Refill her ionized water with tap water. Say you got her some more. She lives in blissful ignorance, you save $150 a month.
Refill her ionized water with tap water. Say you got her some more. She lives in blissful ignorance, you save $150 a month.
Sometimes people goes like "Im spending $XXX on this medicine, Im not gonna screw my diet" and in the end they end up noticing starving is not the way and end up eating healthy.
Ignorance is bliss. It all depends on whether or not you're willing to shell out the 150 bucks a month for her happiness. Personally, I'd let her know. Ignorance may be bliss now, but it may come back to bite her in the ass down the line.
500 calories a day? That is extremely low. So low that it is unhealthy.
whit 500 calorie a day not only she is starving her self but the body go into survival mode
If the thinks it will make her feel less hungry, maybe it will. Thats how homeophaty/placebo works anyway. But 150 usd a month is a very steep price for that. On the other hand, if you pay that much, it has to be effective, right?
There are other diets out there, a lot of them build on a low cal ditet (almost all the shakes/soup/bar packs). BUT a starvation diet drops you very fast the first week, since you dump out more than you put in, after that the body lowers its metabolic rate to cope with the bad times. When you go off a diet like that, you usually gain back what you have lost, unless you reduce your overall intake or exercise more.
Let's put it this way. Put yourself in her shoes, and her in yours. What would you want her to do?
That's your answer.
Fenixdown (retail) : level 60 priest. 2005-2015, 2022-???? (returned!)
Fenixdown (classic) : level 70 priest. 2019 - present
500?! fuck that solution, tell her to stay below 1500 a day and go for a walk 2-3 miles a day. these 2 things alone whould make her lose weigt at record speed.
You should absolutely intervene. Never mind the homeopathy crap, but living off 500 calories a day is simply dangerous and won't keep them going for long.
I'd take that money and invest it in knowledge about how human calorie consumption works and lose weight the healthy, long term way.
No, really. Even the strictest diets don't dip below 1000-1200 calories. Stop it right away.
That aside, show her some of James Randi's stuff on homeopathy, it's pretty explanatory.
Question, would the sugars from a 0 cal soda still contribute to weight gain? Been trying to lose weight and have successfuly maintained my 1200 cal diet (well, except the day I had my car accident...) for 10 days but not a single pound was lost so Ive been wondering if its because of my 0 cal soda consumption.
'Nutritionist' isn't subject to professional regulation in many countries, you can call yourself one if you want!
As a nutritionist I can confirm that drinking liquids containing certain xanthine alkaloids can lead to increased alertness but can also cause addiction and high blood pressure, and even death in some animal species.
Kindly offer to buy the treatment for her , rob a couple of her old bottles and fill them with tap water. pocket the $150. everyone is happy, she continues to diet, you get to buy beer!
I would love to see what the conversation started off like...
i can imagine something like "ok dear I've spoken to my online mmochampion friends about you being on a diet and needing to lose weight and we have decided..."
A scientist not believing in homeopathy
more at 11
That's not true at all - I do believe in the observable benefits brought about in a significant percentage of the population via the placebo effect. My question wasn't about whether or not the placebo effect exists - it clearly does - but rather about whether it was preferable to inform her of all the facts including the negative effects that would be wrought upon her body by such a drastic dieting method, or to let it run its course and deal with those issues down the line.
While its well known that starvation diets do indeed lead to people losing large quantities of weight, the issue is that they come with a huge number of associated risks and little evidence that at the end of the diet the weight would stay off - rather that as soon as the calorie intake increased beyond energy levels needed to live that the body would start cramming as much of it back into fat storage as it could.
If you mean, rather, to imply that there a medical benefits to homeopathy beyond the placebo effect, you're right, I don't believe that because it can be demonstrated as completely false. Also, color therapy does nothing (actually, thats not true, there are a couple of liver conditions which the only treatment for besides transplant *IS* blue light color therapy, however that's a unique case - color therapy doesn't cure cancer, or measles, etc, or have any mechanism to do so). Crystal therapy is another hoot. Crystals do nothing besides look pretty. Acupuncture has no medical benefits. Remote pressure points (such as in the feet) simply don't exist. There are some direct manipulation points in the neck which can affect blood flow, and manipulating other ailments directly can sometimes have a positive effect, much like taking an anti-inflammatory ibuprofen will. These all share something in common with homeopathy though - a high (well, under 30%, but that's pretty good considering they're not directly doing anything) success rate through the demonstrable benefits of the placebo effect.
The funniest thing about the placebo effect, is that post-trial studies of patients who've been on the placebos find that well over half simply don't believe they've been on a placebo - that the "scientists must have screwed up and given them the real drug instead". That's how strong the effect is - people would rather believe that educated scientists who know precisely what they're doing must have 'screwed up', rather than understanding how marvelous the body is that this effect has evolved to give our body stimulus to try and repair itself simply by believing it can do so. When they're not in a 'trial', how much harder would it be to convince these people that they've been on a placebo, and that the water/crystals/acupunture/etc weren't actually doing anything directly? See the problem?
It's especially effective against conditions where our conscious response lies entirely in our brain - boosting the immune system, or headaches for example. While the stimuli may be real, the pain signal processing is done entirely in the brain - many pain killers work simply by suppressing this pain processing, but the placebo effect demonstrates that in many cases, people can do this themselves, without drugs, simply by believing they're taking drugs. Homeopathy for example...
Pressure points are my favourite, too many people watch kung fu movies and believe that there are certain points you can press to magically effect the body's energy flow or some other bullshit.
Pressure points do exist, but not in that way at all. Even from a martial arts perspective they are only about how joints and muscles and tendons work in relation to each other, and manipulating certain points allows you to prevent your oponent applying force in a certain direction, or to put pressure on a joint or nerve. Its all explainable by quite simple mechanics, there is no mystic place you can touch in foot to prevent headaches.......