Koing
Elite Member <br> Super Moderator<br> Health and F
- Oct 11, 2000
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Originally posted by: irishScott
Originally posted by: Megatomic
You compensate for the huge calorie burn by taking in an equal amount of calories plus a bit more to compensate for muscle growth. My BMR is 1800, and my exercise related calorie expenditure is about 1500 per day. I'm not seeing any negative effects in my health at all. And my knees and ankles are in much better condition now than they were two years ago. No more creaking and crackling and stiffness.
I'm seriously excited about triathlon and it's my ultimate fitness motivator. :thumbsup:
It doesn't have to do with the calorie intake specifically. The book (Written by that Dr. Oz guy) just uses it as a measure for how much stress your body endures, and how much is too much.
He actually uses the Governator himself as an example. Arnold himself acknowledges that his body is slowing down because of his age AND because of his overtaxing it for years.
The effects aren't immediate, but there are plenty of marathoners out there who have horrible arthritis when they hit their 40s, while the non-super athletes can move freely.
I'm planning long-term here. I want to be as healthy as I can possibly and practically be; for the rest of my life. Not just the present.
Well either way you cut it, if you do anything long enough and hard enough for a period of 10-15yrs+ you will end up falling to bits. If you didn't you didn't do it long enough or hard enough period.
BUT not everyone wants to compete and be at the top of their game. If you do whatever activity/ sport you do to a lesser degree you will last longer over the lonver overhaul.
As for me? F0ck it. I'll lift as heavy and as fast as I can go without injury. As I start rocking over 33-35yrs or so I'll train lighter more often and take longer recoveries and my peaking years are more or less over. I have been at it for 7yrs and have a further 10-12yrs left in the tank till my obsolute peak.
You take your changes and do what you want but at the end of the day if you do ANY sport competitively for a long time you will end up falling to bits. It's knowing when to back off the pedal a bit is the key. A 25-28yr old isn't the same as guy that is 38-41...your recovery will not be the same. And for most people the older you get the more injuries you accumulate along the way, and it all adds up!
Running is tough on the knees, so is churning out hundreds and hundreds of press ups on your elbows.
Koing
