The truth about macro patterns

There are all kinds of ideas and theories about how you should eat to lose weight. Diets ranging from Weight Watchers, Whole Food Diet, Paleo Diet, and everything in between have their own guidelines for how you should eat to lose those unwanted pounds.

One of the latest ideas on the market today is a concept called ‘macro-patterns’.

The macropattern is simply the idea of ​​combining macronutrients in each of your meals. This theory has only three food possibilities to help you lose weight.

The first pair of macronutrients that this theory suggests eating are protein and carbohydrates. Protein is the building block for nearly every function in your body, and you can never have enough of it. It helps you build muscle and speeds up your metabolism. Carbohydrates, on the other hand, can make or break your diet. If you eat too many, you could start storing them as fat. If you eat too few of them, you could send your body into starvation mode where you store everything as fat. This combination is recommended because your body can break down this pair properly.

The next suggested macronutrient pair is the combination of protein and fat. Again, your body can break down each one properly, but when it comes to the last pair of macronutrients possible in this theory, it’s thought that you’ll start storing fat.

This macronutrient pattern of combining fats and carbohydrates is thought to store one of them as fat, since your body can’t break them down simultaneously.

That is false, your body can use every fuel source for energy, one is more efficient than the other.

Carbohydrates are the only food group that start breaking down as soon as they hit your mouth. Fats, on the other hand, take twice as long to break down.

Where this idea of ​​combining carbs and fat as a means of gaining weight comes into play depends on the type of fat and carbs you eat.

You won’t get fat eating fruits and nuts for a snack, however if you eat pasta and trans fats you will certainly gain weight.

In short, the macronutrient pattern is just one viable theory when it comes to combining processed and non-whole foods. It is incredibly difficult to eat meat, nuts, fruits and vegetables until obesity, since those were foods that our bodies were meant to eat.

If you enjoyed this article, check out Eating To Lose for more free information on diet, nutrition, fitness, and how your lifestyle affects achieving your fitness goals. There is also a plan available to help you start reaching those goals.

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