Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - The Pros and Cons of the "One Meal a Day" (OMAD) Diet
Episode Date: July 26, 2021The “One Meal a Day” (OMAD) diet has been around for a while, but it’s more popular now than ever before. That’s likely because fasting, intermittent fasting, and diets that revolve around not... eating for long periods of time are more popular in general. OMAD is the most extreme variation of intermittent fasting, and much tougher to follow than the Leangains protocol, for example. Why would you want to eat just one meal a day, though? If you’re not doing it currently, should you consider it? Many people say OMAD improves your metabolic health, reduces your risk of disease, helps you live longer, and is generally superior to traditional eating. Other people are less convinced and question the efficacy, safety, practicality, and necessity of OMAD. So that’s what this podcast is all about. What is the OMAD diet, what are its benefits, what are the downsides, who should consider it (and who should not), and more. Timestamps: 4:54 - What is the OMAD diet? 10:19 - What are the benefits of the OMAD diet? 15:05 - What effects does the OMAD diet have on weight loss? 24:14 - What are the downside of the OMAD diet? Mentioned on the Show: Legion VIP One-on-One Coaching: https://buylegion.com/vip Want free workout and meal plans? Download my science-based diet and training templates for men and women: https://legionathletics.com/text-sign-up/
Transcript
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Hey there, I'm Mike Matthews and this is Muscle for Life.
Welcome to another episode and thank you for joining me today.
The one meal a day diet, OMAD, something that has been around for a while.
I mean, I have heard about OMAD since I got into the fitness racket back in 2012, but
it's more popular now than it was then or maybe has been at any point in the past,
because fasting is more popular now than ever before. And that includes intermittent fasting
diets and other diets that revolve around not eating food for long periods of time.
And the one meal a day diet is the most extreme, quote unquote, version of intermittent fasting,
right?
You could say that water fasting is more extreme than OMAD, of course, because then you might
go several days without eating or even doing a 24 hour fast once per week.
Some people might find that more difficult than eating just one meal per day.
But as far as just your daily intermittent fasting protocols go, one meal a day
is a bit tougher for most people than let's say the lean gains protocol, which is usually three
meals a day. You have eight hours to eat all of your calories. Most people split that up into two
or three meals. And so why would you want to eat just one meal a day if you're not already doing
it? Because if you're
already doing it, you probably just like it. If that doesn't sound like something you would like
to do though, should you consider it? Well, some people, many people say, yeah, because it's going
to improve your metabolic health. It's going to help you reduce the risk of disease and dysfunction.
It may even help you live longer. It may have certain effects in
the body that increase longevity. And depending on who you listen to, you also might hear a lot of
science-y sounding explanations as to why OMAD is superior to traditional eating by a country mile
and even superior to other intermittent fasting regimens. Other people
though, like me, as you will find out, are a bit less convinced and they question the efficacy,
safety, and the practicality and the necessity of OMAD. And so that is what I will be talking
about in this podcast. What is OMAD? What are some of its benefits, some of its purported benefits?
What are the downsides?
Who should consider following OMAD and who should not and more.
Also, if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out
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more, we've found that people are often missing just one or two crucial pieces of the puzzle.
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there's something you're not doing correctly or at all that's giving you the most grief.
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All right, let's start this discussion where we always start discussions like these,
and that is a simple definition of OMAD. What is the OMAD diet? And that is an initialism for one
meal a day. And that basically tells you what the diet entails,
right? One meal a day. In most cases, it's actually one hour. You could say it's the one
hour a day diet where you eat all of your daily calories in a one hour period. And it's normally
just one large meal. And then you don't eat anything for the other 23 hours of the day.
And some people would say that those are 23 hours of fasting. Although
technically you're not in a fasted state until your insulin levels have come back down to a baseline
low level. And that means that your body has finished processing all of the food that you ate
in that one meal. Then you are technically in a fasted state. Up until then you're in a fed state.
And because you are going to be eating
a couple thousand calories, probably maybe a bit less if you're a small woman, especially if you
are restricting your calories for weight loss. This is a large meal that's going to take several
hours to process. It could be four, five, six, even seven to eight hours, depending on how big
you are and how much food you eat in your one meal a day and the makeup of
that meal. For example, if it is a high protein, high carb and moderate fat meal, or maybe even a
moderate carb, high fat meal, the more fat that you inject in that meal, the slower it will be
processed. Whereas if you're following a lower fat diet, and so that means it's going to be a high
protein, very high carbohydrate, lower fat meal that will probably get processed a bit faster. And so that's what
the diet entails. There are no calorie targets or macronutrient guidelines usually that comes
with OMAD. You're basically eating as much as you want, but you're supposed to just eat to
satisfaction. You're not supposed to force feed yourself. And usually you are not restricted as to any foods you can eat. You're supposed to
eat the stuff that you like, but you are supposed to eat your meal at roughly the same time every
day. And that's because your body gets used to getting fed at certain times and will naturally
get hungry leading up to those feeding times. So if you were to, let's say for a
week, eat your one meal a day at 1 PM, and then maybe a week is not enough actually to cause that
entrainment, but probably seven to 10 days or so. And then you decide, actually, you want to switch
it up and start eating at three or four, or maybe eat earlier in the day. It's okay. You can make
that change, but let's say you're going to
go from the 1 p.m. to the 3 or 4 p.m. Don't be surprised if you start getting hungry around 1
p.m. and you find it hard now to stick to the plan. That's a good nutrition tip regardless of
the type of diet that you are following. It is smart for helping control appetite to generally
eat at the same times every day, regardless of how many
meals you're eating or what is in those meals. And so then a lot of people who follow the OMAD
diet, they eat their one meal in the evening. It's usually a very big dinner sometime between maybe
6 p.m. and 10 p.m. And then they don't eat anything else. And then they get in, you know,
p.m. and 10 p.m. and then they don't eat anything else and then they get in, you know, let's say seven or eight hours of sleep and so that makes it easier to go the 23 hours without food and if
they have eaten a lot the night before, they often are not hungry at all in the morning anyway, so
that helps them get a little bit further and if people are going to struggle with this, and women in particular tend
to struggle with fasting diets more than men, and there are biological reasons for that. It's not
just because women are psychologically weaker. No, there are biological reasons why women tend
to have more issues with hunger in particular on fasting diets, so much so that the intermittent
fasting diet or approach that is most popular in the body composition space,
which is the 16-8 diet, 16 hours of no food, 8-hour eating window. It's generally recommended
for women to go maybe 12 to 14 hours without food and have the 12 or 10-hour eating window just to
cut down on the hunger because many women experience it to the degree where it's distracting
and it is just counterproductive and it can lead to overeating and feelings of guilt and so forth.
And some people though with OMAD, they prefer to eat a large breakfast and that just works best
for them. So, you know, sometime in the morning they eat a very large meal and that's it for the
entire day. And some versions of OMAD will say you can
eat a small snack or two throughout the rest of what is supposed to be your quote-unquote fasting
period. Like you can eat some low calorie fruit, for example, or a little bit of protein. And that
of course means you spend even less time in a fasted state, which kind of further defeats the
purpose of a diet like this, which is to maximize fasting, to maximize the amount of time that your insulin levels are very low. That's really what it comes
down to. So many OMAD purists say that you can't eat snacks, you can't drink calories,
you eat your one meal, and then for the rest of the day, you can drink water, you can drink
zero calorie drinks. So diet soda is okay. Diet anything is okay. So long as it's
zero calories per serving. Black coffee is often used to help blunt appetite or other caffeinated
beverages for people who are very sensitive to caffeine. Sometimes it's black tea, or maybe it is
half of a can of an energy drink or something like that. Now, as far as benefits go, there are a lot of claims out there. If you poke around on
the internet, you're going to hear a lot of things. You're going to hear that OMAD can reduce your bad
cholesterol, your LDL cholesterol levels. It can reduce inflammation. It can reduce the risk of
different types of disease, neurological disease, metabolic disease, Alzheimer's. It's going to make
your heart healthier and it's going to improve your cognitive function and your brain health. It's going to increase autophagy levels,
the natural cell death that occurs in cellular turnover, and that is claimed to increase
longevity. There are claims that OMAD can improve your hormone profile. It can boost your growth
hormone levels. It can boost your testosterone levels. And as I mentioned in the intro, many people have very scientific sounding explanations
for how all of that works.
But when you take a closer look at a lot of the studies that are used to support claims
like those, you quickly realize that the evidence is tenuous at best.
So for example, there's no research out there that looks at the OMAD diet
specifically. The studies that OMAD adherents are using to support their claims all involve
different kinds of fasting protocols. So there's really no way to know if the benefits associated
with one of those types of diets, like the 5-2 diet, for example, can be applied to another one like OMAD.
What's more, much of the research on fasting and intermittent fasting is done on animals.
And of course, we can't assume that benefits that are seen in animals are going to also be seen in humans.
We can't extrapolate it directly from rats to humans.
And a lot of the research has been done in unhealthy people,
people who are overweight, people who are sedentary, people who eat very poorly,
the standard American diet, which has an apropos acronym, SAD, the sad diet.
So when you take somebody who doesn't eat well, who doesn't exercise, who drinks too much alcohol,
well, who doesn't exercise, who drinks too much alcohol, maybe has other unhealthy habits like smoking, probably isn't sleeping well. And if you start restricting their calories,
you start bringing their body weight down, improving their body composition,
maybe including some exercise of any kind, just movement is beneficial at this point.
You're going to see a lot of the benefits that I just ran through, not because
of the diet per se, simply because they're losing weight and they're moving. Their body is just
getting healthier. And now what happens if you take somebody like me, probably like you, who
has a healthy body composition, who is active, who's doing at least a few hours of exercise per
week, who eats a lot of nutritious foods, who has pretty good sleep hygiene. What happens when you take somebody who's doing the most
important things mostly right most of the time, and then you put them on a fasting diet, you put
them on the OMAD diet, are there any additional benefits for people like us? That is one big
question mark. And based on my understanding of the current weight of the
evidence, if I had to make a bet and a fairly big bet, it would be on no. And that's not because I
have an ax to grind with fasting or intermittent fasting or people who really advocate for those
types of diets. I personally have no emotional attachment one way or another to
how I eat or even how I currently recommend most people eat, which as you know is, hey,
if you're like most people, you're probably going to do best with a traditional type of diet,
eating three to five or even six meals per day, and probably going to do best with a high protein
diet and at least a moderate carb and moderate fat, maybe even higher carb and lower, not low,
but lower fat diet. And you're going to do well if you eat a large variety of foods and a lot of
nutritious stuff and include some treats in there as well to satisfy your sweet tooth. And that's
probably what's going to work best for you. Now, if that does not quite work for you, if you like
to eat just two or three meals per day, for example, and let's
say you are not naturally hungry in the morning, you don't even like breakfast as a meal or
breakfast foods, well then actually maybe intermittent fasting might work well for you,
but only because it's just going to fit your preferences. It's going to fit your lifestyle.
Maybe it fits your schedule. It is a diet that you're going to be able to stick to, in which
case I would recommend trying it. Try the skip breakfast intermittent fasting, which usually comes out to be that 16, 8 approach or 12
to 14 fasting. And then the remaining hours eating window, which many women do a little bit better
with. It looks kind of like that actually. Maybe you start eating 12, 1 PM and you finish 6 or 7
PM and then you just do that day after day, right? But anyway,
let's get back to OMAD and let's talk about OMAD and weight loss because that is the primary
benefit claimed that sells people, that persuades people to do it. And as you know, the only way to
lose weight, to lose fat is to eat fewer calories than you burn. Over time, of course, you can do it every day. You could have a
moderate calorie deficit every day, or you could do it three or four or five days out of the week
and then eat maintenance calories on the other days. But the important thing is if you look at
total calories consumed over a meaningful period of time, let's say three months, and then you look
at total calories burned, that total calories burned has
to be significantly lower over the course of that three months for there to be meaningful fat loss.
And several studies show that diets that involve fasting can be effective at helping people lose
weight because many people find that it's easier for them to restrict their calories, to maintain
a calorie deficit when they eat fewer meals, fewer larger meals every day.
And mostly because of appetite of effects, people find that they're just generally less
hungry if they do that.
But studies show that some people respond better to a traditional type of meal layout.
And again, in my personal experience, having worked
with many people over the years, I would say many of the people I've interacted with prefer a more
traditional diet. They prefer to eat something in the morning, eat something around lunch,
usually some kind of snack in the middle of the afternoon, a little pick-me-up, eat dinner,
maybe an after-dinner snack. Many, many people enjoy eating that way.
And even when they're cutting, they don't have problems with hunger. But again, there are
certainly many people who can do fine with that, but they do better with fewer meals. They do
better on an intermittent fasting diet. And so one meal a day fits into that paradigm. For example,
in one study conducted by scientists at the Beltsville
Human Nutrition Research Center, participants who could only eat one meal per day couldn't
consume enough calories in a single sitting to meet their daily calorie needs. So as you'd expect,
these people lost on average about four pounds of fat over the course of the eight-week study,
which is not impressive per se, but nothing to scoff at. That's
decent depending on where they were starting. Hey, it's results, right? And it's pretty good
considering that they were told to just eat normally. They were not told to restrict their
calories. They just simply couldn't eat more than maybe 1,500 or so, max 2,000 in a single meal.
And they were burning more than that over the course of
the study. Now, a counterpoint that I should mention is the workability of that approach
depends on what you're eating. Of course, if you're heading to the local greasy spoon and
getting a pile of oily meat and French fries and washing it down with a big milkshake, you can put
down a couple thousand, you know, three, 4 thousand calories in one sitting without feeling over full, without feeling
like you would feel if you took those calories and put together a big meal of mostly nutritious
foods. And if you don't believe me, go do that right now. Head over to whichever calorie counting
website you like to use and give yourself
2,000 or 2,500 calories for this one meal with the stipulation that most of those calories
have to come from relatively unprocessed foods, nutritious stuff that you are going to prepare
yourself, whole grains, seeds, vegetables, legumes, fruits, lean protein, and then you
can take 20% of those calories and do whatever
you want with them and then if you want to take this experiment further try it try try to eat
that much nutritious food in one meal it is not pleasant now i should also mention that there is
scientific evidence for some of my comments that I made earlier about intermittent
fasting diets not necessarily working any better for people for weight loss than traditional diets.
There was a large review that was done by researchers at the University of Sydney that
involved analyzing 40 studies on intermittent fasting, with 12 of them comparing intermittent
fasting directly to traditional dieting methods. And what the researchers found is that there were no significant benefits related to body
composition, fat loss, insulin sensitivity, or hormones.
And those are some of the biggest types of benefits that intermittent fasting zealots
will bandy around.
So the primary benefit of OMAD is it may help you control your calories and control your appetite
better than more traditional eating or other intermittent fasting protocols. And I suppose
there are some non-physiological benefits that are worth considering, like not spending as much time
making food, eating, cleaning up. And those things resonate with me. I would love to spend less time. I don't
spend much time making food, eating, or cleaning up, but I would love to spend less time doing that
because I have so many other things that I'm doing these days, but not enough to want to
follow the OMAD diet. And I'll explain why in a minute. It has some pretty significant downsides
that need to be considered as well.
Now, another non-physical benefit of OMAD and other fasting diets that's worth mentioning is it can help you become comfortable with being a little bit hungry, with going longer periods
without food. And if you're somebody who, when you get a little bit hungry, you immediately rush
to eat or you feel the urge to rush to eat. You do not want to
experience any hunger whatsoever. Or if you go for three, four or five hours without food and you get
a little bit anxious and you may not even feel particularly hungry yet, you just are now thinking
about eating and you have a compulsion to go eat, then it can be productive to unlearn those habits. And you can unlearn them.
They are just psychological habits and intermittent fasting and other fasting diets can help you
rewire your relationship with food in a constructive way. They can help you get
comfortable with being a little bit hungry, for example. That does not mean physically,
physiologically, that you need to eat food right away. Nothing bad is happening in your body when you're a little
bit hungry. I remember many years ago when I did not know much about anything really. Maybe I
thought I knew a little bit, but my nutrition and my training knowledge was sorely lacking.
I remember I read in a bodybuilding magazine back then that if you
don't eat protein every couple of hours and you start to get hungry, your body starts eating
muscle right away. That's where it goes for the energy that it needs. And I never looked into it.
I just thought that quote unquote experts knew what they were talking about. And so I used to
get hangry, you know, the hungry, angry kind of feeling if I hadn't eaten protein in like the last three hours and I was starting to feel hungry because I thought that my biceps were withering away. With every second, I was losing a fraction of a gram of muscle directly from my biceps, of course. No, I didn't think that, but I thought that I was slowly losing ground. I was taking little baby steps backward and I was spending all of this
time in the gym, probably close to two hours a day, five days a week at that time. And I was
stuffing myself with three or 400 grams of protein every day, which was not appreciated by my gastro
intestinal tract. And I was also at the time I was eating a lot of egg protein. And if anybody
listening has eaten a lot of egg protein,
you know what I'm going to say next. What was coming out of my butthole was impressively
noxious. It smelled necrotic. And so anyway, I was doing all of these things and then I was
sacrificing gains by not eating protein every couple of hours. And I am certain that the
psychological component, the distress that I added to the situation ramped up my hunger because later when I learned how
things really work, that was overnight no longer a problem. Previously, if I didn't eat food every
three or four hours, I would get very hungry and I would get upset. And then I learned how
the metabolism works and I learned about energy
balance and macronutrient balance. And the fact that, for instance, research shows that your body
really doesn't start breaking down muscle until probably 16, 17, 18 hours without food. And then
just like that, no more appetite issues. I could go four, five, six, seven, eight hours without food and not get that hungry.
Maybe a little bit after six or seven hours, but nothing like before.
If you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out my VIP
one-on-one coaching service because my team and I have helped people of all ages and
circumstances lose fat, build muscle, and get into the best shape of their life faster than
they ever thought possible. And we can do the same for you. Coming back on track here to OMAD,
let's talk about some of the downsides. So the first disadvantage is OMAD is probably not optimal for building muscle. And there are a few reasons. First, let's talk about lean bulking or lean
gaining when you maintain a calorie surplus to gain muscle and strength consistently. And that
is what you have to do if you are no longer a newbie. If your newbie gains have been exhausted,
if you have at least a year of proper training under your belt, you can no longer recomp, gain muscle and lose fat at the same time. Effectively, you have to
choose one or the other. You have to lean bulk or lean gain, maintain a calorie surplus, maybe a
10% or so over what you burn, and you gain muscle, you gain strength, you gain fat, and then you cut,
and then you restrict your calories, you retain your muscle, and you retain most of your strength, you gain fat, and then you cut, and then you restrict your calories. You retain your muscle and you retain most of your strength and you lose the fat. And now you look
a little bit bigger and you then go to a maintenance phase or maybe back to a lean bulking
phase. You quickly regain any strength that you lost and you just keep on going from there.
And the reason you have to do this is research shows that that energy surplus, that consistent energy surplus, you could think of
it as boosting the effectiveness of your body's muscle building machinery, so to speak. It helps
your body better recover from training and to better adapt to training and to better add muscle
tissue. And that of course then allows you to gain strength.
Now, if you are eating just one meal a day, it's going to be hard to do this unless you have a
very large appetite. But if you have a very large appetite, you're probably going to struggle with
one meal a day because you're going to get hungry and you're going to want to eat more than one
meal per day. So let's say you just have a normal appetite and I can speak to that. I have a normal
appetite. I don't have a small appetite. I don't have a large appetite. I would say it's just right
in the middle of the bell curve. And I tap out personally around probably 1500 calories in a
meal. Sure. I can eat more than that, but at that point I am just eating more for the sake of eating
more, maybe because it tastes good. I am certainly not hungry anymore. And for me to
lean bulk, for example, I would need to start that diet probably around 3000 calories per day. I'd
have to do a little bit less cardio, although I probably wouldn't. And that's another discussion
that I've actually had here on the podcast. If you go to the feed and search for cardio,
you'll find an episode that I posted a few months ago about why I think everyone should consider
including some cardio in their regimen, even if they're trying to just gain muscle and strength as quickly as possible. So I would keep
my cardio routine, which is about two to three hours of moderate intensity per week. I would
keep that in. And so to do that and lift, I'd have to eat a bit more action. I have to eat about
32 to 3,300 calories per day. That would be my starting point on my
lean bulk. And that would go up throughout the course of the lean bulk. It probably would go
up to close to 4,000 calories per day. And I, I, I sure, maybe I could eat that much in one meal
every day with most of those calories being nutritious, but that's going to be tough.
That is not going to be enjoyable at all. And of course, but that's going to be tough. That is not going to
be enjoyable at all. And of course, anything that gets in the way of dietary compliance can be a
major obstacle to accomplishing your fitness goals. So that's the first problem is it's going
to be hard to eat enough calories every day to maximize muscle growth if you're eating one meal
a day. Now we have the protein intake issue. So if you want to gain muscle and strength as quickly as possible, you want to eat somewhere around one gram of protein per pound of body weight per day. Now we have the protein intake issue. So if you want to gain muscle and strength as quickly
as possible, you want to eat somewhere around one gram of protein per pound of body weight per day.
You could go as low as 0.8 grams. That's fine. But that's a lot of protein to eat in a single
meal. And even if you can do it, that is almost certainly not best for gaining muscle. There
isn't that much research on protein timing and distribution,
but the studies that we do have show that splitting it up, splitting up your daily protein
intake into three to six meals is likely superior to eating the same amount of protein in fewer
sittings. And the research is most clear here actually with one serving of protein per day,
even if it's a very large serving, one large amount of protein per day versus 3, 4, 5, 6. The 3, 4, 5, 6 is going to win over time in terms of
muscle and strength gain. And by doing the OMAD diet, of course, what that means is you are missing
out on these other opportunities to give your body some protein and boost muscle growth. And
you will almost certainly gain less muscle over time as a result of that. Another downside
of OMAD is kind of obvious. It can lead to extreme hunger, minimally just increased hunger.
For example, studies have shown that many people who limit themselves to just a couple of meals
per day, one to three meals per day, they can experience very high levels of hunger and other
side effects that just make dieting miserable.
Dizziness, nausea, anger, lethargy, constipation. And that is probably one of the reasons why many
intermittent fasting studies have higher dropout rates. So people who just quit than other human
feeding studies, which is something that many people, of course, those who are most into
intermittent fasting and promoting it, don't talk about.
You can look at the results that an intermittent fasting diet had with people who finished
the study, but you have to also look at how many people finished the study.
If 100 people started and only 15 finished, you need to take that into consideration when
you are judging the overall effectiveness of the diet, because of course, adherence and
compliance are the most important factors. So long as a diet is set up properly, so long as it takes
into account energy balance, it creates a calorie deficit, it provides enough protein, it provides
enough nutritious calories, and there are many ways to do that. But so long as a diet does that,
then really all we need is compliance. We don't need perfection.
We just need the person to be pretty good at following the diet over the long term. Another
downside of OMAD is it's probably not best for overall health for a number of reasons. One,
it's hard to get enough key nutrients. It's hard to get enough vitamins and minerals and other
things that our body needs to stay healthy when we are eating just one meal a day. And especially if we're struggling to eat enough calories and especially if we are struggling to eat enough fruits and vegetables, which is common with people who follow OMAD, probably because fruits and vegetables can be very filling for not many calories. And so if you need to eat 2000, 2500, maybe 3000 calories in one meal,
if you are going to be eating, let's say two to three servings of fruit, and I think three would
be the minimum number of servings of vegetables per day, I would like to see probably five or
six servings. But let's just say it's the minimum of two servings of fruit per day and like three
of vegetables per day. And you're going to want some leafy greens in there. That alone is pretty filling, not many calories, but it's pretty
filling. So you're only now a few hundred max, maybe 500 calories into this 2,500 calorie meal.
And then you have all of the lean protein that you're eating and that's very filling. And then
you're supposed to eat a bunch of carbs and you're supposed to get in fats. It's just not feasible for most people. And so what they do instead then is they start making
food choices based on how much they can eat in that one meal. And that usually means more
calorie dense foods that are less nutritious. Now, there are other health factors to consider,
other health downsides to consider with OMAD. For example,
research shows that eating just once a day is linked to increased blood pressure, cholesterol
levels, including bad, quote unquote, bad, the LDL cholesterol, which you do not want to get too
high because that increases the risk of heart disease. If OMAD does lead to high levels of
hunger, and it does in many people. You can only withstand that so much before
it starts to lead to binging. And that is probably going to be on higher calorie, lower nutritional
value, quote unquote, unhealthy foods. And studies show that if that happens too often, if you
alternate between long periods of fasting and binge eating that can promote disordered eating in people who
are susceptible to that problem. And that can cause a more serious and chronic problem. Eating
disorders are no joke. When they take hold, they can be very insidious and they can undermine health
and wellness in many different ways. Something else that often happens with OMAD is insufficient
protein intake. And that not only hurts body composition,
that can lead to muscle loss. If you are also restricting calories for weight loss and doing
a bunch of cardio on top of that, which again, many people are at least restricting calories
with OMAD because many people turn to it to lose weight. And so if you are trying to lose weight,
you're restricting your calories, not eating enough protein, that is going to hurt your body composition. And if you chronically
under eat protein, maybe you're not chronically restricting your calories, but you're chronically
under eating protein, then the risk of various types of disease goes up, various dysfunctions
goes up, your ability to improve your body composition to gain muscle and strength goes
down. That is one of
the biggest dietary mistakes that you can make, under eating protein. The other ones, the other
biggest ones would be not managing your energy balance properly. So chronically overeating,
for example, to the point where you are very overweight and where you stay very overweight,
and then chronically under eating nutritious foods, eating too much junk and not enough of the
good stuff. So then who should consider following the OMAD diet and why? Should anybody? Well,
I think I have made my case, at least for why I think there is no clear cut benefit of OMAD over
more traditional approaches to eating or more traditional
approaches to intermittent fasting, like for example, the 16-8 method or the 12-14
version for women. But if you are currently following a fasting diet and you want to see
how you do eating fewer meals per day, you could give OMAD a try. You're probably not going to
stick with it for the long term because it's just not a very sustainable diet. Or if you just like tinkering with different dietary
strategies and just doing your own N1 experiments so you can say, hey, I tried that and here is how
it went for me, then I could see giving it a go for a week or two. If you're very busy and if you
are very busy on certain days and you struggle to find time to
eat enough food to stop and get in your nutrition, then OMAD can be a useful tool on those days.
You may want to just load up, for example, in the morning and then go, go, go all day,
or maybe the other way around. Maybe you are go, go, go all day and then you just load up in the
evening. That would be my
personal preference. I don't like eating a lot of food early on in the day. I like to eat more of
my calories later in the day. But one little tip if you're going to do that is try not to eat your
one meal within an hour or maybe two hours of your bedtime because research shows that if you eat too
much food close to when you go to bed, it can interrupt your sleep. So try to give yourself at least, I would say, four to five hours to digest as much
of the food as you can to work through as much of that meal as you can before you go
to sleep.
And one more use case for OMAD that's worth mentioning, another instance of where it can
be helpful is let's say you eat way too much one day for whatever reason.
Who cares?
is let's say you eat way too much one day for whatever reason, who cares? You just ate a thousand, maybe 2000 more calories than you burned. And you would like to quote unquote,
undo a little bit of the damage. Well, what you can do is eat a lot less the following day.
And OMAD can be useful for that, where you are going to eat, let's say 2000 calories the
following day. And normally you would be eating 2,500 calories or 2,800 calories.
So you're going to try to give yourself a decent deficit the next day to hopefully lose
any fat that you gained from your overeating.
And you may find that easier to do in one meal, especially if, let's say, you ate a
large dinner.
That's where you ate thousands of calories, a couple thousand
calories at dinner and you wake up, you're not hungry. It's 12 p.m. You're not hungry. It's 3
p.m. You now feel like you at least have an empty stomach and you could go another couple of hours.
Well, yeah, you could do that then. You could just go, you know, I'm just going to eat a dinner.
I'm going to make sure I get in my protein. And maybe it's even fewer calories than that.
Maybe it's 1500 calories.
I wouldn't recommend going too low, but that can be an easy way to just cancel out an accidental
overeat or even a planned overeat.
Let's say it's going to be a big holiday dinner.
You really want to enjoy yourself.
You're going to eat a lot of food.
And so you plan then on not eating much the following day and maybe just eating one meal later in the day when you start to get a little bit hungry again. Caveat, though, is don't make that the rule. That should be the exception. That should be something that you do every once in a while, because if you get into the habit of doing that too often, that can also lead to disordered eating if you are susceptible to that type of issue.
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