Thanks for correction. I did use the wrong term was late and tired. Good catch my man.
No harm no foul Señor Rabbit.
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Thanks for correction. I did use the wrong term was late and tired. Good catch my man.
Absolutely untrue, excessive carb intake will convert to fat1) Carbs are almost never stored as fat.
2) all carbs will replace glycogen
3) there's no physiological need to cut carbs 5hrs before bed.
Absolutely untrue, excessive carb intake will convert to fat
Then why is it that when I cut my carbs I can drastically reduce my body fat
1) Cutting carbs reduces glycogen which many people mistake for either muscle or fat loss
2) reducing glycogen reduces water weight which many people mistake for fat loss
3) cutting carbs reduces calories in which THE CALORIE DEFICIT causes fat loss.
4) nothing in this post, even remotely in any way shape or form, proves your other post.
Good to knowFacts[emoji106][emoji108]
Jennie Craig has made mad money on their programs doing exactly this and people thinking they lose 10-20lbs the first month or money back.
They know what doc is saying is true and feed off people, then take their money.
De novo lipogensis in humans only happens in very extreme circumstances. Please provide any sort of evidence to the contrary if you'd like but there is none to find....
So what happens to those excess carbs if they do not convert to fat? Would they just temporarily become bloat/ water weight once glycogen is replenished?
Question for Doc, what is your take on Coconut oil, my friend told me to replace my fat intake to solely coconut oil as it helps to metabolize BF.
Great info thanks DocThe first thing the body tries to do to carbs is turn them to glucose and use them for immediate energy needs. If excess glucose is left over after energy needs are met, then they get stored as glycogen. De novo lipogenesis, or being stored as fat, is very rare and takes extreme circumstances to happen to any significant degree in humans.
What ends up happening with the "carb debate" is your body needs less energy bc carbs are plentiful. When this happens it needs less stored fat to mobilize as energy and thus less fat is burned. Basically, when you eat more carbs, you burn more carbs or store more as glycogen but burn less fat. When you eat less carbs you burn less carbs but more fat. Don't think this automatically means you get fat eating carbs or lose weight reducing carbs bc it's the deficit that counts. If you replace all your carb calories with fat calories nothing really changes much except how you get to the same end point, ie, you burn more fat but bc dietary fat is preferentially stored, it means you store more fat. It's net changes that matter for body weight.
Here's a simple article that explains it better than I am:
http://www.bodyrecomposition.com/fat-loss/how-we-get-fat.html/
You're welcome manGreat info thanks Doc
Great info thanks Doc
Great thing about doc is he doesn't normally call people crazy names, he brings his points across and will have a great conversation about the topic at hand. Learned a lot from this guy.
And he does a great job at catching me when I misplace a word [emoji23]

Carbs cause the fat storing hormone insulin to be released and all fat burning is halted till insulin resides , that's a fact.
And he does it were an average person can understand instead of trying to talk over there head. Thanks DocGreat thing about doc is he doesn't normally call people crazy names, he brings his points across and will have a great conversation about the topic at hand. Learned a lot from this guy.
And he does a great job at catching me when I misplace a word [emoji23]
