Why Blaming Exercise Won’t Make
You Thin
by Claudio Boni - Manager Results Plus
Submitted by Dave Parise - Owner Results Plus
Personal Training Hamden CT.
A week ago the Time magazine article, Why
Exercise Won’t Make You Thin, was presented to
me by several clients. Being a personal
trainer, I quickly became intrigued and flipped to
read what latest study could be showing something
overlooked by the fitness world for decades. What I
found was something of a much different nature.
Despite several studies being “partially” cited as
evidence for John Cloud’s (the article writer)
claims, very little of the work presented much in
terms of a groundbreaking revelation that would
prove exercise ineffective. What I did find,
however, was an aggravated writer explaining his
frustration about how his daily bouts to the gym and
meetings with trainers have failed to lead him to
the hard body physique that he seeks. What I’d like
to do now is take a moment to dissuade some other
readers into seeing through a clouded perspective.
Cloud’s argument, summed up, is that although
exercise burns calories, it causes an increase in
hunger that will ultimately lead to excessive eating
and therefore a built-in sabotage towards any
possible diet. First and foremost I will go on the
record to agree with Cloud that, yes, exercise does
increase metabolism. The body will notice additional
activity and increase hunger in response. Why is
this? To answer let’s first look at how the body
works. If someone burns an average of 2000 calories
a day then the body will roughly look for 2000
calories of consumption to satisfy its energy needs.
However, if we exceed the normal 2000 calories being
burn and go to the gym and burn an addition 400
calories, don’t you think the body is going to want
to refill that energy gap?

Yes, there is a problem here, but increases in
metabolism are normal. Exercise and heart rate
elevations are normal. Movement is normal. Our food
choices, on the other hand, are not always so
normal. One thing that is certain is that no one is
entitled to unhealthy eating without experiencing
the unhealthy side effects. Cloud’s frustration
stems from his aggravation that spending 5+ hours a
week in the gym should merits him the “perfectly
salted, golden-brown French fries” that he feels he
deserves “after his hard trip to the gym.”
I’m sorry to deliver the news, but no amount of
exercise in the world will make up for a bad diet.
Maybe you can break even, or even cause some weight
loss, but to change your body’s composition is near
impossible with just exercise alone. Models on the
cover of Men’s Health and movie star physiques don’t
come from just grueling trips to the gym. Ask any
celebrity trainer, or any trainer in their right
mind, and they will tell you that diet makes up at
least 60% of the final product in producing a body
someone is seeking.
Fitness models like Greg Plitt didn’t develop their
bodies from being able to eat muffins because they
deserve it for working out so much. They have
achieved such incredible bodies by sticking to diets
high in protein and moderate in carbohydrates and
fats. Not just any carbs and fats, but slow
digesting and fibrous carbs and healthy omega-3
enriched fats.
Exercise is not a get-out-of-jail-free card. Yes, it
increases the metabolism, but what happens when
exercise is removed from the picture? Several
clients of mine have come to me on their last
resort, claiming to have tried every diet on the
planet with no success. Some say they have even
tried the “carb-starve” depletion diets and lost
some weight, but upon ceasing the diet the weight
returned with a vengeance.
Many of these clients who have come to me don’t take
in a excess amount of calories. They are at their
daily requirements, and often lower than they need
caloricly. However, because these calories are
pushed into only two or three meals a day that are
made up of processed, high glycemic-index
carbohydrates (that release fast into your blood
sugar), their bodies are being surged with quick
energy they are not using. Unused energy only has
one option: storage (a.k.a. fat). In many cases
these clients are not hungry throughout the day, but
are taking in the wrong types of meals at night.
Because of this they have very little energy and
find themselves feeling like they are dragging
through their day. But what these clients are the
most upset about is their appearance: A slow and
steady weight gain over the years. This is not
muscle being built, but actually being lost. The
metabolism is so underfed with proper nutrients that
it freaks out and slows to conserve energy
(recognizing that its not getting enough calories).
A slowed metabolism does three things: 1-muscle is
burned to create the energy need that was not
supplied by the diet, 2- fat is stored to conserve
any little energy that is brought in by the
unhealthy carbohydrate enriched foods, and 3- the
body produces less energy, making a simple walk up
the stairs feel like a 200lb bodybag drag
competition.
Cloud goes on to state in his article how, “after
all, doesn’t exercise turn fat into muscle.” I
couldn’t pick a more backwards statement. This line
of thinking in metabolically impossible. Muscle and
fat are two totally different tissues in the body.
If this was the case, we’d find ourselves pointing
to an overweight gentleman and saying, “watch out,
or else all that fat might turn into muscle.”
Exercise either burns fat or builds muscle,
depending on not only the type of exercise, but also
depending on what the macronutrients taken in from
food tell the body to do. If I told the best
brick-layer in the world to make me the finest brick
house, but gave him tiles as materials to work with,
do you really think he’s going to give me any kind
of a brick house? No. All the exercise in the world
will fall short if the body doesn’t get the proper
building blocks needed to make the final product we
are shooting for.
The article later attempts to bash exercise from a
scientific standpoint; this time Cloud recruits a
study by the Public Library of Science (PLoS ONE),
in which 464 overweight women were split into one of
four groups. The first group, being the control, did
no exercise while the other three groups were
assigned either 72, 136, or 194 minutes of exercise
per week. Although on average each group did lose
weight, Cloud explains how these previously
sedentary women did not see a significant increase
in weight loss with increased exercise. At first
glace this piece of evidence looks like it holds
ground, but when I dragged up the actual study
itself I found that it was presented in a rather
misleading way. What Cloud fails to mention about
the study is that not only did the exercise groups
each see a loss of inches in tape measurements, but
that these weren’t just a group of overweight women:
they were post menopausal women. This changes
factors in an extreme sense because post menopausal
women are recovering from fluctuating hormone
levels. After menopause, the female body is low in
estrogen. Because this key female hormone is stored
in fat cells, the body vigorously tries to hold onto
fat as much as possible, making weight loss
extremely difficult. So much so that post menopausal
weight gain is almost considered inevitable by some.
Comparing this group of women to a generalized study
about weight loss is unfair and unprofessional.
Apples don’t make good oranges for a reason.
Cloud explains how if you “workout hard enough to
convert, say, 10lbs of fat to muscle- a major
achievement- you would be able to eat only an extra
40 calories per day, about the amount in a teaspoon
of butter, before beginning to gain weight. Good
luck with that.”
Again, the line of though is completely skewed here.
If someone where to loose 10 lbs of fat and put on
(not convert) another 10 lbs of muscle, then he or
she must have realized the type of hard work and
dietary discipline it takes to complete such a task.
They would then be knowledgeable enough to know that
a teaspoon of butter belongs nowhere near a healthy
eating program. We’re talking about pure fat here,
the unhealthy kind, which comes in at a whopping 9
calories per gram. Why isn’t that replaced with 3
ounce of grilled chicken, which is calorically the
same, but will do light-years more for your physique
that butter will?
Foods such as Cloud’s ever so coveted “muffins and
sports drinks” are calorie dense. Craving them, even
after exercise, is the sign of improper dieting
where food is not being front loaded (more in the
morning and less in the evening) and slow releasing
carbohydrates are not being taken in at the right
time. Of course Starbucks is going to market their
muffins right in front of your face. It’s not their
responsibility to get you to eat the right foods;
it’s their responsibility to stay alive as a company
and make a profit. You can not blame them for
wanting to sell you a product, even if it’s not
healthy for you.
Here’s something I will definitely agree with Cloud
on. Exercise shouldn’t be the only thing to consider
when trying to burn off some extra pounds. Cloud
sites several studies that show that there is no
particular added benefit to organized exercise
program when compared to simply being active. This
is true. Humans burn hundreds of calories less today
than we did hundreds of years ago. Everything we do
is in front of us. To get something done fast we
don’t run it over to the post office in a hurry.
Instead we sit in front of the computer and the
fastest googler wins. So yes, get up, move around,
burn some extra calories. They’re no way anyone can
say they don’t have time to exercise when in all
actuality life is the exercise! There is no need to
sit on a stair mill for 40 minutes. Those machines
were created to making burning calories more
efficient in less time. They are not the only way to
loose weight. Losing weight is a lifestyle change,
not a quest for a number. Organized exercise is made
to supplement inactive; to help us get the movement
we aren’t normally getting.

Cloud may say that evolution didn’t program us to
lose weight through exercise, but we can all agree
that evolution did program us to be active
individuals. That’s why we have hands for grabbing
and legs for running. To be used. One thing I can
guarantee you is the evolution definitely did not
program us to eat processed, man-made foods like
muffins, pizza, and bagels. Those aren’t “from
nature.” That’s something that man decided we liked,
so we found a way to include it in our diets.
Exercise doesn’t entitle us to eating them. If that
was the case, bodybuilders, yoga instructors, and
fitness models would be entitled to a doughnut a day
with the amount of exercise they do. Think there’s
some correlation with their healthy eating and their
dynamite bodies? I think so. We are not entitled
to anything. If you want something, you go after it.
If you don’t, then you don’t really want it. You
simply “would like to have it.” There’s a big
difference.
In short, blaming exercise for bad eating is like
blaming sports cars for fast drivers. Exercise
increases metabolism because the body become more
efficient at burning calories. But with the stress
of exercise the body is in dire need of the proper
nutrients to make it function correctly. There is no
conspiracy here. McDonalds doesn’t have playground
in them to make the kids hungrier, as Cloud deduces.
Ever think that those playgrounds are there because
kids like to play on them? Does that mean baseball
games are only around to make sure that kids buy
food from the ice cream truck in the parking lot
afterwards? Cloud asks “could pushing people to
exercise more actually be contributing to our
obesity problem?” If that were the case, gym rats,
body builders, and fitness enthusiasts like Jack
Lalanne would be the fattest of us all. Take a look
around. Let’s not shift the blame to exercise. It’s
time to take control of our lives and make the right
choices, inside and outside the gym. Fitness is not
just what you do on a cardio piece or with a weight
in your hand. Fitness is a way of life.
Claudio Boni
CPT Manager
Results Plus Personal Training
3013 Dixwell Ave
Hamden CT. 06518
Web: www.resultsplus.com
Office: 203-288-8822
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