army1987 comments on How I Lost 100 Pounds Using TDT - Less Wrong

70 Post author: Zvi 14 March 2011 03:50PM

You are viewing a comment permalink. View the original post to see all comments and the full post content.

Comments (242)

You are viewing a single comment's thread. Show more comments above.

Comment author: Eliezer_Yudkowsky 17 March 2011 09:17:35PM 20 points [-]

Bleah. Still not used to this high status thing.

But seriously, if you are not metabolically privileged, what happens if you try this is that your body shuts down and goes into starvation mode instead of losing weight. Your fat cells do not release fat under any circumstances, though they're happy to hoover up blood sugar so you always feel tired. We're not talking "feeling hungry", we're talking that you stop feeling hungry and lie down, feeling very very cold and having a hard time moving. Literal starvation, instead of your fat cells releasing fat. I've never tried starving myself that much (I worry that it will cause my brain to cannibalize irreplaceable neurons or something, the way the rest of the body cannibalizes muscle) but I've just recently watched that happen to someone else who tried to lose weight by not eating and wasn't metabolically privileged enough to get away with it.

A calorie is not a calorie. The thermodynamic theory of metabolism is a fucking lie. And it seriously does wear away on your nerves like sandpaper, after a while, to be blamed for it, when the exact same diet can make one person thin and cause the other to blow up like a balloon...

Eh, just read "Beware of Other-Optimizing."

Comment author: [deleted] 11 June 2012 08:48:11PM 0 points [-]

your body shuts down and goes into starvation mode instead of losing weight

How long did you endure that? I kind of get the same when I start a weight-loss diet, but it usually only lasts about three days for me (provided I don't do anything drastic such as reducing my calorie intake by more than 25%).

cannibalize irreplaceable neurons

I don't think that's likely to happen. Neuroplasticity has been widely demonstrated even in adults, hasn't it?