Friday, January 24, 2020

Any tips for gaining/maintaining muscle while losing weight?

I (M/21) am making another push this year toward weight loss (CW: 245, 6’0”). I’ve always been pretty athletic and feel I have a good bit of muscle on me, so I’ve had trouble really placing what my goal weight should be.

Moving forward I just want to lose weight and eventually push toward gains. During the losing weight phase I was looking for some tips on what deficit I should eat and what I should be doing at the gym in the meantime.

Is it a waste to lift every day while eating a deficit?

Would it be better to just focus on what burns the most calories like cardio?

Should I add extra protein to my diet to help get some gains in the meantime?

I just have a lot of questions, and figured I’d get advice here. Thanks!

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Weight loss =/= gym membership

Just as being healthy =/= being fit. I don't know when it was, but I always associated weight loss with the gym... Maybe all the commercials blasted on TV when I was little, or maybe word of mouth but whenever the thought of losing weight came to mind, it was always followed by the gym.

Maybe this is why I was overweight and near obese most of my life, I hated the idea of going to a public place and being watched as I minded my own business. I always made the excuse of it's too far, expensive blah blah blah.

Last year after a huge accomplishment (yay education) I realized I was capable of starting something, push through it and finish it... Felt great. I started browsing reddit, looking at YouTube videos "how to get healthy" "how to lose weight" I started to read and watch from fellow overweight / obese people that lost 100, 200 and some pounds and managed to completely change their life.

They all had the same advice over and over again.

The battle starts at the kitchen, period.

There will be no gyms, no excersises, no workouts, none.

Your mission is to realize what you are eating, and understand what you are eating and learn everything you can of what you are eating... But careful because this also includes the most deadly enemies of them all: Liquid calories.

You will lose weight after you start learning of the foods you eat, the stuff you shouldn't be eating / drinking and creating some sort of calorie deficit in your body.

After you lose some weight and gain the confidence that you need, then you may add additional support such as working out, excersise, fasting, etc

I personally still don't go to the gym, I know that I am in a calorie deficit so I am not expecting to build the largest muscles in the block. I wanted to get into calisthenics so I went with the bodyweight option... I know I am gaining strength because I can feel it with each workout that I do and different progression variations, just do whatever takes you to your goals.

Good luck with your lifestyle changes.

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Thursday, January 23, 2020

Sticking to it and not giving into emotional eating

Over the course of getting my bachelor's degree, I had slowly gained weight totaling about 30 lbs (10 to 15 lbs of it had occurred over the past year due to the stress of some family health crisises and grief over the death of two close friends). Unfortunately, I have developed the bad habit of turning to food when I'm sad or stressed, specifically sweets.

Now, I am in graduate school, taking classes, teaching, and doing research. I've decided to try to lose weight, but I often have trouble sticking to a weight loss plan and give into temptation (sweets...) when I'm stressed. Does anyone have any advice on how to overcome this? I'm currently trying Noom. Is anyone here using it? Is it helpful?

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[Progress] I used to think I was the laziest, most undedicated individual out there but today marks my 10th kg lost

I started my weight loss journey on 21st October 2019. I weighed 65 kgs and was generally just unhealthy (used to eat a lot of sugary things). I started off slow with just exercise and no diet/calorie counting.

Just exercise helped motivate me a lot. I thought I’d leave it after a few days but it’s been 4 months and I’ve stuck to it religiously.

After exercise, I started cutting sugar out, saying no to cakes etc (I have the biggest sweet tooth out there and everyone in my family was shocked) but I just watched YouTube videos of Korean girls dancing (One Million Dance Studio I’m looking at you) and their figures gave me a lot of motivation.

On 22nd December 2019 I downloaded My Fitness Pal and properly started counting my calories after calculating my BMR. That app is a literal Godsend, it helped a lot in my journey.

In the middle, I got gifted a huge amount of chocolate and I thought I would cave but it’s still there locked up in my cupboard. I can’t even believe it myself.

I didn’t stick to a specific diet, I mostly just control my portion size and eat whatever I’m feeling like. I also incorporate some no carb days in the middle to kind of cleanse my body. I drink lots of cinnamon tea as well.

I just look and feel better. I’m so glad I believed in myself enough to power through the obstacles.

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4 months away… and I can’t wait!

I’m feeling super motivated to start, or rather, finish a long journey.

In early 2019 I had been trying (and unsuccessfully I might add) to find the motivation to get in shape. I was my heaviest at 188 lbs. So, I started to run… again. I enjoy running and, over the years I have trained for and completed many half marathons, a full marathon and even a 50k, but all that ever got me was skinny fat. I’d end up with toned legs, noodle arms and a small gut, not the most impressive of dad bods.

By Spring, I had dropped to about 180 lbs from running and paying a little bit better attention to my diet. But I was starting to become skinny fat again, I debated on joining a gym. I heard about a HIIT circuit gym close to my house and in May I decided to check it out. I joined with the intention not on really losing weight but more for building muscle and toning up. In more general terms I just wanted to “look fit” and not have a dad bod. The HIIT gym is pretty great, I go for 30 minutes 3 times a week, and get a full body workout. I enjoyed the quick sessions with structured workouts, which made going and completing the workouts super convenient. I talked about it with everyone, I even talked my wife into joining. Over the next couple of months, I started to feel a little stronger and even lost a few more pounds.

During the summer (and kind of spur of the moment) my best friend talked me into training for another 50k in the fall. We found a race right after Thanksgiving and made a training plan that was for only 12 weeks and I started running long miles again. However, with the heavy demands of training for a 50k trail marathon, (running 5 times a week) I had to cut down to twice a week at the gym. The increased miles and reduced gym time stalled my strength gains and I was on my way back to becoming skinny fat once more.

We successfully completed the 50k (yay!) and by this time I had dropped to 169 lbs! However, the long miles of cardio and reduced strength training had altered my physique a bit. While my weight was looking okay, it wasn’t the “fit” look I was going for. After taking some time off running, I decided I wanted to try to bulk up over the next couple months. Without really planning it out other than saying I want to bulk up this month. I kind of took a relaxed stance on my diet and drastically cut back on all the long cardio. I increased my gym sessions back to 3 times a week and the strength gains of the early summer started to return.

The bulking period… I started reading articles and watching some fitness videos on youtube and without getting into too much Bro-science I think what I did for December is a more of “dirty bulk” and ate kind of whatever I wanted (within some reason) and gained about 6-7 pounds back over the month. By January, I had started using myfitnesspal to track my eating more regularly. I was keeping to about 2000 cals/day, trying to get at least 150g of protein/day and went on with more of a clean bulk/maintenance diet, gaining a little more, up to 178.

To back up a little bit, when January rolled around the gym was starting to get more crowded – as they tend to do at this time of year, and one of the trainers just asked me kind of in passing “how are you doing on your fitness goals?” And that’s when it hit me, I didn’t really have one…I wanted to “look fit” but what does that even mean? Its not really a measurable goal, poorly defined and no real finish line to shoot for. So, I thought about this for a few days and decided that I needed a more concrete goal and landed on wanting to have noticeable abs. Still, not the best of goals as its kind of subjective and a little vague. After a little research, I found out that abs start to show around 13-15% body fat. We have a beach trip coming up around Memorial Day so why not make the goal of having visible abs coincide with that?

Finally! A measurable goal to shoot for, and a time-frame to do it in. I found my finish line!

Now that I have a defined goal, I wanted to create a plan to accomplish it. I started making a spreadsheet to track my progress and take some measurements. I put my measurements in an online body fat calculator, and it estimated I have about 24% body fat. In researching body fat though I concluded that the calculators aren’t super reliable and can range in accuracy. So, I found a bod pod air displacement test relatively close by and for only $15 I can get a highly accurate measurement.

I started doing a deeper dive into where I am currently and where I want to go. Starting to form a plan on how to get there. I know I’m going to need to “cut” weight, but I also want to keep as much muscle as I can …to avoid being skinny fat once more. A fast diet will drop some weight most of which would be fat, but some will be muscle mass too. After more research, watching more youtube videos and talking with the trainers at the gym. I think I can maintain or possibly gain muscle over the next 16 weeks if I go slow with the weight loss, work hard at the gym, exercising and eating right, to complete a body transformation. As part of eating right I’ll be focusing on protein and trying to get at least 135g per day.

I’m currently 178 pounds and estimated at 24% body fat (BF) which comes out to about 43 pounds of fat and 135 pounds of lean body mass (LBM.) If I can maintain my 100% of my LBM and drop to 15% BF then my new goal weight is about 155 lbs. However, my ending weight goal can fluctuate though depending what my LBM does over the next 16 weeks. If I keep my main goal to only have 15% BF but I lose 2% LBM or gain up to 3% LBM then my ending weight will land anywhere from 152-160 pounds.

Which brings me to this week…my last week of “clean” bulking. Well, the weight gain bulking part has kind of fizzled, the past couple weeks as I’ve basically maintained my weight. So I’m going to use that as a starting point in my diet change calculations. All month I’ve been hovering around 1900-2100 calories a day. (My myfitnesspal average is 1850 but I don’t always add a light snack here or there.) If I have a starting weight of 178lbs and a goal of 155lbs then I will need to lose about 23 lbs. In my research I found that 1 lb of fat is lost with a 3,500-calorie deficit, which for 23 lbs comes out to over 80,000 cals! I have 16 weeks to do it, so that’s about 5000 cals/week or 700/day. This 700/cals per day is the deficit I’ll need to impose to slowly lose weight.

If I make an educated guess that my current daily calorie intake is about 1,925 and I burn 450 cals each of 3 times a week at the gym (confirmed via chest wore heart rate monitor), then my net weekly cals (calories eaten minus calories burned) is 12,125 which averages to 1,732 cals/day.

If I plan to cut my daily caloric intake to 1500 cals, and increase my calorie burn at the gym to 500 (x3) and then add in running/walking 3 times a week to burn an additional 600 cals (per run) then my planned total would be 7200 net cals per week or 1028 cals per day. Which comes to about 700 cals difference from what I’m currently doing. Of course, all this math might shift a little when I get the results of the bod pod body composition test which is scheduled for next week, on the last day before the diet and exercise change will kick in. I plan schedule another one at the end to see how I did. I'm already pumped at the thought of what my "after" pics could look like.

I have a goal, I have a plan, now all I need to do is stick to it.

Easier said than done, but here goes! Thanks for reading.

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Is it possible to activate both slow and fast twitch muscle fibers in 2 parts of your body?

I've been going to the gym and changing my diet up for a little over a month now, and I had a question I was really curious about. Leg me explain: - I'm a 270 lb, 6' 18 yo male, and my goal is to go down to at least 250, then 220, then 200 by at least june 2021. - I really enjoy cardio. I can hike, run, bike, and swim for hours and I wouldn't get tired of it. The only thing that's stopping me is chafing in my thighs and joint discomfort. - I don't really like doing weight training, but I still go and do it because I know that I need to hold as much muscle as I can. I've shifted my gaze more towards only doing upper body when I'm in the gym. - I've been going back and forth between jogging and the gym every day for the past 2 weeks, with a day or 2 per week to rest.

Now that I've got some of my explanation down, I want to know if it's possible to activate both the twitch fibers since my lower body is only doing slow twitch, but my upper body is only doing fast twitch. Is it possible to activate them both during my weight loss journey?

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Just accept it or? Weight loss after joining Gym not going to plan.

So I started my weight lose journey back in late November. I quickly went from 345-330 (I was 330 on the 1st) Felt good.

I joined a gym in late December and have been going for a month now. And I'm finding it hard to stay under my calorie intake (currently sitting at 2,360) i'm working out 4x a week and I feel way more hungry then I used too. Since the start of the year (the 1st) I've gone from 330 to 328. Was hoping to be closing in on the lower 320s by the end of January but feel like I'd be lucky to be 326 by end of this month.

But my clothes are fitting better, much better then before. Part of me feels its cause I'm replacing fat with muscle which I know takes up less "space" and even though I'm not always staying under my calorie intake I'm still making progress and I should be happy.

Thoughts?

Just this week

Thursday: Over 284

Wednesday: over by 50

Tuesday: Under by 100

Monday: over by 58

Although Sunday I was under by 336

(I find Sundays its quite easy to stay way under)

However before I joined the gym it was easy to stay under my calorie goal by 200-300 everyday.

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