7 Boundaries and Invalid Claims · 7.3 Pregnancy, Eating-Disorder, and Underweight Boundary
7.3 Pregnancy, Eating-Disorder, and Underweight Boundary
Human Fat-Based Metabolism
This page is structured as definition, control variables, causal chain, observable outputs, and boundary, and serves as a canonical definition node in Human FBM.
Pregnancy, lactation, eating-disorder risk, and severe underweight states are not suitable for direct guidance from ordinary Human FBM pages.
Control variables in these states include development needs, endocrine context, behavioral risk, and total-energy safety monitoring beyond substrate structure.
Development-stage demand, lactation energy demand, and hormonal background form an independent control layer.
Eating-disorder behavioral risk and psychological variables cannot be explained by substrate structure alone.
Severe underweight and malnutrition risk require separate safety-monitoring variables.
Total energy and lean-mass trend are prerequisites for whether structural discussion can continue.
When special physiological or behavioral risk is present, structural discussion should yield to safety-boundary definition.
Continuing with substrate variables alone can produce incorrect judgment and incorrect execution expectations.
Under this boundary, common outputs include intensified energy volatility, rising lean-mass risk, and unstable execution.
Output focus should shift to stop conditions and safety monitoring, not structural optimization promises.
This page provides no execution advice and defines stop conditions only.
Structural pages in this context serve boundary explanation, not guidance function.