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Thread: -40 pounds in three months

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    Austin,TX
    Posts
    479
    Quote Originally Posted by bangbangskeetskeet View Post
    As a fitness professional I have to disagree with you. For someone who wants to loose body fat doing body weight exercises is perfect. Low weight and high reps is going go help put muscle on as well. You have to drop body fat first then put on muscle mass. Lifting heavy will be good for increasing size. You're looking at 2 completely different diet styles...for a weight loss goal you need a deficit (burn more calories than you take in 500 more calories burnt every day will equal one pound a week) and for muscle gain you need a caloric surplus (about 1400 extra calories every day for a 2-3 pound mass gain in a month).

    Now I'll give you the 5 most important keys to your success.
    1) Diet - this makes up 75-80% of your sucess when changing body composition. You want a deficit (like I explained above). You also want the proper balance of carbs, protien and fats (40/30/30).
    2) Cardio - the fastest most efficient way to burn calories. You want to do cardio for 20 min or more at a time.
    3) Supplementation - most people say that if your diet is good you don't need suppliments...WRONG! it's been scientifically proven that you can't get all the nutrients from food alone. Now add in a caloric deficit and you're getting even less nutrients. That's where it comes to supporting your diet with suppliments.
    4) Progressive resistance training - weight training. This preserves and increases your lean muscle tissue. Increasing muscle will increase your metabolisim. This is crucial for fat loss. You really need a good program. P90X is a great program to help you drop weight and cut body fat quickly.
    5) Accountability/Motivation - if you're not motivated the weight won't come off. I think it's extremely important to have a support system also. There will be days you don't want to work out or do anything for that matter and having people help keep you on track will make that less frequant.

    If you have any questions or anything like that feel free to pm me.
    Do you mind me asking what "Fitness Professional" means? I don't mean to sound condescending, I'm actually interested.

    As far as my comments:
    I never said that doing high rep exercises wasn't beneficial. I was saying that it's definitely not the way I would go about it and that there are much better methods(in my opinion). If all you're concerned about is the number on the scale dropping then sure do 2 hours of cardio every day, do super sets, and eat 1500 calories. But keep that up and eventually you're going to have the physique of a long distance runner.

    If you are concerned about looking fit, dropping fat, and maintaining LBM then you want to maintain strength which means lifting heavy.

    As far as the supplement comment, it was a bit vague I'm not saying I agree or disagree, but there's really no reason for any supplements at all except creatine, fish oil, and a multi-vitamin. Everything else is either illegal or it isn't worth the money. Heck, even protein powders aren't needed, they're just convenient and tasty.

    Also, cardio is a supplement for a poor diet. There is really no need for it with regards to fat loss. There are plenty of bodybuilders that cut weight for their competitions with absolutely no cardio. Keep your diet right and you don't ever have to even think about doing cardio. In crease your cardio or decrease your caloric intake, either one is essentially going to have the same effect.

    I'm not about to claim I'm a professional, but I've dabbled in a bit of everything in regards to fitness.
    -High School State powerlifter
    Squat-665 Bench-315 Deadlift-575
    -College Baseball Player
    -Minor in physical education and nutrition
    -Aspiring bodybuilder(I have my own success story of dropping ~33 lbs in 10 weeks).

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Mesa, AZ
    Posts
    5,979
    Quote Originally Posted by randomhero View Post
    Do you mind me asking what "Fitness Professional" means? I don't mean to sound condescending, I'm actually interested.

    As far as my comments:
    I never said that doing high rep exercises wasn't beneficial. I was saying that it's definitely not the way I would go about it and that there are much better methods(in my opinion). If all you're concerned about is the number on the scale dropping then sure do 2 hours of cardio every day, do super sets, and eat 1500 calories. But keep that up and eventually you're going to have the physique of a long distance runner.

    If you are concerned about looking fit, dropping fat, and maintaining LBM then you want to maintain strength which means lifting heavy.

    As far as the supplement comment, it was a bit vague I'm not saying I agree or disagree, but there's really no reason for any supplements at all except creatine, fish oil, and a multi-vitamin. Everything else is either illegal or it isn't worth the money. Heck, even protein powders aren't needed, they're just convenient and tasty.

    Also, cardio is a supplement for a poor diet. There is really no need for it with regards to fat loss. There are plenty of bodybuilders that cut weight for their competitions with absolutely no cardio. Keep your diet right and you don't ever have to even think about doing cardio. In crease your cardio or decrease your caloric intake, either one is essentially going to have the same effect.

    I'm not about to claim I'm a professional, but I've dabbled in a bit of everything in regards to fitness.
    -High School State powerlifter
    Squat-665 Bench-315 Deadlift-575
    -College Baseball Player
    -Minor in physical education and nutrition
    -Aspiring bodybuilder(I have my own success story of dropping ~33 lbs in 10 weeks).
    No I dont mind you asking. By fitness professional I mean that Im a personal trainer....Im NASM, NFPT, and CrossFit level 1 certified.

    Again I have to disagree with the lifting heavy comment. Look up CrossFit online.....check out "the benchmark girls"......Here I did it for you....
    The Benchmark Girls:
    Angie
    100 Pull-ups
    100 Push-ups
    100 Sit-ups
    100 Squats
    For Time
    Complete all reps of each exercise before moving to the next.

    Barbara
    20 Pull-ups
    30 Push-ups
    40 Sit-ups
    50 Squats
    5 rounds for time

    Chelsea
    5 Pull-ups
    10 Push-ups
    15 Squats
    Each min on the min for 30 min

    Cindy
    5 Pull-ups
    10 Push-ups
    15 Squats
    As many rounds as possible in 20 min

    Diane
    Deadlift 225 lbs
    Handstand push-ups
    21-15-9 reps, for time

    Elizabeth
    Clean 135 lbs
    Ring Dips
    21-15-9 reps, for time

    Fran
    Thruster 95 lbs
    Pull-ups
    21-15-9 reps, for time

    Grace
    Clean and Jerk 135 lbs
    30 reps for time

    Helen
    400 meter run
    1.5 pood Kettlebell swing x 21
    Pull-ups 12 reps
    3 rounds for time

    Isabel
    Snatch 135 pounds
    30 reps for time

    Jackie
    1000 meter row
    Thruster 45 lbs (50 reps)
    Pull-ups (30 reps)
    For time

    Karen
    Wall-ball 150 shots
    For time

    Linda
    (aka "3 bars of death")
    Deadlift 1 1/2 BW
    Bench BW
    Clean 3/4 BW
    10/9/8/7/6/5/4/3/2/1 rep
    rounds for time

    Mary
    5 Handstand push-ups
    10 1-legged squats
    15 Pull-ups
    As many rounds as possible in 20 min

    Nancy
    400 meter run
    Overhead squat 95 lbs x 15
    5 rounds for time
    The New Girls

    Annie
    Double-unders
    Sit-ups
    50-40-30-20 and 10 rep rounds; for time

    Eva
    Run 800 meters
    2 pood KB swing, 30 reps
    30 pullups
    5 rounds for time.

    Kelly
    Run 400 meters
    30 box jump, 24 inch box
    30 Wall ball shots, 20 pound ball
    Five rounds for time

    Lynne
    Bodyweight bench press (e.g., same amount on bar as you weigh)
    pullups
    5 rounds for max reps. There is NO time component to this WOD.

    Nicole
    Run 400 meters
    Max rep Pull-ups
    As many rounds as possible in 20 minutes.
    Note number of pull-ups completed for each round.

    This is just the beginning of CF. I will say this....I started training CF a few months ago, one of my clients was at 250 pounds with 35% body fat on our first session...March 5th...yesterday he was down to 205 pounds and 17.3% boy fat. That means he has dropped fat AND increased his lean mass....
    T-RAV
    99 GMC | 5.3 | Skinny White Guy Tuned

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