I'm very close to a diploma in sports nutrition. The really was meant as sarcasm
I'm not a fan of cutting out carbohydrates. There's better ways to lose weight. Like you say, the average person doesn't have amazing restraint when it comes to food selection and cutting out carbs will eventually lead to a point where the craving gets to badly that the person will likely to return to their old ways. I hear you about the Pizza....espeically with Dominoes just a phone call away
A diet where gradual reduction in carbohydrate is probably the better solution long term. Especially for an athlete. We all saw what happened to Oscar when he followed a low carbohydrate - high protein diet leading up to the Pac fight. He made weight really well......but that's the only positive thing you can really say about his performance.
Sorry mate, I edited your post trying to quote you! fixed it - Adam
Last edited by AdamGB; 03-03-2009 at 10:29 PM. Reason: whooops ;)
ah..
Hell, I can't keep up with everyone's private life!
Oscar should smack whoever advised him or if he doesn't have the strength to lift his arms ask Pac to do it.
"best weigh to lose weight" pun intended?
seriously, if you cut calories but still eat correctly and by the food groups you will lose excess fat. If you workout daily/every other day you will lose fat much quicker. I suppose it all depends on your goal.
Without getting into details like Ono and co., if you have excess "fat" on your body, meaning you're not in good shape, then you don't need a damn diet plan, or even diet book to tell you what to eat. Just exercise and cut calories. You will lose fat so fast.
If you're in good shape and trying to get in better shape, then you should look into talking to a nutritionist and stuff of that sort.
just my opinion and thoughts from my previous experience of losing weight and getting into shape. I was never ever over weight, but i trimmed about 15 lbs in 2 months to get into great shape. Took a little while but doing it the right way paid off.
Very simple: there is no quick and easy way. It requires hard work and a basic diet. You don't have to be counting every single calorie, eat smart. Cut back on artificial foods. Live by the rule: "If man made it, don't eat it." Man was made to eat a whole bunch of things not to count his calories. Notice that our ancestors weren't eating a bunch of synthetic foods like we do. Workout hard, eat smart (natural and not too much), and be consistent and you will loose fat. Don't go on some fad diet that the human body wasnt made to do. It's not rocket science just common sense.
You can't lose weight quickly and do it safely...
A low Carb diet would be AWFUL idea for a serious athlete... look at oscar De La Hoya's last fight.
As long as you are eating a sensible, nutritious diet I don't think you need anything more than a structured exercises regime incorporating muscle developing exercises and plenty of Anaerobic training to boost your metabolic rate.
It would help us if you told us a few things:
Why are you losing the weight?
How much weight do you have to lose?
What amount of time do you have?
What intensity do you perform at (if at all)?
A misspelled thread title followed by the message '' isn't really going to get you anything at all focused or unvague.
your all thinking im fat or something ?losing weight quickly and safely surley you would of guessed for a bout ?
you give us too much credit for being able to figure things out lol
but I knew why you were leggy, but didn't add anything as it was so close to your fight I don't think you should have messed with your diet then. I think it would only have weakened you. As it turned out you had your fight and won it, so.
1 hour (speed 7) on StairMaster will kick your butt.
You will lose a thousand calories and 3 lbs instantly (depends on your current weigh). It's favorite gym machine.
Id say drop some calories but make sure what your eating is good for you. Id say it would work better with a low calorie high protein diet. Add in some cardio EVERYDAY! Interval training is best as apparently it stops the body from going catabolic and diminishing muscle. Add in some amino acids to help maintain muscle and you should lose fat, weight and still keep muscle. But i could be wrong, just my thoughts.
lol...uh-huh.. that doesn't make sense son, please provide published medical records proving that, because I really can't find any on pubmed...lol
Word up, about time someone gives a normal response.
Thanks Ono.
If you guys haven't noticed, i havent been on the forum that much for 3-4months, i've been cutting down for boxing, and i only started training last week. I cut down from 97kg, now im 83.5-84, and maintained alot of my muscle, my bodyfat currently is at 12%, which im pretty happy as i have no gut anymore. I trained as a bodybuilder rather than a boxer, but the whole principle to dieting is the same, your calories are the only variable as training is different.
Put it this way, if you're a boxer you will end up requiring more calories, because u burn more with running, jogging, skipping, boxing, sparring, so on and so forth.
You can still lose weight with boxing, but you're going to break down more muscle because the training you are doing is a mixture of various exercises that require different primary sources of fuel, i.e. jogging=glycogen from food you just ate in your pre workout meal.
While High intensity interval training (sprint/walk/sprint/walk) uses fat and some glycogen from your pre workout meal, and very little muscle.
Losing muscle is inevitable while dieting to lose weight, you're going to lose it either way, because you are on a calorie deficit diet and you have low insulin levels, therefore its extremely hard to stay anabolic at all times.
AHAHAHAH, bro, ketosis is for obese people, and it should only be used in short term, it also enlarges the glands near your throat if you're on it too long. Ketosis isnt for atheletes, a caloric deficit diet is ideal for losing weight and maintaining muscle.
You can eat pretty much a variety of things if you count it into your macronutrient ratio on a caloric deficit diet. Your diet would roughly look like this: protein each meal, around 8-10g of fats each meal, very little carbohydrates in the morning, a proper amount of carbohydrates pre workout and post workout, 6-7 meals (including shake).
^^
Thats what a normal caloric deficit diet looks like, so you basically have first hand experience from me, ive just come off it, its not some fucked up diet from hollywood, its not even a 'diet', its just science, reducing your carbs and fats, but keeping them at a level where you're just on boarder line.
If you're a male never have your calories below 2000.
ok thats enough from me, once again, thanks for the post Ono, good to see we have some educated people on the forum
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