Nutrition Myths · No. 1
Carbs don't make you gain weight. Your context does.
The most blamed macronutrient on earth is mostly innocent. What actually moves the needle is quantity, quality, and the life you eat it in.
Walk into any conversation about weight and someone will indict bread. Carbs have become the villain of the modern plate — quietly cut, anxiously counted, blamed for everything from a stubborn waistline to an afternoon slump. It is a tidy story. It is also wrong.
No single macronutrient makes a body store fat. That is decided by the total energy you take in against what you spend, stretched over weeks and months — not by the presence of rice on a plate. The right carbohydrates, eaten in sensible portions, feed your hormones, your workouts, and your mood.
What gets people into trouble is rarely the carbohydrate itself. It is the form (ultra-refined, engineered to be eaten quickly), the volume, and the context — eaten while distracted, under stress, or on top of a day that already had enough.