Originally posted by: krunchykrome
Originally posted by: RagingBITCH
Originally posted by: krunchykrome
I've been into bodybuilding since the begining of the year. I train 4-5 days a week and I spend over $150/month on supplements. I've gained some lean mass since, so you could say I am fairly serious about the sport.
I'm currently 5'11 and I weigh 195 lbs. But I can't run for more than a few minutes without losing breath. I can sprint, but I can't run long distances.
I wouldn't say 4-5 months is serious. You're probably experiencing beginner's gains, wait another 6 months when you hit a plateau.
And if you can't run more than a little while before losing breath, that means you're not in good cardiovascular shape. I don't care how you try to slice/dice it. People need to realize that being athletic/getting in shape involves both aerobic and anaerobic excercise, you're cheating yourself by not trying to get better at both.
Granted I'm not that great at running - I don't think I could ever do a half marathon or a full, but I don't make excuses, I try to get better at running.
I agree with you, you can have a muscular body, but without cardiovascular health, you are not in shape. I have been bulking lately, not worrying much about cardio. My only concern at this time is gaining as much weight as I can before I start cutting in a month.
And I dont think my gains are associated with beginer's gains. I weightlifted frequently a year ago, then I stopped, and only recently did I get very serious about it. Some of the gains I've gotten back are the result of muscle memory. The rest is hard work and supplementation.
Originally posted by: RagingBITCH
Um, do you have any idea what you're talking about?
Originally posted by: RagingBITCH
Originally posted by: krunchykrome
Originally posted by: RagingBITCH
Originally posted by: krunchykrome
I've been into bodybuilding since the begining of the year. I train 4-5 days a week and I spend over $150/month on supplements. I've gained some lean mass since, so you could say I am fairly serious about the sport.
I'm currently 5'11 and I weigh 195 lbs. But I can't run for more than a few minutes without losing breath. I can sprint, but I can't run long distances.
I wouldn't say 4-5 months is serious. You're probably experiencing beginner's gains, wait another 6 months when you hit a plateau.
And if you can't run more than a little while before losing breath, that means you're not in good cardiovascular shape. I don't care how you try to slice/dice it. People need to realize that being athletic/getting in shape involves both aerobic and anaerobic excercise, you're cheating yourself by not trying to get better at both.
Granted I'm not that great at running - I don't think I could ever do a half marathon or a full, but I don't make excuses, I try to get better at running.
I agree with you, you can have a muscular body, but without cardiovascular health, you are not in shape. I have been bulking lately, not worrying much about cardio. My only concern at this time is gaining as much weight as I can before I start cutting in a month.
And I dont think my gains are associated with beginer's gains. I weightlifted frequently a year ago, then I stopped, and only recently did I get very serious about it. Some of the gains I've gotten back are the result of muscle memory. The rest is hard work and supplementation.
True. What was your beginning weight before you started a year ago? And supplementation - while necessary to an extent for building muscle, is largely overdone nowadays. I'm just not a fan of people saying "I have to have supplement X, Y, and Z". I used to be huge into supplements, but I just realized its a huge drain on the wallet when considering once you get off the majority of them, you lose a lot of your size. I'm pretty happy now with just protein powder and Glutamine. I'm looking more at maintaining size b/c the women are pretty happy (5'10", 172lbs).But good luck with lifting weights and gaining mass. I started at the end of freshman year of college - 140lbs dripping wet. It's definitely a confidence booster and a lifelong thing to make yourself better.
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