RetroGamer87 wrote:
trollcatman wrote:
But your stomach changes size to adapt to more or less food. After a while it will probably adjust to the "new normal".
Mine doesn't. If I don't find a new source of phentermine pills I may gradually return to my natural weight.
trollcatman wrote:
It also depends on what you eat. Fiber and protein gives you the full feeling longer than carbohydrates, since carbohydrates are really easy to digest. Eating beans, peas, fish, eggs will be better for that than bread or similar things.
I should try that. But aren't fiber and carbs the same thing? They're both bready foods, right? I mean, carbs is anything that resembles bread and fiber is also in bread, I think
Fiber and carbs are sort of the same thing in that they are both based on carbon atoms. The difference is in nutrition: what we call fiber are the ones we can't really digest, so they contain no calories for us because of it. They just end up in our poop, which is a good thing because fiber gives consistency to our waste. Usually carbohydrates are listed seperately from fiber, but sometimes both are listed under carbohydrates and then differentiated between sugar and fiber. Basically anything under that heading that is not fiber are "cheap" sugars that are easy to digest but are considered empty calories. Bread is mostly sugar, even brown bread. People eat bread because it is convenient and easy to carry around, not because it is healthy. That is why most empires are based on bread historically, easy to feed the soldiers and the farmers. People from hunter-gathered societies were usually larger and healthier than "civilised" people exactly because these barbarians didn't have agriculture and had to eat fish and such. Another nasty thing of sugar is that it does not stop your hunger so you will keep eating more, that is why people can keep eating cookies. It's a bit like beer, you can keep drinking beer and still feel thirsty.
Basically, bread and pasta and cereal and everything made from flour or sugar are often considered empty calories. Vegetables are usually high in fiber and sometimes anti-oxidants, while meat and fish and eggs are high in protein. It sounds strange but pork liver is extremely high in some vitamins because the liver stores vitamins. Rye bread with liver pate is actually a fairly healthy meal.
Beans and peas contain some fiber, some carbohydrates and some protein and a bunch of vitamins and minerals. Carrots are very low in calories but contain some fiber and vitamins. Best to vary what you eat so you get a wide variety of nutrients.