I feel drainedNot sure if it was the 8 hours of sleep, the leftover chicken tikka masala and risotto I had for lunch or what, but squats went down like fish in a barrel today.
Maybe.I've not noticed any change in energy from my cutting yet, but I'm wondering if it might not make as much difference for me due to working out fasted.
I'm lacking. The past month has been rough. I don't feel weak and my strength is there but I'm not motivated today. Just a bit drained.I'd guess how drained you should feel would depend on how much sleep you had before that point. For me, that's always the key to a good cut... ridiculous amounts of sleep.
If you're healthy, and generally injury free...I've been bitching too much about it lately. Need to suck it up and get thru the stress.
Well I'm at least injury free-ish XDIf you're healthy, and generally injury free...
...SMASH THAT SHIT!
Hi Fitness GAF!
First time posting. I'm 5'11'' and started at around 205-215 (can't recall) pounds August of last year. Moved to D.C. and changed my diet for the better and incorporated regular exercise and now I'm at 165 lbs. Probably the healthiest I've been in a looong time (25 years old now).
Thing is I didn't really follow a set program before, but now I'm thinking it's time to seriously concentrate on building muscle. I am going to follow the Candito Linear Training program in the OP. But this is the first time I will ever track my calories. I used the myfitnesspal website and its telling me that my maintenance calorie intake is 2,190 calories (assuming sedentary lifestyle and factoring no additional exercise). I tried loading up on calories today but I feel a bit daunted by the amount that I need to eat in order to build muscle. Makes me think I should re-evaluate how I approach my diet before jumping right into upping my calorie intake, I'm nervous about reversing the progress I've made losing weight if I don't do things correctly....I've made a ton of great progress as is.
Does anyone have any good reading or suggestion to someone new about watching calories? Should this be something that is on my mind now, or should I concentrate on following the program and see what happens to my gains? I get the sense that going for straight big calorie surplus at this point may be a bad idea and I should aim for calorie maintenance instead.
Any help for newbie is appreciated!
750 seems like a high estimate, but 2.5 hours of walking is a good 600 calories for sure.Question about Step-counters/Pedometers....
I've been using the Android App Pedometer to track my steps the last five months. Today, I just happened to check the settings and realized they've had me as a 150 Pound guy (i'm 210). I fixed it and all of a sudden my calorie burning SKYROCKETED. Thing is, I think it's too high now.
For example, today the app says I burned 750 calories in 15,000 steps (2:30 of walking throughout the day, to/from/during work). Does that seem accurate? Way off?
I suggest taking it slow with adding calories. Try adding 200 or 300 instead of the usual 500 and see how you do at the gym. If lifts start suffering and you arent progressing, then add more calories.
Whats your bodyfat % guestimate btw?
Edit - Unrelated... anyone here particularly worry about their sodium intake? To the best of my knowledge, my blood pressure is on the low side (definitely not high), so I've always wondered if I actually need to be particularly concerned by it. I think the only things I eat that have a significant amount are salted popcorn (you can take that out of my cold hypertensive hands), pizza and sometimes a pre-made pasta sauce.
Edit 2 - Oh god, it's another one of those subjects where no-one seems to have a fucking clue. Doing some reading on it and there's plenty of evidence on both sides. YAY SCIENCE!
Plus this fun nugget: "low-salt diets could have side effects: when salt intake is cut, the body responds by releasing renin and aldosterone, an enzyme and a hormone, respectively, that increase blood pressure".
However, I think the biggest issue (and one that I've been trying to monitor) is potassium intake. There's some evidence that the ratio of potassium to sodium is fairly important, perhaps more than the actual numbers. Ideally it's 2:1 for potassium, but good luck reaching that after downing an entire bag of chips and a pizza lmao. Purely my speculation but I think if you're doing 1:1 then you're doing pretty good. Unfortunately society is so fixated on sodium alone that it's the only thing that's mandatory on nutrition labels, making potassium tracking an utter pain in the ass. Still makes me less angry than low carb zealots though.
Has anyone seen Naked? Looks kind of neat, assuming you've got $550 to spend on a fitness tracking device ($1000 if you don't reserve it soon).
https://naked.fit/index_m.html?utm_...e&utm_content=text&utm_campaign=NintyFiveText
Knees are slightly bothering me after 2 weeks of squatting 3x per week and a long weekend of yard work/landscaping. Should I lay off the squats this week to be safe? If so, what should I do instead?
(doing stronglifts 5x5)
I've always responded to the one-a-day method. If I am off for a long time I'll use beginner programs that focus on compounds like SS to get back in the swing but once I'm done I move straight to one muscle group per day at 6 days per week.Been on SS for 4 months now and I think it's time for something new since my progress has slowed to a halt.
My current status at 73kg (160lbs):
Squat x5: 75kg (165lbs)
Deadlift x5: 105kg (242lbs)
Bench x5: 60kg (132lbs)
OHP x5: 35kg (77lbs)
Chinups x7
I'm looking for a primarily aesthetic based program, don't really care if it's a 3 times or 4 times or whatever. Any suggestions?
Been on SS for 4 months now and I think it's time for something new since my progress has slowed to a halt.
My current status at 73kg (160lbs):
Squat x5: 75kg (165lbs)
Deadlift x5: 105kg (242lbs)
Bench x5: 60kg (132lbs)
OHP x5: 35kg (77lbs)
Chinups x7
I'm looking for a primarily aesthetic based program, don't really care if it's a 3 times or 4 times or whatever. Any suggestions?
So you're basically taking a bunch of size measurements and guesstimating body fat? Neat tech, but I'm not convinced it's going to be accurate in any meaningful way.
Would be cool for looking back at yourself at different dates though.
Plus this fun nugget: "low-salt diets could have side effects: when salt intake is cut, the body responds by releasing renin and aldosterone, an enzyme and a hormone, respectively, that increase blood pressure".
Heh and there I was thinking excess salt caused high blood pressure thus the need for diuretics to flush it out through...
Imagine trying to do this against Brolic...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XXDeOXTHJ_U
arm / socket / removed
If Im honest Im far more interested in running than lifting but Id still like to build my strength. Would it just be a case of running and trying to consume more calories to match up with what Im burning so I can gain strength and mass?
Imagine trying to do this against Brolic...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XXDeOXTHJ_U
arm / socket / removed
Yeah, but you want a real challenge. Replace the wooden bar with a cake.
Well... you know, thinking about it.
I've always responded to the one-a-day method. If I am off for a long time I'll use beginner programs that focus on compounds like SS to get back in the swing but once I'm done I move straight to one muscle group per day at 6 days per week.
Allows me to knock the ever living shit out of a group without losing energy to hit a second and I'm done in like 50 minutes.
Sun-Fri:
Legs, abs
Chest
Back
Shoulders, abs
Bis (legs again, front squats only)
Tris (legs again, calves only)
Then it's volume, volume, volume. Constantly changing my routine every 3-4 weeks for each muscle group, always starting with a compound then moving on to accessories.
There are a bunch of intermediate and advanced programs you can try. This one is just one I made and used the past 40 or so weeks.
You're probably just not eating enough.
Been on SS for 4 months now and I think it's time for something new since my progress has slowed to a halt.
My current status at 73kg (160lbs):
Squat x5: 75kg (165lbs)
Deadlift x5: 105kg (242lbs)
Bench x5: 60kg (132lbs)
OHP x5: 35kg (77lbs)
Chinups x7
I'm looking for a primarily aesthetic based program, don't really care if it's a 3 times or 4 times or whatever. Any suggestions?
:OGoing for 415 flat bench. Wish me luck guys
Struggled! But I got it! Wooot!
XDFrom the trade show. They couldn't understand why I was taking a picture, but wasn't interested in any of their products. Had a fitgaf chuckle.
Wooh! Made it through. Wasn't too bad a workout once the espressos kicked in.