Roger&Me
Bluelighter
^You could do a little research yourself you know...
knumb said:I'm 5'11 and about 200lbs. I've gained quite a bit over the last year, since I quit tobacco. I'm 22. I need to loose weight, but am not willing to eat whey powder or raw oats. I know I need to do cardio, from what I've been reading on here, but I'm not sure what cardio is exactly. I can't do jumping jacks or anything that is hard on the joints because I have bad arthritis. What do you suggest? My diet consists of eggs, lots of carbs, and quite a bit of vegetables. I'm currently trying to cut out all sweats/soda pop from my diet, (its hard because im a baker).
Charlie Brown said:Im regularly doing squats and deadlifts and have found my hamstrings and quads are getting large..however my calves are not growing at the same speed...2 questions
1. Does squats and deadlifts target the calve muscle?
2. Apart from reverse leg curls (i hate these) what excercises can i do too build the calve muscles?
Jert said:Thanks for all the great info Cpt. Caveman; you rock dude. I had a question for you : FRom your experience , have you found any one particular exercise that is best for developing abdominals?
I've been working out for a bit now, and Dammnit! I want a 6-pack to go with my 6-pack, and it hasn't yet developed. I'm a pretty skinny dude and I work out usually 3 out of 6 days, so I think it is feasible that I should be able to do it.
Right now I do about 50 situps and 20-25 lying-down-leg-raises per workout day.
So yeah, any exercise you recommend? ...Is doing two exercises best? One for lower abs, one for higher?
Thanks a gazallion Caveman.
ebeneezer_geeza said:My Wife doesnt eat meat and will only eat fish once a week. She wont eat cheese. She has osteopenia so i am worried about her diet. I do all the cooking but she is very fussy when it comes to food.
Any ideas what sort of nutrition i should be providing for her?
Geez-A said:I have a question- which exercise is best to tone up the hips and thighs area? I have been doing a regular fast paced 1 hour walk and also a stair master- but want to know which is better to lose fat in that area rather than build up muscle (Dont want Serena Williams legs- just more tone).
Cheers!![]()
angel!na said:Hey!
Ok, im 22yrs old, 5'2 and weigh 65kg.
I want to lose 10kg so i can get down to 55kg. Problem is i cant seem to lose any weight. I've been going to the gym for the past 4-5years now usually 4-6x per week, although that's not consistent all the time but i'd say it is for the most part. My weights stayed pretty much constant all the way through, maybe getting down to 62kg at one stage.
My body doesnt look 10kg overweight, i'd say i have a good amount of muscle mass which contributes to my weight being over the normal ranges in the BMI for my height and age. I hold my weight mainly around my stomach/top of thighs/ass and my stomach is definitely the hardest past to lose weight from, especially from the sides.
I change my program around every 2 months or so but maybe you could give me some input into what i can do better to lose weight.
Heres the program im about to start-
Monday- 1hr weights class (full body) + swim. approx 20 laps and work my way up
Tuesday- 7km jog (40min) + 20min walk, + 30min stairs, + 15min row
Wednesday- 1hr weights class, + swim
Thursday- 7km jog (40min) + 20min walk, + 30min stairs, + 15min row
Friday- 50min bike class + 1/2 hr free weights.
Saturday- Day off
Sunday- 7km jog (40min) + 20min walk, + 30min stairs, + 15min row
I've been doing alot of cardio previously but thought i'd start back up with 3 days p/week of weights to try and speed up my metabolism to lose some weight.
A typical day of food looks like this:
Breakfast: bowl of musli w/soy milk & a banana
or a smoothie w/ soy milk, banana, strawberries, blueberries, & flaxseeds
Lunch: tuna w/ lots of salad
Dinner: chicken and vegies
Snacks: fruit, nuts.
Any advice?
ebeneezer_geeza said:My Wife doesnt eat meat and will only eat fish once a week. She wont eat cheese. She has osteopenia so i am worried about her diet. I do all the cooking but she is very fussy when it comes to food.
Any ideas what sort of nutrition i should be providing for her?
Skyline_GTR said:As I understand it, the problem with just using CV workouts to lose weight is that one loses weight in the form of both fat and muscle. Losing muscle isn't ideal and really one shouldn't think so much about losing weight, but about losing fat - and lowering ones body fat%.
This is what I'm doing with excellent results so far, goes against traditional thinking (got it from the forums at www.menshealth.co.uk, the mod there is a personal fitness instructor and recomends it) but I've been doing it for 4 weeks and have lost about 10lbs and gained a fair amount of muscle tone (didn't have much to start with though!). Would have lost even more if I cut down on my weekend binge drinking.
Height: 6'2" (187cm)
Start weight: 182lbs/13 stones/82.7kg
Current weight 171.5lbs/12.25 stones/78kg
Start BF%: 23% - don't know how accurate that is - it was done entering circumference measurments into the calculator at www.mybodycomp.com
Current BF% - dunno, going to re calculate this weekend.
Diet: approx 1600 calories per day (edit: except on saturdays when it goes up through alcohol), with an approx split of 250g carbs, 85g protein, 33g fat.
Training: weights 3 times a week, full body workout, takes about 40 mins.
No regular CV work at this stage, although the weights session is intense enough to get my heart pounding and sweat pouring.
Now the reasoning behind doing weights and not regular CV is that not only does muscle use a lot more maintenance calories than fat (so helping the all important calorie deficit), the body's top priority when muscles are put under progressive resistance is to preserve and build muscle - hence all the weight loss will be focused on fat - and not fat and muscle. I suppose I could introduce CV work as well (will do in a couple of months when the fat's off), but I don't want to overtrain at the begining and also I'd have to consume more calories to have the energy. It's much easier just not to eat them in the first place, then to go running several times a week to burn them off.
As the captain says, drinking plenty of water is good, especially ice-cold - the body then needs to burn extra calories to maintain the correct temperature.
Also, if possible, splitting your meals into 6 small ones as opposed to 3 larger ones helps keep your metabolic rate up. e.g 6*300kcal is better than 3*600kcal.
womanthatrolls said:So recently i lost alot of weight...im not sure how, i guess i just moved more and ate less but never really concentrated on exercising, untill now.
I've started working out at least 6 days a week with programs including cardio, weight traning and stretching (example- yoga, kickboxing twice a week and body flex twice a week and the rest simple cardio on the treadmill,3 mile run or such) I've also cut out ALL soda and tea in my diet and have only drank water for the past 6 months. My eating habbits are normal and hardly ever excessive.
So heres my problem, i got on the scale yesterday and i've gained 5 pounds i the past 2 weeks...What the hell is up with that?!?!?!?!