As we discussed in the last post, I want you to suspend all that you know about carbohydrates, proteins, and fat. I want you to clear notions of glycemic index and eating for blood type.  I’m asking you to not have conclusions about our paleolithic ancestors. No, let’s talk about the very basics of energy in our body, but check the Chakras at the door.

Today we’ll take a rather geeky-side step. We are going to talk about energy, oxidation, and heat (not temperature).  These are all things that we can see, measure, and repeat. Let’s reserve comments to questions and clarifications – I don’t want a similar scheme from someone else.  I am confident that what I am saying is true – to the best of our current understanding.

Quick background.  We are “homeotherms” in that our body temperature stays constant. This temperature (around 37C +/-) is the net result of waste metabolic heat. We need to stay in an environment cooler than our body for the most part, so that the waste heat can leave – else we just burn up. Cars need radiators.  We are the same. Heat (not temperature) always flows from hot to cold.  At the atomic level, that’s just lots of atoms bouncing together – just like rubbing your hands together and getting warm.

Heat (not temperature) is then the net energy in that object. Hot coffee has MORE heat than your tongue. It transfers (rapidly) when you sip it. That is what causes the discomfort. That is a very visceral picture of heat, but in thermodynamics we talk about heat in a far more general way. Most of the discussion has absolutely NOTHING to do with temperature and in fact, temperature is something that goes up and down in many cases to preserve the balance of energy when heat is transferred.

Riding The Wave

all metabolism processes release heat - you can consume protein carbohydrates or fat.At the top of a roller coaster, you have a LOT of potential energy just before you fall. At the bottom of the hill you have lots of kinetic energy (energy of motion). Stand on that track and splat, you are mowed over my the massive car. Chemical reactions release and absorb energy in much the same way.  Hold some explosive in your hand, you have potential energy, light the fuse and bang, release of all that stored energy at one time.

Get the picture?

The process of extracting energy from carbohydrates, proteins, and fats is metabolic oxidation.  We add oxygen to the “fuel” and “burn it” to release energy.  This is a extremely complex process, with lots of steps, but we can attack the problem from the basic energy in, energy out approach.

Let’s say you eat some glucose…or even table sugar, sucrose.  In both cases those two molecules have Carbon (C), Oxygen (O) and Hydrogen (H).  These individual atoms are all linked together with chemical bonds. Breaking these bonds requires energy (pulling the roller coaster up the hill) and then releases energy (going down the hill).

Some of the energy does work – like move a muscle, beat the heart or fire a neuron in the brain, but MOST of the energy (80%) is just waste heat energy (not temperature) that gets transferred to surrounding tissue and the tissue then increases in temperature.

What we will learn on specific posts about carbohydrates, protein, and fats is that each of them is processed a little differently by the body, but all can be used for that fundamental energy we need to live (pulling the roller coaster up the hill).

Additionally, we’ll discuss that proteins have a dual use – they can not only be burned like fuel, but they provide a store house of amino acids that are the basic building blocks of our tissue, hormones, and hair.  In that sense when you EAT protein, it is not USED by the body; rather it is broken down into amino acids and the body picks out the ones it needs to make whatever is on the “to-do” list – be it eye tissue, insulin, or keratin (hair & nails). The rest of the unused amino acids get tossed into the burn pile. We don’t store them.  When we dig into proteins, you’ll see that this word is so misunderstood, that it’s caused huge problems. We’ll find why our body doesn’t actually “burn” protein in much the same way as our body can’t burn “starch.”

On the other side of the balance, fats are places our bodies (and plants) can store energy.  We’ll talk about one other form of stored energy, glycogen, in the post on carbohydrates, but just remember that adipose (fat) tissue is a place to dump excess, non waste heat energy until you need it later (gas in the trunk).

So all of these hand-waving sentences: I need more protein to build muscles, high glycemic carbs are my problem, or it’s the good fat, are just distractions at this very basic level. If you were not fat, or competing in an intense triathlon, then really, any of these three fuel sources would do just fine for energy. All of them are acceptable for fuel. Some have more heat energy stored within and others have less.  Some can cause secondary hormonal issues, etc…but your body has evolved to process all three of these. Alcohol is another fuel we can throw in the mix – it’s digestible, but the by-products are toxic; it’s certainly energy that can be processed.

Sweet Mistakes

Ultimately, it is glucose – a simple sugar (carbohydrate) that fuels your brain and keeps the cells nourished. We monitor “blood sugar” and for most of us it stays in a pretty tight range.  Proteins and fat can be inserted into the process with some fancy tricks, but all the heat energy they contain is eventually assimilated to some part the overall system to process glucose.

What do you need to know from this to move on? Simple. These three macronutrients: carbohydrate, protein, and fat are all useful sources of energy. If you are about to run a race and are 6% body fat, you might want to stock up on energy. If you are worried about the scales and the only exercise you get is looking for the remote control, you probably have plenty.

Einstein said, “We can’t solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.”

Weight loss, ALL WEIGHT LOSS, is then the process of going on a naturally “high fat” diet and consuming your body fat to fuel the roller coaster of life.  For each and every heart beat, mouse click, or push up, you need some energy and you’ll want to get it out of your own reserves, not help plants and animals lose weight by eating theirs. If you only drink water, you’ll have no choice but lose body fat.

The problem with the starvation approach is that your body also has to constantly replace proteins (not necessarily your meat, but more hormones, cells, etc..) and in the next post we’ll look closer at how that complicates things and makes severe starvation, not the most appropriate form of weight loss.buy big water slides

 

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Thanks!
Ray

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43 Responses to Burn, Baby, BURN

  1. Lara Stephens says:

    Can’t wait for the next post!!

  2. Jamie vickery says:

    Great post. I will reserve my questions regarding the best way to diet for someone with excess fat like me to lose weight. I believe strongly in low carb/slow carb approach, but I’m thinking the benefits have more to do with speed of digesting, keeping me full and minimizing calorie intake more than anything else. Can’t wait for the next post!

    • admin says:

      diets aren’t religion. don’t believe any of them. just learn the basics and I bet the answer will be immediate and obvious. It’s going to be a while before we get to anything that resembles a diet. I would like to stop the overall nonsense that is resulting in fat kids and dead relatives.

      That takes a little reprogramming and for me, it took admitting where I had inconsistencies and needed to rethink all of what I believed.

      but here is a hint: it is NOT about carbs, protein or fat. If you are thinking about that, there is no way to recognize the enemy.

      it’s about gas.

      Ray

  3. Mark Carroll says:

    Sorry about the comment on the last post that led to a massive internet showdown. I am 100% onboard with the roller coaster analogy, especially when it comes to the concept of something that is the kickstart… the thing that makes you go over the edge and turn all that potential energy into motion.

    • admin says:

      Sorry? no way! I love discussion. I think it is all helpful. I just want to get everyone focused on the basics and off of all of the fancy words that are causing the confusion.

      What we are doing is trying to grasp EXACTLY what a carbohydrate, protein and fat are and how they are processed for energy. Once you put these into proper context, you’ll be able to better understand why the weight is gained.

      I need X protein, avoid high glycemic food and trying to get my omega-3s are all statements designed to market and sell ideas, not teach people how their body works.

      Einstein said, ” “We can’t solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.”

      hmmm…let me put that in the post.

      Ray

      • Mark Carroll says:

        I am very interested to see where your research led you. It seems so simple from a math perspective that outputs need to exceed inputs, but the variables are not quite as simple. I agree that there is too much hype out there, and I never trust anyone selling snake oil. Having said that, if something can add to a variable, I am all for trying it.

  4. John Wenger says:

    Very excited about this whole series, Ray. I’ve read all your posts so far, and I’ve always found them clear and informative.

    • admin says:

      Thanks John…

      This is a side step, but after the last year of traveling around the country, I feel it is so necessary. Others tell me people just don’t care about “learning things;” give them a checklist and formula. The problem is this approach just doesn’t work. There is not ONE answer. I am not invoking the “we are all different” straw man argument either. What I mean is that there are many problems that are compounded. Most of us that end up in the obese category (at least me) had other issues that eventually caused us to take action.

      Still others choose to die and we celebrate.

      It’s sad to me.

  5. Rachel Osby says:

    Love the post. Looking forward to more!!

  6. Ben Smith says:

    Still following here too! Looking forward to the next post.

  7. Victor Moreno says:

    Can’t wait for the next post, for some reason it’s not easy to find good info on protein metabolism. BTW, the image of “fueling our mouse clicks” was hilarious to me.

    • admin says:

      victor, sometimes that is ALL the energy I expend…as much as I hate to admit it.

      Yes, I’ve spent a lot of time and it seems that this is a huge whole; partly because it is complex and partly because it makes our neat little diet schemes fall apart.

      Ray…

  8. Christopher Erckert says:

    Stoked for the next post

  9. Ross says:

    Very interesting. It’s all about how to create that negative caloric balance.

    BTW, there are some very knowledgable intermittent-fasting advocates out there who contend that the idea that we have to eat six meals a day or we’ll go into a catabolic state is just plain wrong and that this theory may just be marketing baloney put out by folks trying to sell protein powders and other supplements.

    • admin says:

      yes…but let’s not think about that. Really read this and think about the basics. Don’t try to explain or judge the other stuff you know or hear. What I want to do is give everyone a benchmark, a ruler that we can use to have a meaningful dialog and discussion.

      At this point, just know that we need energy to live. That energy is “heat” (not temperature) that is stored in the three macronutrients. We release it through the digestion process and most is wasted.

      We will pick apart carbs, protein and fat next….

      Ray

      • Mark Carroll says:

        Can’t wait to see the science… I mean, from what it sounds like here, you are breaking this down to the lowest possible intake to keep the body functioning. That would bring into question every psuedoscientific study. Is the calorie still the ruler, or is there another measurement that we can judge food by before it gets put in the body?

  10. Ross says:

    I like the analogy of excess body fat to debt. If you are in debt, you need to start living within your means by some combination of spending less money (eating less) and earning more money (burning more calories).

    If you’re fat, you haven’t, on balance, lived within your caloric means up to this moment in time in your life.

    • Mark Carroll says:

      Ross, great analogy… now the question is… how far can you reduce your spending (debt accrual) on a daily basis without your body going into foreclosure.

      • admin says:

        ok you two love birds…we don’t even know what MONEY is yet, so let’s not figure out a neat system to spend it . I promise, if you just inch along with me here, we will get to caloric deficit and I will happily “throw in my two-cents worth” (couldn’t help myself).

        Ray

      • Mark Carroll says:

        June 2nd, I started with more debt than the US Treasury. Thanks to a little Gazelle like intensity, I am out of Chapter 11, yet currently re-organizing. In real terms, I went from 321 to 262. I am trying to figure out what 262 to 220 looks like, and your blog posts are going a little too slow 🙂

      • admin says:

        Hey now! I got to give everyone SOMETHING to look forward too.

        Congratulations! I saw the 220 to 190 several times before hitting the 230. Size 40 jeans were my line in the sand. Opted for the 38s with stretch 😉

        Ray

    • admin says:

      …if only bank accounts were this easy to stuff. I need a business muse that runs on pizza.

      Ray

  11. Christy Seguin says:

    This is GREAT! I’m following along every word, & can’t wait to see what you have deciphered in your studies. My life is ruled by carbs, protein, & fat grams, & a deep fear of getting one even slightly wrong. I hope this will break the grip of that iron fist. Thank you so much for all you are doing—you are truly going to make a big difference in people’s lives!

  12. Neil Vorley says:

    Very interesting couple of posts. Looking forward to next installment!

  13. rachel burgess says:

    great blog!! just tuned in from all the way over in New Zealand.
    Looking forward to next post…
    oh, and ice baths…? wow that’s extreme

    • admin says:

      Thanks Rachel!

      I agree on ice baths, but really I’ve learned a few things that make a big difference. Just can’t get my mind off of this carb, protein, fat paradox.

      I’ll be back to the chill soon.

      Ray.

  14. Seth Featherston says:

    Sounds like it comes down to calories in calories out all the time. The trick is to figure out a way to eat to keep from going over your calorie budget. I have been waiting forever for another post, and can’t wait for the next one. Right now I am trying to figure out a way to get access to a cool pool. 🙂

    • admin says:

      Yes and no. Right now, most would be challenged to even clearly articulate what calories in and out are. We know about the 80% waste heat calories that are not really considered, but even worse is our total misunderstanding of the basic three fuel sources.

      More soon

      Ray

      • Mark Carroll says:

        Well quit answering our comments already and write!!!

      • Seth Featherston says:

        Do you blame us for not knowing? 🙂 with all the misinformation thrown out there, it’s hard enough to figure out the right direction to go in. For me , it felt like throwing spaghetti at the wall and see what sticks. So far cold showers in the morning, strength training in the evening, with crossfit on the side and intermittent fasting is the way i’ve been going for awhile. I pick and choose protocols from what i learn,and i am single digit fat %, but I put in a lot of work too, but I enjoy the challenge.

  15. Kevin Flanagan says:

    Hi Ray

    I’m really impressed by your back to fundamentals approach. Back further than fitness, diet or even nutritional science. Back to hard science.There are so many terms, rules & laws thrown around; the things that “everyobody knows”, the “common sense”… 🙂

    I’ve always thought it was funny when people quoted laws of thermodynamics while missing the point that the human body is NOT a closed system. (Or if there is really any such thing)

    Your series of articles will also no doubt demolish many ‘truths’ that I still cling dearly to. “Diets are religion” – amen to that!!!

    Also “ALL WEIGHT LOSS, is then the process of going on a naturally “high fat” diet” – how simple, how true, how obvious only now that you have pointed it out.

    Following you from Ireland, can’t wait for the next article.

    Thank you for sharing this with us.

    • admin says:

      Thanks Kevin…

      I was nervous that this was going to go into too much detail, but my email and the comments have been excellent! Please spread the word a bit and let people know, there’s no sales fest going on with registration. I think that I will keep it as is for now, but am open to allowing some content for the unregistered. For now, I am trying to make it work through donations and I have a few things coming up to that will create a good opportunity to turn this into a full time gig. I haven’t even scratched the surface of what I know I am capable of doing and I LOVE to teach.

      What has been truly astonishing is that the last three years I was able to personally live through all of this. It’s fortuitous that my weird experiments have such a profound application to this other part of nutrion that has been wandering around for more than 4 decades. I want to unravel it all and put it out there for people to choose. There are ways to lose weight FAST – some healthy, some unhealthy – everyone can decide what they want to do. As well, there is all of the chronic disease that we are battling. That too can be address with nutrition and it all ends up coming back to these very basic principles. Imagine that – we eat as we evolved to eat and we stay healthy.

      Will keep it coming… I wish I could afford to blog every day!!!

      Ray

  16. Karianne Burns says:

    Hey can’t wait for the next installment. What’s that picture you used at the start of the article and how does it relate? Just wondering if you were trying to tie in such a work of art into your scientific explanation of metabolism.

    • admin says:

      Karianne

      you get BONUS points (I’ll find something to give you – don’t forget to remind me) for such a GREAT question. The painting is not a random choice. It’s called Flaming June, so obviously the title fits. It happened to be one of my closest friend’s favorite painting. It get’s better. It was painted by Lord Frederic Leighton, in 1895 – about the same time that Wilbur Atwater was doing his thermodynamic experiments to come up with the Atwater factors – which we use (perhaps unwisely) to this very day.

      Further there is an Oleander Branch (see full version here), which it is toxic and represents the delicate link between sleep and death. I thought that was really applicable, because what we choose to eat every day is absolutely the same decision.

      Thanks for asking!

      Ray

  17. m d says:

    listening to you talk is just like listening to myself. the ammount of times i have said and told people that no matter what “diet” you are currently on your body is using stored body fat to fuel what ever your deficit may be. hence YOUR BODY IS USING A HIGH FAT PERCENTAGE FOR FUEL.

    • admin says:

      Oh no! You’re weird like me too? Lol.

      Can’t out exercise your mouth. Can’t lose weight on a “low fat” diet. The trick is to use as much of yours as possible, right? Most effective exercise is to isometrically clench ones teeth in the presence of fattening food!

      Thanks

      Ray.

  18. m d says:

    haha yeah i sure am, the constant raving annoys people hehe. I am currently working on a big project and would love your involvement if your interested, it will take a few years for me to finish but it has a very promising ending 😉 basically its right up your alley.
    You can email me if you like mate
    markus_d@live.com
    cheers and thanks for the reply

  19. Mark Carroll says:

    I just got a groupon offer for 75% off on something called “cryolipolysis”. Have you heard of this before? Obviously, its a scam, but interesting that a high end salon is promoting freeze therapy! You were ahead of your time!

  20. […] Burn, Baby, BURN On September 29, 2011, in Blog, by admin […]

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