If
you think about it, losing weight is actually kind of a mind-boggling
thing. One minute you're carrying the extra pounds, but after a stint of
healthy eating and regular exercise, you're physically smaller. So where does all the fat go?
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You might imagine the globules of fat just sort of burst and cease to exist, but POPSUGAR looked
into it and it turns out that's very much not the case. I mean, there's
clearly a reason I don't have a degree in anything scientific.
"The
correct answer is that most of the mass is breathed out as carbon
dioxide. It goes into thin air," physicist Ruben Meerman, MD told POPSUGAR. Yeah, you read that correctly: you breathe out fat. This is unbelievable.
*Starts breathing quicker in an attempt to get rid of more*
Apparently,
it's a rough 80/20 split between fat predominantly being expelled from
your body via your lungs, with the remainder being evacuated via your
urine, faeces, sweating, and tears.
[post_ads]If
you're feeling a bit dim now for never having known this life-altering
information, don't worry, you're not the only one. According to the head
of the UNSW School of Biotechnology and Biomolecular Sciences,
Professor Andrew Brown, there are plenty of doctors and dietitians who were convinced fat was converted into muscle, or that it turned into either energy or heat and was 'burnt' in that way.
Sadly, if you're now thinking that instead of your next work-out at the gym you'll just cry buckets while breathing quickly - if that's how fat exits the body, why not give it more opportunity to go, right?
- you'll be disappointed. Fat has to go through a metabolic process
before it's actually lost - but having said that, there are plenty of
ways to boost your metabolism, and that will speed up your rate of fat loss.
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