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The Magnifying Glass Effect - Printable Version +- Steroid Forums (https://steroidforums.org) +-- Forum: Main (https://steroidforums.org/forumdisplay.php?fid=4) +--- Forum: General (https://steroidforums.org/forumdisplay.php?fid=5) +--- Thread: The Magnifying Glass Effect (/showthread.php?tid=6753) |
The Magnifying Glass Effect - 01dragonslayer - 10-16-2023 By Aadam | The Magnifying Glass Effect is when we “zoom in” on a fuck up and become so hyper-focused on only that one fuck up that it becomes totally blown out of proportion and seems much worse than it really is. In this post, I’m going to show you why a few ‘bad’ days aren’t as bad as you think they are and why you should avoid falling victim to The Magnifying Glass Effect. This grid represents one year of your life ![]() Doesn’t seem so bad, right? Good. Let’s zoom in a bit more. This is one month of your life. ![]() ![]() This guy: ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() And now that the MGE is in full effect, you lose all sense of rationality and freak out. This is no longer just one bad day. No. Thanks to the MGE, this has just become the be all end all. Mainly the end-all. This freak out leads you to do things that only amplify the initial fuck up. So what initially wasn’t that much of a big deal has now just become a huge deal. This is where people will:
How this looks in real lifeWhile not 100% accurate, the 3500 calorie rule is still fairly accurate, so I will be using it to illustrate this point. The 3500 calorie rule states that to gain 1lb of fat, you need to consume 3500 calories on top of what you’re currently eating in a week. Let’s assume you’re dieting, and your current calorie intake is 2000 calories per day. ![]() In a week this equals 14,000 calories (7 days x 2000 calories). To gain one pound of fat, you’d need to eat 3500 calories on top of the 14,000 calories you’re currently eating. This means a total weekly intake of ~17,500 calories (14,000 calories + 3,500 calories). So let’s assume you ate 2000 calories for 6 days, and then one day in the week you ‘fell off’ and ate, hmmm, I dunno, let’s say 4,000 calories. This equals a weekly intake of 16,000 calories. By the end of the week, you’re still in a weekly deficit of around 1,500 calories. Not enough to gain fat. /sidebar4,000 calories is the equivalent of eight Big Macs. ![]() /end_sidebarThe weight you gain from one day of overeating is water, salt and glycogen ––not body fat. And this ‘water’ weight will drop after a few days once you’re back on track. Let’s push this example further and look at it over the period of a monthLet’s say you have three ‘fuck-ups’ in a month.
If your daily intake to lose fat is 2000 calories––in a week, that’s 14,000 calories, and over a month it’s 56,000 calories (14,000*4). For you to gain body fat, you’d need to be eating more than 70,000 calories over a month. So those three days of falling off aren’t going to ruin your fat loss progress, as long as you get right back on to your diet. Remember to keep the bigger picture in mindEveryone fucks up on their diet and training, occasionally. The point of this post is to illustrate that a bad day or two isn’t going to be detrimental to your goals as long as you get right back on track. Fucked up? Fine. Acknowledge you fucked up and move on. When you freak out and start trying to ‘damage control’, that’s the moment the MGE kicks in, and you end up doing something that only makes the situation worse. |