This was written by James D. Brausch. Posted on Saturday, May 26, 2007, at 1:10 pm. Filed under Other. Bookmark the permalink. Follow comments here with the RSS feed. Post a comment or leave a trackback.
Well James,
Since that 267.5 lb low it looks like the 2 pints of ceam in that homemade ice-cream have been doing the trick.
(I reckon that’s as much as 4000 calories — if it was heavy cream — on top of the rest of the food for the day!)
I realize that the accepted definition of diet here is ‘what you eat’, but did Nemeas find the right domain name for the project — weightLOSSdude.com ?
At least the ‘two-pints-of-cream-ice cream for dessert’ diet MUST be a ‘write-off’ as best weight loss strategy, I guess! BUT was it really necessary even to TRY it just to confirm it couldn’t possibly work?
More power to your efforts though!
Al
(p.s. Sorry if this is a repeat post, there was a glitch)
That’s why you need to ignore the calorie counters. Calorie intake does NOT have a very close correlation with weight gain.
The 267.5 to 273 was obviously water gain after the forced dehydration from the prune juice. Check out the history.
My “high fat” experimental diet had quite a bit of home-made ice cream in it. I would guess I was eating about a quart a day and had a total caloric intake of over 6,000 daily calories. I lost an average of 2.5 pounds per day on that diet.
I don’t recommend a high fat diet for other health reasons, but the myth that calories cause weight gain is just that… a myth. It is been disproven by almost every person attempting to lose weight at one time or another. It is one of the most common methods tried and ALWAYS fails… 100% of the time.
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Well James,
Since that 267.5 lb low it looks like the 2 pints of ceam in that homemade ice-cream have been doing the trick.
(I reckon that’s as much as 4000 calories — if it was heavy cream — on top of the rest of the food for the day!)
I realize that the accepted definition of diet here is ‘what you eat’, but did Nemeas find the right domain name for the project — weightLOSSdude.com
?
At least the ‘two-pints-of-cream-ice cream for dessert’ diet MUST be a ‘write-off’ as best weight loss strategy, I guess! BUT was it really necessary even to TRY it just to confirm it couldn’t possibly work?
More power to your efforts though!
Al
(p.s. Sorry if this is a repeat post, there was a glitch)
Hi Al,
That’s why you need to ignore the calorie counters. Calorie intake does NOT have a very close correlation with weight gain.
The 267.5 to 273 was obviously water gain after the forced dehydration from the prune juice. Check out the history.
My “high fat” experimental diet had quite a bit of home-made ice cream in it. I would guess I was eating about a quart a day and had a total caloric intake of over 6,000 daily calories. I lost an average of 2.5 pounds per day on that diet.
I don’t recommend a high fat diet for other health reasons, but the myth that calories cause weight gain is just that… a myth. It is been disproven by almost every person attempting to lose weight at one time or another. It is one of the most common methods tried and ALWAYS fails… 100% of the time.
-James D. Brausch
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