Being Obese is Healthy- BULLSH*T!

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  • @jfknightom
    @jfknightom Жыл бұрын

    This moderate attitude and explanation is true body positivity.

  • @RenaissancePeriodization

    @RenaissancePeriodization

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much. I really am a huge fan of body positivity grounded in realism. Like, if you want your body to change for good reasons, change away. Hate doesn't have to be a part of that process. - Dr. Mike

  • @danieltemelkovski9828

    @danieltemelkovski9828

    Жыл бұрын

    @@RenaissancePeriodization There's no beauty in obesity. It deserves to be hated and so do the people who promote it. People can tell fatties "you're beautiful just the way you are," but they're lying. The test is: would they change places with the fatty? Of course they wouldn't, because they know there's nothing good about it.

  • @jgajoe

    @jgajoe

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed! Smartest way to go about it! Measure your real current TDEE, then just eat 100-200cals less and burn about 100-200cals via excersize. Stick to this for 1-2 years while smashing the weight lifting constantly! Throw in some random 18-36 hour fasts 1-3 times a months. Keep protein at 1.2-1.5gm per kg of lean weight. That's it! Do this consistently for 1-2 years and see the body transform!

  • @datoolz0

    @datoolz0

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jgajoe If you're trying to lose weight weighlifting can't help. Running is the only effective weight loss method. Weights cannot help. Eating vegetables, on the other hand, does.

  • @loganwolv3393

    @loganwolv3393

    Жыл бұрын

    @@datoolz0 It still helps actually, with cardio you burn way more calories yes, but with weight lifting you're building muscle and more muscle = more BMR so long term it really helps.

  • @sagaofkatie
    @sagaofkatie Жыл бұрын

    It's so crazy to me when people try to convince us that obese is healthy. When I was obese I couldn't walk around comfortably, stairs were a nightmare, and even basic movements were a struggle/pain. Nothing physically or mentally healthy about it for me and I'm sure it would've led to an early grave if I didn't lose the weight. Thanks for another great video Dr Mike!

  • @RenaissancePeriodization

    @RenaissancePeriodization

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah man, back in my natty days I was 270lbs at one point, probably 30% body fat, and let me tell you... it was terrible! - Dr. Mike

  • @paulwhite9242

    @paulwhite9242

    Жыл бұрын

    yeeep. Been there, done that. Lost 200ish in the early 2010s, gained 100 of it back during lockdown, working on getting that back off (going more slowly this time admittedly, about 22 lbs in 2.5 months). You definitely feel it! and my back and knees and ankles fucking hate it. 300 was better than 400 by far but neither's fun.

  • @BioLogicalNerd

    @BioLogicalNerd

    Жыл бұрын

    It's likely in response to the bullying that has been going on and as of recent there's been an effort to address it via... not so healthy means i.e. "fat acceptance" rather than dealing with the bullying itself.

  • @ac2395

    @ac2395

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BioLogicalNerd I wouldn’t blame it all on bullying. This is mostly political. It’s the idea of anything is anything if you “FEEL” it so. It explains the trans movement, fat acceptance, alternative lifestyle push, etc. I predicted them eventually saying lifting/gym = white supremacy. An alt right pipeline to fascism. It’s not like they back up their claims with science. It’s always a political movement. You read and listen to enough of what they have to say and the words white supremacy is eventually gonna come up.

  • @seemamenon9897

    @seemamenon9897

    Жыл бұрын

    absolutely agree. I am obese & its tough

  • @1brunner699
    @1brunner699 Жыл бұрын

    Eighteen years ago one of my significantly overweight pharmacist friends (24 years old at the time) was having a conversation with friends about poor diet and obesity and his opinion was he didn’t see a problem with being overweight and even used himself as an example with how healthy he was and how his blood work was great. I asked him if he missed that day in endocrine where we learned that you eventually burn out your pancreas and insulin sensitivity? 15 years later he had a myriad health issues, diabetes, and got gastric bypass.

  • @Pile_of_carbon

    @Pile_of_carbon

    Жыл бұрын

    This! The body can take some serious beating and still work great... for a while, until it doesn't anymore.

  • @RenaissancePeriodization

    @RenaissancePeriodization

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh man that sucks! - Dr. Mike

  • @shawnsansom6450

    @shawnsansom6450

    Жыл бұрын

    Good thing he got his gastric bypass. Maybe a little later than he should have, if only we would stop stigmatizing this as an appropriate treatment.

  • @ArkBlanc

    @ArkBlanc

    10 ай бұрын

    It's straight up insane that even people in health and medicine jobs can have the opinion that "obese can be/is healthy". They should know better.

  • @nikitaw1982

    @nikitaw1982

    10 ай бұрын

    Vac mandates culled common sense. Mass compliance by doctors when saw everyday in their offices consequences along with reports from colleagues I lost all respect. Doctors aren’t a special breed, just as cowardly and selfish as the rest.

  • @RoeeNegbyDaHot
    @RoeeNegbyDaHot Жыл бұрын

    I love how you approach the issue with perfect clarity while still staying sensitive, informative, professional and funny. It's possible to promote health without bullying and shaming.

  • @sebastiansullivan4770

    @sebastiansullivan4770

    Жыл бұрын

    great comment

  • @andrewlalis

    @andrewlalis

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree. We won't get anywhere by shaming people. Positive reinforcement is much more effective to promoting healthy habits.

  • @pominiq

    @pominiq

    Жыл бұрын

    @@andrewlalis effective and empathetic 💪

  • @RenaissancePeriodization

    @RenaissancePeriodization

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much! Shaming is something you stop doing in like 7th grade, and in 8th grade you feel bad about having done it. When adults consistently do it, it's like.... hold on, why? - Dr. Mike

  • @Masterdesstruct

    @Masterdesstruct

    Жыл бұрын

    At the end of the day, its your life, not mines. But its extremely harmful to say being obese is "healthy"

  • @andrewc6863
    @andrewc6863 Жыл бұрын

    When I was 22 I weighed 420lbs. The amount of food I was consuming started making me feel sick. So I eliminated the food that I suspected was making me feel sick inadvertently putting myself in a caloric deficit. I lost 60lbs without even realizing I did it. Family and friends started commenting on how much healthier I looked and I hopped on a scale to confirm. The realization of how truly easy it was to lose weight without realizing it made me want to lose more. In two years with some beginner level weight lifting and cardio exercises a few days a week I got down to 180lbs. Last time I weighed 180 was in the eighth grade. Now at 29 I've leveled up my skills in weight lifting and I'm easily maintaining a 215lbs bodyweight. I've learned so much in my journey about my own health and fitness and the importance of maintaining that, that all this talk about being overweight and healthy to me just sounds like lame cop outs for people who are too lazy to make positive changes in their life. But to each their own...

  • @swiper1131

    @swiper1131

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome story. Mine is similar. I weighed ~510lbs when I graduated high school and legit lost over 100 lbs without changing much of anything except I got a job where I was walking around a lot lol I got down to 235 -> got married and got all the way back up to 390. I've since gotten back down to around 245 and hang in the 245-270 range depending on bulk/cut,e tc.

  • @RenaissancePeriodization

    @RenaissancePeriodization

    Жыл бұрын

    Holy crap, three cheers!!! Amazing! - Dr. Mike

  • @dflctr

    @dflctr

    Жыл бұрын

    420 you say?

  • @andrewc6863

    @andrewc6863

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dflctr yeah I chuckle a little every time I tell the story too haha

  • @farhanhussain_

    @farhanhussain_

    Жыл бұрын

    Congrats👍👍

  • @jamesk4452
    @jamesk4452 Жыл бұрын

    You see lots of "healthy" obese 20-30 year olds, you do not see alot of obese 70-80 year olds (in general)

  • @kevin_6217

    @kevin_6217

    Жыл бұрын

    🪦🪦🪦

  • @juliusseizure324

    @juliusseizure324

    Жыл бұрын

    Because they’re not gonna live that long?

  • @garymarch719

    @garymarch719

    Жыл бұрын

    Weight is weight whether it's BF or muscle, the heart has to pump blood to this tissue making it work 2, 3, 4X harder depending on how much weight you are carrying!

  • @huntrj3116

    @huntrj3116

    Жыл бұрын

    The people who promote “health at every size” also tend to be pretty young. I imagine you don’t see older obese people promoting it because the health complications have caught up to them and realize that statement can’t be true

  • @Mellow4202

    @Mellow4202

    Жыл бұрын

    @@juliusseizure324 pretty much I think that's what he was saying, I mean there may be some obese individuals that make it to their 70s but I've honestly never seen somebody in their '80s that was morbidly obese or even just obese. Maybe overweight but definitely not obese. It also decreases your quality of life, I know 85-year-olds who still go on jogs and do yard work and I know 65-year-olds who can barely walk and need a cane or a walker. Imagine being like 65 and you can barely get up off the toilet or even wipe your own ass. Sounds like a crappy quality of life and it happens all the time.

  • @brianmiljevich826
    @brianmiljevich826 Жыл бұрын

    I was 525 pounds in 2017, today I am about 350 pounds and can tell you that I feel MUCH better. I still have another hundred-ish to lose, I can't wait to see what 250 feels like.

  • @zacharytipton1801

    @zacharytipton1801

    Жыл бұрын

    Dude that’s killer, way to go!

  • @evernew23

    @evernew23

    Жыл бұрын

    How tall are you?

  • @brianmiljevich826

    @brianmiljevich826

    Жыл бұрын

    @@evernew23 6’ 4”

  • @bcrnl9603

    @bcrnl9603

    Жыл бұрын

    Congrats!

  • @OriginalOrigins

    @OriginalOrigins

    Жыл бұрын

    my god man! keep it up

  • @andreap3669
    @andreap36699 ай бұрын

    I was obese and "healthy" for 25 years. At 47 and 200# I felt like shit, got winded going up and down stairs, had sore joints, was tired all the time yet couldn't get good sleep. I decided I didn't 2ant to be 50 and fat and recognizing it was only going to get worse, I set about getting fit and ACTUALLY healthy. I lost 75# and competed in women's physique division after 4 years of dieting and training, at the age of 50. Life got me by the balls immediately afterward; it took 6 years to gain it back. ( including during Covid) And at 57 my bloodwork was not so great, and I decided to stop fucking around and get back to it. Down about #50 with about 10-15# of fat to go. Bloodwork and overall energy is now excellent. My goal is to never be fat again. Period. Being obese sucks and anyone who says otherwise is kidding themselves!

  • @notkyle6969
    @notkyle6969 Жыл бұрын

    Glad to know that my prior weight problems likely have no long term effects. In 2021 I was 21 and weighed around 270, lost 100lbs in 10 months and gained around 18lbs of muscle in a year now at 22 i'm around 18% bf at 194lbs miraculously I was lucky to be able to lose weight and not rebound 8 months after the end of my diet and no weight gain. Actually at the beginning of july i started cutting again so I have room to do some bulking.

  • @GRPABT1

    @GRPABT1

    Жыл бұрын

    Well done, keep it up.

  • @malcolmjelani3588

    @malcolmjelani3588

    Жыл бұрын

    Good, stop over eating

  • @thapelomaraisane8705

    @thapelomaraisane8705

    Жыл бұрын

    @@malcolmjelani3588 I imagine the guy who turned his life around by losing 100lbs would know that.

  • @capyboi-776

    @capyboi-776

    Жыл бұрын

    @@malcolmjelani3588 He already did?

  • @danielkanewske8473

    @danielkanewske8473

    Жыл бұрын

    Nice work!

  • @ahnilatedahnilated7703
    @ahnilatedahnilated77035 ай бұрын

    I wish 2 of my friends, that passed at 38 and 42, would have seen this video. They both were very heavy, 300 and 450lbs. They were told by their doctors to lose weight or die. The one did, and then went back up and gained even more. The other had a cholesterol level over 400 and refused to change. They couldn't do hardly anything. Helping one move and we were carrying a love seat, I thought he was going to have a heart attack walking 20 feet with it. The other, we were edging his yard, I was doing the edging and he had to sit down for 10mn just from walking around with me. That is not a life! I can't get them back but I couldn't help them change either. :(

  • @christopherarias4050
    @christopherarias4050 Жыл бұрын

    The fitness industry needs this message so much! U don't need to be shredded or skinny, have a little chub is ok having a little chub and muscles is better!

  • @3komma141592653

    @3komma141592653

    14 күн бұрын

    It's kind of ironic. Because Mike is part of the problem where totally healthy people take unnatural amounts of testosterone and ruin their health for some more muscles. 75 % of the fitness influencers i see are on gear and many young people will pay a high price for this. Of course i agree on the obesity topic. Still it's kind of shady to lecture people when you do real unhealthy things on the other spectrum of the story.

  • @SlagNasty
    @SlagNasty9 ай бұрын

    Dr. Mike, I have been suffering from diet fatigue for about 2 months. I lost 60 lbs in 3 months from intermittent fasting (half the day hungry) then 2 normal meals. Plus walking, tons and tons of walking everyday on hills. One of your videos taught me I need to take a break from the classic cut and so maintenance. Some days I wake up fatigued, but your advice has helped. I have gone from 270 to 210. My goal is 180. Love your videos.

  • @Wingnut202
    @Wingnut202 Жыл бұрын

    This is the extremely important point, I think you nailed it. Not hating yourself because of your body composition is wonderful and something to move forward with in society. Denying scientific reality and leading people into early deaths and terrible quality of life helps no one.

  • @End.Ever.
    @End.Ever. Жыл бұрын

    Am currently accepting & growing into my "Thickalicious" state. May 2019 - 404 lbs (bloatmax human deathstar) Feb 2021 - 155 lbs (Rake with 0 energy & crushed hormones) Today - 195 lbs. I feel better today than I did at both 400+ & 160 lbs, it turns out maybe I wasn't designed to be small! I'm eating well, in balance & moderation alongside being generally MUCH more active, this has changed almost every aspect of my life. Both mentally & physically I feel more human & capable. I'm in love with the process of training for both size & strength, I have a newfound joy in hiking & getting out into the world & a final bonus is I actually know how to cook FINALLY and I feel that's a super underrated aspect of taking your diet and overhauling it. Am I borderline "Obese"? Sure, would I say that much mattered? Nope. I train 5x a week, avg 15k steps a day and live with the knowledge I'm doing better & that's all that really matters. Hand on heart, I know I still got "some" bodyfat and that's something I'll work on over the next "x" amount of years. In 3 years I've overhauled my health & life, so the last few lbs of fat can come off when it's time!

  • @Darknight526

    @Darknight526

    10 ай бұрын

    FUCKING AWESOME!

  • @thefirehawk1495

    @thefirehawk1495

    10 ай бұрын

    If you train 5x a week and do 15k steps and are feeling great I very much doubt you're actually nearly obese because I bet you have plenty of new lean mass which means BMI will stop working for you. All advanced strongmen and bodybuilders have overweight or obese BMI despite not being obese.

  • @End.Ever.

    @End.Ever.

    10 ай бұрын

    @thefirehawk1495 Oh, for sure, I know I'm not actually "fat" obese, but by the BMI scale and system, I'm on the border. My body composition compared to my peers who even weigh less than me is much better. I also have an estimated 5-12 lbs of excess skin around my body from the weight loss, which factors in! I just know me being a very small human was ill advised, I was wrecked trying to remain as a "normal" bodyweight for my height if that makes sense?

  • @elenalizabeth

    @elenalizabeth

    9 ай бұрын

    @@thefirehawk1495 yeah but BMI is what most drs will use to assess “health”, even though like bloodwork it should only be one piece of the puzzle of health assessment. I was told by a dr I was “overweight” on BMI scale even though I was literally in hospital being treated for anorexia with my ribs and hipbones sticking out, I was barely eating (often not eating for several days at a time) and was taking a boatload of laxatives daily. I was fainting and dizzy all the time, sleeping 18+ hours a day, yet that dr thought it would be smart to tell me “you can’t be anorexic as you are overweight on BMI” (I was 5kg over what was “healthy” BMI) while I was in hospital being treated for anorexia that another dr at that same hospital had diagnosed me with. I had to gain weight before they were ok with me going home but I then always had in my mind “another dr said I was overweight so why do they want me gaining more weight” and I struggled for years with my disordered eating habits.

  • @TelvanniWizardMoneyGang
    @TelvanniWizardMoneyGang Жыл бұрын

    As an ex-fat person, I gotta say, health benefits aren't really the reason I deliberately lost bodyfat. I just hated how I looked in the mirror and decided to do something about it, and I feel incredibly on a daily basis compared to before. Just FEELING good everyday, like being able to walk around the mall without getting gassed, or going to bed without the discomfort of a fat belly resting on my sensitive stomach, is totally worth the effort. The health is just icing on the cake.

  • @matheussantos9367

    @matheussantos9367

    9 ай бұрын

    Say what you will about health and stuff, but I've seen time and time again, in my personal journey even, that the spark that lights the fire of change is being unhappy with how you look and feel. It is a very powerful, often overlooked and most of the time frowned upon feeling, that when used correctly is absolutely magical in its results.

  • @darkstalkerkaathe4582

    @darkstalkerkaathe4582

    8 ай бұрын

    I love your username so much

  • @1brushstudio

    @1brushstudio

    6 ай бұрын

    "I want to look good naked" was a yuge motivation for me, and it still works even after losing all the weight I had gained, as I never want to walk around in that flesh suit again.

  • @issecret1

    @issecret1

    5 ай бұрын

    For me it was the health and the body image is just the icing. I guess it matters if you already began to see health problems when you started, cause for me it was affecting my sleep

  • @marcmcphee
    @marcmcphee Жыл бұрын

    I constantly have this argument with a friend of mine. They claim they can be obese and healthy. They’re closing in on 40, and it’s bound to catch up to them at some point.

  • @___whateverr

    @___whateverr

    Жыл бұрын

    when i used to be fat i was the same , it's called being in denial they don't want to accept the fact because they are lazy and scared to try

  • @___whateverr

    @___whateverr

    Жыл бұрын

    if they loose even one pound and see the scale moving and that it' s not that hard to change they will get super motivated

  • @marcmcphee

    @marcmcphee

    Жыл бұрын

    @@___whateverr I fully agree. I used to be 268 pounds (at 5’10”)…and now I’m around 195 pounds (and have been for a couple years)….just need to take that first step. They keep making excuses (it’s my birthday…there’s a holiday coming up etc)…until bad health problems creep in. I really care for them so I’ll be here to help them but THEY need to want to change or it’s all for nothing.

  • @benfrese3573

    @benfrese3573

    11 ай бұрын

    @@___whateverr problem is that scales have a tendency to go up as well :) But yeah, it can help.

  • @popcornto6032
    @popcornto6032 Жыл бұрын

    I had mild sleep apnea at 19 a few months ago. 6'3 and 310lbs at my highest. Now I'm 273lbs. Difference is night and day. Sleep apnea is gone, I can do the 90 minute boxing training and not be exhausted, I can do 15 Deficit Paused Push-ups (up from 8 at 296) and am slowly approaching my first pull-up hopefully by the end of this fat loss phase. Started my 2nd fat loss phase this week (8 weeks). This phasic approach to losing weight has saved me, for the first time in my life I feel like I'm in control, and confident of reaching the end Goal (215-220 by the Start of 2024). I'll keep updating you on my progress the coming months and once I reach the end Goal by commenting on new videos. Thanks Dr Mike

  • @malcolmjelani3588

    @malcolmjelani3588

    Жыл бұрын

    Stop stuffing your face

  • @tsegazeabbeteselassie8827

    @tsegazeabbeteselassie8827

    Жыл бұрын

    @@malcolmjelani3588 shut up and do something with your life. @popcornto, being able to do that many pushups at ur weight means ur incredibly strong, ur physique is gonna look fantastic once you hit your goal. keep it up!

  • @jebbush2527
    @jebbush2527 Жыл бұрын

    That obese but becomes healthy mid 20s scenario is me rn. 24, I’ve lost 50lbs and I’m normal bmi (barely) for the first time ever-including as a child. I was healthy while fat but it wasn’t aesthetic. Good to know that I (probably) didn’t do any permanent damage.

  • @strongwiseandfree

    @strongwiseandfree

    Жыл бұрын

    good job!!!

  • @lukec2226

    @lukec2226

    Жыл бұрын

    Great to see people moving to a healthy life, congrats.

  • @johnsmith-zj8vp
    @johnsmith-zj8vp Жыл бұрын

    This literally describes my experience. I have been fat all my life while being active and having perfect blood work. I realized when I reached 430lb at 22years old that, although I was still "Healthy", I felt like shit and was starting to slow down. I started lifting, regular cardio, and just minding my calories so now im down 30lb and feel so much better. I still have a long way to go but I was able to change course before it was too late. Thanks for all the great content and the no bullshit approach.

  • @natzuko9275

    @natzuko9275

    10 ай бұрын

    wow man that s really good ! keep going eventually u will get there !!

  • @westbrad6808

    @westbrad6808

    9 ай бұрын

    Awesome bro. Keep it up. Rooting for you

  • @Ryan-ij7di

    @Ryan-ij7di

    6 ай бұрын

    Keep going bro! If you stopped with the weight loss, pick the weights back up and get back into it :)

  • @MrBobogoa
    @MrBobogoa Жыл бұрын

    It's a shame really that the body positivity movement has become so misshapen. The original idea, that being overweight or obese shouldn't be a cause for self-loathing and that people can be mentally healthy at any size, is an admirable one! But, as Dr Mike laid out in the video, that doesn't mean that physically one is healthy or that those who are overweight shouldn't try to live healthier lives at healthier weights/bf percentages. I'm curious to know where, when, and how HAAS became what it is today, which is really just an excuse to ignore the physical reality in favour of preserving fragile egos

  • @jbb8261

    @jbb8261

    9 ай бұрын

    Ehhh, if you’re morbidly or even regular obese you are by definition the opposite of mentally healthy

  • @zenvariety9383

    @zenvariety9383

    9 ай бұрын

    Yeah, the body positivity movement has been taken over by those with a fat fetish. I'm 5'7" and 208 pounds. I have a fair amount of muscle, but I do want to build more muscle so my body fat goes down.

  • @elenalizabeth

    @elenalizabeth

    9 ай бұрын

    The “original” body positivity movement was actually about visible disabilities and being “body positive” (ie not being an a**hole about things people can’t change) about things like missing limbs, scars and stretch marks, unique skin colourations like vitiligo, hair conditions like alopecia, etc. Morbidly obese people just took over the “body positivity” thing and made it all about them, even though unlike actual disabilities, their issues can be changed (by not eating as much and exercising).

  • @Mbstr1
    @Mbstr1 Жыл бұрын

    I 100% agree with you Mike, you for sure don't need to snort cocaine all the time to become railthin. Amphetamines are way cheaper, the effects last longer, more appetite suppressive, just a way better replacement all around.

  • @Masterdesstruct

    @Masterdesstruct

    Жыл бұрын

    W

  • @BlargeMan

    @BlargeMan

    Жыл бұрын

    Appetite*

  • @Red88Rex

    @Red88Rex

    Жыл бұрын

    Plus your living room will be reorganized

  • @benfrese3573

    @benfrese3573

    11 ай бұрын

    This is great advice!

  • @robo3915
    @robo3915 Жыл бұрын

    This channel is on another level. Great advice, no Bro Science, and a message pitched in a way that’s motivating. Dr Mike is a fantastic educator disguised as a strip club bouncer! 🍻

  • @AbsurdistPanda

    @AbsurdistPanda

    9 ай бұрын

    😂😂😂😂😂

  • @PierreDennis
    @PierreDennis10 ай бұрын

    Great video! When I was 25, I weighed close to 260lbs. I lied for years saying I was "fine". I kept telling myself "Oh, I'll start this summer, or next." And, never did. Then I lost a tone of weight before going back to school. In fact, I think I lost too much so fast, I should have did it over an extended period of time to keep some of my strength or gains. In a matter of 4 months (maybe less), I went from 259 to my lowest 183. I cut sugar & carbs, gave up junk food, mostly stuck to eating vegetables and some type of lean protein (chicken or salmon). Now I'm 34, at 165lbs. What I've learned along the way, is yes, you can still make room for junk food. But, I limit the amount I intake. And, the most underrated thing to help me lose weight was a lot of walking! I started with 2-3 miles a day, then made my way to 4-5 miles. Now with a dog, I average about 6-7 miles daily, on top of weight lifting which I do 4 days a week. Like the Doctor said, it's a journey. Not an overnight thing. Could take years to get to where you want to be. But, the journey to get there will be worth it. Make every day count.

  • @paulbarker4575
    @paulbarker4575 Жыл бұрын

    This the exact motivation I needed today to not slip on my diet. Thanks Dr Mike!

  • @reallymakesyouthink
    @reallymakesyouthink Жыл бұрын

    These magazines always show someone doing yoga because that's all you can do when you are obese. When i was at my heaviest, exercise was a nightmare. People don't talk about chaffing and sweating etc and I probably didn't fall into obese camp so my heart goes out to those who are. The limitations of the weight hinder real health gains.

  • @grenade8572

    @grenade8572

    10 ай бұрын

    To be fair, her yoga posture is impressive for an obese person. I've been slightly overweight the most of my life (2-3kg overweight), but I'ce always been unable to do this posture (even if my fit years, from my 21yo to to my 25 yo). Besides, you're right: overweight/obesity is not only unhealthy but also annoying. With my currently "only" 2kg overweight, I feel uncomfy when I walk with a dress or a skirt, I feel the fat when I'm going to sleep, etc. I was much better in my fit years, and I just joined a gym to be fit again. ^^ Writing this, I'm sored, but it totally worth it.

  • @theonlytampacks
    @theonlytampacks7 ай бұрын

    I was an obese and healthy person despite being over 300 pounds for years. I got up to 353 in my mid 30s, and my blood work was still mostly good. Even my blood pressure and pulse weren't that bad. And then my gallstones tried to pop my gall bladder. And then my fatty liver looked close to cirrhosis. And then my already fragile mental health plummeted. I faced my own mortality at least a few times for a couple years. But, I thought I would share for those in their mid to late 30s, because I've lost over 85 pounds and six inches on my waist. My waist is smaller now than when I weighed 265 in my 20s. So, try it. Believe in yourself.

  • @alexever17

    @alexever17

    6 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing. I am a bit younger and overweight with less pounds than you but my gallbladder was removed years ago and I remember from that time that on a doctor report fatty liver was mentioned. Very happy to hear that it cam get better (have startet following the doctor mike cult for 2 month now already lost 5 lbs)

  • @mr.dudbud4551

    @mr.dudbud4551

    4 ай бұрын

    I hope you keep up the good work friend!

  • @BeardWulf
    @BeardWulf Жыл бұрын

    When I was overweight my depression had a hard grip on me. I used a recovery phase to force a fitness routine into my life. Two years later I'm fit as fuck, I also can balance my mental health way better. Painful truth: It IS hard work, it WILL be slow and there is NO quick fix, but the journey of development and continuous learning is the real reward. Best decision of my life.

  • @espenstoro
    @espenstoro Жыл бұрын

    I was pretty obese, now I'm just overweight. My blood pressure was always perfect, most blood values pretty much in a decent range, and I was pretty healthy. But now that I lost some weight, I'm healthier. Being relatively healthy is good, but to be more healthy, well... you get the idea.

  • @Cenot4ph

    @Cenot4ph

    Жыл бұрын

    You're missing a lot of factors in that health assessment

  • @___whateverr

    @___whateverr

    Жыл бұрын

    blood pressure isn't the only factor , but good job keep going

  • @zennyrpg6087

    @zennyrpg6087

    Жыл бұрын

    Likewise! I didn’t have any health problems except the weight itself. But also I felt like crap, I was always tired and cold. I feel so much better now that I lost the weight and my quality of life is better. But also I could have technically claimed that I was healthy before.

  • @espenstoro

    @espenstoro

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Cenot4ph I didn't put my full bloodwork in this post.

  • @espenstoro

    @espenstoro

    Жыл бұрын

    @@zennyrpg6087 That's a cool thing, felt pretty good before, but I feel much better now. If only I had known. Oh well, never too late to change. :)

  • @SuprEmpth
    @SuprEmpth Жыл бұрын

    I use a quote I got from a good friend of mine who’s also a personal trainer whenever some of my obese family and friends talk negatively about my health journey….”I rather workout and eat better on my own doing than a doctor telling me I have to”

  • @kevinrice7291
    @kevinrice7291 Жыл бұрын

    I’m obese and 100 years old and I take offense to this reasonable and scientifically backed information.

  • @RenaissancePeriodization

    @RenaissancePeriodization

    Жыл бұрын

    "How DARE you?!" - Dr. Mike

  • @kevinrice7291

    @kevinrice7291

    Жыл бұрын

    @@RenaissancePeriodization oh my god Dr Mike responded to me!!!! I’m never washing this…..phone again!!!

  • @krisdobbs6701

    @krisdobbs6701

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kevinrice7291 🤣🤣🤣

  • @yihaozhou4313

    @yihaozhou4313

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kevinrice7291 Did he spit on your phone

  • @glennbishopbishthemagish

    @glennbishopbishthemagish

    Жыл бұрын

    @@RenaissancePeriodization Where is the science, exactly?

  • @Disc0spider
    @Disc0spider Жыл бұрын

    Good video, Dr Mike. Thank you for sharing. I can appreciate trying to positive with one's appearance and body size, but as someone who was once clinically obese (over 130kg, or nearly 300lbs), I did not like being obese. I profusely sweated almost all the time, I would easily get out of breath, I would accidentally break clothes on a regular basis (like shorts or jeans), I accidentally broke furniture a few times, and I did not feel "good" about myself (I was that guy who always wore dark-coloured clothing that was way over-sized and honestly, I was a total "neck beard"). I always just felt, I don't know how to explain it, but kinda ill, like all the time. I was also so physically weak, and I was only 21 years old at the time. Shortly after turning 21, through 'insert back story here', I lost over 70lbs (over 30kg) and found passion in health, fitness, weight lifting as well as the martial art and sport of judo. Have been going on for 14 years strong since then. I understand and acknowledge that the reason I was obese, was because of me. It had nothing to do with "genetics", it all came down to the poor choices that I was making. I made the choice to stay up late playing video games. I made the choice to over-consume calories in the form of processed foods that I found palatable and pleasurable. I made the choice to consume large amounts of alcohol on a regular basis. And I made the choice to not physically exercise. I will say though, one thing that did frustrate me when I was obese, is how disrespectful, insulting and blatantly rude some people were toward me, because of my appearance and weight. I had no friends in my early years of high school and was often physically and mentally tormented by bullies (some of which tried to follow me via virtual means into my senior years, and even my university/college years). This lead me to isolating myself away from others for my physical and mental safety, seeking comfort in things like the internet, video games, popular culture and of course, processed foods I found palatable and pleasurable. Alcohol came into that mix later on in life when I was legally old enough to drink. I am very much glad that I found better health and a new passion, and I am confident that I may have extended my life for a few years. However, what I am not grateful for, are those in my past who seemed convinced that they had the right to treat me the way they did, simply because of my appearance and weight. On the same token... not to possibly contradict myself... while I believe it is important to respect others, and to be positive about ourselves and our bodies, I also believe our health is a priority. We don't have to be an elite athlete or a magazine model, but in order to improve the quality of our lives, our mental health, and to ensure that we can live on this planet for as long as naturally possible, we should be striving to maintain good care of our health.

  • @AngelGarcia-he2gm
    @AngelGarcia-he2gm7 ай бұрын

    Me and Ethan have alot in common in my current journey. I let myself gooo. But I've currently been on this fat loss journey for a solid couple years now. I've always been up and down in my twenties 195 then up to 300, then down to 220. Once I got kids I ballooned up to 365. Currently im at 270. I'm 511, trying to get down to 220-215. RP and Ethan Suplee has really helped open my eyes from all the online BS that exists. Its beginning more of a lifestyle change and non of this bouncing up and down nonsense. Its alot harder this time though, im 35 and im beginning to have the aches and pains of carrying this weight around, also sleep apnea and now taking BP medication. Yep, should of kept it off in my 20's. Wished i found RP back then. Thanks Dr. Mike for posting these vids. I couldnt fit on a roller coaster with my kid last year. Now, i can fit into XL and 2X shorts. I used to be at 4X man.

  • @blagerthorpnonersense1894
    @blagerthorpnonersense18949 ай бұрын

    I’m all for body positivity and being comfortable in your own body, as someone who has been significantly heavier in the past and has undergone body recomposition through lifting and eating habit changes i am glad you made this video and whole heartedly agree. I’m so tired of hearing things like “you can be obese and healthy,” because its not really true. Yeah those test results might be ok… at first, but that obesity happened because of bad habits that will invariably show up in those tests a little later down the line.

  • @nevermindmyname813
    @nevermindmyname8139 ай бұрын

    I'm not even obese, I body build as it is, but I still appreciate the more gentle, yet still plainly honest, educational approach you took to this topic.

  • @onielk
    @onielk4 ай бұрын

    It's pretty funny that this video got recommended randomly to me. I started a new job 9 months ago and right away decided I would need to start going to the gym. Since I work as a taxi driver now. Before this I have always had active jobs so I've never seen a need to work out. But I will say I've been fat most of my adult life. On the edge of "Obese" if u look at BMI (yes I know it's not entirely accurate), but I have felt fine and have not had any health issues so far. I checked my weight for fun before I started and it landed on 113kg. Well things started happening after I started lifting weights. My posture greatly changed, I felt stronger, got down 2 sizes on pants, muscles started to show and just like 2 weeks ago I was like "Wow. It would be fun to check in on my weight again." So I did. Turns out I still weigh 113kg. Haha. Thx for reading. Good video! Have a nice day

  • @Dablus
    @Dablus Жыл бұрын

    This is exactly what scares me shitless, I'm 26, i weigh at around 320lbs, i started working on changing my habits and my life in general, for now I am (or at least i feel) healthy, but i am really afraid shit would get back to me while in that changing period, or that i would pay my 3 or 4 years of obesity later in life... I don't know you or you channel but you've gained a follower Thank you for that video, you're saving lives

  • @guttsu
    @guttsu Жыл бұрын

    Bloodwork, it was always bloodwork for obestiy health advocates. Like that was the ONLY metric they could ever point to, a single snapshot in time, that negated all other evidence to the contrary. Great video as always.

  • @Hoop639

    @Hoop639

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree with you , buts it’s one of the only measurable metrics we have and it does tell us a lot.

  • @matthewcreelman1347

    @matthewcreelman1347

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Hoop639 I have what I call the vacation stress test for able bodied people. It’s basically this: you land in a very walkable city for a week’s vacation - something like Paris, Amsterdam, London, Rome, etc, and your hotel is right in the heart of the city. Your travelling companion wants to walk everywhere, and says that they typically take 25k to 35k steps a day while on vacation. Can you keep up with them on foot? The methodology is a little loose, but I think that it holds up.

  • @robertt9342

    @robertt9342

    10 ай бұрын

    @@matthewcreelman1347. That would be like 8 hr straight of walking, slow enough to actually see things but not including stop or breaks.

  • @elenalizabeth

    @elenalizabeth

    9 ай бұрын

    @@robertt9342 yeah but the point is a lot of supposedly “obese but healthy” people couldn’t do anywhere near that amount, they’d be burnt out after less than an hour of walking around. I doubt most of them could do more than 5K steps in a day, let alone 35K. And in their everyday life I doubt they do more than 1K steps in an average day.

  • @black-nails

    @black-nails

    7 ай бұрын

    @@elenalizabeth "technically" obese people (so anything over 30% BMI, which is a very common BMI especially for women) can be very fit and walk even more than skinny people. It can be hard to walk a lot, even any skinny sedentary person, after 30yo.. almost definitely. Unless they are at the point that they are severely lacking mobility or have other health issues due the weight, it's not a huge issue to be active in that way.

  • @philmann1745
    @philmann1745 Жыл бұрын

    I love the emphasis on lifting weights and being “thickalicious” rather than skinny. I’ve known many girls over the years who do nothing but run to get in shape and they end up with zero shape that extra body fat sits loosely on top of and looks so much worse. We need to get more people into lifting weights to lose weight and look better.

  • @Shvabicu

    @Shvabicu

    Жыл бұрын

    Cardio is terrible for fat loss. Don't know where this stupid idea came from to do cardio (only).

  • @arihaviv8510

    @arihaviv8510

    Жыл бұрын

    If that's all they can do and they lose weight, they'll still be healthy and that can be accepted even if it doesn't "look great"

  • @doomslay3r964

    @doomslay3r964

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Shvabicu Ikr most people I talk to think going on a run is going to magically burn of fat and preserve muscle, avoiding the truth that eating a reasonable diet is far more valuable.

  • @Red88Rex

    @Red88Rex

    Жыл бұрын

    As a 37/f who did years of running and many more years of lifintg… as much as I loved the endorphin rush I got from running, you cap out quickly on muscular development. The best way to change your appearance is weight lifting.

  • @derek96720

    @derek96720

    Жыл бұрын

    High tempo running is one of the most efficient fat burning activities there is. Weight training is important as well, yes. But I'm tired of this "cardio is lame" BS, because it's always the lifting crowd that says it, mainly as an excuse to not do cardio. No one who runs decent mileage every week and medium to high intensity can be fat for very long.

  • @LuvLuke954
    @LuvLuke9549 ай бұрын

    Thank you. I was very much into diet and exercise and it showed til I became ill in my mid 40s. 7 years later and I’ve had an organ transplant 18 months ago, and feel excellent, between meds, age, gender I still have about 30 lbs to lose. I have lost 30 so I’m still on my weight loss journey. And idc what anyone tries to tell me that I can rely on my age, gender and meds to excuse my being overweight. Watching these young people pretend they feel good about themselves while being morbidly obese or even just “pretty fucking overweight” 😂 is INSANE and disgusting. It is a SAD LIE that they are being told and spreading this bullshit to others that eating processed foods, not exercising, wearing XXX is normal and beautiful? What is wrong with basic science? Any cardiologist will tell anyone listening that being a 0 is not a goal and being XXX is not a goal. Healthy living = whole food, physical exercise, mental well-being. Everything else is paying someone to alleviate your personal responsibilities to your SELF. I LOVE YOUR VIDEOS! Thank you for the constant motivation!!! ❤

  • @CloaknDagger
    @CloaknDagger Жыл бұрын

    Mike I love you man, just wanted to say that. You're very comforting and I appreciate all you do and put out there.

  • @tommaso99
    @tommaso99 Жыл бұрын

    This vid showcases what Dr Mike does so well, and differentiates him from so much of the fitness industry - his dogged appreciation for nuance on the topics. There’s so much binary thinking plaguing fitness (and frankly everything else) it’s nice to see someone who honestly grapples with the nuanced grey areas.

  • @noleftturnunstoned

    @noleftturnunstoned

    9 ай бұрын

    We call that science, and intellectual honesty. Problem is that people don't have time for nuance, so the loudest most certain voices get through while those who should be listened to get drowned out. *Cough Jordan P, Samy H, cough, cough* sigh

  • @tommaso99

    @tommaso99

    9 ай бұрын

    @@noleftturnunstoned ad idem.

  • @TheAURELIANITO
    @TheAURELIANITO Жыл бұрын

    I had 33 BMI 2 years ago. Dieted and took 10 kg off, now I am 29 BMI. Now I has started lifting weights and I feel much better (just 1 hour 2 times a week). Even my back pain disappeared! The approach dr Mike proposes is awesome.

  • @obi-wankenobi1233
    @obi-wankenobi1233Ай бұрын

    I used to be pretty chubby as a kid, pretty much up until I was 14-15. Could barely run three kilometres (although I was a very fast sprinter and could outpace most of my class at short distances). When I was 15 I decided that I had had enough, and that I was going to be more active. I talked to my mum about it and she suggested that I start by walking more. I never ate a lot of junk, I just had a big apetite and my activity didn't match my calorie consumption. I kept walking, even tried a ten week running program to help people run their first 5k. I didn't complete it, but it did get me started on proper exercise. When I entered high school, it was very far from home. Almost 10 kilometres. Pretty soon I started getting off the subway halfway through the journey home and walked the rest. Eventually I just started walking the whole way whenever I had the time. When I turned 17, I got my conscription note from the government (I'm Swedish, and we have conscription). That was the true wake up call, as I had always dreamt of joining the military, but always thought it was too far off. I started going to the gym one week later with my dad. It's now a year and a half later since then. I'm graduating high school this June, and I'm reporting to my regiment for basic training this August. I can deadlift 100 kg, leg press 180 kg, and run 12 kilometres. I still have a bit of fat left which hide my shy abs, but I'm within a healthy weight for my height. Beginning to exercise was one of the best decisions I've ever made, and I am a better person because of it.

  • @kunya16
    @kunya169 ай бұрын

    Even with healthy blood work that doesn't mean the joints aren't under immense pressure. The knees hurt so bad. Sleep quality is reduced. The fatigue and digestive issues suck. I was obese and it was awful. Never again.

  • @bakerbrian41
    @bakerbrian41 Жыл бұрын

    Dr. Mike thanks for the video! Lately I’ve been wondering about this topic and how it differs from bodybuilders. For example, 5’6” and 270 pounds, consuming thousands of calories per day would seem to me to put a tremendous strain on the digestive system, the heart and arteries and the lungs. PEDs or not, in this state of being, can the organs really tell the difference between overweight “fat” and overweight with muscle? I assume that eating healthy vs unhealthy would be a factor in either state of being. You touched on this but have there been any studies done on bodybuilders who’ve maintained a large physique for ~10 years?

  • @Hoop639

    @Hoop639

    Жыл бұрын

    I’m not DR Mike, but anyone pushing for peak performance such as Dr mike in terms of size, PED, bodybuilding, have traded off “optimal” health and I’m sure he’s aware of it. Anything ELITE usually has trade offs for health.

  • @JoshBenware

    @JoshBenware

    Жыл бұрын

    The answer can only be speculative. Nobody is a lean 270 lbs without drugs. We already know many bb dropping dead, and it's obviously not just weight. Drugs, dehydration, and other unhealthy manipulations are obviously a big factor. We just can't know for sure if a natural man who weighs 270 lbs at around 12-15% bf would be healthier than a man weighing the same at 60% bf cause there's no test subjects for the study to ever exist.

  • @doomslay3r964

    @doomslay3r964

    Жыл бұрын

    In order to reach a lean mass of 270lbsat that height, the bodybuilder would be blasting roids for years. There is no point studying how the body handles lean mass as opposed to fat weight as the drugs taken to reach such a size would already have done much more damage than being obese could ever cause.

  • @joenobody8216
    @joenobody8216 Жыл бұрын

    I was obese my entire life. Lost the weight in 2018. Best decision I’ve ever made.

  • @fernandoriveros8577
    @fernandoriveros8577 Жыл бұрын

    Hey doc! I was wondering about what would you recommend as a split for simply maintaining muscularity and strength while prioritising not feeling to sore or tired to fully enjoy other aspects of life. I was really into going full hard on the gym 6 times a week but as I am about to enter my masters study I would like to focus more on socialising, study, personal relationships, etc. Perhaps get into other sports like BJJ. How would you go about freeing that space? What should I prioritise?

  • @skytehpanda

    @skytehpanda

    Жыл бұрын

    3 Full Body workouts a week, 2-3 sets per exercise. If you start BJJ then depends on priority, meaning if BJJ is priority then do 1 Full body a week, if not then 2 Full body a week and then BJJ. It will be more than enough to have a good life balance, great health and great body.

  • @thugg90
    @thugg90 Жыл бұрын

    What a great message and REALISTIC message, Mike, i know a lot of folks online need to hear this.

  • @gunsandcommissions
    @gunsandcommissions10 ай бұрын

    This is a reminder of how amazing the human body is. Going from literal obesity by the time you're in your early 20's, to not obese in your mid 20's, and not suffer the effects. I was a gym rat since I was 15, through college, and after, until around 32. Then I got fat and lazy, from 5'11" 220lbs to 285lbs, eating pure garbage. Completely let my health and body go in most ways possible, including a decade of legit SA. I ruptured my quad tendon at 42, had no health insurance, and hit my rock bottom. Had the surgery, and while my leg was locked in a brace, got my diet right, and lost 50lbs. I began the physical therapy all on my own using youtube and whatnot, and continued to build on those good habits. I just had my annual physical, 132/89 bp, all labs clean, lipids slightly elevated but ok with high HDL being a contributor, test at 594NG/dL, 220lbs. And I can run if I want to and do physical things I was told I'd probably never do after the knee injury. I flat out abused my body for a decade and a half and, at middle-aged, was able to reverse it. I'm not bragging or suggesting anyone do this. I had legit MH issues and didn't respond to my divorce in a healthy way. But it blows my mind what diet and exercise can do for the human body, and that constant wonder is what keeps me on the right track. Thanks for sharing your knowledge, Dr. Mike.

  • @Ramsaaaa

    @Ramsaaaa

    10 ай бұрын

    Wow. That must've been a hell of a journey. Massive, massive props. I went on a similar journey. From 6'0" 160lbs, state athlete by the end of high school, multiple years of year-round training prior to college. Then hit the wall, mentally-speaking. 7 years of substances, overeating, undereating... all over the place. 140lbs at times, 210lbs at others. Eventually quit drinking and smokin' (legal state) and got back to high intensity training. Wow. My mental health SKYROCKETED. Mental stability for the first time in close to a decade. Physically, feeling phenomenal. I feel 5 years younger. Nutrition, exercise, hydration, sunlight, sleep... we hear it time and time again. Wish I would've listened years ago, but I sure am glad that I made that switch before hitting 30. I'm right there with you, it's absolutely mind boggling. I wish my loved ones would see the light as well, but we're all on our own journey. I sure as hell won't be going back to my previous lifestyle during this lifetime. Funnily enough, a rough break-up was the catalyst for me as well. Looked in the mirror, then at my old athletic gear and went, "damn, what happened?" Then I dusted off the old barbell setup. Struggled with a 135lb deadlift. Could barely OHP the bar. That sealed the deal. Ever since that day, I've been focused in on nutrition and fitness like never before. I've since beat PRs from my high school days. The sky is the limit when you give your body the tools and fuel for success. Cheers brotha!!!

  • @Ramsaaaa

    @Ramsaaaa

    10 ай бұрын

    Oh and I must add; Dr. Mike and Eric Bugenhagen were instrumental in my recovery. Perfect combo of mindset, practical advice, and concise explanations. Two great guys. Huge thanks to Dr. Mike!

  • @tyshirey6324
    @tyshirey6324 Жыл бұрын

    I was 170lbs heavier at one point in my life - blood pressure and many other issues… I’ve made that long path from 345lbs to 175lbs and my heart truly goes out to people in the obese category. Thank you for putting this out there - it seems like you genuinely care! It’s not as easy as “oh obese people are undisciplined” buuuut there is a world they/me can be healthier and live a far more enriching life long term! Thanks again for REAL information and not selling people fake junk! I love what you said in one of the comments: “body positivity grounded in realism” Good on ya man!

  • @seapuppers3605
    @seapuppers36056 ай бұрын

    As a big girl with pcos, insulin resistance, and bad chronic fatigue I really appreciated this video. It’s really nice to hear that you don’t have to be rail thin to be healthy, bc I do my best with what limitations I have financially and physically through working out and eating at home instead of out. Which I feel like I’ve done good with bc I’ve gained weight bc of muscle and have lost a few inches.

  • @diseofisa2426
    @diseofisa2426 Жыл бұрын

    All I can keep saying is I wish you were around when I first started 25 years ago,you are real,honest,and I love your sence of humour! Keep up the Great work!!!😀

  • @Dildo__Shwaggins
    @Dildo__Shwaggins Жыл бұрын

    I lost 100 pounds and have kept it off for 5 years now. At one point weight loss success seemed impossible but I truly believe anybody can do it. My advice would be to learn as much about nutrition as you can and buy a kitchen scale. Just get moving and stay consistent and success will come.

  • @coughhy
    @coughhy Жыл бұрын

    Such a great message everyone should hear. Thank you

  • @ronweaver4311
    @ronweaver4311 Жыл бұрын

    So many people need to watch this. It’s very down to earth and not overly complicated to understand.

  • @altair4849
    @altair48494 ай бұрын

    Since day one of January 24, ive decided to just eat to where I'm in a caloric deficit and do 2 10 min workouts, one in the am and one after work. I've gone from almost 260 and am currently at 193lbs. Putting on muscle weight too. Building muscle for me, just feels good and makes working out that much more enjoyable. It's only mid of February. That's just 1.5 months. Im still eating the foods I love, just not much of it. I feel and look better. I have more movement and flexibility than I did in my early 20s(currently in my early 30s). This journey has changed the way I eat to the point where I no longer crave processed sweets as much and now prefer fruit sugars instead. Every aspect of my life suddenly improved (from work/life balances, relationships, financials, etc.). I only wished I had started sooner.

  • @Fake--Natty
    @Fake--Natty Жыл бұрын

    This will trigger a lot of delusional people 🤣

  • @CrimsonRoseDancer
    @CrimsonRoseDancer9 ай бұрын

    I think the biggest problem is that people don’t want to take ownership of reality. I am overweight, I know I am not healthy, however, I can learn to love myself and my body while not denying that fact. Just take ownership. This goes for so many other things I won’t talk about but people are deflecting reality with untruths because they think it suddenly will be fact and therefore ok.

  • @matthewcreelman1347
    @matthewcreelman1347 Жыл бұрын

    I’m 6’2, currently about 190 pounds. I used to weigh between 240 to 280, but in 2019 I went up to 320. I was able to lose the weight through diet and exercise, and making food at home during Covid instead of eating out every day. It makes such an incredible difference in not just my physical state, but also my mental state. 11/10, would recommend, and I strongly agree with about 90% of what Dr. Mike says on this channel.

  • @andrewstubblefield4605
    @andrewstubblefield4605 Жыл бұрын

    Body goals: Have Dr. Mike classify me as 'thickalicious."

  • @GleaMDMK
    @GleaMDMK Жыл бұрын

    Thickalicious is Dr. Mike's first rap album, in case you didn't know.

  • @d2ds17
    @d2ds17 Жыл бұрын

    I was 330+ lbs by the age of 15. I never felt fat until I would see my reflection. I was just as athletic if not more so than my slimmer friends. I would beat my buddies on the basketball team, 1 on 1, whoop my buddies at tennis and such. Now I'm 40 and in the best shape of my life, largely in part to your advice and app! I used to be one of those Gold's Gym trainers that thought I knew everything. I didn't learn what a deload was until a decade later. Anyways, I was fat but fierce! Not sure if my blood work was good or not, but I felt awesome. Life's only gotten easier since my tubby days👌🏼

  • @billygreenbean7119
    @billygreenbean71199 ай бұрын

    Thickalicious right here lol. I am on week 3 of a 12 week fat loss that I am doing according to YOUR direction and people already have said I have lost weight. I will report back in 9 weeks with hopefully more fat loss. My goal is Current 12 wk fat loss 6 week maintenance period 12 wk fat loss Pattern to repeat til 6 pack achieved. Thank you 🤘🏼

  • @Insanity_Wolf
    @Insanity_Wolf Жыл бұрын

    Hell yeah! Look at this comment section. Congrats to all you guys for getting healthy and committing to losing weight. Nobody has to be skinny, ripped or athletic toned. Hell, a lot of people look better with some extra pounds on them. Just as long as you're around a healthy weight for your frame and staying active and having a somewhat healthy diet. That's all that matters.

  • @DreamArctica66
    @DreamArctica66 Жыл бұрын

    Can we finally reframe body positivity into something positive like this pls.

  • @Moose92411
    @Moose9241111 ай бұрын

    I love the neutrality of this approach, and the objective lack of judgement. No one is saying it's your fault or that you're a bad or unworthy person... just that it's time to make a change, and here's why.

  • @robertwilson8826
    @robertwilson88269 ай бұрын

    I have to agree, it does catch up with you. I’ve been morbidly obese all my adult life and I’m superficially still healthy at 47 years old and 150kg. My blood sugars are prefect, my blood pressure and cholesterol are fine, but my testosterone (which is rarely tested in Australia) is terrible. My doctor says, if i understood correctly, it’s because fat converts testosterone into oestrogen faster than your body can make it. It’s making losing weight very difficult. Who knows whatever changes are going on that don’t show up in routine blood tests. Not to mention the extra pressure it puts on joints. I get how hard it is for some of us to lose weight, but it’s not healthy, and it 100% catches up with us. And I’m pretty sure if it wasn’t for my love of the gym it would have caught up with me much sooner..

  • @ozymandias3097
    @ozymandias3097 Жыл бұрын

    It’s absolutely wild to me that some people would rather struggle and toil to change the standards held by our entire society, rather than just eat a bit less and add some amount of exercise to their lives. Everyone wants to fit in and seem “worthy” in the eyes of others, but forcing your way into acceptance is the dumbest form of laziness because it honestly takes far more effort than just applying some self-discipline.

  • @phila9288

    @phila9288

    Жыл бұрын

    Whining and complaining is so much easier and comfortable

  • @alekssalkinrkc

    @alekssalkinrkc

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly. If they put that same “change societal standards” energy into self-improvement (in this case making more loving decisions for themselves) they would feel light years better.

  • @DrAJ_LatinAmerica

    @DrAJ_LatinAmerica

    Жыл бұрын

    Think of a UAW production worker vs a person from India working in Dubai. People complain because they can and if they think someone is listening.

  • @jonjones5092

    @jonjones5092

    Жыл бұрын

    Independent of that effort though, overweight people get treated badly in many situations where their weight has no bearing on what's going on. It's a bad deal and shouldn't be like that, probably. Society could reasonably be kinder. It's also kind of fucked that people treat long term weight loss like it's not a big deal to start or maintain, that is the furthest thing from the truth. It just doesn't stick for the large majority of people. Focusing on healthy habits independent of weight loss is much more likely to actually help a given overweight person's health. That insight is important and easy to overlook.

  • @DrAJ_LatinAmerica

    @DrAJ_LatinAmerica

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jonjones5092 Overweight get treated badly??? Really? maybe isolated situation. There are situations where ugly people get treated bad, or short people get treated bad,...... Honestly, go to a strongman competition, 400+ lb monster guys, no one treats them badly jejejeje. There are many famous actors who were or are obese and not been treated badly. I was 100 lbs overweight from 2011 to 2020. Never seen or felt like I was treated bad for my weight, maybe because I am short and ugly but not the fat. I have two very dear friends who are the life of any party. Both 6' 2", both 380+ lbs range, middle aged white guys, single and never have any issues with anyone, again, they are the life of the party. Maybe the people you know just need to develop a john belushi, Chris Farley, John Candy type of a character. Or go the other way and become a PhD of something really nerdy. There is always a reason someone is getting treated bad. Looks, height, character, education, financial status, race, color, religion,......it happens.

  • @nickhtk6285
    @nickhtk6285 Жыл бұрын

    MYTH: " you need to train hot for fat loss and hypertrophy. It increases blood flow and thermogenic properties. Wear a thick a hoodie. Never take a cold shower after a work out " Id love to see this explained....

  • @0101german

    @0101german

    Жыл бұрын

    That's scientific fact. It's why I only eat hot foods to stay lean. Warm bowl of cereal every morning to start my day

  • @maskedspanishpinocchiodevi7934

    @maskedspanishpinocchiodevi7934

    Жыл бұрын

    Just finished microwaving my salad

  • @ImKong

    @ImKong

    Жыл бұрын

    Specially you can see this happening amongst some pro bodybuilders that prioritize sweating like a motherfucker rather than performing better or going harder at cardio. It pisses me the fuck off that people with such influence are spreading this misinformation.

  • @LAK_770

    @LAK_770

    Жыл бұрын

    Almost certainly not true on either count - and without a doubt vanishingly insignificant factors if they matter at all. We’re warm-blooded animals, so our body temperature doesn’t vary much at all. We literally get sick then die if our bodies deviate from homeostasis enough to change how metabolism and protein coding work. Warmer or colder rooms affect the *rate* at which our body sends blood to extremities, but that’s what a warmup is for and it’s just a matter of time. A cold shower isn’t cold enough to hurt gains, and the mammalian diving reflex could actually help gains via the parasympathetic response. However, an *ice bath* that actually has a significant systemic anti-inflammatory effect could be a minor to moderate detriment to gains if done chronically.

  • @Mellow4202

    @Mellow4202

    Жыл бұрын

    @@0101german bro this had me dying lol I'm assuming you're being sarcastic. "Warm bowl of cereal to start my day" what ? Lmfao fuckin dead dude.

  • @carriepickett2687
    @carriepickett2687 Жыл бұрын

    I think health needs to be a topic of conversation. Health is many things and I appreciate Mike’s point about separating physical attractiveness from healthy body fat percentages because as is obvious just because someone is wildly attractive to look at doesn’t mean they are “healthy”. I have heard people online in comments calling a young lady unhealthy because she had slight middle tummy pudge in a bikini 👙. Her body fat was probably low 20% range she said she wore a women’s medium in clothes. I appreciate this idea of thickness and healthy you don’t need to have visible abs female or male to still be active and muscular eating mostly nutritious meals. ❤😊

  • @carriepickett2687

    @carriepickett2687

    Жыл бұрын

    I will add the woman I was describing is a professional rugby player and Olympic athlete, she didn’t deserve to be called fat by anyone with eyes. When she flexed she did have visible abs even ❤

  • @santeri-leinonen
    @santeri-leinonen Жыл бұрын

    The increase in muscularity is really noticeable in how you feel, surprisingly fast, if you take lifting weights seriously. I started getting more active last March by training at home with bodyweight and resistance bands 3x a week with a full body program. Did that for about 3 months, got a gym membership in the beginning of June and have been going there 4x a week with an upper-lower split. I don't weight too much less than I did when I started (I hover around 105kg/230lbs), but damn I feel SO much better now than when I started. But the good news is I started to feel noticeably better in like two weeks, so you don't even need to wait for 5-6 months to notice a clear difference and by the time I moved my training into the gym, the difference was night and day already. Now I am committed to my fitness journey by now, I train relatively hard for my level of experience and really love the process. I don't worry about loosing all of my fat yet, but I do plan to cut next spring to around 12-15% bodyfat, if I keep this train rolling. But it's really amazing to witness what your body is capable of and the transformation is really noticeable already, without really loosing much weight as the weight I do have has been transforming into muscle. I seem to respond to training relatively well, but even with the speed of progress aside, it's so easily worth it to get into resistance training, that I only wish I started earlier. Thankfully even, if the best time to start something would have been 10 years ago or so (am 26, very soon 27), the second best time to start is now! Ps. Also I would like to thank RP and dr. Mike for your videos! I love learning the ins and outs of things I get into and this channel has been a goldmine. I also love the training videos you post for inspiration and motivation, even if I don't go that hard at my level, as my focus is on learning the basics, but I do push myself onto the edge of what is reasonable in terms of intensity and effort considering where I am on my mesocycle and considering my newness. I really live for the intensity in my training and I aspire to push myself eventually to the levels of crazy you guys put out in terms of effort and intensity!

  • @rhomboidq7001

    @rhomboidq7001

    Жыл бұрын

    With fitness and lifting, the journey is the destination. Once you realize that it’s a dream!

  • @santeri-leinonen

    @santeri-leinonen

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rhomboidq7001 Absolutely! I try to take that approach with most things and the more I settle into that with training, the more I enjoy it. I do have goals to guide me along, but training itself and having fun with the process is the underlying motivation that has kept me relatively consistent and motivated so far.

  • @TorBoy9
    @TorBoy9 Жыл бұрын

    So there are 4 body types: ectomorph, endomorph, mesomorph and thickolicious: strength training, healthy eating, higher levels of physical activity. You learn something new every day!

  • @heidinsasha
    @heidinsasha Жыл бұрын

    Would love to see a video on how losing weight the third or fourth time is harder than the first time. For those who have yo yo'd several times with additional weight gained each time. I have to lose 100 pounds this time and can't face what I have done to myself or get the scale moving down.

  • @Rofl30000

    @Rofl30000

    Жыл бұрын

    Would love to see deez 🥜

  • @KillianDefaoite
    @KillianDefaoite Жыл бұрын

    I'll add one more comment - I'm male, 5'7.5", 22 years old, currently about 215lbs. I usually sit closer to 200 even, but I am prepping for a powerlifting meet and trying my best to fill out the 220 class. I have a good amount of muscle mass, but even still my bodyfat percentage is somewhere in the 20-30 % range, and it has been that way since my early teens. Obviously not ideal. My bloodwork is perfect, but I know I can't stay this fat long-term, which is why I am making a structured plan to lose about 25lbs after I compete. Thanks for all of this free info Dr. Mike.

  • @doomslay3r964

    @doomslay3r964

    Жыл бұрын

    20% bf isnt a bad thing, unless you are training for aesthetics. Assuming you are a natural athlete, your hormonal production is actually highest at this range of bf, although over 25%bf you start to have an uptick in estrogen.

  • @SuperBigwill85
    @SuperBigwill85 Жыл бұрын

    I’m 37, 5’7” and carried excess weight most of my life. Ive lost 100 pounds in the last year and feel like I’ve missed so much. Not to mention carrying all that weight for so long has taken its toll on my knees and feet. All I can do is blame myself and try to handle the damage control.

  • @user-zb3lr3ke4f
    @user-zb3lr3ke4f Жыл бұрын

    I think another huge point is to figure out your relationship with food, so that you make sure as you start to lose weight you dont create a worse relationship with food. A lot of diets (especially ones marketed towards young women) practically glorify EDs and that will set you on an equally unhealthy path.

  • @arihaviv8510

    @arihaviv8510

    Жыл бұрын

    And they also have nothing to do with adding resistance training to your plan

  • @leesalawitch1386
    @leesalawitch1386 Жыл бұрын

    "They're no longer healthy. They're dead."

  • @austinvanderheyden8678
    @austinvanderheyden8678 Жыл бұрын

    Dr. Mike if you get to read this I have a question for you. Would someone who is pretty relatively strong as a natural? Let's say they are able to row 95s, easily bench 225, or what other given hypertrophy exercise see any beneficial strength increases if they hopped on peds? I understand it's widely genetic for the person who's taking peds and the category of peds. But let's say they're also a pretty good genetic responder to the weights, would there be any strength increases minus the squat, bench, and deadlifts? thanks!

  • @MrSunnyBhoy
    @MrSunnyBhoy Жыл бұрын

    Amazing video Doc, I am thickalicious now, having been abese my whole life, not 35, I'm on an unstoppable missing to get wripped. I am now eating so well and I don't even get tempted much by junk food. Never thought I'd get there!

  • @eXtra_Baconz
    @eXtra_Baconz Жыл бұрын

    "And over time, you turn from obese into "thickalicious'"😆 got a kick outta this!

  • @Grand_Rizzard104
    @Grand_Rizzard104 Жыл бұрын

    It's amazing how stating the most obvious facts in the world can get you fired or physically attacked.

  • @motivateandbfit7342
    @motivateandbfit7342 Жыл бұрын

    This is such a great video & response!! Thanks Mike!!

  • @adonalsiumwillrememberourp8027
    @adonalsiumwillrememberourp8027 Жыл бұрын

    I’m currently someone who is obese. At my heaviest was 401lbs. In the last 3-4 months I’m down to about 365. How long should I continue cutting before I think about a diet break situation? It feels good to make progress for the first time ever. I’m just worried about potential burnout.

  • @TheMarkTenification
    @TheMarkTenification Жыл бұрын

    Sumo wrestlers are touted as a paragon of health while being obese: great blood work, no visceral fat, etc. Average lifespan, 60-65 years, and that's in Japan, the longevity capital of the world. Turns out it's impossible to out train a terrible diet when you're 50+ years old.

  • @christopherfaulkner5821

    @christopherfaulkner5821

    Жыл бұрын

    I would imagine there are a lot of early deaths in the sumo wrestling community…..especially in those that don’t lose the weight pretty quickly after retiring. Also, I believe the average lifespan is about 77-80 in Japan (highest in the world I think). So dying at 60-65 could be a good 12-20 years earlier than normal.

  • @insearchofprometheus

    @insearchofprometheus

    Жыл бұрын

    While carrying around all of that weight all the time certainly isn't helping their longevity, just look at all of those knee wraps, but there are probably a lot of other things affecting that average life span figure. Top-tier sumo is quite brutal on the body in many ways other than just weight and diet.

  • @enmorot

    @enmorot

    Жыл бұрын

    However, many point to the fact that most sumo wrestlers stay obese for years after their career and this is why they tend to live shorter. If they, on the other hand, continued training until they’d reached a non-obese body weight, they most likely would live about as long as everybody else. If this is considered, parts of your comment does not really hold up anymore. However, carrying around extra weight for some time (even if that is muscle and/or when being young and training regularly) tend to hurt longevity a bit, as more bodyweight wears more on the body than less.

  • @TheMarkTenification

    @TheMarkTenification

    Жыл бұрын

    @@enmorot "Turns out it's impossible to out train a terrible diet when you're 50+ years old." That comment was addressing the key issue: you can be a healthy fat-lete (fat athlete), but eventually that fat, and age will make being an athlete near impossible, robbing you of your health elixir. As is evidenced with sumos who cannot maintain their extreme training after retirement.

  • @enmorot

    @enmorot

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheMarkTenification Thank you for clearing that up and a great response!

  • @medi_michi
    @medi_michi Жыл бұрын

    Calling obese healthy would be the same as calling dumb people smart - most people would like to be called according how they feel/what they strive to be but are often not willing to actually make the change needed Facts/Data > Feelings🙏

  • @glennbarret-jy5ut
    @glennbarret-jy5ut10 ай бұрын

    I decided I wanted to be healthier about 3 months ago. Roughly. I started walking every day for half and hour, doing a push up, squat and sit-up routine. About 40 minutes in total. I also cut out most sugars from my diet. I’ve lost about 10kg and don’t really feel like i’ve changed all that much about my lifestyle. Less soft drinks, and some moderate exercise, that was it

  • @Psyclic.
    @Psyclic. Жыл бұрын

    I lost 60kg (~130lbs). Started when I was 44 as I KNEW I was headed for an early grave.It’s took a little over 18mnths of hard work but I did it. I don’t doubt a lifetime of obesity has done damage but I’m sitting around 15% bf and loving lifting. I’m a better, happier healthier husband and father. A lot of the how I got there is thanks to Dr Mike and a few other trusted fitness producers like stronger by science.

  • @joeraguso5376
    @joeraguso5376 Жыл бұрын

    By that standard of health, you can also be healthy as a smoker. What a shortsighted view on health.

  • @dc100dc100
    @dc100dc100 Жыл бұрын

    Healthy obese is like healthy smoker.

  • @st.ricardomilos5117
    @st.ricardomilos51174 ай бұрын

    In my mid to late 20s I was 207 pounds of fat (I'm around 5'6), and was miserable, both physically and mentally. I am so glad I made that descision to reduce my caloric intake and start lifting. These days I'm 32 and have went down from 207 pounds of adipose tissue to 179 pounds of muscle. I still have a bit of fat on me, but it's backed up by quite a bit of muscle. My physical and mental health have improved immensely, and my liver functioning is back to normal (I was at risk for non alcohol related fatty liver). These days I do crossfit. It's a very hard sport, but I love it

  • @mikeysharp6280
    @mikeysharp6280 Жыл бұрын

    You handled this so well. You should be proud of your compassion. Peace

  • @TrollHunterxXx
    @TrollHunterxXx Жыл бұрын

    When Lizzo is a fitness influencer you know we’re in trouble

  • @black-nails

    @black-nails

    7 ай бұрын

    ... we're in trouble because fat people workout and literally practice things that would benefit anyone?

  • @hemipenes

    @hemipenes

    5 ай бұрын

    @@black-nailsfat people tend not to workout

  • @JK-pp2xl
    @JK-pp2xl Жыл бұрын

    I think you're preaching to the choir?

  • @moneyisweird7862
    @moneyisweird78625 ай бұрын

    This was the most compassionate way to to talk about this and explain it - just so good!

  • @b1uezer
    @b1uezer Жыл бұрын

    Started back in the gym back in April, been at it consistently so far. What ended up working now for me is making sure each meal has sufficient protein, and I cut out most of the food that didn't provide either nutrients or macros I needed. I still eat chips, pizza, etc. but way less of it, and I still am eating a lot overall. My musculature is improving and I'm not concerned about what the number on the scale is, and I'm looking and feeling better everyday at 250lbs (I'm one of those that carries it well).

  • @lordfifth3106
    @lordfifth3106 Жыл бұрын

    Is healthy

  • @castronaut2000

    @castronaut2000

    Жыл бұрын

    ......... or can be healthy.

  • @The3Lego3Freak
    @The3Lego3Freak Жыл бұрын

    Dr Mike cancelled #2

  • @mateusbarao1761
    @mateusbarao17612 ай бұрын

    I was obese and healthy in my 20s so I never really cared about what doctors and others told me, then the 30s hit and signs of trouble started appearing. Thankfully I've managed to lose weight through exercise and eating better and the results were evident in my most recent tests.

  • @todormarta2372
    @todormarta2372 Жыл бұрын

    This video hits pretty close to home, as someone who used to be hover around 400lb in my 20's to now a still obese 240 lb but a much healthier, eating better foods + cardio and resistance training. You have to unfxk your brain and change your perception and Face reality the worst thing you can do when your that big is lie to yourself, and thats all this agenda of fit at all sizes acomplishes.

  • @Firm-Tofu-King
    @Firm-Tofu-King Жыл бұрын

    Sorry, what is healthy?

  • @kurasaki81

    @kurasaki81

    Жыл бұрын

    Tofu

  • @kristsostad7571

    @kristsostad7571

    Жыл бұрын

    Incline bench

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