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07-13-2011, 03:52 PM
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#61
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Gator Country Silver
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Wherever I am I doing fine. I am here for a good not a long time.
Posts: 12,563
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gator7_5
BTW, If I fasted for 12 hours, I'd fall on the floor and die. You people talking about not eating for a couple of days and still functioning must not be exercising or you have a slow metabolism. My metab is mach3. I gotta eat all day just to stay upright.
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Doubtful. I do a full 24 hour fast once a year and that means nothing crosses my lips at all. Sure I am hungry but I have energy, the only bad part is since I am a coffee fiend I normally get a headache from lack of caffeine and even with that I have plenty of energy.
12 hours is really not bad at all, if you get a full nights sleep its rather easy to go 12 hours without eating. Figure you sleep 8 hours and then are awake and fasting for only 4 hours. I do it pretty regularly now. Wake up start my day with coffee and get to work, before I know its lunch time and I haven't eaten in 12 or 13 hours.
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07-13-2011, 04:10 PM
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#62
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All SEC
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Acworth, GA
Posts: 1,360
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gator7_5
Could be. I feel alot better in general when I'm hydrated. I don't like carbonated drinks (except beer which I love) or sweetened drinks like sweet tea so consuming a lot of water is easy for me.
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Don't get me wrong. I also feel better when I have eaten. I just don't get the effect of "hunger supression" that is talked about.
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07-13-2011, 04:14 PM
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#63
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Gator Country Silver
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Wherever I am I doing fine. I am here for a good not a long time.
Posts: 12,563
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ATL, drinking a lot or a little water seems to have no effect on how hungry I feel. Honestly, the only thing that does seem to keep me from being hungry is distraction. The busier I am the less likely I am to eat a lot and since I work from home with an endless amount of food available I better stay busy or I will just hang out in the kitchen.
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07-13-2011, 04:21 PM
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#64
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Gator Country Silver
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 10,951
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Quote:
Originally Posted by LeafUF
Doubtful. I do a full 24 hour fast once a year and that means nothing crosses my lips at all. Sure I am hungry but I have energy, the only bad part is since I am a coffee fiend I normally get a headache from lack of caffeine and even with that I have plenty of energy.
12 hours is really not bad at all, if you get a full nights sleep its rather easy to go 12 hours without eating. Figure you sleep 8 hours and then are awake and fasting for only 4 hours. I do it pretty regularly now. Wake up start my day with coffee and get to work, before I know its lunch time and I haven't eaten in 12 or 13 hours.
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Is your once a year Ash Wednesday? I skip lunch that day and I pretty much write the workday off after noon.
No freaking way I could skip breakfast. I typically have a yogurt or banana before I work out in the early am and then a protein shake on the way home from the gym, and a PB&J with milk before I head to work. I cant make it till 11:00 before I feel faint. I don't believe everyone can fast and still function at 100%, or even 50%. Maybe I've had a tapeworm for 35 yrs..
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07-13-2011, 04:25 PM
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#65
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All SEC
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Acworth, GA
Posts: 1,360
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Quote:
Originally Posted by LeafUF
ATL, drinking a lot or a little water seems to have no effect on how hungry I feel. Honestly, the only thing that does seem to keep me from being hungry is distraction. The busier I am the less likely I am to eat a lot and since I work from home with an endless amount of food available I better stay busy or I will just hang out in the kitchen.
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I have found being busy also helps.. but for me doing something physical is the BEST. Something mental helps, but I know/can feel that I am hungry while being busy. For me, I have also tried chewing gum. That helps in the short term, but I find that if I chew gum all day long, I go WAY overboard at dinner.
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07-13-2011, 04:27 PM
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#66
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Gator Country Silver
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Wherever I am I doing fine. I am here for a good not a long time.
Posts: 12,563
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gator7_5
No freaking way I could skip breakfast. I typically have a yogurt or banana before I work out in the am and then a protein shake on the way home from the gym, and a PB&J with milk before I head to work. I cant make it till 11:00 before I feel faint. I don't believe everyone can fast and still function at 100%, or even 50%.
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I am not saying to fast, I only do it once a year and its for religious purposes. I just think you would be surprised how easy it is to skip or delay breakfast. I know I was.
I usually eat a small meal between 11 and 12 go to the gym about an hour after that and have a protein shake on the way home. That way I have usually only eaten around 500 to 600 calories by 3 o clock. It seems you just go to the gym earlier but you may end up having your last evening meal earlier in the evening than I do.
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07-13-2011, 04:29 PM
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#67
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Gator Country Silver
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Wherever I am I doing fine. I am here for a good not a long time.
Posts: 12,563
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ATL_Gator
I have found being busy also helps.. but for me doing something physical is the BEST. Something mental helps, but I know/can feel that I am hungry while being busy. For me, I have also tried chewing gum. That helps in the short term, but I find that if I chew gum all day long, I go WAY overboard at dinner.
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I still have trouble with long periods of hunger and making good choices after. I have learned that I can delay the first meal I have every day for a few hours by having coffee and staying busy with work. After that I can stave off afternoon hunger or delay the need to eat by hitting the gym in the middle of the day then coming home and diving back into work. I used to do the gum thing too when I worked in an office but I would go through a pack a day and it didnt help me really reduce calories, just delay eating.
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07-13-2011, 04:53 PM
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#68
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Gator Country Silver
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 10,951
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Quote:
Originally Posted by LeafUF
It seems you just go to the gym earlier but you may end up having your last evening meal earlier in the evening than I do.
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No doubt. I usually cook dinner around 6. My friends all make fun of me for eating so early. I go to bed around 930-10 and eat a cup of cottage cheese and maybe some fruit before I hit the hay.
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07-14-2011, 12:30 PM
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#69
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Gator Country's Ring of Honor
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 62,223
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I've lost 11 pounds in 21 days. Think I'll end it here as I'm 6-0 143 with about a 29'' waist right now. Abs are rock-hard but I do have a bit of loose skin. I suspect I'll go back to meals at 2pm and 8pm with perhaps a bedtime snack.
Suspect these changes will have the effect of adding back 200-300 calories, enabling me to perhaps add a bit of muscle and 'fill out' a bit while remaining in the same weight range. I will acknowledge that while I never get one gram of protein per pound, this recent foray probably had me getting less than half that.
Fasting 20+ hours every day certainly did introduce new hunger pangs, though they were not life-dominating. But going back to the 2pm and 8pm meals will, I suspect, all but eliminate hunger pangs.
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07-15-2011, 03:15 PM
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#70
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Heisman Winner
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Tallahassee
Posts: 5,556
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dreamliner
Abs are rock-hard but I do have a bit of loose skin.
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anything you can do about this? I tipped the scale at 179 this morning, down about 120lbs since July 17th 2010 so i feel like theres a little extra skin there(only natural). There is a little stomach skin, but nothing noticeable to anyone other than my hardest critic(myself).
I haven't been to the gym in 5 weeks so I am maintaining on diet alone for now. I plan to get back, but I have a physical scheduled to get some bloodwork done and make sure i don't have some kind of flu here recently....but i digress.
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07-15-2011, 03:57 PM
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#71
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Gator Country's Ring of Honor
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 62,223
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Quote:
Originally Posted by slmdLS1
anything you can do about this? I tipped the scale at 179 this morning, down about 120lbs since July 17th 2010 so i feel like theres a little extra skin there(only natural). There is a little stomach skin, but nothing noticeable to anyone other than my hardest critic(myself).
I haven't been to the gym in 5 weeks so I am maintaining on diet alone for now. I plan to get back, but I have a physical scheduled to get some bloodwork done and make sure i don't have some kind of flu here recently....but i digress.
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It typically tightens over time but is also a function of age, level and duration of previous obesity and genetics. But if you say yours is scarcely noticeable yours is best-case scenario.
As to your maintaining through diet alone, I tell my trainees:
eat less + move more = fat loss
eat less + move a little = fat loss
eat less + don't move = fat loss
overeating + lots of movement = no fat loss and possible weight gain
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07-15-2011, 04:02 PM
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#72
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Premium Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 2,767
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I generally skip breakfast and lunch and eat large meal in the evening. I find a little beef jerky during the days keeps me from dropping blood sugar and having negative side effects.
Works for me~
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07-15-2011, 04:43 PM
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#73
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Gator Country's Ring of Honor
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 62,223
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Potzer01
I generally skip breakfast and lunch and eat large meal in the evening. I find a little beef jerky during the days keeps me from dropping blood sugar and having negative side effects.
Works for me~
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That sounds great ... but what 'negative side effects' ? Are you diabetic ?
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07-16-2011, 09:23 AM
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#74
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Gator Country Silver
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 10,951
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dreamliner
I've lost 11 pounds in 21 days. Think I'll end it here as I'm 6-0 143 with about a 29'' waist right now. Abs are rock-hard but I do have a bit of loose skin. I suspect I'll go back to meals at 2pm and 8pm with perhaps a bedtime snack.
Suspect these changes will have the effect of adding back 200-300 calories, enabling me to perhaps add a bit of muscle and 'fill out' a bit while remaining in the same weight range. I will acknowledge that while I never get one gram of protein per pound, this recent foray probably had me getting less than half that.
Fasting 20+ hours every day certainly did introduce new hunger pangs, though they were not life-dominating. But going back to the 2pm and 8pm meals will, I suspect, all but eliminate hunger pangs.
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Dream, I have to ask why a guy who weighs 154 @ 6' would want to lose weight? I'm 6' 167 and am doing everything I can to get to what I feel is an ideal weight of 170. I have extremely low body fat. I can't imagine being in the 140's. What's the reasoning?
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07-16-2011, 11:13 AM
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#75
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Gator Country's Ring of Honor
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 62,223
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gator7_5
Dream, I have to ask why a guy who weighs 154 @ 6' would want to lose weight? I'm 6' 167 and am doing everything I can to get to what I feel is an ideal weight of 170. I have extremely low body fat. I can't imagine being in the 140's. What's the reasoning?
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Several reasons:
(1) To establish, primarily for my trainees, how little food is actually required for optimum performance. and this is because my typical trainee SERIOUSLY needs to get a handle on their eating.
(2) Because guys in particular are hung-up on being 'too light.'
(3) And because guys in particular almost always exaggerate how lean they really are. As an example, when a guy says, "I'm under 10% bodyfat", he's probably just under 15% BF. Now, mind you, I don't browbeat anyone into what you might consider extreme weight-loss. Rather, I'm just trying to be real.
Also, bear in mind that we're not all built alike. Bodyweight can be HIGHLY deceiving. No doubt you're a bigger person than I am to begin with. I put the 'ecto' in ectomorph. I was 6 pounds and 22'' at birth, 30 pounds when I was three and was 6-0 135 in college.
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07-16-2011, 12:09 PM
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#76
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Gator Country Silver
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 10,951
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#1 makes sense. Don't buy the rest. I bet our body type is very similar. I just focus on adding more muscle.
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07-16-2011, 12:25 PM
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#77
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Gator Country's Ring of Honor
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 62,223
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gator7_5
#1 makes sense. Don't buy the rest. I bet our body type is very similar. I just focus on adding more muscle.
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Your argument appears to convey the thing you deny: the bro-pressure to be heavier.
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07-16-2011, 12:50 PM
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#78
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Gator Country Silver
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 10,951
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dreamliner
Your argument appears to convey the thing you deny: the bro-pressure to be heavier.
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No, not heavier. Weight is a by-product of gaining muscle. Its not even 50% for appearance, I like being stronger. I'm a builder and an avid outdoorsman, and it makes all aspects of lifting easier.
You're obviously knowledgeable, and I don't feel bad for asking about your weight loss, because its a choice you make to weigh that much, it's just a very foreign concept to me. You're probably one of the fittest people on here, but what do you have against building lean muscle and definition?
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07-16-2011, 01:03 PM
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#79
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Gator Country Silver
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 10,951
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You know, I'm conversing without knowing your background. Hope you didn't find my posts as argumentative, I really am intrigued by the topics on this board. I need to read more of your posts.
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07-16-2011, 01:18 PM
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#80
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Gator Country's Ring of Honor
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 62,223
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gator7_5
No, not heavier. Weight is a by-product of gaining muscle. Its not even 50% for appearance, I like being stronger. I'm a builder and an avid outdoorsman, and it makes all aspects of lifting easier.
You're obviously knowledgeable, and I don't feel bad for asking about your weight loss, because its a choice you make to weigh that much, it's just a very foreign concept to me. You're probably one of the fittest people on here, but what do you have against building lean muscle and definition?
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I like being stronger too. In fact, I'm currently training in a way that emphasizes pure strength, moreso than someone who's emphasizing hypertrophy. As I pointed out, as I've lost weight I've gotten stronger and stronger.
And leanness and definition is a function of fat-loss, not muscle gain.
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