[quote]Professor X wrote:
[quote]seekonk wrote:
[quote]browndisaster wrote:
The “ectomorph” typing is complete BS. These people are just tall and skinnyfat. The skinnyfat belly look will go away after some good consistent training and eating. I think all these specialized low volume only compound ectomorph programs out there only worsen these guys.[/quote]
No, it is not BS. You misunderstand. We are talking about skinny LEAN people, not skinny fat, like you can see our abs and veins, who have difficulty gaining. [/quote]
?? I was an “ectomorph”. Not too many people would call me that now.
Savagenation just wrote the same…and no one would call him that now either.
Yes, for the most part, the average person even using these terms is using them WRONG.
They do NOT have full understanding of how the human body works and likely got what they think they know strictly off the internet.
Your body doesn’t give a shit about a label. If you have to eat more to gain weight, then fucking eat more.[/quote]
I used to hate advice like the advice Professor X is giving right now. I used to swear I was an ectomorph and nobody understood me.
But now I understand, calling yourself an ectomorph is just some stupid label that internet gurus gave out. I gained ~24 lbs of muscle in the past 3 years. That is not “crazy” by any means, but it took me from an “ectomorph” to a studly physique. My secret? Eating more and higher training intensity.
You have a high metabolism. That is it. You don’t have some predetermined fate where you are destined to be a skinny little bitch (like the name “ectomorph” implies).
Eat. Eat more than you think is acceptable. If you are still skinny and not gaining muscle, EAT MORE.
Increase your portion sizes to two of everything. If you go to Chipotle for lunch, get two burritos and two bags of chips. When you eat dinner, eat two steaks, two baked potatoes, two massive servings of vegetables. When you go out to dinner with friends, order a soup, a salad, an appetizer, and a large entree with extra sides. Add two scoops of protein in your post-workout drink. I think you get the picture here.
This advice is so frequently overused as a fix for everything. But it actually works, and there is a reason it is touted so often.