Metabolic Intro Series - Part 3

What IS Energy?

Many people still think that food, or “calories”, equals “energy”.

In this video I do my best to show that calories don’t necessarily equal “energy", whilst also explaining in clear terms what energy actually is, why it matters so much, and how some things get in the way.

Resources - Beginners

 

Reading

It All Comes Down to Energy - Jay Feldman writing about energy - just in case you didn’t read this article from the last video!
ReThinking Optimal Health - Great Article by Allison, a fitness and nutrition coach, talking about optimal health goals and the interrelation with energy.
Eating for a Fast Metabolism - Article by Kristy Alford on the importance of a fast metabolic rate and packed full of further blog posts and articles.
How to Heal your Metabolism - Nutritionist Kate Deering writing about cellular energy and how that energy is affected by different foods and diet.

Listening/Watching

Energy is EVERYTHING - The video compliment for Jay Feldman’s energy article explaining exactly why energy matters so much.
ATP & Respiration - A great video by CrashCourse explaining what cellular respiration is and how glucose gets converted into energy!
Sugar, The Delicious Truth - MSc Keith Littlewood talking about cellular physiology and the importance of sugar and carbs in the diet.
The Reason your 1200 Calorie Diet is Making you Fat - Kitty Bloomfield and Kate Deering talk about restrictive diets, fat loss, and sugar

 

FAQ’s

  • Well yes...it is correct that, per gram of fat or carbohydrate, fats are able to yield ultimately more ATP than carbohydrates can. However, the amount of energy that comes out in the end is not necessarily the determinant of efficiency, and doesn't even begin to take in the other consequences on the metabolism that are involved.

    Carbohydrates are ultimately far more efficient for creating energy than fats are and we can create energy using carbohydrates far faster than we can using fats, which is why high intensity exercise becomes very tough on a low carb regime.

    The other things to take into account here are the effects of one or the other on the rest of our biology - Fats, especially when they of the polyunsaturated variety, will over time reduce our ability to use carbohydrates for energy. The use of fat for energy will tend to raise cortisol and other stress hormones in order to maintain sufficient sugar for brain function, and of course fats do not stimulate thyroid function in the same way that carbohydrates do, as well as producing far less carbon dioxide which is needed to use oxygen.

  • I did A LOT of low carbing, fasting, and calorie restriction for many years, and I totally resonate with you. My understanding is that, at least at first, low carb diets can leave you feeling awake, alive, and extremely productive, especially as they tend to lower gut bacteria and thus levels of our main endogenous inflammatory mediator, endotoxin.

    However, over time I slowly began to get cold, especially my hands and feet, my sex drive slowly disspeared, and I got increasingly edgy, anxious, and depressed whilst my insomnia just got worse. This is because of (mainly) cortisol and adrenaline, which in the short term can leave you feeling alive and awesome, but long term will be slowly breaking you down and causing hypothyroidism.

  • This is a hard one - and I completely resonate with the misunderstandings propagated around topics such as diabetes and metabolic syndrome. M understanding is that diabetes is not caused by sugar, but rather stress, polyunsaturated fats, metabolic disruptors in the environment, and low levels of essential nutrients.

    Once stress has caused enough damage to the cells, they become unable to uptake and properly use glucose which, combined with a poorly functioning liver, thyroid, and gut, means that glucose becomes a challenge to our system. The mainstream way of dealing with this is to just say "sugar did it", and find means of controlling sugar from that point on, whereas the metabolic approach would be to look at your current environment, search for foods that actually support, rather than damage, the mitochondria, and use potentially large doses of some supplements and vitamins including thiamine, biotin, niacinamide, thyroid, and others as a means of regenerating and restoring the cells ability to use and process glucose again.

    Some doctors worth checking out are people like Dr. Walter Kempner, who in the 1930's was actually curing people of diabetes by putting them on very low fat diets and feeding them nothing but white sugar, white rice, and fruit juice....that shouldn't have been possible under the current mainstream viewpoint.

Resources - Science Minded

 

Reading

Cellular Respiration and Degeneration - Excellent article referencing Dr. Ray Peat’s work on cellular respiration and talking about the stress systems.
Energy, Structure, and Carbon Dioxide - Article by Dr. Ray Peat on just how essential cellular energy is to maintaining our health.
Sugar Issues - Ray Peat writing about the therapeutic use of sugar in medicine and why it is now such a misunderstood energy source.
Why you Don’t Want to be a Fat Burner - Superb article by Kyle Mamounis, Phd, discussing the dangers of fat metabolism and why glucose oxidation is preferred.

Listening/Watching

Energy and Structure - Danny Roddy talking about the importance of oxidative vs metabolism and why energy matters so much for maintaining structure.
Energy and Metabolism - Dr. Ray Peat talking about details involved in cellular respiration and what goes wrong when we lose the ability to process sugar
Causes and Non-Causes of Insulin Resistance - A presentation by Kyle Mamounis, Phd, discussing why sugar might not be the cause of diabetes.
Thyroid, CO2, Redox Balance - Danny Roddy and Georgi Dinkov covering basic metabolic theory and focusing on thyroid and carbon dioxide.

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Part 2 -Two Theories

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Part 4 - What IS Stress?