Recomposition: Maintaining weight while losing fat

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Replies

  • YorkApples
    YorkApples Posts: 10 Member
    @LC4509
    I am the same as you. I am 5'3", 110pound. When I do plank, my belly hang down there! Not nice at all.
  • heybales
    heybales Posts: 18,842 Member
    Only if what you were doing was overworking the current level of muscle such that the body had to expend extra energy to make muscle that would then require a little extra energy to maintain.

    Body doesn't make muscle for no reason.

    Did the swimming or running increase to a decently higher speed/pace level when you do short intense workouts?
    And you were already pretty fit aerobically?

    It could also be a factor of doing more endurance in those cardio sports - that asks the body to store more carbs which has attached water.
    And if you are finishing up a season of doing longer endurance and hot - could also be increased blood volume.

    Or, you might happen to gain fat in many areas at once and not be noticeable with it.
    Shoot, one study on swimming showed more subcutaneous fat added to deal with the cooling effect.

    Or several of the above combined.


    Oh - to your final question - it wasn't maintenance if you gained anything but water weight - muscle or fat gained means more than maintenance was being eaten.
    Do you show a steady increase through the year in weight?
  • Lean59man
    Lean59man Posts: 714 Member
    edited November 2017
    Orphia wrote: »
    I’m a bit concerned my average weight has risen 3 kg since January, despite logging everything I eat and keeping to my calorie limit.

    Not sure whether that’s muscle or not. I exercise every day, averaging 17,000 steps a day including lots of running, and swimming and yoga.

    I don't feel or look like I have more fat.

    Can you gain that much weight due to muscle in 11 months at maintenance?

    g8z79rv7epxa.jpg

    Yes, you could gain 3 kg in 11 months, particularly if you were new to exercising.

    The 3 kg is not all muscle of course. It's impossible to gain all muscle.

    You definitely have some good quality muscle on you.

    Congrats!

  • Orphia
    Orphia Posts: 7,097 Member
    edited November 2017
    Thanks, @Lean59man and @middlehaitch
    heybales wrote: »
    Only if what you were doing was overworking the current level of muscle such that the body had to expend extra energy to make muscle that would then require a little extra energy to maintain.

    Body doesn't make muscle for no reason.

    Did the swimming or running increase to a decently higher speed/pace level when you do short intense workouts?
    And you were already pretty fit aerobically?

    It could also be a factor of doing more endurance in those cardio sports - that asks the body to store more carbs which has attached water.
    And if you are finishing up a season of doing longer endurance and hot - could also be increased blood volume.

    Or, you might happen to gain fat in many areas at once and not be noticeable with it.
    Shoot, one study on swimming showed more subcutaneous fat added to deal with the cooling effect.

    Or several of the above combined.


    Oh - to your final question - it wasn't maintenance if you gained anything but water weight - muscle or fat gained means more than maintenance was being eaten.
    Do you show a steady increase through the year in weight?

    @heybales My swimming has increased in pace. Did a whole bunch of PBs on Friday.

    My running has increased in endurance/distance. I've been increasing distance and running 3-6 times a week since September 2015, and able to run over 21 km distances since June 2016. I ran my first marathon in August.

    Name: Orphia
    Age: 50
    Height: 176 cm
    Total Weight lost: 35.5 kg
    Time it took to lose: 12 months
    Been logging since April 2015
    Date began maintaining: April 2016
    How long in maintenance: 19 months
    Maintenance weight range: 63-65 kg


    Average weight recorded from January: 62.8 kg
    Average weight recorded from February: 63.5 kg
    Average weight recorded from March: 63.2 kg
    Average weight recorded from April: 63.9 kg
    Average weight recorded from May: 63.5 kg
    Average weight recorded from June: 63.6 kg
    Average weight recorded from July: 64 kg
    Average weight recorded from August: 64.1 kg
    Average weight recorded from September: 64.4 kg
    Average weight recorded from October: 65.5 kg

    (I hurt my back 30 September and my weight jumped 2 kg for a couple of weeks, and that threw October out of whack.)

    Week of...
    7th November: 66 kg
    14th November: 65.4 kg

    Current average weight: 65.2 kg
  • heybales
    heybales Posts: 18,842 Member
    BF% needs to be on it's own scaled 0-20 vertical so it's as impressive as possible!
    Still impressive, good job keeping at it.
  • Luna3386
    Luna3386 Posts: 888 Member
    Morgaen73 wrote: »
    Here is my stattistical progress over the last 8 months. I took a before pic but I haven't taken an after pic yes. I cant really see the difference in myself but hey at least that stats look good.

    ca8v4tgf0djg.jpg

    I shared my pics on my feed and others were able to point out some changes that I myself couldn't see. Maybe that's an option, especially if seeing the photos might put you down in the dumps.

    As for me, even though the last 5 months was an unplanned recomp, it proved what everyone said... I won't see enough change/it's too slow. Granted I was still trying to lose fat so better than nothing.
  • lorrpb
    lorrpb Posts: 11,463 Member
    Orphia wrote: »
    I’m a bit concerned my average weight has risen 3 kg since January, despite logging everything I eat and keeping to my calorie limit.

    Not sure whether that’s muscle or not. I exercise every day, averaging 17,000 steps a day including lots of running, and swimming and yoga.

    I don't feel or look like I have more fat.

    Can you gain that much weight due to muscle in 11 months at maintenance?
    It's possible if you've been lifting, but you don't mention that. You look great!

  • Aw0627
    Aw0627 Posts: 82 Member
    edited January 2018
    I've been reading around about recomp and just want to make sure I'm understanding it correctly, and I have a couple of questions if anyone could help I'd appreciate it.

    So recomp to my understanding is you eat over your TDEE on day's that you workout and under on days that you don't right? So does working out include cardio or just weight lifting? And If I eat under my TDEE which is about 1500 then that is about 1200 and over would be about 1700 correct? Also does Bodyfat percentage matter I don't have an accurate measurement but my BF is around 26% which is kinda high.

    Also, I'm 5'6, 129-132
  • Aw0627
    Aw0627 Posts: 82 Member
    sijomial wrote: »
    Aw0627 wrote: »
    I've been reading around about recomp and just want to make sure I'm understanding it correctly, and I have a couple of questions if anyone could help I'd appreciate it.

    So recomp to my understanding is you eat over your TDEE on day's that you workout and under on days that you don't right? So does working out include cardio or just weight lifting? And If I eat under my TDEE which is about 1500 then that is about 1200 and over would be about 1700 correct? Also does Bodyfat percentage matter I don't have an accurate measurement but my BF is around 26% which is kinda high.

    Also, I'm 5'6, 129-132

    @Aw0627

    No you don't have to calorie cycle at all. I suspect that myth comes from people who mistakenly believe you need a surplus to add muscle.
    There was a MFP blog that suggested it was some sort of requirement, typical ill-educated twaddle trying to make something simple and normal seem complex and special.

    Cycle calories if it suits you, eat the same every day if it suits you, follow the MFP "eat back exercise calories" method if it suits you. Highly unlikely to make a scrap of difference apart from adherence, which is personal.

    BF% has an effect (positive - you have more readily available energy, negative - changes won't be as visible under a covering of fat....). If you are at a happy weight then that's fine.

    Biggest thing to optimise and focus on is your training, diet just supports your training and recovery.

    Seriously Thanks for the quick response, but I just want to make sure I understood you correctly

    So you're basically saying with body fat percentage is that if I have a lower body fat percentage then I will simply see results faster or are you saying I wont see much results at all? Because I thought recomp was losing fat while building muscle? Also I know it up to me but do you think it would be better to lower my body fat percentage?

    Also is P90X consider a weight lifting program?
  • psuLemon
    psuLemon Posts: 38,426 MFP Moderator
    sijomial wrote: »
    Aw0627 wrote: »
    sijomial wrote: »
    Aw0627 wrote: »
    I've been reading around about recomp and just want to make sure I'm understanding it correctly, and I have a couple of questions if anyone could help I'd appreciate it.

    So recomp to my understanding is you eat over your TDEE on day's that you workout and under on days that you don't right? So does working out include cardio or just weight lifting? And If I eat under my TDEE which is about 1500 then that is about 1200 and over would be about 1700 correct? Also does Bodyfat percentage matter I don't have an accurate measurement but my BF is around 26% which is kinda high.

    Also, I'm 5'6, 129-132

    @Aw0627

    No you don't have to calorie cycle at all. I suspect that myth comes from people who mistakenly believe you need a surplus to add muscle.
    There was a MFP blog that suggested it was some sort of requirement, typical ill-educated twaddle trying to make something simple and normal seem complex and special.

    Cycle calories if it suits you, eat the same every day if it suits you, follow the MFP "eat back exercise calories" method if it suits you. Highly unlikely to make a scrap of difference apart from adherence, which is personal.

    BF% has an effect (positive - you have more readily available energy, negative - changes won't be as visible under a covering of fat....). If you are at a happy weight then that's fine.

    Biggest thing to optimise and focus on is your training, diet just supports your training and recovery.

    Seriously Thanks for the quick response, but I just want to make sure I understood you correctly

    So you're basically saying with body fat percentage is that if I have a lower body fat percentage then I will simply see results faster or are you saying I wont see much results at all? Because I thought recomp was losing fat while building muscle? Also I know it up to me but do you think it would be better to lower my body fat percentage?

    Also is P90X consider a weight lifting program?

    Fat is very effective at hiding increasing muscle as it masks definition (it's part of why taking measurements is a good idea). The "last few pounds" often make far more visible difference than the "first many pounds". Seeing results isn't the same as getting results.

    "Because I thought recomp was losing fat while building muscle? "
    - It is. Remember muscle building is slow, as a female it's really slow even under optimal conditions with perfect training.

    "Also I know it up to me but do you think it would be better to lower my body fat percentage?" - The quickest way to drop BF% is with a calorie deficit / losing weight but then your chances of building muscle become slight and limited. Everything is a compromise. Only you know where you are now and what your goal body is, how important not dieting is, how important leanness is compared to strength etc etc.

    "Also is P90X consider a weight lifting program?" - From what I understand of it, no.

    While P90X is a resistance program, it's not going to be optimal for recomposition. It's more general fitness. Now, don't get me wrong, you can add a progressive overload, you are only hitting the major body parts once a week. If any program beachbody program was used, I'd recommend Body Beast. It's at a bro-split.
  • nowine4me
    nowine4me Posts: 3,985 Member
    For you recompers... how do you measure your success? Weight remains the same, so what metrics do you use for goal setting? Purely increasing load and getting stronger?
  • BeccaLoves2lift
    BeccaLoves2lift Posts: 375 Member
    nowine4me wrote: »
    For you recompers... how do you measure your success? Weight remains the same, so what metrics do you use for goal setting? Purely increasing load and getting stronger?

    It's definitely pictures and strength increases for me.
  • HoneyBadger302
    HoneyBadger302 Posts: 2,065 Member
    nowine4me wrote: »
    For you recompers... how do you measure your success? Weight remains the same, so what metrics do you use for goal setting? Purely increasing load and getting stronger?

    I'm measuring weekly, taking photos weekly, and then how my clothes fit. Increasing load as well.
  • ecjim
    ecjim Posts: 1,001 Member
    nowine4me wrote: »
    For you recompers... how do you measure your success? Weight remains the same, so what metrics do you use for goal setting? Purely increasing load and getting stronger?

    The belly is a little smaller - love handles are shrinking- jeans are looser- shirts are tighter - arms & shoulders & traps are bigger - the weights are going up - more reps & sets. - I have no idea what my body weight is doing. I really don't care. It's been a while since I've weighed myself, and I probably weight about the same - Eastcoast Jim
  • ecjim
    ecjim Posts: 1,001 Member
    nowine4me wrote: »
    For you recompers... how do you measure your success? Weight remains the same, so what metrics do you use for goal setting? Purely increasing load and getting stronger?

    I really didn't answer your question, but if you are increasing the load , then you are getting stronger & making progress. If you want to maintain your should be staying at or near the same weight, & loosing inches. You may have to adjust your food intake or timing for this to happen Eastcoast Jim
  • me0231
    me0231 Posts: 218 Member
    Hey guys, first time posting here. :)
    I'm 5'11 and 159 pounds. Initially I wanted to get down to 150 but I'm just tired of being in a deficit. I've lost 45 pounds since last March. Been lifting since August. I still carry a fair amount of fat on my thighs bit have leaned out in my midsection especially and weight loss has slowed to a crawl now. I can also see that I don't have a lot of muscle definition, so at this point I feel like recomp is the way to go and maybe go back into a deficit down the road.

    Does that sound reasonable? I've read everywhere that recomp is slow, takes patience etc but what are we talking about? Months? Years? What about the gym, how fast could you see improvement in weights? When I started I went up nearly every week, the last month or so I haven't made much progress, but I'm not sure if that's the end of the newbie gains or simply because I'm in a deficit?

  • bbell1985
    bbell1985 Posts: 4,571 Member
    me0231 wrote: »
    Hey guys, first time posting here. :)
    I'm 5'11 and 159 pounds. Initially I wanted to get down to 150 but I'm just tired of being in a deficit. I've lost 45 pounds since last March. Been lifting since August. I still carry a fair amount of fat on my thighs bit have leaned out in my midsection especially and weight loss has slowed to a crawl now. I can also see that I don't have a lot of muscle definition, so at this point I feel like recomp is the way to go and maybe go back into a deficit down the road.

    Does that sound reasonable? I've read everywhere that recomp is slow, takes patience etc but what are we talking about? Months? Years? What about the gym, how fast could you see improvement in weights? When I started I went up nearly every week, the last month or so I haven't made much progress, but I'm not sure if that's the end of the newbie gains or simply because I'm in a deficit?

    I think with decent training and nutrition you'll see some changes every few months or so. I found that it is helpful to focus on performance, and the body composition follows.

    Stalls in the gym could either be from the deficit, or if you've been following a linear program for a long amount of time, it might be time to change to a more daily undulating type of periodization.
  • me0231
    me0231 Posts: 218 Member
    bbell1985 wrote: »

    I think with decent training and nutrition you'll see some changes every few months or so. I found that it is helpful to focus on performance, and the body composition follows.

    Stalls in the gym could either be from the deficit, or if you've been following a linear program for a long amount of time, it might be time to change to a more daily undulating type of periodization.

    Thanks for your reply! Ok, every few months sounds doable. I'm sure I'll be wishing for faster results but the weight didn't come off overnight so I think I can be patient. I'm looking to hire a trainer to make a program so hopefully that'll be on point. I spent a lot of time learning about nutrition and weight loss, now it's time to focus on training.

    What do I need to expect in terms of scale weight? I've seen people maintain in a range of about 5 pounds or so, would that be the same in recomp?

  • bbell1985
    bbell1985 Posts: 4,571 Member
    me0231 wrote: »
    bbell1985 wrote: »

    I think with decent training and nutrition you'll see some changes every few months or so. I found that it is helpful to focus on performance, and the body composition follows.

    Stalls in the gym could either be from the deficit, or if you've been following a linear program for a long amount of time, it might be time to change to a more daily undulating type of periodization.

    Thanks for your reply! Ok, every few months sounds doable. I'm sure I'll be wishing for faster results but the weight didn't come off overnight so I think I can be patient. I'm looking to hire a trainer to make a program so hopefully that'll be on point. I spent a lot of time learning about nutrition and weight loss, now it's time to focus on training.

    What do I need to expect in terms of scale weight? I've seen people maintain in a range of about 5 pounds or so, would that be the same in recomp?

    It's easier to be patient when you see your gym performance get better and better. And when you're not in a deficit, it will.

    Female? Yeah, I'd say it's natural to fluctuate within 5 pounds.