Talk to me about protein shakes
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Could've been newbie gainzz, entirely possible.0
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Noob juice0
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That's 3!! What's going on?! You guys had a protein special on Doc Oz or something?
(Sorry OP, you've had good advice already, I'm just shocked at all the protein threads)0 -
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Linville10 wrote: »Hello. I started working two weeks ago. Currently I'm on week two of couch to 5k and will be adding in two days of kettlebell workouts. I have various protein shakes but I don't know if I should be drinking them with the type of workouts I do. If I should be drinking them, what kind do you recommend? Any advice would be appreciated since I know nothing about protein shakes. I'm a female have about 90 lbs to lose and don't want to be bulky. Thanks.
This workout routine does not *need* protein shakes. Just make sure you are eating foods with a decent amount of protein. You are better off eating your calories in the long run. You also won't get bulky from this routine no matter how much protein you eat.
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Yeah I agree. There must of been a show on protein shakes very recently.....
Please let it be NOT Dr Oz.....0 -
Liftng4Lis wrote: »
Ok. Thanks.0 -
No protein shakes at all. Just eat sensible diet of lean protein in meat, fish, chicken, eggs, etc. Plus fruits amd veggies and a little complex carbs, according to your daily calorie limit. Protein shakes are a weight gain tool, and you are overweight.0
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Liftng4Lis wrote: »Various protein shakes? What kind do you have? Also you won't get "bulky" unless you start to do some serious lifting. Do expect confusion in your weight though. Kettleball workouts will likely add muscle to you body, which is relatively heavy.
NO. With the exception of newbie gains, one does not build muscle in a deficit.
Duh. She is a newbie.0 -
Linville10 wrote: »Hello. I started working two weeks ago. Currently I'm on week two of couch to 5k and will be adding in two days of kettlebell workouts. I have various protein shakes but I don't know if I should be drinking them with the type of workouts I do. If I should be drinking them, what kind do you recommend? Any advice would be appreciated since I know nothing about protein shakes. I'm a female have about 90 lbs to lose and don't want to be bulky. Thanks.
You will not be bulky unless you bodybuild for a year and cut a signifigant amout of your fat that covers your muscles. LIFT heavy, lift to failure, build muscle.
Cut out the shakes and bars until you can get your overall carbs below 40% of your caloric intake. they suck for the most part unless you use them wisely while powerlifting.0 -
Linville10 wrote: »Hello. I started working two weeks ago. Currently I'm on week two of couch to 5k and will be adding in two days of kettlebell workouts. I have various protein shakes but I don't know if I should be drinking them with the type of workouts I do. If I should be drinking them, what kind do you recommend? Any advice would be appreciated since I know nothing about protein shakes. I'm a female have about 90 lbs to lose and don't want to be bulky. Thanks.
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Hi my favorite protein shake is premier protein vanilla and strawberry. You can get it at SAMs club or Costco or walmart. The vanilla is great if you add ice and a Starbucks via. Tastes just like iced coffee.0
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Liftng4Lis wrote: »
Not true. and you will repeat me next week.0 -
Iron_Feline wrote: »Linville10 wrote: »Thanks for all the replies. I know I have a whey protein shake and a couple other tubs of shakes that my husband has bought at one time or another. I'm doing kettlebell workouts to lose weight and tone my muscles. I have my settings at losing 2 lbs a week so I'm allowed 1200 calories.
Are you eating back some of your exercise calories as you should be.
Not for weight lifting, because it's too difficult to figure out those calories. However, cardio exercise calories should be eaten back. MFP vastly overestimates, so about half is usually good.
However, 1200 calories sounds like too few calories.0 -
I'm oh so tired of people saying that the reason I'm gaining weight is because I'm exercising and building muscle which weighs more than fat. The reason I was gaining was because I was eating too much and exercising too little. Now that I've reversed the trend, I've lost weight but more important, lost LOTS of inches. Fat doesn't weigh as much as muscle, yet over 50% of your body weight is water. So just keep eating less and moving more and the fat will drop off, the muscle will build, and you will be healthier after all.0
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Liftng4Lis wrote: »
Ok. Thanks.
No it isn't. Here's two studies where LBM and strength increased as fat mass was lost in elite athletes.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21896944
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21558571?dopt=Abstract&holding=f1000,f1000m,isrctn (abstracts only, sorry)
http://ajcn.nutrition.org/content/58/4/561.long
Muscle gains in weight training obese females during 800 cal/day diets verified by biopsy.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0002822398000947
Loss of fat and gains in fat-free mass (lbm) in normal weight women eating ad libitum while weight training.
LBM and muscle can be gained as fat is lost (and fat is only lost in a calorie deficit). This can happen in both trained (non-newbie) and untrained individuals. The gain in muscle may mask some fat loss, and I've read posts from people who end up happy at higher weights than they expected to, as the last time they were at that weight they were significantly less muscled. In people who are already lean, a smaller deficit is recommended to protect LBM when restricting calories to lose fat. Bulking/cutting is faster, and less frustrating, but it is possible to build muscle in a calorie deficit, for both newbies and more experienced lifters.0 -
Well I just got the sleeve surgery done a few days ago. Was put on a strict diet ofcourse. I can drink Protein shakes with low sugar and atleast 30g Protein, water, low sodium V8, Vegetable broth and pedialight.0
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No protein shakes at all. Just eat sensible diet of lean protein in meat, fish, chicken, eggs, etc. Plus fruits amd veggies and a little complex carbs, according to your daily calorie limit. Protein shakes are a weight gain tool, and you are overweight.
Lol no
Protein shakes are not a weight gain tool. They simply provide you with protein. If you use them and go over your calorie limit then you will gain weight, but if you use them and stay under your calorie limit you will lose weight.0 -
Liftng4Lis wrote: »
Ok. Thanks.
No it isn't. Here's two studies where LBM and strength increased as fat mass was lost in elite athletes.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21896944
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21558571?dopt=Abstract&holding=f1000,f1000m,isrctn (abstracts only, sorry)
http://ajcn.nutrition.org/content/58/4/561.long
Muscle gains in weight training obese females during 800 cal/day diets verified by biopsy.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0002822398000947
Loss of fat and gains in fat-free mass (lbm) in normal weight women eating ad libitum while weight training.
LBM and muscle can be gained as fat is lost (and fat is only lost in a calorie deficit). This can happen in both trained (non-newbie) and untrained individuals. The gain in muscle may mask some fat loss, and I've read posts from people who end up happy at higher weights than they expected to, as the last time they were at that weight they were significantly less muscled. In people who are already lean, a smaller deficit is recommended to protect LBM when restricting calories to lose fat. Bulking/cutting is faster, and less frustrating, but it is possible to build muscle in a calorie deficit, for both newbies and more experienced lifters.
Lol no.
In the first two studies the LBM was small compared to the fat loss and more importantly they lost weigh.
The person you are referencing is gaining weigh. They are not gaining muscle at a rate that masks fat loss.
If they had gained a little weight but then it levelled off I would say they had newbie gains then ending up doing a slow recomp. But they said their weight is steadily rising. So they are not in a deficit.
Did you even read the third study? They didn't gain muscle, in fact 24% of the weight they lost was from LBM. It states that weight loss at a severe deficit is not affected by lifting and it doesn't alter the composition of the weight loss.
And the fourth is discussing body recomp. You'll note that there was no significant change in body mass.
None of these studies back up your assertions.
Fat is lost and muscle gained when eating at maintance or slightly above in a recomp. Not in a deficit bar initial newbie gains that at most will be a lb or two if you're really lucky.
The person is gaining weight steadily. They are not in a deficit.
The people who were happy at a higher weight than they expected still lost weight. This doesn't mean they continued to build muscle as they lost weight, just that they kept what they had unlike a lot of dieters.
Sigh.0 -
Iron_Feline wrote: »Liftng4Lis wrote: »
Ok. Thanks.
No it isn't. Here's two studies where LBM and strength increased as fat mass was lost in elite athletes.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21896944
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21558571?dopt=Abstract&holding=f1000,f1000m,isrctn (abstracts only, sorry)
http://ajcn.nutrition.org/content/58/4/561.long
Muscle gains in weight training obese females during 800 cal/day diets verified by biopsy.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0002822398000947
Loss of fat and gains in fat-free mass (lbm) in normal weight women eating ad libitum while weight training.
LBM and muscle can be gained as fat is lost (and fat is only lost in a calorie deficit). This can happen in both trained (non-newbie) and untrained individuals. The gain in muscle may mask some fat loss, and I've read posts from people who end up happy at higher weights than they expected to, as the last time they were at that weight they were significantly less muscled. In people who are already lean, a smaller deficit is recommended to protect LBM when restricting calories to lose fat. Bulking/cutting is faster, and less frustrating, but it is possible to build muscle in a calorie deficit, for both newbies and more experienced lifters.
Lol no.
In the first two studies the LBM was small compared to the fat loss and more importantly they lost weigh.
The person you are referencing is gaining weigh. They are not gaining muscle at a rate that masks fat loss.
If they had gained a little weight but then it levelled off I would say they had newbie gains then ending up doing a slow recomp. But they said their weight is steadily rising. So they are not in a deficit.
Did you even read the third study? They didn't gain muscle, in fact 24% of the weight they lost was from LBM. It states that weight loss at a severe deficit is not affected by lifting and it doesn't alter the composition of the weight loss.
And the fourth is discussing body recomp. You'll note that there was no significant change in body mass.
None of these studies back up your assertions.
Fat is lost and muscle gained when eating at maintance or slightly above in a recomp. Not in a deficit bar initial newbie gains that at most will be a lb or two if you're really lucky.
The person is gaining weight steadily. They are not in a deficit.
The people who were happy at a higher weight than they expected still lost weight. This doesn't mean they continued to build muscle as they lost weight, just that they kept what they had unlike a lot of dieters.
Sigh.
Such is the nature of the internet "I shall quote these studies, without reading or comprehending them, and blind you with broscience conclusions that have no validity...because that is how I roll. "
The sad thing is that most people who do this have no idea that's what they're doing..they are honest in their own conviction that what they've been told, heard or read, is just fact ...it's not even their fault...it's the way our society works, it's the basis of filling tabloid media and it's our low concentration span and inability to "do science"0 -
Iron_Feline wrote: »Liftng4Lis wrote: »
Ok. Thanks.
No it isn't. Here's two studies where LBM and strength increased as fat mass was lost in elite athletes.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21896944
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21558571?dopt=Abstract&holding=f1000,f1000m,isrctn (abstracts only, sorry)
http://ajcn.nutrition.org/content/58/4/561.long
Muscle gains in weight training obese females during 800 cal/day diets verified by biopsy.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0002822398000947
Loss of fat and gains in fat-free mass (lbm) in normal weight women eating ad libitum while weight training.
LBM and muscle can be gained as fat is lost (and fat is only lost in a calorie deficit). This can happen in both trained (non-newbie) and untrained individuals. The gain in muscle may mask some fat loss, and I've read posts from people who end up happy at higher weights than they expected to, as the last time they were at that weight they were significantly less muscled. In people who are already lean, a smaller deficit is recommended to protect LBM when restricting calories to lose fat. Bulking/cutting is faster, and less frustrating, but it is possible to build muscle in a calorie deficit, for both newbies and more experienced lifters.
Lol no.
In the first two studies the LBM was small compared to the fat loss and more importantly they lost weigh.
The person you are referencing is gaining weigh. They are not gaining muscle at a rate that masks fat loss.
If they had gained a little weight but then it levelled off I would say they had newbie gains then ending up doing a slow recomp. But they said their weight is steadily rising. So they are not in a deficit.
Did you even read the third study? They didn't gain muscle, in fact 24% of the weight they lost was from LBM. It states that weight loss at a severe deficit is not affected by lifting and it doesn't alter the composition of the weight loss.
And the fourth is discussing body recomp. You'll note that there was no significant change in body mass.
None of these studies back up your assertions.
Fat is lost and muscle gained when eating at maintance or slightly above in a recomp. Not in a deficit bar initial newbie gains that at most will be a lb or two if you're really lucky.
The person is gaining weight steadily. They are not in a deficit.
The people who were happy at a higher weight than they expected still lost weight. This doesn't mean they continued to build muscle as they lost weight, just that they kept what they had unlike a lot of dieters.
Sigh.
Such is the nature of the internet "I shall quote these studies, without reading or comprehending them, and blind you with broscience conclusions that have no validity...because that is how I roll. "
The sad thing is that most people who do this have no idea that's what they're doing..they are honest in their own conviction that what they've been told, heard or read, is just fact ...it's not even their fault...it's the way our society works, it's the basis of filling tabloid media and it's our low concentration span and inability to "do science"
I also think that since they know most people won't read the studies they think they're safe.
I however love learning new stuff I esp found the third study about weight lifting on a 800 cal diet interesting, as I assumed those lifting would lose less lbm but they didn't. :noway:0 -
JimFsfitnesspal wrote: »Liftng4Lis wrote: »
Not true. and you will repeat me next week.
REALLY, please provide data to prove how you defy science.0 -
Liftng4Lis wrote: »
Ok. Thanks.
No it isn't. Here's two studies where LBM and strength increased as fat mass was lost in elite athletes.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21896944
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21558571?dopt=Abstract&holding=f1000,f1000m,isrctn (abstracts only, sorry)
http://ajcn.nutrition.org/content/58/4/561.long
Muscle gains in weight training obese females during 800 cal/day diets verified by biopsy.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0002822398000947
Loss of fat and gains in fat-free mass (lbm) in normal weight women eating ad libitum while weight training.
LBM and muscle can be gained as fat is lost (and fat is only lost in a calorie deficit). This can happen in both trained (non-newbie) and untrained individuals. The gain in muscle may mask some fat loss, and I've read posts from people who end up happy at higher weights than they expected to, as the last time they were at that weight they were significantly less muscled. In people who are already lean, a smaller deficit is recommended to protect LBM when restricting calories to lose fat. Bulking/cutting is faster, and less frustrating, but it is possible to build muscle in a calorie deficit, for both newbies and more experienced lifters.
Did you even read these???? I'm going to guess not, since as Iron_feline pointed out, you have no clear understanding. I will not beat the horse.
The bolded part above is due to re-comp. YES, I HAVE been doing one for the last 6 months (a very slow process). I am NOT gaining muscle (my time for newbie gains are past), I AM getting stronger.0 -
No protein shakes at all. Just eat sensible diet of lean protein in meat, fish, chicken, eggs, etc. Plus fruits amd veggies and a little complex carbs, according to your daily calorie limit. Protein shakes are a weight gain tool, and you are overweight.
No they're not. They're a convenient way to hit your protein macro. Gaining weight only happens in a surplus (true weight gain, not day to day fluctuations) . I drank protein shakes while I was overweight. Lost weight fine...0 -
Liftng4Lis wrote: »
No, that isn't true. Body builders love to talk about these newbie gains. The actual problem is that body builders reduce their body fat percentages to dangerously low levels so that any calorie deficit will result in significant muscle loss, just because they don't have enough fat to supply the energy they need. For normal people, it is certainly possible to get the required energy from fat while building muscle. If the calorie deficit is small, gaining weight is certainly possible.0 -
TimothyFish wrote: »Liftng4Lis wrote: »
No, that isn't true. Body builders love to talk about these newbie gains. The actual problem is that body builders reduce their body fat percentages to dangerously low levels so that any calorie deficit will result in significant muscle loss, just because they don't have enough fat to supply the energy they need. For normal people, it is certainly possible to get the required energy from fat while building muscle. If the calorie deficit is small, gaining weight is certainly possible.
Any science to back up your opinion?
Studies that actually back it up would be nice. So far we haven't seen any.0 -
Iron_Feline wrote: »TimothyFish wrote: »Liftng4Lis wrote: »
No, that isn't true. Body builders love to talk about these newbie gains. The actual problem is that body builders reduce their body fat percentages to dangerously low levels so that any calorie deficit will result in significant muscle loss, just because they don't have enough fat to supply the energy they need. For normal people, it is certainly possible to get the required energy from fat while building muscle. If the calorie deficit is small, gaining weight is certainly possible.
Any science to back up your opinion?
Studies that actually back it up would be nice. So far we haven't seen any.
It wouldn't do any good because some body builder would just say, "that's just newbie gains" as if that is the answer to everything. The simple fact that fat has 4 or 5 times the number of calories that muscle having the same mass has is sufficient to tell us that it is possible.0 -
Liftng4Lis wrote: »
Or water retention in the muscles0
This discussion has been closed.
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