Master does by the look of his post above yours.
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Heh, thanks mate... don't think I'm anything special mind... just goes with the territory.
Bilbo I don't think your problem is an abundance of fat... just focus on gaining more muscle!
My body fat went up 2% in a week when I was ill... I couldn't eat and could hardly drink for a week and had a really high fever. I lost over half a stone... most of it water weight.
Was making sure the scales at work worked properly when I got back and my body fat was 2% higher. Clearly I couldn't have gained any fat as I couldn't bloody eat (if anything I looked leaner... but skinnier too)... but seeing as there was 7lbs less of me... the few pounds of fat that I did have on my body now accounted for a higher % of my total weight.
The fact is that I wasn't fatter. It's just a number and unless you're a serious athlete, model or whatever then I wouldn't worry too much... it's nice to see big results, if you were 25% at the start of the year and got to 16% then that's progress... but if you gain or lose 1-2%? As long as you feel and look better don't sweat th small stuff! ;)
What the heck is a bodyfat scale? Just sounds weird to me.
It's fairly low mate, nothing outstanding by any means... not for somebody who boxes as a hobbie and basically worksout for a living :)
Don't really monitor it a lot... I took it in the morning a while ago and I think it was about 53... it was toward 50 anyway. Loads of things can have an affect on it so it could be lower at the moment or higher, I haven't checked.
Like your body fat it's not the be all and end all of fitness, not even cardiovascular fitness. It's obviously the sign of a stronger heart but there are some factors to take into account to... gender and age etc.
Women for example tend to be lower than men on average. because they have less muscle to have to pump oxygen to and lower metabolisms etc.
I know women who's resting heart rate is similar to mine, some a touch lower who I will leave for dead in any cardiovascular fitness test.
If I've had a heavy few weeks training then my heart rate will probably be higher at rest than some other people's... even if I'm fitter... my body is repeairing and growing cells, pumping waste products around, replenishing nutrients/fluids etc... If you train the way I do then your body doesn't stop right when the workout does.
It's 24/7 think that's one of the reasons you become over trained if you don't periodise your training... (something I've only just became disciplined enough to do! I can't stop myself or step back and have lighter weeks! gotta practice it and preach it! ;))
I tend to just go off performance and wellbeing rather than getting heavily in to stats when training people. If you look better, feel better and perform better than you're doing something right! ;)
If a client wants to see the numbers I'll test them... some people thrive off analytical results and numerical proof but a lot don't need it.
I had a guy who went from 100kg to 98kg in 6 weeks... not a tonne of weight lost but we took some tests (repeated them thrice to make sure as always) and I forget the exact numbers but he's went from over 30% body fat down to something like 23% body fat and gained something like 6kg of muscle.
I could pretty much tell him all of this based on what we'd been doing, how he'd been performing and how he looked (it's not rocket science, his strength shot up, he looked thinner, he was 100% more active but not eating any more and he looked slimmer!) but could tell he still had doubts... and you've got to have faith in what you're doing to see it through... so I got it on paper for him.
This guy is trying to drop from about 100kg to about 80kg lean (again we had to work this out, great client... but very number driven, again some people work better that way... at least it gives him a goal) so I understand that with that much weight to drop, he wants to make sure what he's doing is working.
Bilbo on the other hand... being 140 or sometimes 143:o... just needs to get on with it and pump that iron! :p
Eat well, train hard and take your vitamins BRUTHA
http://wwfhasbro.prowrestlingoutside...nia-712484.jpg
I have got mines down to 48 but that was long ago but it is not far off that but the way you put it, it does not matter that much. I know Henry Armstorng was in the 30's and had to really warm up to get going before he entered the ring, so it does have it advantages as he could punch for fun for ages.