[quote]1llusion wrote:
[quote]Invictica wrote:
[quote]1llusion wrote:
[quote]LiquidMercury wrote:
[quote]1llusion wrote:
Guess I could have been more clear. I’m not doing the measuring with the callipers, another person is. I’ll work on my clarity in the future.
I’d agree with your last statement, that most people can’t do it. I can’t argue that. But, from what I’ve seen over the last few years as a trainer is that most people have the potential to be lean year-round, they simply make the choice not to. They make these small choices daily that hold them back, and at the end of the day it matters. Myself, I prefer to eat well, get to bed early, and train hard more than I enjoy things like cheap food and alcohol.
Personally, I have a hell of a time gaining any fat. For example, for two weeks I ate 10g of carbs/kg of bodyweight per day (so 700g/day), while getting 1.5g of protein/lb of bodyweight and got noticeably leaner, visually and verified through skinfolds.
I don’t intend to imply that people should be as lean as I am, but I honestly see no reason why any competing male athlete should be over 8% bodyfat. Even the 105+ guys would benefit from being leaner, granted it would take more effort to keep that kind of lean mass on you.[/quote]
I’d be interested to hear say your top 5 “daily choices” that you see people making that hold you back. As a strength athlete, and relatively lean one (8-9%) I find I can’t go much leaner than that without making big sacrifices in strength. If you’ve found a way to avoid that I’d definitely be interested in hearing, or even trying it out.[/quote]
It really isn’t complicated at all.
- Eat well. Every meal, half of your plate is lean meat, other half is veggies. Drink water. Once a week, have a carb-up meal. If you are leaner the next day, you had the right amount of carbs. If you got fatter, you had too many.
- Sleep well. sleep in a bat cave (no light, sound, electronics, nothing. relax before bed, and ensure your magnesium levels are adequate via a RBC magnesium test)
- Proper workout nutrition. that means no carbs before or during training. bcaas during the session, protein, glutamine and glycine post workout (add carbs if you have abs).
You can get very far with the above, without changing any of it. My clients do it all the time, so can you.[/quote]
What’s your best in-competition total?
What’s your best training total?
[/quote]
First comp is july 7.
training total 165 @71kg
I’ll qualify for provincials this year, and nationals next year. that’s the goal any ways.
I really don’t understand what you’re finding so difficult about what I posted. Have you ever tried it?
[/quote]
Yes I have. What you said is simply common sense for all athletes, nothing revolutionary. But that alone isn’t enough when you are putting up significantly higher numbers. Not to shit on your parade, but your total is on the low side. Granted we all have to start somewhere, I don’t think you should speak as a voice of authority for strength athletes since your own strength is not exactly top notch.
However, if you are putting up very big numbers in the next little while, staying sub 8% BF, then I would very much want to learn more of what you’re doing. Until then, please heed the advice and warning of stronger/more experienced lifters.