The diet plan involves a big increase in exercise. I don’t know if the Soylent will work or not, I am not as negative about it as some in the thread, but why not tailor what you eat to what you’re doing?
I train as a runner- I’m no champ, but it keeps me in shape. When I am especially focused on improving my times, I try to eat a runner’s diet. 50 miles of treadmill per week is close to the same thing, so maybe give it a look? I don’t count calories, I simply try to limit myself to things on the list (plus Doritos of course). The choices are all healthy, and with 15 of them it may provide a more satisfying level of variety than a liquid diet.
But again, I don’t know anything about Soylent, maybe that will work in the short run.
Habeed, I posted a link some time ago and would like to know if you had a look at it. DSeid and RP seem to have given you some solid advice, and the reason I ask is because a lot of what they have said aligns pretty closely with what nerd fitness has to say. I don’t want to come off as a fanboi, but the support and advice I’ve received helped me lose 30 lbs two years ago. It enables you to make better lifestyle choices which should result in you losing some weight, but more importantly, make you healthier and as a bonus, your clothes will fit better…
Can I add that “runner’s diet” to my list of potential high satiety/moderate palatabilty diet plans?
I do want to be clear … a meal replacement plan can work for the weight loss phase of a diet plan but a liquid meal replacement plan as a long term solution is not a great idea, IMHO, even if it was sustainable. Real foods contain a plethora of substances that contribute to health and the benefits of eating a variety of real foods - vegetables, fruits, nuts, beans, whole grains, fish, so on - are not captured by a processed liquid meal substitute.
Vey seriously, “moderately palatable” (avoiding the hyperpalatable) does not mean food doesn’t taste very good. It is a reference to the combinations of sweet/salty/fatty products of the Food Industrial Complex. A more academic treatment:
Now I am unsure how far the addicition analogy goes but the fact that the combinations created in the modern world stimulate those centers more strongly than most real foods do (and the satiety centers less) is the idea …