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| Forums | Why
Eating Excessive Amounts of Fat Makes us Fat While most of us know that consuming excessive amounts of fat will make us fat, we don't all understand exactly why this is true. To implement a successful weight management program, you need a good understanding of fat and why this nutrient makes us fat. The amount of energy a particular food has depends on the quantity of fat, carbohydrates, and protein it contains. Food energy, both in its consumption and expenditure, is measured in terms of calories. Foods are either made up of fats, protein, carbohydrates, or a combination. A food that contains mostly fat will contain more than twice the calories than a food containing mostly carbohydrates and/or protein. For example, compare a serving of low-fat yogurt to a serving of nonfat yogurt--the low-fat yogurt has quite a few more calories than the nonfat variety because every gram of fat has more than twice the calories of a gram of protein or carbohydrate. Fat contains 9 calories per gram; protein and carbohydrates yield only four calories per gram. Therefore, it is important that you move towards replacing foods high in fat with foods higher in protein and complex carbohydrates. No more than 25 percent of your total calories should come from fat, fewer than 10 percent from saturated fat, the most damaging form. A recent study of 23 lean men and 23 obese men found little difference in the total number of calories each group consumed. But the obese men consumed, on average, more than 33 percent of their total calories from fat, compared with 29 percent for the lean men. Because the body converts dietary fat into body fat more easily than it converts protein and carbohydrates into body fat, the obese men were storing more fat even though both groups consumed the same total number of calories. |
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| During the process of converting
protein and carbohydrates to fat, your body uses them as energy and burns
more than a quarter of their calories; it takes more energy (calories
"burned") to convert carbohydrates and protein into body fat
than it does to convert dietary fat into body fat. Thus, more carbohydrate
and protein calories are used and fewer are stored as fat. Dietary fat, on
the other hand, goes straight into storage, with very few calories being
used. For example, John consumes 2,000 calories a day of which 40 percent
come from fat. If John replaces half of the fat calories (20 percent of
total calories) with calories coming from complex carbohydrates, less food
will be converted to body fat even though the total number of calories
consumed has not changed.
It is important to note that when that 20
percent of the 2,000 calories from fat now comes from carbohydrates (or
protein), you consume a lot more food, since each gram of carbohydrate or
protein contains less than half as many calories per gram. Therefore, when
you begin to decrease the amount Sure, there is plenty of work to be done, but it really doesn't matter how long this new process takes. If you allow changes to take place over several years, your body will adjust comfortably, and you will be more likely to maintain the healthy lifestyle permanently. When you begin achieving improvements in energy and physical and psychological performance, the fun and excitement you experience will make the change well worth the effort. Action creates motivation! Good luck: I hope you enjoy all the wonderful benefits of a healthy, active lifestyle. |
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