Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - How Can Some People Eat So Much Without Gaining Weight?
Episode Date: April 4, 2022Why is it that some people seem to eat whatever they want without putting on any body fat? Almost all of us know that person that just doesn’t put on body fat no matter how much they eat. And if you... search the internet for 10,000 calorie challenges or #cheatday, you’ll see plenty of very fit folks eating huge amounts of food, without any body fat to show for it. What gives? While it seems like these people have some innate ability to eat without consequence, their bodies follow the same physiological rules as everyone else's. The real explanation boils down to their eating and exercise habits, including the ones you don’t see. In this podcast, I’ll answer why some people seem to be able to eat as much as they want without getting fatter. Press play and let me know what you think! Timestamps: 0:00 - Try Whey+ risk-free today! Go to buylegion.com/whey and use coupon code MUSCLE to save 20% or get double reward points! 4:20 - How can people eat whatever they want without gaining weight? 10:49 - Burning calories through digesting food 13:52 - Storing macronutrients as fat 20:07 - Moving more when you eat more 21:48 - Calorie absorption Mentioned on the Show: Try Whey+ risk-free today! Go to www.buylegion.com/whey and use coupon code MUSCLE to save 20% or get double reward points!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey there, I'm Mike Matthews. This is Muscle for Life. Thank you, thank you for joining me today.
Now, if you Google, or maybe not Google, right? How about search, preferably not on Google,
the 10,000 calorie challenge, or if you go on just about any social media network and look up the
cheat day hashtag, you will find a lot of examples of very fit people eating ungodly amounts of food without having any body fat to show for it.
Some of these people seem to do this fairly often, too, and stay very, very lean.
And we've all known at least one person who seemed to be able to put away platters of food without putting on any weight.
So what gives?
Are these people just blessed with the right genes?
Do they have an abnormally fast metabolism?
No and no.
Because while it seems like these people are simply immune to gaining weight,
no matter what they do, no matter what they eat, no matter how much they eat, their bodies do follow the same
physiological rules as yours. They too are subject to energy balance. And what that means then is
the real explanation for their apparent freedom from fat gain is unsexy. It boils down to their eating and exercise habits, including ones you don't see,
and that is crucial, not some inborn trait that just allows them to gorge with impunity.
And that's what this podcast is going to be about. Why can some people seem to be able to eat so
much without getting fatter? Before we wade into it, one of the easiest
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think. All right, let's start this discussion with an overview of what is going on here. There are
three basic reasons why some people can apparently eat whatever they want without gaining weight.
The first one is you probably aren't seeing these people at all times, and you're probably not
carefully measuring their calorie intake, and it's likely that their average calorie
intake is less than you think. Another common reason is you're not seeing these people's
activity or exercise habits. And many times they are exercising or just moving around a lot more
than you realize. And finally, we have that while overeating for a few days or even a few weeks
will almost always cause some fat gain, there are some changes that occur in your body that can
prevent all of the excess calories you eat from being stored as body fat. And often these people
are benefiting from this as well. Now, those first two points are pretty straightforward.
People see someone regularly eating large amounts of food without gaining fat, and they assume that
this is due to some biological blessing, like a fast metabolism. I've had many people ask me if
that's how I can eat a bunch of dessert and not be fat, or how I can eat a few plates of food at Thanksgiving and
still be lean. People assume that I do that a lot more often than I actually do. And so then the
mistake there is basing an assessment on just a snapshot or maybe a few snapshots of somebody's
daily routine. So maybe it's a coworker or it's a
classmate who eats these big lunches, or it's a friend who gluts themselves at the holiday parties
or a roommate who always seems to be snacking throughout the day. In reality though, many of
these people, they don't eat as many calories as you might think. It looks like they eat more than they do because they eat less
the rest of the time when you're not seeing them eat large amounts of food. So for example,
the friend who seems to go hog wild at lunch might not eat breakfast at all, or maybe they have a
very light dinner or the roommate who always has a snack in their hand. Maybe they rarely eat large meals or
sit down meals. Maybe they just mostly snack and the party binger. Well, they probably eat smaller
portions the rest of the time when they are not going hog wild. And the scientific term for this
gap in your knowledge is known as selection bias, and it affects all of us. If you're human,
you have to deal with selection bias, just like you have to deal with confirmation bias and many
other biases that psychologists have identified. So when you see Skinny Dave devouring that entire
pizza on New Year's Eve, and you think, how does he eat so much and look like that? But then you fail to notice that,
well, he actually eats a lot less the rest of the week. Or maybe you notice lean Lisa
munching on some fruit nuts all day, but you don't realize that she doesn't eat a breakfast or a
lunch or a dinner proper. She just has six, seven, eight smaller little snack meals throughout the day. And this same principle applies to activity levels too, because while some people do eat
considerably more than others without gaining weight, and sometimes it's others who weigh
more who should be able to eat more without gaining weight.
So that can really throw people for a loop when you have smaller people eating more than
bigger people eating more than bigger people
eating and not gaining weight. If the bigger person were to eat the same amount as the smaller
person, the bigger person gains weight. One way that can happen is activity levels. Someone who
lifts weights two or three times a week and let's say walks their dog a few laps around the block
every day, they don't need to eat nearly as much as somebody
who is hitting the gym five days per week and participating in something like Brazilian jiu-jitsu
maybe, or boxing, or maybe they go rucking, or they go hiking, or cycling on the weekends.
A lot of energy expenditure. Most people who eat a lot, who eat quite a bit more than average without
gaining fat, don't have some special metabolic advantage. They are just probably eating about
as many calories as they are burning over time. If you were to average out their daily calorie
expenditure and their daily calorie intake, or if you were to look at it on a weekly basis, the average number of calories burned versus eaten per week, you would see that there is a parity
there. And so then what many people do is they overestimate their calorie intake or underestimate
their activity levels. They think they are eating four or 5,000 calories per day. And I don't want to mix up the days here.
So this is someone observing this person who can eat a lot of food and stay lean.
So this person observing might think, wow, they're eating four or 5,000 calories per
day.
Or maybe the person themselves who is able to stay lean on a lot of food, they might
think they're eating four to 5,000 calories per day. But in reality, it's more like maybe 3,000 on average. And then the activity energy expenditure
might be underestimated. The person, again, themselves who just stays lean, they might
think that they burn, oh, I don't know, maybe 1,000 calories per day when it's more like 2,000
calories per day. Now, with all of that said, there are a few quirks of human physiology that prevent all of the
calories that we eat from being stored as body fat. And this partially explains why the aftermath
of overeating isn't as severe as we sometimes think or expect. And the main factors in play here are the calories burned
during the digestion of food, the storing of some macronutrients as fat more easily than others,
the increase in physical activity in movement that can occur when you eat more, and the absorption
of the food. You don't necessarily absorb every calorie you eat.
So let's look at each of those things in more detail. Let's talk about burning calories through
digesting food. Now, when you eat a meal, your body has to burn energy to digest and process
the food. And this is known as the thermic effect of food. And research shows that it accounts for approximately 10%
of your total daily energy expenditure. That is about one in 10 calories that you consume is
burned during digestion. Now, how much energy you burn through TEF depends on the size and
composition of a meal. Smaller meals require less energy to digest, of course, so they also cause a smaller
increase in energy expenditure. Larger meals, on the other hand, require more energy to digest,
and so they cause a greater rise in energy expenditure. And this is also part of why you
feel warmer after eating a large meal. Like for me, if I eat a big bowl of pasta and I am in a room that is maybe around 72 to 75 degrees,
there's a fair chance I will start sweating. And that's my body expending energy to turn that food
into usable energy, turning those calories into things that the cells can use and that can be stored into body fat and so forth.
Now, studies show that the thermic effect of protein, carbs, and fat is quite different.
Protein has the highest TEF score of around 20 to 30%, carbs around 5 to 10%, and fat around 0 to
3%. Now, what that means is meals higher in protein and carbs cause a greater
increase in energy expenditure. The thermic effect is higher than meals high in fat.
And how processed or unprocessed your food is also changes its effect on TEF. In one study
conducted by scientists at Pomona College, they found a processed food meal of white bread and American cheese increased TEF about 10%, whereas a whole food meal of multigrain bread and cheddar cheese increased TEF about 20%.
And another study found similar results when people burned about 92 extra calories per day by eating whole grains instead of refined grains.
And that was over the course of about six weeks.
And so let's say that you overeat by a thousand calories.
You burn 2,000 calories in a day and you eat 3,000 calories.
Well, right off the bat, you're losing about a hundred of those
excess calories to the thermic effect of food.
And that's just an across the board average
though. If we look at what you ate, let's say the meal that contributed the extra 1000 calories.
Let's just keep it simple. It's one meal and it was high in protein and high in carbs or one of
the other. And it was mostly composed of whole foods. Well, then you might be burning closer to 150 or 200, or maybe even
upward of 250 of those calories off right away. Now let's talk about storing some macronutrients
as fat more easily than others, because how many calories you store as body fat does depend on what
percentage of those calories come from protein, carbs, or fat. And
this is because those macronutrients are not all processed in the same way by the body. Protein is
used almost entirely for repairing, building, and regenerating cells, hormones, and other molecules
in the body. And excess protein, excess calories from protein are burned off as fuel in the liver.
Protein is never directly converted into body fat. There is no mechanism for the body to do that.
Now, if you look at carbs, those are mostly stored in the muscles and the liver in the form of
glycogen. And many people are surprised to learn that while the body can turn glucose,
which of course is obtained from carbs, into body fat, it doesn't happen under normal circumstances.
Research shows that you have to eat a lot of carbs for a fair amount of time. I'm talking
1,000 plus grams of carbs per day for maybe six, seven plus days in a row,
then you might see a considerable rise in what is known as de novo lipogenesis in the process
that turns the excess carbs, the excess glucose into body fat. But under normal circumstances,
carbs are rarely converted directly into body fat. Now that leaves us with dietary fat
and this is chemically very similar to body fat and thus your body prefers to store dietary fat
as body fat and then burn carbs and protein for immediate energy. Now you might be thinking that
if I'm right, can't you just outsmart your body's metabolism? Can't you hack your metabolism by eating a ton
of carbs and a ton of protein and keeping your fat intake really, really low? Unfortunately,
that's not as effective as I wish it were. It would be fun, right? Because if you eat too many
carbs, let's just talk about that first, you will gain fat. Now, chemically speaking, carbs are very
different from the
molecules that make up body fat from triglycerides, and they have to undergo an energy-intensive
process to turn into those molecules that I mentioned earlier called de novo lipogenesis.
Now, if you ate, say, a moderate to even a high-carb diet with a moderate normal amount of dietary fat, there would be little or
no de novo lipogenesis happening in your body. But if you started to eat a lot of carbs, like I
mentioned, there would be de novo lipogenesis happening and that would contribute to your body
fat levels. And it could contribute considerably, even if 15 to 25% of the energy in the carbs is lost during the process of converting
them into fat. So maybe a hundred calories worth of carbs might only turn into call it 75 or 85
calories worth of body fat, but it will get converted into body fat and overeating carbs
can contribute to fat storage in another way too, because as your
body burns more and more carbs for energy, which it will, of course, if you are feeding it a ton
of carbohydrate, it will burn proportionally less of the fat you eat. And thus more of the dietary
fat that you're eating will be stored as body fat. And so what that means then is the more carbs you
eat, the more fat you will store and the less you will burn throughout the day. And so what that means then is the more carbs you eat, the more fat you will
store and the less you will burn throughout the day. And those carbs can directly contribute to
fat gain through de novo lipogenesis. And this is why most studies show that people gain similar
amounts of body fat after overeating carbs or fat. And just to make this point clear, because it's
important, if you are eating a high fat diet,
you are going to burn more fat for energy. Your body's going to have to do that. Let's say you are
eating a really high fat diet and really low carb diet, but you are also going to store fat,
more dietary fat as body fat. Now, if you flip that around and you are eating a very high carb
diet, low fat diet, some of the carbs are going
to be converted into body fat. If you're eating really a lot of carbs for several days at a time.
And, and this is, this is more relevant probably to most people eating high carb diets. I don't
come across too many people eating very high carb. I mean, 700 to a thousand plus grams per day,
but maybe 500, 600, maybe even 700. That is about as high as most people go eating that amount of
carbohydrate. It means that most, if not all essentially of the dietary fat being eaten is
being stored as body fat. Now, protein is a little bit more
interesting because there is research that suggests that excess calories from protein alone
does not contribute meaningfully to fat storage in the same way, at least that carbohydrate and
dietary fat can. But let's remember that the body does turn at least a
percentage of excess amino acids from protein into glucose, which of course then can be turned
into body fat. And so again, just eating protein, that would not be a metabolic hack either,
unfortunately. And let's also keep in mind that most people who might want to eat large amounts of protein are not talking about carbohydrate and fat-free protein.
They're often talking about delicious meat, for example, which is fatty meat.
And they're talking about high-protein yogurt, which has fat and carbs.
And they're talking about eggs, which, of course, has fat as well.
And there's nothing wrong with
eating those foods, but if you ate too much of those foods, you will get fatter. Now, what is
true though, is if you are willing to keep your fat intake low, you can minimize fat gain by
primarily overeating carbs and protein. And I'll talk a little bit
more about that in a moment, but for now, I want to move on to the next point here,
which is moving more when you eat more. And this one is very related to the idea that some people
have naturally fast metabolisms and can just eat more than others without gaining as much weight.
It is not though, because of metabolic voodoo. It is not
because they are blessed with better fat burning genes. Instead, the reason some of these people
seem to have fast metabolisms is just their activity levels and how their activity levels
change when they overeat. Because research shows that some people will spontaneously and subconsciously move more
throughout the day when they overeat. And that increase in activity can be significant. In some
studies, it can be up to 700, even a thousand plus calories per day. And keep in mind that is not
formal exercise. There's actually a term for it, non-exercise activity thermogenesis or NEAT. And so if you
take those people who are just the high NEAT type and you feed them an extra 1000 calories per day,
some will burn off two thirds or three quarters, even all of it just by moving around more,
fidgeting, tapping their legs, pacing, taking the stairs instead of the elevator,
parking a little bit further away
rather than a little bit closer. And what is interesting about NEAT is it varies a great deal
from person to person. So when some people overeat, they move around a lot more just randomly
than others. We also know that women tend to have a smaller rise in NEAT than men when overeating, which is not surprising
given their smaller statures. Okay, the final point here is calorie absorption because you
don't absorb every calorie you eat. And you might've noticed something before, after a trip
to the bathroom, not everything you ate was entirely digested. Some foods, particularly
ones high in fiber like grains, nuts, seeds, and vegetables, can make their way through us without being completely broken down. What's more, these high
fiber foods can also interfere with the absorption of dietary fat, meaning more of the fat that can
be easily turned into body fat gets excreted. Now, does that mean that many of those extra
cheat day calories are just going in one hole
and out the other? No, unfortunately not. The body is very good at extracting calories out of
the food that we eat, and roughly 95% of the calories we put in our mouths are absorbed during
digestion. That said, eating more or less of certain foods can change how many calories are absorbed.
Specifically, eating more fiber-rich foods, particularly those high in soluble fiber,
can reduce slightly how many calories are absorbed during digestion.
So for example, you only absorb about 70% of the calories in whole almonds because of
the fibrous shell of the almonds that prevents a lot of the fat from being
absorbed during digestion. And when you eat high fiber foods like almonds with other high fat foods,
the fiber from the almonds reduces the total fat absorption of the entire meal. Thus, eating high
fiber foods reduces the absorption of calories from all of the foods that you eat, not just the high fiber ones. And
what are the best sources of fiber? What are the best high fiber foods? Oh, that's right. It's
fruits, it's vegetables, it's whole grains, it's nuts, it's seeds, it's legumes. It's all of the
stuff that our moms told us to eat. Yet another reason to get most of our calories from relatively unprocessed,
highly nutritious whole foods that we have to prepare ourselves. don't miss new episodes. And it also helps me because it increases the rankings of the show a
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