Saturday, November 16, 2013

some videos!!!

some videos!!!


425 lb deadlift 300 lb squat 475 lb rack pull

I take it these are vids of you? or not...

deznutz I take it these are vids of you? or not... no.

oh my this guy is fuckin retarded

drunknmunky no. i know...

deznutz i know...

that squat was awesome

I really thought that guy was fucking around and this was a parody. I looked at his website and he seems dead serious. He wants IT work, what a great way to display web developing skills with such a flashy website.

Aaaaaaaaarrrr!!!!!!!

slowest server evar. the vids cant be that much better

super hawt

i never thought you could screw up a deadlift my mistake. that guy is hilarious

wow, words cannot describe....

that deadlift looked fuckin painful

ouch nevermind that squat looked even more painful, my back would be hating me

Shit that guys good I bet he has huge sex muscles.

omg

gsteclipse97 ouch nevermind that squat looked even more painful, my back would be hating me if that squat was painful, then what's this? http://66.235.41.207/training/2003_W...-dumps-900.wmv

he said he was alright ;x

some gay guy just walked in our dorm room while i was watching that and me and gilgamesh were laughing at it he didnt understand the funny

Mass Aaaaaaaaarrrr!!!!!!! That guy is a fagjar.

should i laugh or cry? i dont know

Ceaze if that squat was painful, then what's this? http://66.235.41.207/training/2003_W...-dumps-900.wmv

I want this guy to enter an actual competition and get laughed out of there.

sans_pants some gay guy just walked in our dorm room while i was watching that and me and gilgamesh were laughing at it he didnt understand the funny

some videos!!!

Is this a good protien supplement?

Is this a good protien supplement?


the General Nutrition Center over here has allt his noname shit I've been reading the reviews and this looks pretty good, what are your opinions? Whats it taste like? http://www.bulknutrition.com/?products_id=518

off subject, but just to squash all of the rumors going around these days.....it's spelled "Protein"

sorry

just get ON Whey 10lb bags and be done with it

KDubb just get ON Whey 10lb bags and be done with it whats it taste like?

Inferno69 whats it taste like? the chocolate is

KDubb the chocolate is thats what they all say and it ends up tasting like shit

Inferno69 thats what they all say and it ends up tasting like shit To me it tastes like watered down hot chocolate, so it's not bad at all. offtopic: Where can I get another cup? I misplaced mine somewhere. If it's in the 10lb bag, it wont resurface.

Inferno69 thats what they all say and it ends up tasting like shit if you find a protein shake that actually tastes like something you'd drink if you werent looking to be healthy, post it immediately. if anyone actually enjoys drinking a protein shake they are probably too poor to have afforded real food in their life.

incubimmer if you find a protein shake that actually tastes like something you'd drink if you werent looking to be healthy, post it immediately. if anyone actually enjoys drinking a protein shake they are probably too poor to have afforded real food in their life.

all protein tastes like complete shit. you get used to it. man up edit: and in general chocolate is the better tasting

jackjohnson all protein tastes like complete shit. you get used to it. man up edit: and in general chocolate is the better tasting thanks what about the protein in this?

jackjohnson all protein tastes like complete shit. you get used to it. man up edit: and in general chocolate is the better tasting The 2 different brands of protein shakes I have used have been my favorite meals of the day. I love them!

what are you guy's thoughts on this? http://www.bulknutrition.com/?products_id=63

Inferno69 what are you guy's thoughts on this? http://www.bulknutrition.com/?products_id=63 that's fine, instead of ordering a 10lb bag right away, order 2lbs and that way if you don't like the taste you can try something else. ON is pretty popular because it's cheap, has a good nutritional profile, and the chocolate doesn't taste terrible.




















Is this a good protien supplement?

s1 and psmf

s1 and psmf


well I goit 3 bottles to waste, wanting some opinions on running it while doing this diet and where the best spray locations are. I remember cavefish doing it, but I don't know where he is also, If I was to start it, would I wait the 2 weeks for the S1 to actually kick in then start the PSMF or should I start it the same day I start the S1?

i dont know about the psmf, but as far as the s1 apply it to thighs, chest, stomach, shoulders wherever. some people get minor irritation from it.

christophers haha why are you doing a psmf? what happened to "no cutting til 250"? I figure shed off all the pounds for summer time, and run the test cycle come fall time. I'm also in school right now, eating all this food is actually making me lethargic and costing me shit loads of money.

superbri007 what is a psmf ? protein sparring modified fast

drunknmunky protein sparring modified fast link?

timberwolf link? like you need it

timberwolf link? http://www.bodyrecomposition.com/pro.../RFL_intro.php

tops of feet are a prime location

superbri007 because the skin is so close to the bone and there is not much meat? just thin there

Sgt. Ownage tops of feet are a prime location but wouldn't socks rub it all off?

what is this S1 stuff?

oh btw, PSMF is not hard for anyone curious. Maybe because it's only day 1, but it's been no problem so far... I actually feel better than when I was eating all those damn calories.

Chris3G what is this S1 stuff? transdermal 4ad and 1-test

SteveO but wouldn't socks rub it all off? nah, also what i did was apply at a time when you wont have to wear socks for at least 30 min...and it was in the summer when i could wear flip flops...which i did

this shit burns, my chest feels like it's on fire.. I guess you don't apply to sun burned places

and chris, you always motivate me to stop even thinking about cutting... I will never reach my damn goals if I do this, another change in plans and back to bulking. Hopefully will gain 15-20 lbs, gonna run the s1 for 5-6 weeks and that should shoot me up to 230-235. Hopefully the 4AD will keep me on my feet

SteveO this shit burns, my chest feels like it's on fire.. I guess you don't apply to sun burned places keep it away from your nipples thats the only place that burned me

thanks for the laughs guys

SteveO this shit burns, my chest feels like it's on fire.. I guess you don't apply to sun burned places i never put it on my chest...i would go feet and delt/upper arm

Sgt. Ownage i never put it on my chest...i would go feet and delt/upper arm well burning would be a good thing wouldn't it? means it's penetrating into the skin, I'm not feeling anything on my feet, stomach, or thigh

SteveO well burning would be a good thing wouldn't it? means it's penetrating into the skin, I'm not feeling anything on my feet, stomach, or thigh burning=irritation...put it on those places i said...it will absorb fine...

Sgt. Ownage burning=irritation...put it on those places i said...it will absorb fine... will do, what kinda gains did you get on your cycle? were u running nolva with it? I just did 20mg to be safe

christophers not eating is going to be easy for any skinny or formerly skinny person I didn't think it was that extremely hard either. and I've been a fat guy for a long time. 5th and 6th week was fucking hell though. I felt lethargic like a mother fucker. My workout sessions were ass. Weeks 1-4 were fine.

Wait wait. I take that back. The first week was hard for me. I remember going to sleep hungry like an asshole. My stomach was growling like crazy. The results were worth it though. Plus I think my body type allows me to keep more LBM as long as my protein intake was high. (being fat doesn't hurt either). I got used to it though. I think its great if you can handle it. It gives a ton of motivation to see that much weight loss in a short period of time. Good mental test too. Plus it allowed me to change my tastebuds.

a little bromo in the morning will kill your appetite for the day

s1 and psmf

w00t got my Creatine and Myoplex today!

w00t got my Creatine and Myoplex today!


I ordered Creatine and Myoplex meal replacments off Bodybuilding.com on Tuesday, got them today... . So happy. Its gonna be my first time using creatine ever, so im kinda excited. Giddy like a lil school girl. . I hope I am not one of those 30% that it doesnt work for

White I ordered Creatine and Myoplex meal replacments off Bodybuilding.com on Tuesday, got them today... . So happy. Its gonna be my first time using creatine ever, so im kinda excited. Giddy like a lil school girl. . I hope I am not one of those 30% that it doesnt work for What's the general consensus? Myoplex > Muscle Milk? or vice versa?

Jsweet What's the general consensus? Myoplex > Muscle Milk? or vice versa? I have heard alota good stuff about both. I just have a friend at work who swears by Myoplex and he drinks it alot and likes it. So, I was like eh, ill get it and see how it is. Hope its good, LoL. If its not, oh well, ill still drink them, heh. I havent had Muscle Milk before so.

myo is good but not for the price

well i'm cheering cause my order of ogoplex came in today!! on a more serious note... White I have heard alota good stuff about both. I just have a friend at work who swears by Myoplex and he drinks it alot and likes it. So, I was like eh, ill get it and see how it is. Hope its good, LoL. If its not, oh well, ill still drink them, heh. I havent had Muscle Milk before so. why not try his myoplex, if you like, buy a bottle of myoplex and give him back what you took. if you dont, pay him the fractional cost of what you used (you use 1/10 the bottle, you pay him 1/10th the price).

damn i got like 10 packs of myoplex deluxe i would have sold you

i love myoplex strawberry creme

tize myo is rediculously thick Im talking gains here, Just got some Muscle Milk, and a Weight Gainer. Depending on how this does Myoplex may be next. (It's $12 bucks more than muscle milk for 2 less packs).

Jsweet Im talking gains here, Just got some Muscle Milk, and a Weight Gainer. Depending on how this does Myoplex may be next. (It's $12 bucks more than muscle milk for 2 less packs). Jeez, I really didnt look at prices, I just went with what he siad. I just wanted to try his Myoplex, but he kept forgetting to bring a package in for me. But hey, its not half bad. My 20liter shaker doesnt seem to cary enuff water, heh. To me the damn myplex is way to thick. But whatever. By the time im done drinking it I wanna gag cause its a tad to thick, but oh well. Started my creatine loading today too, thats interesting. Anyways.

I hate myoplex.

myojack! so expensive! =)




























w00t got my Creatine and Myoplex today!

Going for a new dead PR today

Going for a new dead PR today


got my technique down...been working with a PLer (girl) that has me in a more leaning back more as if Im sitting and expelling from my diaphram(sp?) instead. t'was alittle awkward first to adjust to that minor change, but now my shoulders aren't as forward and its easier off the lift. I was working with 405 to get my form...then I hit 585 easier and then 635 nicely. I'm going for a new PR of 685 previous best was 665

no you really aren't.

good luck

Peal no you really aren't.

Peal no you really aren't.

film it



didn't you make a thread awhlie back that said you didn't care about strength, only looks? why the excitement over a new PR if strength isn't important to you?

gotta love to hate

disblohs didn't you make a thread awhlie back that said you didn't care about strength, only looks? why the excitement over a new PR if strength isn't important to you? he only said that cuz he was a weak sexy beast.

its almost 11pm, what happened?

that's a big jump. i say he fails

wow...much hate for me just goes to show what limitations you guys place upon yourself, and if you're too ignorant to understand how...then its already too late and you'll never understand. this is the #1 reason why this forum is shit...thanks guys

and peal...thanks for justifying the reason you've been on my IL for a while

Filmboy44 and peal...thanks for justifying the reason you've been on my IL for a while you love the attention man, don't lie. and just quietly, I see no mention of limitations within this thread. IMO there are quite a lot of us that aim high, not only in bb or pl but in life.

Filmboy44 wow...much hate for me just goes to show what limitations you guys place upon yourself, and if you're too ignorant to understand how...then its already too late and you'll never understand. this is the #1 reason why this forum is shit...thanks guys i was serious

disblohs didn't you make a thread awhlie back that said you didn't care about strength, only looks? why the excitement over a new PR if strength isn't important to you? do I really have to explain it to you like your a 4 year old? I am concerned ONLY with being as muscular and as defined as possible. However, if you knew anything about training you'd know that heavy weight = big muscles (to explain it to you as if you are 4)...and since that is my targeted goal. I am going to attempt heavy lifts in order to stimulate or shock the muscle into growth I'm NOT concerned with going into the gym and trying to move the most weight possible for a contest...I"m doing deads to improve my overall condition as a whole. I find it exciting and thought I'd share the fact that I was going for a new PR but it looks as though none of you can comprehend that.

What do you expect filmy? You post fake shit all the time to get people riled up, you make fun of this forum and act like you are better than all of us. Most of these people don't even rememeber when you used to be helpful and nice in this forum. So don't expect a big hug and slap on the ass when you come in here and post stuff like this from most of the memebers here.

Did you hit it or not?

Filmboy44 wow...much hate for me just goes to show what limitations you guys place upon yourself, and if you're too ignorant to understand how...then its already too late and you'll never understand. this is the #1 reason why this forum is shit...thanks guys what hate? we were just joking around...at least i was. heck, i wanna know if you hit it or not.

Filmboy44 do I really have to explain it to you like your a 4 year old? I am concerned ONLY with being as muscular and as defined as possible. However, if you knew anything about training you'd know that heavy weight = big muscles (to explain it to you as if you are 4)...and since that is my targeted goal. I am going to attempt heavy lifts in order to stimulate or shock the muscle into growth I'm NOT concerned with going into the gym and trying to move the most weight possible for a contest...I"m doing deads to improve my overall condition as a whole. I find it exciting and thought I'd share the fact that I was going for a new PR but it looks as though none of you can comprehend that. do i have to explain basic grammar to you like you're a 4 year old? don't be such a condescending prick. i asked you a simple question and you had to go off and be an asshole about it. so you never post anything helpful and then you expect everyone to praise you for a new PR? people are always posting threads about their new PRs and i'm sure you don't race in there to congratulate them. a perfect example is the thread on the first page with the title " Finally broke into the 100's with dumbbells ." i see that you didn't go in there and give him a high five and tell him good work. the problem with you, at least that i've noticed since i started posting here, is that half of the time you are a nice guy and the other half you are a bitch. congrats on your new PR, asshole

disblohs do i have to explain basic grammar to you like you're a 4 year old? I stopped reading right there the typical mentality of OT. Always trying to better one up on the other person because you think it makes you a better man... whatever man....

Filmboy44 I stopped reading right there the typical mentality of OT. Trying to better one up on the other because you can't it. whatever man.... i can't understand what you just said. regardless, i'm sure you read what i posted and you justified my post with your response. you're acting like a little bitch again. get over yourself. edit: you fixed it. do yourself a favor and read it and maybe you'll realize why there's so much animosity towards you.



disblohs i can't understand what you just said. regardless, i'm sure you read what i posted and you justified my post with your response. you're acting like a little bitch again. get over yourself. edit: you fixed it. do yourself a favor and read it and maybe you'll realize why there's so much animosity towards you. I'm not going to drag this out. Obviously you can't comprehend much so I'll keep it short. You missed my point entirely, which in a way justified it; as for reading your post...no I stopped right htere, I didn't care to read on. I can care less about any "animosity" toward me at all...the threads in the this forum are bullshit through and through...those that are 'lurkers' or too shy to post ask me in PM's and I help them as much as I can so don't give me this shit about why people hate me you little shit 95% of this board can't hold my fuckin' lifting straps...

Going for a new dead PR today

Is a calorie just a calorie?

Is a calorie just a calorie?


Lylemcd Is a Calorie Just a Calorie? (by Lyle McDonald) Before finally getting into a discussion of the different dietary approaches out there, I want to address one of the bigger points of contention in the dieting literature: is a calorie a calorie? Simply put, the debate comes down to this: all that matters is caloric balance (calories in versus calories out) or do the source of those calories matter? As usual, both sides of the argument can bring lots of data to the table in support of their contentions. Frequently, as you'll see below, they end up arguing slightly different issues. In looking the topic, I want to look at three distinct data sets, each of which generates slightly different results (part of the confusion comes from comparing data from dissimilar studies). Studies varying protein intake Most commonly, when folks want to argue that 'a calorie is not a calorie', they will use studies comparing higher and lower protein intakes. With very few exceptions, diets providing adequate protein intake (for dieters 1.5 g/kg lean body mass or higher would be a minimum) to lower intakes find better results than diets with lower protein intakes. This is especially apparent under dieting conditions with any number of studies support the need for higher protein intake to support muscle growth. That is, given an identical caloric intake, the group that gets sufficient protein will generally show better muscle mass maintenance than the lower-protein group. As well, since weight losses are typically similar, that means that slightly more fat is lost. Other studies show that protein blunts hunger better (meaning it's easier to reduce calories) than carbs or fats and a recent study showed better blood glucose maintenance in the diet containing higher protein. Aha, folks say, the source of the calories do matter! Tangentially, I suspect that folks reporting better results from low-carb diets compared to higher-carb diets is related to this. Because of the reliance on meat, it's nearly impossible NOT to get sufficient protein intake on a low-carbohydrate diet; folks on high-carbohydrate diets frequently over emphasize carbs to the extent that protein intake gets shorted. But look, I've been driving the point home for a good portion of this book that adequate/sufficient protein intake is an absolute requirement and I'll be the first to point out the results of the above studies: sufficient/higher protein intakes almost always produce better results than the converse. However, this point doesn't apply to any of the diets I'm going to describe in this book. To get ahead of myself, after setting calories, my first priority is to set protein intakes at the proper levels (in the range of 0.8-1.5 g/lb depending on needs). The question then changes slightly: given adequate protein intake to begin with, does the source of the other calories (carbohydrates versus fat) affect anything or is it simply a calorie in versus calorie out issue. In addressing this, I want to describe two other data sets. Studies where calories are rigorously controlled The first set of studies, which tend to be in the minority are those studies where subject's caloric intakes are strictly controlled. These are usually the studies that the 'a calorie is a calorie' folks use to support their argument. These studies are typically done by locking subjects in a hospital type of situation and measuring their food intake or by giving them pre-made food packets to use at home. Sometimes, studies are done in hospital patients being fed through a feeding tube. As you might imagine, these studies are hellishly expensive (especially if they are done over more than a few days) and, for that reason, aren't being done as often anymore. There is also the question of whether or not they have relevance to the real-world but that's a separate issue. I should also mention that frequently very short-term studies (looking at a single meal or a day or two of intake) sometimes find differences for different diets but these have no bearing in the real-world where you're looking at intakes over weeks or months. However, in those studies, you generally see minimal (if any) differences in terms of the amount or composition of the weight lost when you vary the different nutrients. Studies have compared high to low-carbohydrate diets and even varying low-carbohydrate diets. With minor slop (maybe a pound or two here or there), any differences in the total amount of weight loss or the composition of the weight lost (again this assumes adequate protein intake in the first place) are very minor. Rather, the majority (easily 90% or more) of the change can be attributed directly to the caloric intake of the diet. Macronutrient composition makes a tiny, approaching negligible difference. I should mention that studies comparing high to low-carbohydrate diets typically show greater weight losses in the low-carbohydrate group but this can generally be attributed to greater water losses. One or two studies have shown a slight trend towards greater fat loss in the low-carbohydrate group but it's rarely huge. Of course, athletes and bodybuilders will retort that few studies are done in very lean individuals and this is very true. It's possible that an athlete trying to get to single digit bodyfat levels might find a given diet to produce superior results (I'll mention a few possible situations in the next chapter) but it's poorly studied. On that note, I have had the benefit of receiving endless feedback from athletes and bodybuilders who have compared various diets at the same calorie level. In general, differences in terms of fat loss (or muscle mass maintenance) tend to be small and highly variable. Occasionally, you'll find someone who loses 2-3 lbs more fat (and thus keeps 2-3 more pounds of muscle) on a cyclical ketogenic diet compared so something like the Isocaloric diet (moderate carb/moderate fat) but you can just as readily find folks who report the opposite: more muscle loss and less fat loss on the ketogenic compared to the carb-based diet. It could be genetic difference or something else causing the difference. As you'll learn in the chapters on partitioning, factors unrelated to diet or training control the majority of what you lose on a diet in the first place. I want to mention that relatively fewer studies have been done comparing different sources of carbohydrates or fat. There are studies looking at the impact of sucrose (table sugar) vs. starch within the context of strictly controlled caloric intakes and they usually show no difference. That is, given an identical caloric intake, the source of the carbohydrates shows minimal differences. Similar studies have been done with dietary fat, typically showing similarly small differences. This is especially true when calories are restricted. Unfortunately, overfeeding hasn't been examined in as great a detail in humans. There are studies comparing overfeeding of fat to carbohydrates (in the form of glucose, sucrose, or fructose) and, over the long-term gain in bodyfat are pretty much identical. The mechanism of the fat gain is different but, when the same number of calories are overfed, the same amount of fat is gained. Studies looking at overfeeding of medium chain triglycerides (MCTs) or some newly developed dietary fats (diglycerols) also show some benefits in terms of decreased fat gain but the difference is typically small as well. It's also conceivable that at the extremes of obesity, where all manners of metabolic problems are occurring, a difference might be seen for different macronutrient composition diets. Even there, studies where calories are rigorously controlled generally show little to no difference for varying macronutrient composition in terms of weight loss or body composition. I should probably mention that, in studies of weight changes, there is quite frequently a large degree of variance in weight loss or weight gain given an identical number of calories. As it turns out, and as I'll discuss in the section on metabolic rate, this ends up being more an issue of individual metabolism and how it adapts than the diet itself. That is, some people's metabolic rate goes up (or down) more in response to over (or under) feeding. There is no evidence that the composition of the diet affects this to any significant degree; rather it's a genetically based metabolic effect. To sum up this mini-section: for the most part, studies where protein is adequate (or at least close to it), varying carbs and fats within the context of an identical caloric intake tends to have a minimal overall effect. What effect is occasionally seen tends to be small and highly variable (some subjects do better with one diet than another but there's no consistent advantage). With the possible exception of extreme conditions (folks looking for super-leanness or folks who are super-obese), caloric intake is the greater determinant of results than the macronutrient composition. Studies where calories are not rigorously controlled As you might have guessed, these are generally the studies that the 'a calorie is NOT a calorie' folks refer to. In actuality, there are two different sets of studies in this group. The first is studies which are looking at nutrient intake on various diets. In such studies, subjects are simply given dietary guidelines (such as reduce fat to below 30% or reduce carbohydrates to 50 g/day or less) and intakes are examined. Another data set of relevance to this discussion is studies comparing different diets (for example, recent studies have compared low-carbohydrate diets to the American Heart Association diet) under more real-world free-living conditions. Generally, in those studies, the subjects are given recommendations for the diet and let go. They typically report back to the researchers at some interval and frequently food intake is determined by means of self-reporting (which I've mentioned can be notoriously misleading). I want to look at each since both are illuminating to this discussion, as well as to how to choose a given diet. The studies that look at average intakes given various recommendations are important because they often point to the real reason that a given diet works. For example, in studies where folks are told to reduce fat intake below 30% (or some other value), there is frequently an initial reduction in total caloric intake. That is, when they reduce dietary fat, their total energy intake generally goes down (at least initially). This is accompanied by weight loss. But this is not because of some magical effect of dietary fat, it's simply because they are eating less calories. Of course, longer term studies show that most people end up compensating, eating more of other foods, so the result is pretty short lived. Studies of low-carbohydrate diets tend to show similar results. Tell folks to reduce (or even remove) all of the carbohydrates from their diet and they tend to eat less automatically without thinking about it. Usually a lot less. What typically happens in such studies is that folks keep their protein and fat intakes roughly the same. So, by removing a food category that might make up 50% or more of total calories, they can't help but eat less. Of course, this causes weight loss. But it's not because of the carbs (or lack thereof) per se; rather it's because they are eating less. There are other reasons, of course, such as decreased hunger (which not everyone experiences) and stable blood glucose that contribute to the reduction in calories but the removal of an entire food group is the main effect. Tangentially, I should mention that many, many, many diet books rely on the rather simple prescription of 'reduce or remove food X' to lose weight. With X being something that contributes a lot of calories to the body, such as fat, sugars or highly refined carbohydrates. But while such diet books typically use all kinds of pseudo-physiology to explain the effect, it's really quite simple: if food X contributes a lot of calories to your diet and you remove food X, you'll eat less total calories and lose weight. No magic, simple caloric restriction. So let's look at the second set of studies within the context. As I mentioned above, typically such studies look at the effect of different diets under free-living conditions. Similar to the results above, such studies frequently find that a given diet approach generates greater weight (or fat loss) but the effect is almost always due to differences in caloric intake. For example, a study comparing a low-fat (but calorie uncontrolled) diet to a higher fat (calorie uncontrolled) diet will frequently see more weight/fat loss in the low-fat trial because the subjects ate less calories. The same goes for other comparisons. And while a few studies have shown drastically differential effects (such as greater weight loss at higher caloric intakes for a given type of diet), the methodology leaves a good bit to be desired. As I mentioned above, most use self-reporting of food intakes which tend to be notoriously inaccurate. I should mention that, very frequently, the variance in weight loss tends to be humungous, as do reported caloric intakes. What this would tend to suggest is that, sometimes a certain diet type will reduce (or increase) food intake and sometimes it won't. Individuals variance and food preferences can play a role as much as anything else. Explaining the discrepancy So now, perhaps, we have a little bit better handle on why two totally different arguments about whether or not 'a calorie is a calorie' can come out of the research. The problem is that, most commonly, folks are referring to different data sets in making their argument. As mentioned in the first section, there's no doubt that studies comparing varying protein intakes almost always find better results with the higher protein intake. As you'll see next chapter, all of the diets described in this book are based on adequate protein intake so these studies, have no relevance here. From the standpoint of this book, the real debate comes out of studies which keep protein constant and vary carbohydrates and fat and there are two data sets in this regards. On the one hand are the studies were calories are rigorously controlled, where the subjects are provided their daily food intake. In those studies, differences in weight loss or body composition changes tend to be small and highly variable (some people do slightly better on one diet versus another but there's no consistent pattern). This is the pattern I've observed in the real-world as well: some people do report slightly better results on one diet versus another but there's no consistent superiority of a given approach. On the other hand are studies examining spontaneous food intakes on various diets, typically examining a single diet such as low-fat or low-carbohydrate. Such studies frequently find that spontaneous food intake goes down or up given certain macronutrient intakes. For example, when fat intake is reduced below a certain point, caloric intake frequently goes down. The same occurs when carbohydrate intake goes below a certain point. Diets high in both fat (40% of total calories) and carbs frequently show higher spontaneous caloric intakes. There is also a set of studies looking at changes comparing different diets to one another, using self-reported intakes to estimate caloric intake. While such studies frequently show differences in terms of weight loss, it's generally related to caloric intake: if a given diet causes people to reduce calories more than another (through whatever mechanism), those people lose weight. Is a calorie a calorie? So is a calorie a calorie? Yes and no. Based on the data, my general feeling is this: 1. A sufficient protein intake will always beat out an insufficient protein intake, no matter what you do. Since all of the diets described in this book are based around sufficient protein, this is a non-issue. 2. Assuming caloric intake can be controlled (and protein is adequate of course), shuffling of carbs and fats tends to have a minor, approaching negligible effect. 3. There might be exceptions at the extremes (folks going to single digit bodyfat or extreme obesity) but that doesn't apply to the majority of folks. In this respect, given adequate protein, it seems to matter very little what diet is chosen. From a weight or bodyfat standpoint, high carb should be as good as low-carb. Right? Well, no. The problem is that there's a HUGE assumption built into statement #2 above: that calories can be controlled under a given set of conditions. As has been found repeatedly in the real-world, this simply isn't a safe assumption. Put a little bit differently, it might very well be possible to lose all the weight/fat you wanted on a calorie controlled junk-food diet with some high quality protein source. The problem that would probably arise is that most people wouldn't be able to control their hunger or appetite on such a diet and they'd probably end up eating more in the long run. In eating more, they'd either lose less weight/fat or even gain it. Even if a given dietary approach appears optimal for some reason, if you can't control your caloric intake, and end up eating more because of it, it won't produce results. Meaning this: you'll frequently see folks make comparisons along the lines of 'well, it's easier to eat 300 calories from food X than from food Y, therefore a calorie isn't a calorie'. They may be generally correct but this criticism is tangential to the main issue. This is why I divided the data sets into studies where calories are controlled (usually in a highly artificial fashion) and where they are not (having more real world application). It's obviously easier to overconsume calories from jelly beans or candy than from vegetable just as it's easier to eat 3000 calories from butter than from celery (no human alive could eat enough celery to get 3000 digestible calories). That matters hugely under conditions where folks are allowed to eat whatever they want. Quite in fact, many many diets are based around this simple fact: make people eat less of the foods that are easy to overconsume and/or make them eat lots of those foods that are tough to overeat and they will lose weight because they automatically reduce their caloric intake. I'll discuss that topic more in the next chapter. But that only applies to the situation where calories aren't being monitored. When calories are being controlled rigidly, the source of calories (whether you're comparing carbs to fat, or even different sources of carbs and fat) matters to a much smaller degree. Once again, my point is that if calories are being strictly controlled, the source doesn't appear to make a humungous difference in terms of body composition changes. As well, once you get protein intake to proper levels, fooling around with carbohydrate and fat ratios (within the context of identical caloric intakes) don't seem to make a huge amount of difference either. The bottom line still comes down to calories in versus calories out; it's simply that it may be easier to affect calories in (food intake) or calories out (through activity) with different macronutrient breakdowns. As well, the source of calories can affect other aspects of physiology beyond body composition. Health, energy levels, hunger/appetite and all the rest interact here. So while a calorie controlled diet of jelly beans, butter and protein powder might very well work to lose weight/fat, it probably wouldn't be as healthy compared to a diet of low GI carbohydrates, healthier oils and lean protein sources. Understand me here? Issues such as hunger control, long-term adherence, individual variance, athletic performance, and a few others all go into the determination of what food might or might not be a better choice under a given set of circumstances. So while a calorie might be more or less a calorie under somewhat artificial conditions (where calories are or can be strictly controlled), it's a little more complex than that in the real world. Other issues interact. The next few chapters will address those other issues. cliffs: from a FAT LOSS standpoint, if protein intake is adequate, the source of calories makes virtually NO difference.

protein also yields slightly less calories upon digestion and absoprtion than carbs (it's like 3.9 vs. 4.2 calories per gram).

So does this mean you don't have to gain fat when bulking. If you eat a shitload of protein but kept your calories equal to your output. Does this work? I really wanna gain muscle this summer, but I sure as hell don't wanna put fat on.

Kozzy McKoz So does this mean you don't have to gain fat when bulking. If you eat a shitload of protein but kept your calories equal to your output. Does this work? I really wanna gain muscle this summer, but I sure as hell don't wanna put fat on. No, it doesn't mean that.

By definition, a calorie=a calorie or actually a food calorie=1000 calories. Now there may be some negligable difference in the efficiency at which your body uses the energy source, but that doesn't mean that going down a calorie's worth of fat isn't the same as a calorie's worth of protein.

ACURA TL-S By definition, a calorie=a calorie or actually a food calorie=1000 calories. Now there may be some negligable difference in the efficiency at which your body uses the energy source, but that doesn't mean that going down a calorie's worth of fat isn't the same as a calorie's worth of protein. eh...kinda, 1 Calorie = 1000 calroies, but Calorie is what most people think of when they're talking about calories, but it's really a kilocalorie

okay 1 kilocalorie = 1000 calories. on nutrition information, instead of putting 70,000 calories per serving of nonfat cottage cheese, they just put 70 cals. i suppose they could put 70kcals

ryazbeck okay 1 kilocalorie = 1000 calories. on nutrition information, instead of putting 70,000 calories per serving of nonfat cottage cheese, they just put 70 cals. i suppose they could put 70kcals They label it correctly, a Calorie with a capital C is 1000 calories

Kozzy McKoz So does this mean you don't have to gain fat when bulking. If you eat a shitload of protein but kept your calories equal to your output. Does this work? I really wanna gain muscle this summer, but I sure as hell don't wanna put fat on. no, that means you will maintain your weight/muscle. To bulk, you need an excess of calories. You will fain some fat when bulking, its just the nature of teh beast. If you micromanage you food intake, you can minimize how much fat you gain but thats not much fun.

Kozzy McKoz So does this mean you don't have to gain fat when bulking. If you eat a shitload of protein but kept your calories equal to your output. Does this work? I really wanna gain muscle this summer, but I sure as hell don't wanna put fat on. no, its saying that one protein requirements are met:a calorie from a carb = a calorie from protein = a calorie from fat (when you are talking about FAT gain or FAT loss)

along the same lines over at ruggedmag ARchaic SERIOUSLY Aaron. Why do you think that people eat clean food to get lean? Aaron_F Why do people think high reps = cuts why do people thing medium reps = hypertrophy yet 1-3reps = strength Clean food is an old bodybuilding pile of shit, since I have been around its been low fat, low carbs and everything in between. However a diet high in protien, containing moderate fats and lots of veges helps majorly for satiety amongst other factors. A calorically controlled adequate protein junk food diet allows for the same effect, but in reality is much harder to achieve, because satiety etc is not as good in lower volume meals (ie calorically dense). ARchaic, I have been around bbrs since i started this, I have helped people going into competitions, I have experiemnted on myself (n=1) over the last 15 years, I have been lean, I have been fat, I have been everything in between. I have gained fat on "clean" foods, I have lost fat eating garbage, I have gained muscle eating 100-150g protein per day, I have gained fat eating 350-400g protein per day. I talk to literally thousands of people each year in this area, via the internet and in person, I listen to sports physiologists, I read probably thousands of articles per year, the predominant lot is around sports and weight loss nutrition, I read articles in the general lay press, bbing press, weight loss groups, amongst others, I live and breathe to find ways of improving fat loss, whislt retaining muscle...and throughout all of this time period, it leads to one thing, there is no magic, no way of confusing a body that has developed over millions of years to become a fat storing machine. Dieting down requires adequate protein, lowered energy consumption and an consistent desire to achieve the final goal. Trying to achieve the final BF% without one of these three is an exercise in futility. In the last 1-2 weeks of dieting, you have basically lost the fat you are going to, the remainder is dietary manipulation to achieve a loss of subcut water, to achieve the desired look of the bodybuilder. Test, Ephedrine and DNP also help edit: read this discussion on ruggedmag for the whole 9 page arguement on this. In the end, ARchaic gets his ass handed to him.

Kozzy McKoz So does this mean you don't have to gain fat when bulking. If you eat a shitload of protein but kept your calories equal to your output. Does this work? I really wanna gain muscle this summer, but I sure as hell don't wanna put fat on. also, high protien intake has been correlated with lowered testosterone. http://jap.physiology.org/cgi/reprint/82/1/49

you wanna find out...take two people and diet one on clean foods and diet one on same calories from fast food..lets see who looks better. A calorie is not just a calorie..sorry, if it was we would all be dieting on steak and cheese

mmmmmm steak mmmmmmmm cheese

PurEvl sorry, if it was we would all be dieting on steak and cheese I wouldn't. I'd be too damn hungry all the time eating the small amount of food that would make up my daily calories.

PurEvl you wanna find out...take two people and diet one on clean foods and diet one on same calories from fast food..lets see who looks better. A calorie is not just a calorie..sorry, if it was we would all be dieting on steak and cheese what about chips, cookies, cakes, cupcakes, crackers, ice cream, taco bell, mcdonalds, wendys, etc etc? you know, like 60% of the fat fucks of america eat!

PurEvl you wanna find out...take two people and diet one on clean foods and diet one on same calories from fast food..lets see who looks better. A calorie is not just a calorie..sorry, if it was we would all be dieting on steak and cheese Macronutrient ratios have little to do with weight loss, but what most people don't realize is that weight loss does not necessarily mean fat loss. Sure someone who gets the protein sparring effects of eating nothing but high protein, low carb, low fat foods is going to lose more fat than muscle and a person eating essentially no protein is going to lose more muscle and less fat. But this only goes to a certain point. Someone eating 1-1.5g of protein per lb of lbm is not going to see much more muscle loss than a person eating 3g/lb of lbm, but a person eating 30g or protein a day or whatever the hell the new RDV is will sure as hell lose more muscle. Of course all this is affected by exercise and uncountable other variables but you get my drift. After typing all this I realized I don't know why I am telling you this considering you made the comment, but you know.

FDA is fucking 60g of a protein per day.














Is a calorie just a calorie?

Friday, November 15, 2013

So I have all my ingredients for my protein shake ready...

So I have all my ingredients for my protein shake ready...


But I'm not too sure how to work out the portions. Skim Milk 100% ON Whey (chocolate) Banana Natural peanut butter Egg whites How much of what should I put in?

xpinchx But I'm not too sure how to work out the portions. Skim Milk 100% ON Whey (chocolate) Banana Natural peanut butter Egg whites How much of what should I put in? 1.5 cups, 2 scoops, 1, 1tbs, none

ACURA TL-S 1.5 cups, 2 scoops, 1, 1tbs, none Thank you.

ACURA TL-S 1.5 cups, 2 scoops, 1, 1tbs, none but id be using more peanut butter if it wasnt a pre/post workout shake

I tried it today and it was alright, but there were an awful lot of banana chunks. I'll try it again later without bananas.

add some oatmeal and more pb

shastaisforwinners add some oatmeal and more pb Add oatmeal.

Here's what I do: 1 cup steel cut oats, grind em up dry in the blender first (600 cals) 1.5 cups milk (blend milk and oats together) (225 cals) 3 scoops whey (330 cals+) 2 TBSP oil or pbutter (blend again thoroughly) (200 cals+) you can chug it in one go, and guess what? 1400 calories. Doesn't get cheaper or more efficient than that.

if you have banana chunks, you arent blending enough. Bananas are like the first things to go, very soft compared to other stuff (i use alot of frozen fruits in my shakes because i cant stand chocolate )
































So I have all my ingredients for my protein shake ready...

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