Originally Posted by Leafy
(Post 1007209)
I donno. I haven't actively lifted legs in years. I like being able to wear pants. If I do legs for a couple months, loose fitting pants start to become skin tight on my thighs and I end up wearing like size 38 and taking up massive slack with a belt.
EDIT: Week 2 update - Lost another two pounds without working out. My last final is today so I will be hitting the gym again after a short vacation. Then the inches should start coming off again. |
Originally Posted by Ryan_G
(Post 1007214)
I have this problem. I was blessed with my mom's hips :facepalm: If I actively lift with my legs they become huge. It was great when I was playing soccer because I could run fast and kick the ball like a pro but now it just makes finding jeans or dress pants a pain in the ass because they are cut for normal men.
EDIT: Week 2 update - Lost another two pounds without working out. My last final is today so I will be hitting the gym again after a short vacation. Then the inches should start coming off again. What, specifically, is your diet? Low carbs, high quality fats, high quality proteins? No caloric target, right? I read back through all the pages, and wasn't positive which track you were taking. I'm the OP, and would like to ask a couple of follow up questions. They are completed unrelated to each other. 1) Energy Drinks - SUGAR IS BAD. I get that. But what about things like Monster Zero? No sugar (Sucralose). Granted, it has a lot of things in it that end with -xine, -trate, and -ide. Decent (synthetic) vitamins and lots of caffeine. Thoughts? 2) Cardio - I mean in the generic sense of the word, that is, an exercise that is designed to engage and exhaust your cardiovascular system. To me, cardio is bad word. When I think cardio I think "running" or "jogging"...two things that I absolutely despise. Chalk it up to my wicked ADD, but when I'm running for the sake of cardio, all I can think about is all of the things that I'd rather be doing. That leads to absolute destruction of motivation, and I never stick to a cardio regimen. Interval training, HIIT, or whatever the cool new buzzword is different. HIIT is designed to blast your system, get your heart rate really high in short bursts, leading to a shorter workout. Definitely something I can get behind as there's not enough time for my ADD to kick in. Anyone have any experience with both? Can anyone provide a realworld comparison? The common internet addage is to compare the body of a sprinter (representing HIIT) to the body of a long distance runner (generic hours-long cardio). Maybe that's a good analogy...maybe not. Thoughts? I lift on a structured basis, but I have way too much body fat. Need to adjust the diet and maybe cycle in some cardio. |
I am eating low carbs and sugar with high quality fats and lots of vegetables. I am not counting calories but I am making sure I do not over eat. I am never really overly hungry though and I have been going without meals or anything to eat for 7 to 8 hour stretches the past week due to finals.
I do not ignore my legs completely but I do not lift to build muscle in them specifically. I run on an incline and I am also picking back up the dirt bike which after a long day of woops really gets the legs burning. |
Energy drinks with zero carbs fall into the diet soda regime of using sugar alcohols to replace real sugar with something that kind of tastes like sugar. Skip it. If you need the caffeine but dont like coffee, buy stay alert gum from amazon. Its WAY cheaper than the equivalent amount of energy drinks, and is literally really terrible tasting gum with like 4 cups of coffee worth of caffeine in it, yes it has 2 grams of sugar in it, big deal. Great for pulling those all nighers or trying to not fall asleep at your desk at work after being in the machine shop till 2am last night.
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Originally Posted by Fathom55
(Post 1007282)
1) Energy Drinks - SUGAR IS BAD. I get that. But what about things like Monster Zero? No sugar (Sucralose). Granted, it has a lot of things in it that end with -xine, -trate, and -ide. Decent (synthetic) vitamins and lots of caffeine. Thoughts?
2) Cardio - I mean in the generic sense of the word, that is, an exercise that is designed to engage and exhaust your cardiovascular system. To me, cardio is bad word. When I think cardio I think "running" or "jogging"...two things that I absolutely despise. Chalk it up to my wicked ADD, but when I'm running for the sake of cardio, all I can think about is all of the things that I'd rather be doing. That leads to absolute destruction of motivation, and I never stick to a cardio regimen. Interval training, HIIT, or whatever the cool new buzzword is different. HIIT is designed to blast your system, get your heart rate really high in short bursts, leading to a shorter workout. Definitely something I can get behind as there's not enough time for my ADD to kick in. Anyone have any experience with both? Can anyone provide a realworld comparison? The common internet addage is to compare the body of a sprinter (representing HIIT) to the body of a long distance runner (generic hours-long cardio). Maybe that's a good analogy...maybe not. Thoughts? I lift on a structured basis, but I have way too much body fat. Need to adjust the diet and maybe cycle in some cardio. So unless you are training for a specific event that involves a certain amount of endurance cardio, there's no good reason to spend an hour on a treadmill. For the vast majority of people, HIIT will offer as much or more improvement without overstressing your body. I like sprints and hill runs, and also mix in a few HIIT workouts involving things like burpees and kettlebell swings. Nothing, absolutely nothing, can kick my ass like kettlebells -- with an appropriately-sized KB, doing 2-handed swings for 20 minutes with a 45-second on, 15 second-off pattern will get me to the near-puking moment if I'm really pushing hard. I play a couple sports per week that involve intermittent sprinting. My "endurance" cardio is just once a week -- I do a hill run with a local group -- half mile up the hill, do some burpees or pushups or jump squats, half mile down the hill. Four total round trips for 4 miles, but it takes nearly an hour what with the breaks and other exercises. That's my recommendation. Build your workout plan around activities that you enjoy, adjust those activities to fit your goals. Get your diet right, make your workouts efficient, and you'll see much better results. |
Originally Posted by Fathom55
(Post 1007282)
Anyone have any experience with both? Can anyone provide a realworld comparison? The common internet addage is to compare the body of a sprinter (representing HIIT) to the body of a long distance runner (generic hours-long cardio). Maybe that's a good analogy...maybe not.
The same was true of my Muay Thai training, which I would also consider a form of HIIT. One thing I do when I jog is use an app that measures my distance and time and gives me audio updates of my pace. Like with motorsports, competition motivates me - either against the clock or someone I'm with. I hate jogging on the treadmill, so I use a type of interval for my warmup. I might only jog for 5 minutes instead of 20-30, but I change the speed and/or incline every 30-60 seconds until I'm running and then bring it back down. For what it's worth, I'm in a slightly different boat from most of the posters in this thread as I'm more of a "lean gainer." I think Mark might be closer to that end of the spectrum. Right now, I'm working on increasing my strength, so I am starting a "StongLifts" style program. That said, I am a little guy and only run about an 8.5 minute mile (for a 5K pace) so whatever VoM is doing to be running 7.5 minute miles must be working. |
Originally Posted by Scrappy Jack
(Post 1007356)
For what it's worth, I'm in a slightly different boat from most of the posters in this thread as I'm more of a "lean gainer." I think Mark might be closer to that end of the spectrum.
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Originally Posted by Scrappy Jack
(Post 1007356)
so whatever VoM is doing to be running 7.5 minute miles must be working.
I do a surprisingly little amount of cardio, I just do what is necessary and effective. When I first started to get back in shape I did Insanity and the cardio results were ludicrous (lost 30lbs in two months, too). I still do Insanity, but on my off weeks when I need a break from the gym. Now I lift weights in a cardio "style". I do drop-sets for the first set of each lift and then 6-8 reps of heavy weight for two sets with a 30 second break. I'm drenched in sweat and my heart rate is up/down the entire time. I do HIIT on the treadmill immediately after I'm done lifting. Set controls to Manual Mode with the incline set at 4. 2:00 medium walk, 2:00 minutes quick jog; 1:30 walk, :30 sprint. I usually repeat this for around 13-15 minutes and mix up the order and times depending on how I feel. The main thing is having your heart rate shoot way up and bring it back down. You'll notice your cardio/endurance improving and adjust your speed/times to keep it challenging. After that short time on the treadmill, I am exhausted. I mean, dead. I'll have a trail of sweat running down my hands from under my hoodie and sweat stains showing all over. |
Originally Posted by mgeoffriau
(Post 1007373)
Yup. 5'10", 150ish lbs, 12% body fat. Extremely difficult for me to lose or gain weight (though shifting from a SAD to Paleo-style diet cut a lot of body fat for me).
Before i started working i was 135... now i'm 175 at 7% and cutting. (5'7") I started cutting at 180, i've dropped down 3% body fat and kept just about all the weight. This is coming from someone that also cant gain weight... i was 110-120 in high school. |
Originally Posted by triple88a
(Post 1007508)
Buy protein powder, 2 scoops in the morning on ur way to work or whatever, 2 after the gym. at least 1 Chicken breast and 2 boiled potatoes for lunch and dinner (breakfast too if u can do it) You'll gain weight in no time.
Before i started working i was 135... now i'm 175 at 7% and cutting. (5'7") I started cutting at 180, i've dropped down 3% body fat and kept just about all the weight. |
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I hate how people use protein powder. I only use powder if I feel my protein intake is low on that day.
On a side note, this guy is a bad ass. https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1367441013 |
Do you eat 150 grams of protein every day? If so nice, i dont.
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I eat so much protein it's insane.
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Theres about 20 grams in chicken breasts.. about 10 in potatoes. That would make a lot of food for me to eat to get my needed protein.
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4-5 eggs, a potato, 2 trips of turkey bacon, 2 tortillas, and 3 cups of milk.
That's like 70g protein. Then if I eat 2 turkey paties that day then that's another 70g. I really only drink protein shakes when I'm too lazy to make breakfast. That's 2 scoops, 1 cup oats, 2 tbsp peanut butter, 1.5 cups of milk. That comes out to around 82g. |
Nice, now only if i could have one of u to make me breakfast :D
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I know right. I hate making food.
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+1 on HIIT. I do Super High Intensity Interval Trainging ... aka SHIIT. At the end of each intense cycle, I'm breathing so hard I can barely say "shit! shit! shit!" while panting.
The way I do it is I cycle/row/whatever really hard until my heart rate touches 170, then I go slow until it drops below 150 .... repeat 8-9x. Usually takes about 14 mins if I do it at the end of a workout. |
I drink 2L of milk a day, its just a habit, that helps a lot.
Dann |
Originally Posted by nitrodann
(Post 1007674)
I drink 2L of milk a day, its just a habit, that helps a lot.
Dann |
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