When I was a young athlete navigating endometriosis, three laparoscopies, chemically induced menopause, and then surgical menopause, there was no roadmap. No playbook for someone in their 30s trying to keep training. I wasn’t finding helpful studies in PubMed. All I had was Hystersisters — a chat forum that didn’t help me train, recover, or feel human.
Stacy Sims was apparently doing research back then, but it wasn’t showing up in my Google searches. And when I finally did find her work, it still felt incomplete. Some puzzle pieces, but not the full picture. Not for someone like me.
Fast forward to today, and we’ve got Stacy Sims and Lauren Colenso-Semple debating “women’s fueling needs” on a podcast like it’s a prize fight. Lauren spent years taking passive-aggressive swipes at Stacy in pink-and-purple infographics with tiny PubMed links tucked in the corner. This time she did it to Stacy’s face.
And honestly? The whole thing is unnecessary. It doesn’t move the needle. It doesn’t give clarity to the women who need it. It’s just another round of “who’s right?” while actual athletes are left exhausted and confused.
The Receipts (and How They Don’t Add Up)
Lauren’s side:
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Cited human trials (some women-only, some mixed-sex) showing that fasted vs fed training produces similar adaptations when daily intake is matched.
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Pointed to her own research showing the menstrual cycle doesn’t change protein metabolism.
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Bottom line: outcomes look the same, stop fear-mongering about timing.
Stacy’s side:
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Leaned into meal-timing research in overweight adults, rodent studies on kisspeptin and ghrelin, and the strongest piece of her arsenal: low energy availability (LEA) data in women.
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Bottom line: women are uniquely sensitive, avoid fasted training or risk hormone chaos.
Reality check:
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Lauren cherry-picks outcomes, ignoring LEA literature.
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Stacy cherry-picks mechanisms, ignoring outcome trials.
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Both camps? Mostly studying young, eumenorrheic women.
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Neither gives us guidelines for masters or menopausal athletes.
Topic | Lauren’s Evidence | Stacy’s Evidence | Reality Check |
---|---|---|---|
Fed vs fasted training | RCTs in women/mixed groups: outcomes similar | Rodents + LEA warnings | Fasted sessions aren’t catastrophic if fueling overall is solid |
Nutrient timing | Women-only trials: pre vs post doesn’t matter | Mixed-sex, overweight adults: early > late eating | Daily intake & adherence matter more than timing |
Protein metabolism | Men vs women: similar MPS; cycle phase no effect | Mechanistic “female sensitivity” | Little sex difference; no need for cycle micromanaging |
Hormone sensitivity | Downplays it | Rodents, macaques, kisspeptin/ghrelin | Mechanistic, not performance outcomes |
LEA (low energy availability) | Ignored | Strong women-specific studies | Both should acknowledge: LEA risk is real |