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Anonymous
If you eat a lot in one night (upwards of 1,500 calories in one night) does your body absorb all of it as it would if you had eaten that amount spread throughout the day, or does it expend more energy while digesting the food in your stomach thus mitigating the calories absorbed?
>> Anonymous
look up how sumo wrestlers train

that should be your answer

and yes, for sumo, eating is part of training
>> Anonymous
It absorbs what it needs then stores the rest, that's why it's better to eat many small portions throughout the day, better chance of absorbtion instead of storing fat. But if you're worried about gaining weight you have to eat 3500cal over your bmr to gain a pound.
>> Anonymous
Too much of everything at one moment.
Your body - glycogens, fats storage, etc etc.
>> Anonymous
Let me rephrase.

Situation 1: Over the course of a week one eats 200 calories over their total expenditure each day, and at the end of the week they have an excess of 1,400 calories.

Situation 2: Over the course of 6 days one eats exactly (for hypothetical purposes) their daily caloric expenditure, but on the last day of the week eats 1,400 calories over their daily expenditure.

Given the two situations, which person would gain more weight, or would the gain weight be completely the same?
>> Anonymous
>>347310
I'd like to know as well. From what I observed, people who eat fast food and those who binge due to whatever reason all gain weight so may be it's the same. But if you eat enough so that your metabolism is working at a normal rate compared to those who overeat, you might burn more calories and therefore don't gain as much weight.

Just speculative, i don't know shit.