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Two weeks ago i hurt my shoulder and was told by the Dr. to lay off the upper body workouts for several weeks. Fine, I can accept that. But meanwhile what do I do with my diet? I've started running almost every day I work out (about 3 times a week) - but my workouts are limited to legs, some back, and abs.
Here's my stats and the BASIC gist of my diet. Sex: Male Age: 26 Height: 5’5” Weight: 134 Goal: Decrease BF to 10% while increasing muscle mass - i Calories: 2512 Fat: 68g Carb: 270g Protein: 209g Here's the deal. Since my accident my weight has gone from 135 to 139. Before I was STEADILY at 134-135 - I always weigh at the same time every day. Is this because I haven't been working my upper body? Until two weeks ago I wasn't doing much with my legs, so maybe the gain is because I'm gaining lower body muscle? I realize keeping the muscle I've gained in my upper body is pointless if I can't lift. I'm just trying to figure out if I should toss the diet and do low-cal until I can start lifting again. Also, why would I have gained 4 pounds. How do I keep from putting on more pounds until I can lift again AND still keep a good diet?? |
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No no no! Don't think that if you don't lift for a few months that you will lose your upper body strength. I injured my shoulder 3 months ago, and had to stop doing pressing movements for almost 2 and a half months. But, I worked hard on my legs, and pulling movements while my shoulder healed, and it only took 2 weeks to get right back to where I was. If you eat right and continue to train hard with the movements you can do, your body will hold onto much of the muscle in areas you can't work.
Just take this time to work on some lagging areas that you normally didn't have room for in your training program. |
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It's not all that bad, I think. You can still work your legs, which is the largest muscle group.
Well, at your weight, 2512 calories makes for around 18 cal / lb of bodyweight. That is in the bulking range if I'm not very wrong here. You could drop cals to maintain your weight (around 13 - 15 cal / lb). If you watch very carefully where you're going with that and do your cardio job, I think you can get away with hardly any fat gains. And then, you're 26, so getting back to where you left off shouldn't be that hard at all. |