This Guy Lost 32 Pounds On the ‘Ice Cream Diet’ But there’s a why you shouldn’t try it at home
This Guy Lost 32 Pounds On the ‘Ice Cream Diet’
But there’s a why you shouldn’t try it at home
When we first told you about
Anthony Howard-Crow, a 32-year-old online trainer and YouTuber in
Loveland, Colorado, he had just embarked on a diet that would make the American
Dietetic Association shit bricks: 2,000 calories a day of ice cream, 500
calories a day of protein supplements, and a bit of recreational alcohol.
Nothing more. Nothing less. For 100 days.
We can now report that Howard-Crow
survived the diet. Some might even call it a success, in that he lost 32
pounds, and saw improvements in his blood work. Which you’d think would make
him happy, right?
Not even close.
“This diet was, hands down, without a
doubt, the most miserable dieting adventure I have ever embarked upon,” he
says.
That’s really saying something,
considering that he previously underwent stunt diets that included 30 days of
nothing but fast food and a shorter experiment with 50 percent ice cream.
He was barely halfway through the
project when he began to lose interest in everything. He used to spend 4 to 7
hours a day recording and editing videos for his YouTube
channel (he has a degree in film production) and updating his blog.
Those dwindled to a few minutes here and there. He even quit going to the gym
for the final month of the diet.
Nor did he suffer in silence. “I was
moody, and just generally unenjoyable to be around,” he says.
His goal was to show that calories
matter more than anything else for weight loss—more than macronutrients (carbs,
protein, fat), more than exercise, more than when you eat or how many times you
chew your food or whatever else the cool kids are talking about these days. If
he could go from 192 to 160 pounds in 14 weeks while eating dessert at every
meal, then it’s impossible to argue, as many do, that calories don’t matter.
“The overall goal of my projects is
never to present them as healthy, real ways to lose weight,” he says. If that's
what you're looking for, The Men's
Health MetaShred
Diet is a smart, effective choice. The diet provides an eating
plan that helps you control calories without even noticing—and definitely
without feeling as miserable as Howard-Crow did.
Weight of the evidence
Still, whether he meant to or not, he
showed that in some respects the ice cream diet wasn’t entirely unhealthy. For example, his blood lipids all improved, with higher
HDL cholesterol, lower LDL, and dramatically lower triglycerides. Even his
blood glucose declined slightly, despite eating enough sugar to put Buddy the
Elf into a diabetic coma.
Spencer Nadolsky, D.O., a weight-loss
and obesity specialist isn’t surprised that all those blood markers moved in a
healthy direction. “With weight loss, a lot of these things improve regardless
of the underlying issue,” he says. “But it’s interesting that he got so tired.”
Nadolsky has been there, in a
way. While getting down to mid-single-digit
body fat for a bodybuilding contest, Nadolsky found himself
increasingly tired. Not only that, he says his testosterone fell from 600 to
200 nanograms per deciliter of blood, a predictable consequence of restricting
calories while still training as hard as possible. “I felt it too,” he says.
“No libido, no energy.”
I didn’t ask Howard-Crow about his sex
drive, although he did mention that his wife wanted the project to end even
more than he did.
But the scariest part, Howard-Crow
says, was seeing how much muscle he lost. The 32 pounds he lost included a lot
of muscle. “I was still not extremely lean,” he says.
The muscle loss was due to three
factors: First, and possibly most important, he quit working out when his
energy and ambition cratered. Second, he was eating below his maintenance
level—which was, of course, the point of the experiment. Third, he estimates he
was eating just 120 grams of protein a day; someone trying to maintain muscle
on a weight-loss diet is typically advised to eat 1 gram per pound of target
body weight.
Although he didn’t have a specific
target weight in mind—again, the point of the project was to lower calories and
see what happened—120 grams a day wouldn’t have been nearly enough protein to
prevent muscle loss.
Time off for bad behavior
Seeing these results, and hearing how
hard it was to achieve them, suggests Howard-Crow is done with stunt dieting.
If the “after” picture isn’t much more impressive than the “before,” what’s the
point?
“Despite how miserable it was, I
definitely don’t want this to be my last stunt diet,” he says while
acknowledging he has no idea what his next one might be. “Hopefully some kind
of food-related inspiration will just hit me one day, or come out of seeing
things through my clients that I never even thought about. Either way, you have
not seen the last of these crazy projects.”
Comments
Post a Comment