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Should I loose fat and then gain muscle?

Leever

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I have been a big lifter for a long time. I have had a really good year with my increases in my lifts. I do cardio every day that I lift and I lift on M, W, F. I then rest my muscles on the weekend but I try to stay active for my little girl. My wife wants me to stop lifting and do more cardio because my body fat is a little higher than most 20-25%. i don't want to give up lifting because I worked hard for what I have but then part of me wants me to lose the bodyfat so I can stop tearing my pants in the crotch.

My question to the masses is: Should I stop lifting and do more cardio and such or should I keep lifting and add another cardio onto everything?

My current configuration is:
Monday - Chest/Biceps - Elliptical Machine 44 min
Wednesday - Shoulders/Legs - Elliptical Machine 44 min
Friday - Triceps/Back - Elliptical Machine 44 min

I can only workout on these three days and I have a window of 1.5 hours to work with on these three days. The weekend I usaully keep active with walking, biking, play at the gym with my 2.5 y/o daughter. If anyone has any suggestions, please let me know.
 
get your body where you are happy at then bulk. At 20-25%bf I dont think its a good idea to bulk.
 
I would say concentrate on the cutting first. Your workout seems to be fine, the culprit must be your diet. What's it look like, what are your eating habbits, etc etc?
 
Hell at 20-25% you may not even have to cut, just trim up your diet a bit. Cut out the junk. Eat better foods. It is very easy. At that bf your eating habits cant be good. best of luck to you.
 
Eating Habits

[FONT=&quot]I have to admit that my eating habits are not the best. I mean my diet consists of whole grain in both our pasta and breads. We eat chicken most of the time and eat a little bit of beef and canned tuna. We always keep fresh veggies and fruits in our refrigerator and the reason why we have been eating like this is because it has helped me greatly to reduce my cholesterol.

My main problem is knowing when to stop and the fact that I eat to fast doesn't help either.
[/FONT]
 
[FONT=&quot]I have to admit that my eating habits are not the best. I mean my diet consists of whole grain in both our pasta and breads. We eat chicken most of the time and eat a little bit of beef and canned tuna. We always keep fresh veggies and fruits in our refrigerator and the reason why we have been eating like this is because it has helped me greatly to reduce my cholesterol.

My main problem is knowing when to stop and the fact that I eat to fast doesn't help either.
[/FONT]

Well if you don't want all your hard work to go to nothing, then I advise counting the numbers. If your just eating, don't know the portion size and how many calories, then who knows what your intaking. I say crunch your numbers and adjust your diet accordingly.
 
Thank you very much Double D.

I am trying to map out some meals right now and see what I can have in relation to the other meals. I am a systems engineer so I need to map it out and plan for different meals throughout the day. For instance if I have breakfast A then I can eat either lunch A-C and also have supper B-D. The reason why I wanted to start planning it out like that is so I don't have to think about it when I want to eat.

I am also looking at possibly speed up my current routine and see if I cannot squeeze in another exercise that might be cardio based. If anyone has any suggestions please yell them out.
 
I say crunch your numbers and adjust your diet accordingly.

Thank you for the suggestion. I will do it again and see what happens. I was told by the nutrionist that I should crunch the numbers and try to get my intake down to around 2100 calories in order for me to see any results. I did that and I fould that my daily average was 1800 calories. I kept to that intake for two weeks and I kept coming up with 1800 calories. I reported that to the nutrionist and she had nothing to say to that. She thought I was lying and basically stopped helping me. So I kep eating what I was eating and kept lifting. I am slowly seeing definition but I think by the time that I look cut, I will be huge and my kids will have been moved out of the house.

I need to do a very detailed report on my caloric intake to see where the gaps might be.

Again, thank you for your suggestion.
 
worko n eating a healthy diet and training properly and efficiently and your BF% and weight will balance themselves out.

This in't rocket science. Everyone wants to make is so complicated..."should I bulk up first and then cut? Should I lose fat and then bulk up?"

Just eat healthy and train properly and you wont have to worry about terms like 'bulk' and 'cut', you will be at a point in your health where you feel good and look good and you are living a proper lifestyle. Those are the most important goals that you need to focus on.
 
worko n eating a healthy diet and training properly and efficiently and your BF% and weight will balance themselves out.

This in't rocket science. Everyone wants to make is so complicated..."should I bulk up first and then cut? Should I lose fat and then bulk up?"

Just eat healthy and train properly and you wont have to worry about terms like 'bulk' and 'cut', you will be at a point in your health where you feel good and look good and you are living a proper lifestyle. Those are the most important goals that you need to focus on.
:clapping:

Patrick knows what he is talking about.
 
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Just eat healthy and train properly and you wont have to worry about terms like 'bulk' and 'cut',

Thank you P-Funk. That is now a bigger driver to review my calories and try harder in limiting my intake.
 
Just eat healthy and train properly and you wont have to worry about terms like 'bulk' and 'cut', you will be at a point in your health where you feel good and look good and you are living a proper lifestyle. Those are the most important goals that you need to focus on.

Couldn't agree more. When being healthy becomes your lifestyle bulking/cutting or whatever you want to do will come with greater ease as you get to know your own bodies limitations.
 
Couldn't agree more. When being healthy becomes your lifestyle bulking/cutting or whatever you want to do will come with greater ease as you get to know your own bodies limitations.

Agreed. But as of right now, it seems Leever needs to crunch some numbers before he can just let his diet roll out normally.
 
Absolutely ABCs. I started counting my calories this morning. I am treating this as a research project as if I was at work. I am also going to try to be more conscious of what I am eating...portion wise.

I have always had the mentality of "I am lifting heavy and doing cardio so I can eat whatever I want...no big deal!" I have been eating large portions of food because of that and that is why I have been having such a slow time trimming up. I have been getting trim and my weight has stayed the same but it has taken me over a year to get to where I am right now. The only reason why I have any definition is because I have been bulking up throughout the years. But you guys are absolutly right and I need to be more serious about my portion size than I have been in the past. I have a little book from The Calorie King which will be useful when we go out to eat. Does anyone have any tips on going out to eat or do you use that as a day to spoil yourself?

Now you know, my wife has been hounding me about my calorie intake and portion size for years and because I have not gained weight and my lifts have been increasing, she has mellowed out. She is going to wave this in my face for years to come.
 
Hey Leever, your getting some good advice here. The only things I might add are to cut out any fried foods, sugar (as much as possable), and choose complex carbs like brown rice, baked potato, and old fashioned oatmeal over simple carbs like pasta, white bread, baked goods and packaged cereals.
Your cardio is real close to mine. I do 4x a week after w/o for 40-60 min. The last couple of weeks I have added a fat burner. Lipotrophin AM and PM and it has really made a difference, I was able to drop 7-8 lbs (depending on the scale) in just over 2 weeks. Your on the right path, stick with it and you should see good results.
 
your diet is whats keeping your BF so high. your running is impressive, but try adding some HIIT into that...
 
If you're really eating only 1800kcal/day, lifting three times/week and doing cardio 4x/week you might need to increase your kcal for a couple of weeks to reset your metabolism. 1800kcal is what a woman should be eating not a grown, active male.

At this juncture you need to keep a food log for a week and see how many avg kcals you are eating each day. 1800kcals doesn't sound like a big eater to me.
 
Your in a similar situation to me. It was my diet that was hurting me. I've moved around my diet, and I eat between 2000-2750 calories a day and about 300g of protein a day on work out days and 200g on non-workout days. I try and make sure I'm eating every 3hrs, with my last meal being after the gym at 9:30-10pm.
 
I only said that I was trying to get down to 1800 cal. I did one assessment on my caloric intake for just one day and I found that I was eating in the 3500 area. Like I said at the beginning, I am not gaining weight....but I am not losing fat either... My lifts have been going up and I am bulking up everywhere. If I should be around 2500 calories then that sounds better and then I wouldn't be so hunger.

I have to take off.
 
why don't you use the generic formula:

lose= 10-12 cals per LB of BW

maintain= 14-16 cals per LB of BW

gain= 18-20 cals per LB of BW

start with the maintain and do it for 4 weeks and see what happens. From there, you will know what to do.
 
it isn't 100% accurate. if you have a fast metabolism, start at the higher number. After a couple weeks you will know what to do from there.
 
Hey Leever, your getting some good advice here. The only things I might add are to cut out any fried foods, sugar (as much as possable), and choose complex carbs like brown rice, baked potato, and old fashioned oatmeal over simple carbs like pasta, white bread, baked goods and packaged cereals.
Your cardio is real close to mine. I do 4x a week after w/o for 40-60 min. The last couple of weeks I have added a fat burner. Lipotrophin AM and PM and it has really made a difference, I was able to drop 7-8 lbs (depending on the scale) in just over 2 weeks. Your on the right path, stick with it and you should see good results.

Hey mate - whats the brand name of the Lipotrophin fat burner you're using? :hmmm:
 
Side note:

As soon as I stopped obsessing over every single calorie I started losing weight. I tried using "the book" and counting every single thing I ate, and it took far too much of my time.

My keys:

- Portion control. Don't eat until you're full, eat the meal you've planned out.
- Eat your six meals/day, and eat them 2.5-3 hours apart. No meals should be "make up meals" for when you've skipped one by mistake
- No bread, even whole grain. Too much yeast can wreak havoc on your digestive system, and could get in the way of nutrient absorption. I'm getting along fine with brown rice, steel cut oats and sweet potatoes.
- As many fresh fruit and veggies as you can. I've learned those calories don't really count, as you're subsituting it for less healthy choices. I eat several pounds of fruit/veggies per day and I'm still losing
- Water. Up your intake to as much as you can stand. Everyone talks about "water poisoning" like it's common, but it's tough to do. Just drink as much as you can.
- No processed drinks. Sure, Gatorade/Powerade is great for hardcore endurance athletes, but you don't really need it. Drink some more water. Diet sodas are NOT an okay subsititute. Take a caffeine pill or FOOSH energy mints.
- When you get tired of brown rice, try a lil' hot sauce. :thumb: Spices don't have calories that count.

Just a few tips from my vault of "what works for me". It may not work for you, or anyone that wants to flame me for not counting every calorie, but it does for some and I suggest everyone try it.
 
Just a few tips from my vault of "what works for me". It may not work for you, or anyone that wants to flame me for not counting every calorie, but it does for some and I suggest everyone try it.

First off, you have some great advice in there and secondly, if it works for you, then who gives a shit? That's all that truly matters in the end... results.
 
Side note:

As soon as I stopped obsessing over every single calorie I started losing weight. I tried using "the book" and counting every single thing I ate, and it took far too much of my time.

My keys:

- Portion control. Don't eat until you're full, eat the meal you've planned out.
- Eat your six meals/day, and eat them 2.5-3 hours apart. No meals should be "make up meals" for when you've skipped one by mistake
- No bread, even whole grain. Too much yeast can wreak havoc on your digestive system, and could get in the way of nutrient absorption. I'm getting along fine with brown rice, steel cut oats and sweet potatoes.
- As many fresh fruit and veggies as you can. I've learned those calories don't really count, as you're subsituting it for less healthy choices. I eat several pounds of fruit/veggies per day and I'm still losing
- Water. Up your intake to as much as you can stand. Everyone talks about "water poisoning" like it's common, but it's tough to do. Just drink as much as you can.
- No processed drinks. Sure, Gatorade/Powerade is great for hardcore endurance athletes, but you don't really need it. Drink some more water. Diet sodas are NOT an okay subsititute. Take a caffeine pill or FOOSH energy mints.
- When you get tired of brown rice, try a lil' hot sauce. :thumb: Spices don't have calories that count.

Just a few tips from my vault of "what works for me". It may not work for you, or anyone that wants to flame me for not counting every calorie, but it does for some and I suggest everyone try it.


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I get this stuff at super wal mart in the frozen section... like $3.50 a loaf. Normal price, but Its so good you can eat it without butter or antyhing, just toast it up
 
I've had Ezekiel, and it tastes bloody terrible. I'd rather eat a real piece of bread than substitute that rubber/cardboard mix.
 
Nice I was wondering where in the hell to get that from! This bread is ok, ask an old pro......Oh Jodi your needed.

Oh and as far as cutting out Diet soda, well yes to an extent but everyone has to have some type of get away. If your drinking enough water the soda shouldnt harm you to much. I drink one once every 3 days or so. Trying to keep my sanity.
 
Side note:

- Eat your six meals/day, and eat them 2.5-3 hours apart. No meals should be "make up meals" for when you've skipped one by mistake

I used to eat six meals a day and I was never hungry and I lost a lot of weight. That was the main thing that helped me lose the weight. The nice thing about eating six meals, is that there was little waste. I understand the concept that what goes in must come out but with me, it didn't. What I hate about eating three meals is the fact that I am hungry between meals so I eat a lot. I also try to eat slowly so I get filled up and respond to my stomach before it is too late, but that is hard to do. I have been trying to get my family on the six meals a day but I am having no luck. Our daughter, who is 2.5 years old, eats about six meals a day but that is naturally programmed in her head. My wife understands that of toddlers and children of earlier ages because she is only responding to the need for food and not the schedule.

I believe that that is how our bodies are made to work and being intelligent mammals, we came up with something other than what nature intended. I have been dividing up my wifes meals so I can eat them later in the day or night.

Thank you very much for your suggestions and I will make a note of that.
 
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