Hey guys,
I joined the site years ago, a scrawny wee boy, and have put on lots of muscle since thanks to the great advice here; even as a busy university student, I still find that most of the core exercises and diet tips I learned here help keep me sane
Anyway!
I have a female friend of mine who's having a real struggle losing weight; she's genetically predisposed towards being heavier, is my guess, although not really big (borerline endomorph?). She was at one time (four years ago) 180 pounds during her last year of highschool (when she knew little of fitness or healthy eating), and is now down to about 140 thanks to good lifestyle changes, but is still visibly carrying a fair bit of 'baggage', especially around the legs and buttocks (she's 5 feet, 7 inches tall).
She eats very healthy (i.e. whole wheat everything, healthy fats only, decent protein intake) and I have her working out five days per week at the gym - three of them are intense 30-minute cardio sessions (usually on the rowing machine, I like the total-body aspect, myself) and the other two are weight-lifting days, but also including things like push ups, weighted sit ups, dips - anything and everything intense.
She's lost only three pounds in the last two months, and while you can never cheapen progress, that doesn't seem like very much. Five days out of seven is pretty active, and her diet is impeccable, so I find myself at a loss as to why the results are crawling by so slowly. I'm not a professional, but I have turned myself into quite the buff fellow, and all thanks to information I learned here. I thought sharing those secrets with her would help, but they seem to be having minimal impact.
Maybe this is a gender thing that I don't understand, since I'm a guy. Is there anything "generally speaking" that I should make sure she is (or is not) doing? I realize typing out her exact lifting routine might help, but I know enough to know that that part is sound. If anything, she might eat too little, or go too long between meals, so a slowed-down metabolism is my main guess at the moment; I'm not sure how to jump-start it if that's the case, other than ensuring she spaces meals better, but could that really cut her gains down to the slow crawl they're at now?
Providing she's being honest (I trust her entirely), she's working out very hard and being very careful about her diet. All this effort for so little recent gain has to be discouraging, and I'd hate to see someone 'lapse' because of a perception of wasted effort.
Any thoughts/suggestions welcome, I'm sure I can learn something for myself here.
I joined the site years ago, a scrawny wee boy, and have put on lots of muscle since thanks to the great advice here; even as a busy university student, I still find that most of the core exercises and diet tips I learned here help keep me sane

Anyway!
I have a female friend of mine who's having a real struggle losing weight; she's genetically predisposed towards being heavier, is my guess, although not really big (borerline endomorph?). She was at one time (four years ago) 180 pounds during her last year of highschool (when she knew little of fitness or healthy eating), and is now down to about 140 thanks to good lifestyle changes, but is still visibly carrying a fair bit of 'baggage', especially around the legs and buttocks (she's 5 feet, 7 inches tall).
She eats very healthy (i.e. whole wheat everything, healthy fats only, decent protein intake) and I have her working out five days per week at the gym - three of them are intense 30-minute cardio sessions (usually on the rowing machine, I like the total-body aspect, myself) and the other two are weight-lifting days, but also including things like push ups, weighted sit ups, dips - anything and everything intense.
She's lost only three pounds in the last two months, and while you can never cheapen progress, that doesn't seem like very much. Five days out of seven is pretty active, and her diet is impeccable, so I find myself at a loss as to why the results are crawling by so slowly. I'm not a professional, but I have turned myself into quite the buff fellow, and all thanks to information I learned here. I thought sharing those secrets with her would help, but they seem to be having minimal impact.
Maybe this is a gender thing that I don't understand, since I'm a guy. Is there anything "generally speaking" that I should make sure she is (or is not) doing? I realize typing out her exact lifting routine might help, but I know enough to know that that part is sound. If anything, she might eat too little, or go too long between meals, so a slowed-down metabolism is my main guess at the moment; I'm not sure how to jump-start it if that's the case, other than ensuring she spaces meals better, but could that really cut her gains down to the slow crawl they're at now?
Providing she's being honest (I trust her entirely), she's working out very hard and being very careful about her diet. All this effort for so little recent gain has to be discouraging, and I'd hate to see someone 'lapse' because of a perception of wasted effort.
Any thoughts/suggestions welcome, I'm sure I can learn something for myself here.
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