Cyrus said:Thanks for that, and nothing else is needed
Except for what an ideal protein meal would contain (Red meat?)
TheLoveBandit said:Alrighty then - my background and a few questions. I'm age 35 and sitting at 5'9 with ~225lbs. A realistic target for me is 180lbs (below 170 would be an obtainable dream, but still a dream). I've had VERY high cholesterol but thru medication, exercise, and diet change, I've gotten it back in line and hope to drop the medication soon. I've got fairly strong will and can control my eating pretty well most of the time.
1) I'm trying to change to small meals/snacks throughout the day rather than a large meal. In doing this, my breakfast, lunch, and snacks are primarily fruits and granola bars. What can I do to improve on that menu which helps the cholesterol AND nourish the body (I'm thinking the pre-fab granola bars may not be my best choice)? Btw, I hate tuna fish and yogurts, but can force them into my diet if I have to. I am confident my diet can be whatever amounts of whatever foods I decide is best, and I can control myself in this regard - I'm just not sure what diet plan to pursue (not South Beach or Adkins, but "diet" as in sensible eating pattern).
Well its definetly important that you get some form of protien and some form of essential oils into your system. Consider taking some cod liver oil capsuals and start to use olive oil (in moderation of course) in your diet. Maybe try some egg-white omlettes...
2) I've heard exercising in the morning is better, but most of the credit goes to a) waking you up for the day, b) kickstarting the metabolism for the day, and c) you can't say you're too tired or run out of time like you might say in the evening. Is there really much difference between morning or evening workouts?
Not really. You should definetly try to have some lite-breakfast beforehand. The metabolism reacts quicker if it has something to begin with to burn through. Otherwise it thinks its starving and will try and conserve as much mass as possible. I would try for a morning aerobic activity and a light weight routine at home. You dont need them very heavy- I picked up my first set for like $25...
3) I'm mainly interested in exercising to lose weight, and I've been running but looking to add cycling into my regimen (I don't have a weight system, and probably won't for several more months). I'm aiming to focus on target heart ranges, but I've seen where they list 50-70% of MaxHeartRate is for fat burning and 60-80% MHR is for aerobic exercise. I'm comfortable running at the 70-85% range now (took a few weeks) but would it be more effective for fat burning to stay slower at the 60-70% range? I know going for longer time is better for me overall, but I'd rather be going at a quick, comfortable speed than at a slower one. From experience, I can go about 40 min at my prefered higher pace, but I can go 55-75 min at the slower pace. Part of my issue is trying to limit my workouts to an hour. Do I bite the bullet and run slower for longer, or am I still getting the same effect (assuming same calories burned) by moving up from the fat-burn zone to the aerobic zone?
Try and keep going at your faster rate. Do some stretches if you cant make the full hour. I find a good hour of fairly high exersion running enough to burn calories.
4) In adjusting my workout schedule, I right now would run 30-45 min in the mornings M-F, then go for a distance run over the weekend (creating a day of rest and a day of beyond-normal exertion). Would it be alright to maintain this, and add in an evening activity (the bike ride, a weight workout, etc) for M-F or would I be pushing myself too much? Would it be alright to keep the morning runs and also have an evening run mixed in with the biking or weights (not all at once, just something different each evening, but a steady morning routine of running)?
I would only do 5-days a week morning/evening at my most deadicated but if you can manage to push yourself to do more then thats great. But make sure you listen to your body- it knows when your working it too hard. I would prefer running over biking. Morning runs- evening lifts. :D
For pecs you can do incline dumbbell presses, Decline dumbbell press,Dips and Cable CrossoversCyrus said:what excercises aside from push ups would be good for the chest muscles?
more towards shaping the pecs, perhaps? :]
Charlie Brown said:Im doing 40kg free standing squats
6 sets off 10 maybe 2 times a week...I have actually reach my max! I can go to 50kg but seem to struggle a little bit but once am doing it can get it done....My question is how do I slowly increase my capacity for squats just using free standing bars? also is it save to do the 50kg even though there is slight strain...?
ruski said:
I've taken a lot of notice of the resistance excercises mentioned in this thread and I think I'm going to start throwing those in as well for muscle strength in my upper body (and for also a bit of tone, albeit I should probably start weight training soon as well).
I'm also very interested in an explanation of a few things, though:
Starvation mode - I hear this mentioned a lot and my ex-girlfriend also made mention that this particually bad, can someone give me a quick overview?
My goal is to increase my VO^2 Max and overall cardio fitness, I'm also interested in muscle strength but less worried about muscle tone (it would be nice, but fitness overall is more important to me).
Diet is also something I've been fairly strict about, but I feel like I'm perhaps eating too many carbohydrates w/sides of rice, noodles or pasta being part of a lot of my evening meals (and often lunches, as I take left overs from the day prior to work). I eat very lean foods and eat as many fresh vegetables, fruit, yohgurt, nuts and dried fruit as possible during the day. Carbohydrates have been mentioned as 'not so high concern' in this thread, but I'm wondering at what level 'carbohydrate overdose' is considered a problem?
Russ.
I'm not a professional but here is my take on a few of your questions. One thing I've read is that the ideal body for a marathon runner is very lean and it's imposssible to put on a lot of muscle if you are serious about the sport. That's just a thought though, not really here nor there. Another random thing I read is that improving upper body strength is good for runners because your arm movement propells you forward. To increase strength rather than add size go for low reps high weight, like 3-5 reps per set.