I read an article where Layne Norton used to do 3 months of bulking, and then 1 month of cutting to look overall leaner year round, as compared to bulking for 8-10 months straight, and i like how the strategy sounds.
However, i was wondering, are there any health dangers, or drawbacks to this strategy?
Both approaches work, itās a matter of which one works better for you. I prefer something similar where Iāll do a āminicutā if body fat starts getting too high. Bring it down to a manageable level and keep going.
I remember reading something from Layne where he does 3 weeks where he intakes a surplus of calories then one week at maintenance (or below), to avoid excess bodyfat. But maybe we are just reading different articlesā¦
[quote]parrao79 wrote:
I remember reading something from Layne where he does 3 weeks where he intakes a surplus of calories then one week at maintenance (or below), to avoid excess bodyfat. But maybe we are just reading different articles⦠[/quote]
Ben Pakulski advocates something similar where he alternates short phases of excess and restricted calories. The line of reasoning is that itās closer to how our bodies actually evolved to grow. Back when we were hunters and gatherers, we would go for a long time living off a small to moderate amount of calories alternated with periods of excess calories when we hunted down a mammoth or something. To me, this would also correspond to a training stimulus for the hunters - they just finished sprinting and carrying/dragging pieces of meat.
Ben Pak says that basically this works better because during periods of restricted calories (I think he actually says maintenance) your body becomes more sensitive to insulin, leading to better growth when you raise the calories. Also, having a short period of excess calories doesnāt give your body enough time to become insulin resistant - another good thing.
Iām just sharing peopleās theories, Iām not saying any one approach is best.
[quote]hairydinkbrah wrote:
I read an article where Layne Norton used to do 3 months of bulking, and then 1 month of cutting to look overall leaner year round, as compared to bulking for 8-10 months straight, and i like how the strategy sounds.
However, i was wondering, are there any health dangers, or drawbacks to this strategy?[/quote]
I like this strategy, but change āmonthsā to āhoursā. So Iāll bulk for 3 hours, then Iāll cut for an hour, bulk 3 hours, cut an hour. This way I can bulk for 12 hours a day, cut for 4, and then sleep for 8 (I consider sleeping to be bulk/cut neutral).
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I like this strategy, but change āmonthsā to āhoursā. So Iāll bulk for 3 hours, then Iāll cut for an hour, bulk 3 hours, cut an hour. This way I can bulk for 12 hours a day, cut for 4, and then sleep for 8 (I consider sleeping to be bulk/cut neutral).
Want more diet tips from flipcollar? Follow my blog, instagram, and youtube channel!!!
What happens if you keep calories the same over a long period during bulking?
Letās say you were 200lbs, and you increased your calories which allowed you to bulk up to 230lbs, but in the meantime you also went from 10% bodyfat to 17% bodyfat during that phase.
Now you just stay at those same calories that got you to 230lbs and continue to train hard on your lifts. You do this for a 18 months. What happens?
Your weight will not change from 230lbs because youāre eating the same number of calories every day. But what happens to your bodyfat percentage? Does it stay the same? Or slowly decrease throughout that 18 month period so youāre at a new āset-pointā where youāre something like 230lbs and 12% bodyfat?
Iāve doing the zigzag approach with some success. Still too early to tell completely.
I started a bulk in October with 500 calorie surplus (roughly) at 9% body fat 32 inch waist, 168 pounds. Iāve stopped the bulk about two times to cut back a little because my abs were getting blurry. I spent about 2 weeks on the āmini-cutsā and went back to intermittent fasting and working out on an empty stomach.
I just recently checked my bodyfat again (Skulpt Aim ā awesome tool BTW) and Iām sitting at 10%, with a 33 inch waist and my weight is 175. So Iām sure some of that is fat, but there has to be some muscle in there, because as well as tracking my weight and other measurements, Iāve also chronicled my results in pics. My most recent pic doesnāt look too much different than my starting pic from back in October.
Maybe I can switch gears easily because of the lean, anabolic shape I started from. So if I gained an actual pound or two of muscle since October, with a 1% jump in bodyfat (give or take a little of course) then Iād call that some success and will keep pursuing.
Iāve had lots of success with cyclical bulking, but if youre a natural then once you get somewhat advanced the gains will seem to come very slowly⦠I wouldnāt say your spinning your wheels but it might seem like it.