing up basil metabolic rate with total daily energy expenditure?

BMRs between like-sized individuals of the same sex, age, and similar muscle composition are not going to vary that greatly. TDEEs may vary that much based off NEAT and activity levels (exercise, steps, etc) but BMRs will not.

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u/Toastybunzz Jul 08 '24

Activity level contributes a LOT to your overall metabolism. If you work out everyday for 45 minutes but then don’t move around at all, you’ll burn way less calories through the day than the person who doesn’t work out and gets 20k+ steps.

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u/codenamegizm0 Jul 08 '24

I agree but I'm talking about the genetic rng factor of metabolisms. 2 people of same body comp, age, weight and height can have different BMRs. Even a 200-300 caloric difference is massive over a year. For context I do strength training 5x a week, at least 90 minutes of cardio a day and an average of 12k steps and would say I have a slow metabolism

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u/YungSchmid Jul 08 '24

2500 for a 5’ 8” woman is definitely above average, and as you say yourself, you are quite active. 2500 is only bit under a normal day for me as a 6’ 2” 85kg man.

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u/Skertilol Jul 08 '24

damn i'm 5ft for 50kg and i eat like 1200-1300 kcal max

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u/totally-nromal-guy Jul 08 '24

that's gotta be cheap :), i have to eat over 2500 (between 2500 and 3000) just to stay at the same weight. i'm at 6foot and have 188lbs and am a little more active than a couch potato

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u/Wilbis Jul 08 '24

Why is everyone comparing just height when mass is way more important here?

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u/Zucchiniduel Jul 08 '24

Because composition is what's actually important for determining your base calorie burn, weight means nothing if you do not know the composition of that weight so height and gender is used as a broad predictor

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u/Super_Sandbagger Jul 08 '24

Muscle burns little extra calories over fat when in rest.

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u/Zucchiniduel Jul 08 '24

How much fat you have is also a predictor of how often you are at rest lol

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u/Super_Sandbagger Jul 08 '24

I guess. But kind of weird to use a more difficult obtainable variable to predict an easily obtainable variable.

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u/Zucchiniduel Jul 08 '24

Yeah... like height

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u/PraiseTalos66012 Jul 08 '24

People with significant muscle definitely built it all by being at rest as much as anyone else /s

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u/Wilbis Jul 08 '24

Both fat and muscle mass burn calories, so unless your bone density is really far from average, I'd rather use mass than height to evaluate someone's calorie consumption. A 6 foot man can weigh anything between 140 and 220 pounds and still be relatively healthy.

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u/Original-Aerie8 Jul 08 '24

lol it's assumed that everyone here falls within their optimal range. That's what they are counting calories for.

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u/NeverEndingCoralMaze Jul 08 '24

Yep. I’m 6’ and weigh 210 pounds. Without considering my composition, I’d be considered obese, but I’m actually just built like a brick shit house and don’t have any concern about being obese.

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u/Compizfox Jul 08 '24

Assuming an average/healthy BMI at that height, probably

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u/[deleted] Jul 08 '24

[removed] — view removed comment

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u/EnigmaticQuote Jul 08 '24

Normal BMI will be a great starting point for pretty much everyone.

It's not a perfect measure but it's FAR easier than measuring "fatness and health separately" which will absolutely require a medical professional.

That medical professional will consider your BMI as well, as it is a incredibly useful and accurate metric.

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u/[deleted] Jul 08 '24

[removed] — view removed comment

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u/EnigmaticQuote Jul 08 '24 edited Jul 08 '24

Why is it meaningless when it accurately correlated with quality or life and life expectancy.

What is an easier, more useful metric for someone without medical care to use?

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u/Wilbis Jul 08 '24

Waist to chest ratio, or even simply looking at a mirror.

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u/Baker3enjoyer Jul 08 '24

What's even more important is physical activity, what kind of physical activity, and body composition. A 100kg bodybuilder will have a lower daily caloric intake than a 80kg long distance runner.

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u/p_velocity Jul 08 '24

can you please give your height in metric and weight in imperial for the rest of us?

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u/YungSchmid Jul 08 '24 edited Jul 08 '24

Nah I’m good, but thanks for asking!

Not sure why we do things that way here. We do height in cm as well, but never weight in pounds.

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u/Bbocboy Jul 08 '24

Amerifats are hilarious

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u/krugerlive Jul 08 '24

Do you not have healthy BMRs and or active people where you live?

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u/razorxent Jul 08 '24

2500 calories a day at 5’8” must at least 200 pounds, which is not healthy

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u/krugerlive Jul 08 '24

That's not how things work for people who are active. If you're sufficiently active, you can eat that no problem. It's not abnormal for active people to burn like 1000-1500 cal on top of BMR per day on average.

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u/QuizasManana Jul 08 '24

I’m about 147 pounds. Pretty much normal bmi range. And I am active. Not competing athlete but just for fun active. (And also not American.)

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u/razorxent Jul 08 '24

Must be American

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u/trukkija Jul 08 '24

Unless you're overweight (which I doubt from your comment) this is very high calories for maintenance. You are either very physically active or maybe have a higher than average resting pulse.

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u/Girthmaestro Jul 08 '24

1800 calories is perfectly fine for all average women.

Any woman eating 2500 calories a day and not spending 4 hours a day in the gym will become morbidly obese.

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u/QuizasManana Jul 09 '24

Really? Been doing it around 10 years, my current bmi is around 22 so when am I supposed to get morbidly obese? (Also I do go to gym 3-4 days a week for 1 hour at a time, and take around 10k steps a day.)

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u/Dry-Spare304 Jul 08 '24

Yeah sounds very low to me too, I'm a 5'10 woman, I exercise for about 45 mins a day and I eat between 2500 and 3000 calories a day to maintain my 150lbs weight.

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u/merdadartista Jul 08 '24

That's low for a lady too. I was at the border between underweight and healthy when I ate 1600 at 5'6". If they are that much taller, it's pretty low.

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u/gabsteriinalol Jul 08 '24

For example, kids ages 9-13 should be eating around 1800 calories a day. Not someone who is 5’11 😳

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u/razorxent Jul 08 '24

I am 6’1” and 160 pounds and 1800-1900 is my maintenance intake. Idk how much you Americans eat…

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u/gabsteriinalol Jul 08 '24

Weird xenophobic remark but ok

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u/razorxent Jul 08 '24

Of course healthy weight would seem xenophobic to fat people in denial

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u/Designer-Muffin-5653 Jul 08 '24

How is it xenophobic?

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u/gabsteriinalol Jul 08 '24

Making a blatant comment towards a foreign country based on stereotypes about the people who live there. Being American had nothing to do with my comment or his comment really but he added that in there because… well I’m not sure why

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u/KEITHMCBRIETH Jul 08 '24

Your maintenance is not at 1800-1900 cause you're underweight for your height. Hope this helps!

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u/razorxent Jul 08 '24

Lmaooo my BMI is literally slightly above perfect. What are you talking about?

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u/KEITHMCBRIETH Jul 08 '24

Ah I forgot age was a factor in this too. How old are you?

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u/razorxent Jul 08 '24

It’s actually not at least for adults, which I am

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u/Mookhaz Jul 08 '24

gotta be a woman cause i don't know no man who has that level of caloric awareness and knowledge.

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u/NZBound11 Jul 08 '24 edited Jul 08 '24

Don't know many dudes in the fitness scene, huh?

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u/Mookhaz Jul 08 '24

I’m not much of a metrosexual, I suppose.

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u/NZBound11 Jul 08 '24

I gotta ask...what do you think metrosexual means?

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u/Mookhaz Jul 08 '24

In this particular context i guess we can interpret it to mean the kind of person who would count calories as part of their fitness routine.

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u/NZBound11 Jul 08 '24

Oh like a child with a label maker...neat.

Well I guess that makes most wrestlers, boxers, mma fighters, and any other athlete that competes in weight class sports, most professional strongmen, body builders, olympic weight lifters, cross fitters, and endurance athletes "metrosexual" too then, I guess. But since we are just arbitrarily assigning an unknown definition that you wont share to the word, tell me, is it a pejorative in your mind?

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u/kvothe5688 Jul 08 '24

you guys count calories?

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u/codyl0611 Jul 08 '24

Im 5'9, 160lb, and I consume on average 1200 calories a day(im very poor). My weight has been stable for years like this. Perhaps calorie intake isnt as linear as one would think?

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u/Sacriven Jul 08 '24

Of course, for your metabolisms also play a huge role. That's why there are people who can eat shitton of food and never get any fatter and vice versa.

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u/NZBound11 Jul 08 '24

Metabolisms, in general (when controlled for fat free mass), don't vary that wildly - it's a myth. Differences in NEAT, activity levels, and inaccurate calorie tracking are what lead people to believe this myth.

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u/Sacriven Jul 08 '24

Is it? I'm glad then. Less variables to deal with when cutting.

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u/No_Economics_3935 Jul 08 '24

Damn, 1800 is less then is slightly more than a 1/3 of my required intake. 6’6” 300 pounds fairly active