I'm agreeing with Nancy here. I taught a Psych of Eating class and I 
have a sister who is an exercise fanatic (she is currently training 
with the guy who trained the current Mr. Olympia). Yes, you do get 
hungry after exercising - in fact, my sister is being encouraged to eat 
more. However, it is WHAT you eat afterwards that is important - 
protein (rather than those french fries or muffins mentioned!). 

The other problem is the focus on weight loss (I believe that Stephen 
Black talked about the BMI issue earlier this summer). People don't 
lose weight with exercise - but you can see a change in inches lost and 
body fat.

And that bit about self control!!! What nonsense!! Eating and 
exercising are like any other habit - you need time to form it properly 
(and it may take months). Want better self control at home - number 1 
solution is don't buy the food that isn't good for you and you won't be 
tempted. 

There are also a number of research articles out there that show that 
people just don't realize the calorie count in foods. For example, 
straight black coffee has 0 calories. Starbucks Frappuchino? 240 
calories - and that's the small (tall) - no whip cream. Diet portions 
on food products are often smaller  or swap sugars for fats - but 
people then eat more of the diet food - so does that mean we should get 
rid of diet food?

[email protected] wrote:


>Hi,
>
>I was wondering if any fitness enthusiast or health psych tipsters 
might have had the same reaction to the new Time Magazine cover story 
that I did (I was motivated to write a letter, which is unlikely to be 
published but I thought I'd give it a go).? I was irritated by it for 
two reasons:
>
>1) Scientific inaccuracy - the author mentions "converting fat into 
muscle". Isn't this just plain wrong? You can shrink your fat cells and 
build up your muscle cells but you can't "convert fat into muscle". The 
author (J. Cloud) doesn't seem to have any credentials (but he does 
selectively quote experts on weight and fitness.) This is an easy one 
and I wonder how he missed it.
>
>2) A general tone of "why bother?" - Yes, the author mentions several 
times that exercise is crucial for good health BUT intersperses a lot 
of discouraging material - "if you exercise hard you'll just overeat to 
make it up later" OR "you'll just be lazier later." No, you don't have 
to do either of those things. It's like an excuse making festival...
>
>I think the article is a great example of oversimplifying complex 
behaviors and how that can be misleading or destructive. Any credible 
fitness program includes encouragement to exercise and modify 
nutrition. I think this author is equating "exercise won't help you" 
with lack of discipline which of course IS a problem. I can see this 
article being used by countless people as one more excuse not to try to 
change at all.
>
>Reactions? I am interested to see if I am off the mark here.
>
>Nancy Melucci
>Long Beach City College 
>Long Beach CA
>
>---
>To make changes to your subscription contact:
>
>Bill Southerly ([email protected])

----------------------------------
Deb

Dr. Deborah S. Briihl
Dept. of Psychology and Counseling
Valdosta State University
229-333-5994
[email protected]

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