Mostslepton said:
Haven't read many of the other responses yet, but you could add Yerba Mate to your fat-burning arsenal.
Could, yeah - but OP, keep in mind that these products (yerba mate, for all intents and purposes here, =caffeine) are only a tiny, I mean like 1%, part of the game. I'm serious as cancer on that. Don't waste cash on a 'diet pill formulation', and don't expect you're gonna be surprised by the results. If you have any expectations about them, you will be disappointed lol.
Mostslepton said:
It can suppress appetite, increase metabolic rate, and it is a lesser-known but well-established fact that it has wonderful thermogenic properties.
Wonderful is a stretch, and also the thermogenic boost of a diet pill isn't highly translated to raw fat loss anyways.
Mostslepton said:
This is pretty much on par with bingalpaws' suggestions, as Yerba Mate contains the stimulant caffeign. It is actually being used as an ingredient in many weight loss supplements, as I've recently began to notice. They are also putting green tea extract in a lot of different products, ranging from soaps and shampoos to diet pills.
Let me rephrase in case I wasn't clear on caffeine (or amph, ephedrine, etc). These are cool for a couple reasons. Primarily for the way they allow you to live *during* your cut.
Think of it like this - the caffeine/ephedrine/etc pills you have, they're not there to help you lose fat. You lose fat by having a strong calorie deficit each day during your cut, think of the pills as a weak 'support' system. The stimulants will help you to have more energy while you're hungry, and will also mask your hunger a bit. That's what they do best, provide support to a hard cut, not 'boost' a cut's efficiency.
(stim recommendations again would be only pure tablets of some aforementioned stims, the diet pills are the same stuff only 100X more expensive. You will become tolerant to stims if you choose to use them, I've personally found, as have many others, that 5 days/week is a solid schedule to avoid burnout from stims - the point where you can take like 5 pills and fall asleep - you need to get off for a few days. It's the beauty of caffeine/xanthine compounds, tolerance builds pretty quickly, but leaves pretty quickly.
Mostslepton said:
Which brings up another point, green tea. In addition to Yerba Mate, drinking a cup of green tea 1-3 times a day would be helpful as well.
I wouldn't recommend this unless, of course, he likes green tea. His addition of a few cups of green tea will make *zero* difference for his actual goals here.
Mostslepton said:
Consider obtaining a mate gourd and bombilla straw. In my experience, drinking Yerba Mate tea by itself doesn't seem as effective.
Again, overdoing it by a lot imo. The active compounds he'd care about in yerba mate are very easily extracted and available in any normal yerba mate preparation (although I'd still suggest caffeine over it as, in the end, they're pretty much identical, and caffeine's far cheaper). The gourd is definitely keeping it real

, but unnecessary to him/anyone looking to lose weight (you saw the kid's schedule, I'd hate to see him sacrifice 1 crucial gym visit to go obtain yerba mate gourd or something lol).
Mostslepton said:
But, enough about mate and poop lol. It basically does come down to burning more calories than you take in at the end of the day.
Exactly! That's all there is to it, calorie surplus is needed for muscle growth (as is muscle damage from training), calorie surplus is needed for fat accumulation, and calorie deficit is needed for fat loss. We don't defy physics with our digestive systems lol, you just need to increase the *deficit* of calories until you're losing a good rate, say 2lbs/week (remember what I said earlier, fat will come off faster in the beginning, so you may wanna stack your weekly goals considering that). That's why you need a program like fitday, to know precisely your calorie intake. If you train 3X week (in which case I'd only recommend compound movements, ask for more info if desired), and work similar hours weekly, then your expenditure will be similar. Keep track of your food intake, and keep an eye on the scale. If week 1 goes by and you only lost a pound, drop maybe 300-500 calories / day (easy if using fitday, and no you don't have to be weighing out food and all that, it's easy to use even if all you eat is store bought stuff) for week 2, and so on, til you're at your proper calorie goal for the day that gets you your losses for the week. Also keep in mind your first week's losses will be skewed by some water weight loss. (oh on the note of water weight, don't try cutting water weight lol, I see some people think they found an easy way, just lose water weight - not a good idea on a cut like this lol).
Mostslepton said:
Eating 4-6 smaller meals at 3-4 hour intervals can prove beneficial, but I'm sure somebody already mentioned this and besides, YMWV.
Alright I'm gonna tackle this subject a bit more in depth this time.
Eating a meal will cause a metabolic spike relative to the size of the meal. Eating a given amount of food in a day will create a specified metabolic increase - this is almost 100% independent of when the meals are eaten, and how many separate meals you split the food into.
*However*, I'm not saying that eating more frequent, smaller meals is a bad idea. It's not a bad idea, but the positive things it has going for it do not include a better fat-loss efficiency. The positive attributes of this approach are that your blood sugar stays more uniform (which is very nice when you're on restricted calories), and if your willpower sucks (which would likely ruin your results somewhere somehow anyways), the fact that you eat more small meals makes it less likely you'll be soo hungry and then eat far more than you should have.
But, if your schedule accomodates 3 meals, that's fine - you're not screwing yourself or hindering progress by eating 3 as opposed to 6, it's the calories of the meals, not the number of meals.
Mostslepton said:
Further, there is no magical exercise. But there are some exercises which burn up waaay more calories than others. Consider not just cardio combined with resistance workouts, but dynamic, explosive anearobic movements as well e.g. wind sprints, jumps, any gymnastic-type training exercises/movements, etc.
No magical exercises, definitely. Although, when considering dumbell curls, all of a sudden squats seem magical

.
Although no exercises are magical, some are extremely inefficient and wouldn't be of much use to the OP who has limited training time and a hard regimen in front of him for these months.
Examples of what I'd call very inefficient for him:
situps
curls
tricep extensions
dumbbell flyes
leg extensions/curls
calf raises
wrist curls
Examples of what I'd want to see him doing, efficient stuff:
squats (front squats as well)
deadlifts and variations thereof
bench press
pull ups
etc
Mostslepton said:
, but later just getting into nutrition and fitness helped immensely.
Yeah it does! Nutrition is sooooo important it's not even funny, and so commonly neglected. (note that I'm not referring to nutrition in terms of health, but rather nutrition in terms of specific calorie counts).
Mostslepton said:
I also joined a boxing gym and did gymnastics and a bit of MMA training, so that's something to consider as well.
In general, definitely. For him right now? No way. He'd have to learn to become more efficient there, and his time learning, while not a waste, won't be as efficient as other, more simple approaches. Also, I'd recommend against that, if recommended solely for weight loss, on safety grounds. It's leaving you open to injury and, if not interested in mma, why take the risk? Same reason I won't recommend olympic lifts to someone trying to gain size, there's just too much to learn and a heightened injury risk. If you want to gain size and be an olympic lifter, then go for it. If you want to lose fat and fight, then go for it. But if you're just trying to gain muscle/lose fat, then olympic lifts/mma are not your most efficient approaches. (****one note on that - if you're already CURRENTLY an mma fighter/trainer, or an olympic lifter, then it's different as you wouldn't need to learn, and your injury risk would be lower).
Mostslepton said:
Maybe by getting socially involved in some type of physical training/sports club it will help, as people tend to train less intensely when they're pushing themselves. It worked for me.
Agreed, it does help a lot of people, but many times those that need the help of others to stay focused on their goal, don't last looooong term. I dunno, it just always seems that if someone needs to go with a group, needs others to keep them on point with this kind of stuff, that there ends up a time where they're not around others who are keeping them motivated, and their motivation drops or is completely killed.
I'm not saying partners/etc aren't useful, or won't make you work more efficiently, but be careful of using it as a crutch for motivation/intensity.