Originally posted by: Bateluer
Originally posted by: Gamingphreek
Well yeah, but the sandwhich is also my lunch. In addition to that I am a poor college kid...
-Kevin
Have you considered tuna packs? They are around a buck at walmart. You merely tear open the package and dig in with a spoon. The small ones have about 20g of protein and they keep forever.
Originally posted by: xtknight
I find that after I eat rice/baked chicken I immediately feel ready to work out. So do I need to eat even more of it after I work out or what?
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: sash1
Running builds leg muscle and burns fat?
You still need a surplus of calories to build ANY muscle.
Originally posted by: dpopiz
people seem to be split about this...
anyone have some scientific facts?
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: alkemyst
It's sort of a yes or no.
Yes you can get stronger and lose fat. Especially if new to training.
However, your max lifts will go down quite a bit on a cutting diet. Say I can do 100lb dumbbells for 6-8 reps while bulking...about a week after I cut my food intake down, I may only be able to get 2-4 reps out of that or even have to drop weight to 90-95lbs.
When most in the scene are talking muscle though, they are talking mass. So YMMV on what you are looking for.
In general, most people are better off cutting first, then adding muscle. Most will not do what it takes to put on serious mass anyway. If your bodyfat is already in the low teens as a male and you are not defined enough for your personal wants then no about of cutting will help.
You best bet will come from a 3 day a week program consisting of nothing more than the basics: bench press, squats, deadlifts....throwing power cleans in there is a good idea, but really optional at the starting point. If you want to throw a set of curls or something in feel free but know you are going to gain mass everywhere on your body sticking to the basics in the beginning. After 6-12 months of that and serious eating and sleeping, you should now be able to tell where you need work and where you are may be over-developing.
This is assuming you want to just get big and strong looking....various activities may preclude this from being your goal...but early power lifting can help even light weight gymnasts later on.
Why would you say the part I have bolded? I have been cutting for a few months now trying to get <10% bf. I am probably at about 12-13% right now. Why would you say I can't get any lower?
Originally posted by: SVT Cobra
Originally posted by: Frackal
Originally posted by: SVT Cobra
Originally posted by: ahurtt
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: Majesty
Actually, you need protein to build muscles. Hence the very existence of the whey protein.Originally posted by: Special K
Building muscle requires eating more calories than you burn. Losing fat requires burning more calories than you consume. These two requirements are kind of at odds with each other, unfortunately.
True, but at the end of the day you have to be eating above your maintenance level of calories to gain any weight.
No. Sorry. Your body normally uses protien to build. It normally uses carbs and then fat (in that order) for energy. However, in a pinch, assuming your body has no fat or carbs left to metabolize for energy, it CAN convert to using protien for energy. Excess calories, of any kind, get converted to fat. If your body has excess fat, it will resort to tapping into that fat as an energy source before it taps into its supply of protien. This leaves your body free to use the protien as new building blocks for new muscle cells.
Completely wrong. Your body uses carbs then protein then fat for energy. At certain times you cna burn a higher ratio of fat then to muscle (carbs strill dominate), but that whole fat burning zone thing is a big myth.
It depends ***A LOT*** on what type of activity you're engaged in, your hormone levels: (Insulin, cortisol, testosterone), etcetera. There is no absolute on this one
No, the body always burns carbs then muscle then fat. You find me someone otherwise and we can make a millions of dollars by having his genome decoded and find what gene causes it and maybe we can even win the noble prize. oh wait, that would mean we would have to find someone who evolved past todays humans. Good Luck, I'll pay you well.
Originally posted by: ahurtt
If your body has excess fat, it will resort to tapping into that fat as an energy source before it taps into its supply of protien. This leaves your body free to use the protien as new building blocks for new muscle cells.
Originally posted by: ahurtt
But fat can provide the energy your body needs to carry out exercise and do work leaving any protien you consume free to be used to synthesize new muscles.
Originally posted by: ahurtt
I agree. Genetics play a big part. But for the typical person, the body will metabolize carbs first (because it's easiest to break down) for energy. Next it will turn to fat because a gram of fat contains a little more than 2x the energy that a gram of protien does. (1 gram fat = about 9 calories, whereas 1 gram protien = about 4 calories. And as we know, calories = energy). Finally, if nothing else is available, your body can burn protien for energy.
Originally posted by: Frackal
What in the hell? Maybe we are not understanding each other. Are you saying that the body will, always, tap first exclusively into glycogen stores only until those are depleted, and then will exclusively turn to muscle tissue for its energy needs until .. what? All the person's muscle is gone? LOL and then it turns to fat stores? wtf??? Please clarify
Originally posted by: classy
I have read through some of the responses and it is clear most have no clue in the world of what they are talking about. In short the answer is yes, you can without a doubt gain muscle and lose fat. And it does not depend on what a person's build is either. While it is true an overweight person can generally do this, even a skinny person can as well, but not to the same degree. There are many factors that influence this, mainly diet and then excercise, as well as type of excercise as well. And let me address one person, the one who bought up Ronnie Coleman and professional bodybuilders, that person is clueless, lol. Real quick without going into great detail, most of the size loss by bodybuilders when preparing for a contest is not fat loss, its water weight, plain and simple. The mistake many here are making is they attribute fat loss with weight loss and that is not at all true. You can lose weight you can see on a scale and hardly even change your bodyfat percentage, just like you change your bodyfat percentage, but yet not see much weight loss at all. In closing the answer is yes, but varies on many factors.
Originally posted by: classy
I have read through some of the responses and it is clear most have no clue in the world of what they are talking about. In short the answer is yes, you can without a doubt gain muscle and lose fat. And it does not depend on what a person's build is either. While it is true an overweight person can generally do this, even a skinny person can as well, but not to the same degree. There are many factors that influence this, mainly diet and then excercise, as well as type of excercise as well. And let me address one person, the one who bought up Ronnie Coleman and professional bodybuilders, that person is clueless, lol. Real quick without going into great detail, most of the size loss by bodybuilders when preparing for a contest is not fat loss, its water weight, plain and simple. The mistake many here are making is they attribute fat loss with weight loss and that is not at all true. You can lose weight you can see on a scale and hardly even change your bodyfat percentage, just like you change your bodyfat percentage, but yet not see much weight loss at all. In closing the answer is yes, but varies on many factors.
Originally posted by: alkemyst
Originally posted by: classy
I have read through some of the responses and it is clear most have no clue in the world of what they are talking about. In short the answer is yes, you can without a doubt gain muscle and lose fat. And it does not depend on what a person's build is either. While it is true an overweight person can generally do this, even a skinny person can as well, but not to the same degree. There are many factors that influence this, mainly diet and then excercise, as well as type of excercise as well. And let me address one person, the one who bought up Ronnie Coleman and professional bodybuilders, that person is clueless, lol. Real quick without going into great detail, most of the size loss by bodybuilders when preparing for a contest is not fat loss, its water weight, plain and simple. The mistake many here are making is they attribute fat loss with weight loss and that is not at all true. You can lose weight you can see on a scale and hardly even change your bodyfat percentage, just like you change your bodyfat percentage, but yet not see much weight loss at all. In closing the answer is yes, but varies on many factors.
You have to be talking amateur's or lighter weight lifters if you think it's water-weight they are mostly losing. Day or week of the contest yeah, then they are trying to shed water.
Most heavyweights go up 50lbs+ during their off season...that's not water, it's just easier eating and living. For someone 200lbs+ staying at less than 10% bodyfat is pretty hard. When you are a natural 130-140lbs wet, it's a lot easier to stay there.
Originally posted by: SVT Cobra
Originally posted by: classy
I have read through some of the responses and it is clear most have no clue in the world of what they are talking about. In short the answer is yes, you can without a doubt gain muscle and lose fat. And it does not depend on what a person's build is either. While it is true an overweight person can generally do this, even a skinny person can as well, but not to the same degree. There are many factors that influence this, mainly diet and then excercise, as well as type of excercise as well. And let me address one person, the one who bought up Ronnie Coleman and professional bodybuilders, that person is clueless, lol. Real quick without going into great detail, most of the size loss by bodybuilders when preparing for a contest is not fat loss, its water weight, plain and simple. The mistake many here are making is they attribute fat loss with weight loss and that is not at all true. You can lose weight you can see on a scale and hardly even change your bodyfat percentage, just like you change your bodyfat percentage, but yet not see much weight loss at all. In closing the answer is yes, but varies on many factors.
Oh the irony, I have a degree in nutrition and I am a professional powerlifter, and what you said is complete bs. You have no idea, Ronnie Colman is up around 315-340 before he starts cutting down to about 285. And losing water weight doesn't get you down to his bf% dumbass.And yes I did explain in detail and give the reasons why this is not possible. Once again stfu.
Originally posted by: classy
Originally posted by: SVT Cobra
Originally posted by: classy
I have read through some of the responses and it is clear most have no clue in the world of what they are talking about. In short the answer is yes, you can without a doubt gain muscle and lose fat. And it does not depend on what a person's build is either. While it is true an overweight person can generally do this, even a skinny person can as well, but not to the same degree. There are many factors that influence this, mainly diet and then excercise, as well as type of excercise as well. And let me address one person, the one who bought up Ronnie Coleman and professional bodybuilders, that person is clueless, lol. Real quick without going into great detail, most of the size loss by bodybuilders when preparing for a contest is not fat loss, its water weight, plain and simple. The mistake many here are making is they attribute fat loss with weight loss and that is not at all true. You can lose weight you can see on a scale and hardly even change your bodyfat percentage, just like you change your bodyfat percentage, but yet not see much weight loss at all. In closing the answer is yes, but varies on many factors.
Oh the irony, I have a degree in nutrition and I am a professional powerlifter, and what you said is complete bs. You have no idea, Ronnie Colman is up around 315-340 before he starts cutting down to about 285. And losing water weight doesn't get you down to his bf% dumbass.And yes I did explain in detail and give the reasons why this is not possible. Once again stfu.
Let me also address something else in your post. Because it is clear you got your degree from some online mickey mouse college. For the last and final time you like many other goofballs associate fatloss with weightloss. While fatloss does lead to weightloss, it is not always the case. And like I said many factors come into play from diet, excercise, type of excercise, and genetics. I don't care what lousy piece of toilet paper is hanging on your wall, it is a fact proven countless times, you can gain muscle while losing fat. You need to go back to school or better yet go to a real school.