Dear people that say large weight gain is muscle..
Replies
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I had not thought about it but I say that too, that muscle weight more than fat. I know what I meant, it jut sounds funny. If you had a bucket of fat and a bucket of the same amount of muscle, the muscle would weigh more because it is denser.0
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Cool tip for people as well.. If you want a water displacement test (I called it water dip) or a DEXA scan, call your local university and many of them will scan you a small charge or a donation. They use it to let students learn how to do the tests! I've done it several times that way!0
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I'm cultivating mass, bro!
I love the burrito's in the trash bag episode!!.. Burritos are awesome dude.. I think we need some crack...
rofl, it's always sunny is the best. I fall victim to the it's muscle mass thing. but it has been nice increasing my max while dropping weight. Doing negatives is better than steroids in my opinion0 -
The thing that gets ME is when people don't post the time over which the gain has happened, or their lifestyle before/after starting, or their build, or anything. It bothers me when people say something is impossible only because we all carry, hold, and adjust weight differently.
It's like when people say 10lbs = 7 inch loss. No, not for everyone. Same with this muscle business. If you have a lot of muscle to begin with, if all of that muscle bulks just a little bit, you can easily gain several pounds... However, it's outside of the "averages" and is not the case in most circumstances.
So, say someone posts they gained 8 in 2 weeks. Well, if they were very tall, this is possible. Not LIKELY, but it's possible. I just get tired of it when people make blanket statements, because this is a journey that is very specific to the individual, and though it can be a good jumping off place to start at the averages... I think people should encourage those that are freaking out to get personalized professional assistance, instead of asking for MFPinions.
The human body doesn't work like that. You don't gain tiny bits in different places to add up to huge gains. The human body is a whole system. It breaks down and builds up muscle tissue all over on a daily basis. Net gain or loss depends solely on the body's physical need, and appropriate nutrition. Even if your body did put on an extra pound of muscle in your arms, it probably removed 1 pound of muscle from other parts of the body that wasn't using it. It can't magically create something out of nothing.
Think of a house made from blocks. You can build one of the walls higher by taking blocks off of the other 3 walls, but you still have the same amount of blocks. You can't build up all the walls without going out and getting more blocks. When a person is eating at a caloric deficit, they aren't adding any new blocks to their house, so they are not building muscle, especially in a matter of days.
It's not a question of averages, it's a question of physics and biology.
Exactly. Perfect explanation as always!
8 pounds in 2 weeks. Heh....0 -
Cool tip for people as well.. If you want a water displacement test (I called it water dip) or a DEXA scan, call your local university and many of them will scan you a small charge or a donation. They use it to let students learn how to do the tests! I've done it several times that way!
Usually it's been running me around $40 to get it done which is a steal compared to going to a fitness center that has the equipment.0 -
So what is it if your BF% goes down and your weight stays the same, but according to calculations your LBM goes up by 5 lbs within about a 5-6 week period? Along with all measurements going down?
I figured it wasn't all muscle, but it was nice to see since the scale wasn't moving....0 -
interesting reads - bump0
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no no no, the fat turns INTO muscles.... and it WEIGHS more!
Fat and muscle are composed of totally different cell structures, one cannot become the other.
You can also not target an area and only lose fat there.
FYI
I'm working on seriously building up my pecs, so that when I stop working out I'm going to have ENORMOUS norks. :bigsmile:0 -
no no no, the fat turns INTO muscles.... and it WEIGHS more!
Fat and muscle are composed of totally different cell structures, one cannot become the other.
You can also not target an area and only lose fat there.
FYI
I'm working on seriously building up my pecs, so that when I stop working out I'm going to have ENORMOUS norks. :bigsmile:
Finally someone's making some sense! Tig 'ol bitties from chest presses.0 -
no no no, the fat turns INTO muscles.... and it WEIGHS more!
Fat and muscle are composed of totally different cell structures, one cannot become the other.
You can also not target an area and only lose fat there.
FYI
I'm working on seriously building up my pecs, so that when I stop working out I'm going to have ENORMOUS norks. :bigsmile:
Finally someone's making some sense! Tig 'ol bitties from chest presses.
I may also have to work on my butt so I don't overbalance and fall flat on my face.0 -
Thanks very much to the posters who answered my query on determining muscle mass. I know my doctor has a set of calipers, I could start with him! I never thought of the university hospital - we have one quite locally and the water displacement test is probably something they do.
This site is such a wealth of great information... thank you to all those who give up their time to help, really appreciate it. :flowerforyou:0 -
To those that say that. Please just stop it... just stop.. I see tons of posts on here daily where someone has gained 5-8lbs in a couple days to a week and the answer people give is "You've gained muscle" No... Not even likely if they are on a prohormone/gear(steroids)
This extra weight is usually water.
When you start doing more exercise, your body begins storing more fuel in your muscle cells, where it can be used easily and quickly to fuel your workouts. The process of converting glucose (carbohydrates) into fuel that your muscles actually store and use (glycogen) requires three molecules of water for every molecule of glucose. As your muscles are building up glycogen stores, your body has to retain extra water for this purpose. That's what causes most of the initial weight gain or lack of weight loss. This is a good thing—not something to worry about.
However, despite what the scale says, you are actually losing fat during this time. The extra water retention will stop once your body has adjusted to its new activity level.
Other reasons if they aren't working out included:
•Sodium intake
•Food weight (especially if eating more heavy proteins than usual)
•If they had ate low carb for a few days then carbing up.
•They aren't measuring their food right and estimating wrong.0 -
The thing that gets ME is when people don't post the time over which the gain has happened, or their lifestyle before/after starting, or their build, or anything. It bothers me when people say something is impossible only because we all carry, hold, and adjust weight differently.
It's like when people say 10lbs = 7 inch loss. No, not for everyone. Same with this muscle business. If you have a lot of muscle to begin with, if all of that muscle bulks just a little bit, you can easily gain several pounds... However, it's outside of the "averages" and is not the case in most circumstances.
So, say someone posts they gained 8 in 2 weeks. Well, if they were very tall, this is possible. Not LIKELY, but it's possible. I just get tired of it when people make blanket statements, because this is a journey that is very specific to the individual, and though it can be a good jumping off place to start at the averages... I think people should encourage those that are freaking out to get personalized professional assistance, instead of asking for MFPinions.
The human body doesn't work like that. You don't gain tiny bits in different places to add up to huge gains. The human body is a whole system. It breaks down and builds up muscle tissue all over on a daily basis. Net gain or loss depends solely on the body's physical need, and appropriate nutrition. Even if your body did put on an extra pound of muscle in your arms, it probably removed 1 pound of muscle from other parts of the body that wasn't using it. It can't magically create something out of nothing.
Think of a house made from blocks. You can build one of the walls higher by taking blocks off of the other 3 walls, but you still have the same amount of blocks. You can't build up all the walls without going out and getting more blocks. When a person is eating at a caloric deficit, they aren't adding any new blocks to their house, so they are not building muscle, especially in a matter of days.
It's not a question of averages, it's a question of physics and biology.
Exactly. Perfect explanation as always!
8 pounds in 2 weeks. Heh....
As far as I'm concerned, you still have not addressed my point, nor proven me wrong. You cannot prove 100% that there never was a person in existence that did this. I never said that it was common. In fact, I said it was unlikely. I just admitted that I could believe it was possible.
I know a woman that has 16 extra bones in her body. I bet those extra bones make her weigh more. If she didn't know that, she could be fighting the pounds from those bones for years thinking it was stubborn fat deposits.
Just stop demeaning people and insulting people that have a differing understanding, way of wording things, etc. It really is best help, for us to encourage the confused to get personalized assistance, and not defer to the people on here. Face it, we all have some sort of lack of education and ability. At least a personalized source of information could be assessing the actual situation, instead of just the details the person chose to share.0 -
Thanks. This helps me feel a little better. I had a big gain after lots of working out and it really bummed me out. So much so that I've backed off the big workouts a little.0
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The thing that gets ME is when people don't post the time over which the gain has happened, or their lifestyle before/after starting, or their build, or anything. It bothers me when people say something is impossible only because we all carry, hold, and adjust weight differently.
It's like when people say 10lbs = 7 inch loss. No, not for everyone. Same with this muscle business. If you have a lot of muscle to begin with, if all of that muscle bulks just a little bit, you can easily gain several pounds... However, it's outside of the "averages" and is not the case in most circumstances.
So, say someone posts they gained 8 in 2 weeks. Well, if they were very tall, this is possible. Not LIKELY, but it's possible. I just get tired of it when people make blanket statements, because this is a journey that is very specific to the individual, and though it can be a good jumping off place to start at the averages... I think people should encourage those that are freaking out to get personalized professional assistance, instead of asking for MFPinions.
The human body doesn't work like that. You don't gain tiny bits in different places to add up to huge gains. The human body is a whole system. It breaks down and builds up muscle tissue all over on a daily basis. Net gain or loss depends solely on the body's physical need, and appropriate nutrition. Even if your body did put on an extra pound of muscle in your arms, it probably removed 1 pound of muscle from other parts of the body that wasn't using it. It can't magically create something out of nothing.
Think of a house made from blocks. You can build one of the walls higher by taking blocks off of the other 3 walls, but you still have the same amount of blocks. You can't build up all the walls without going out and getting more blocks. When a person is eating at a caloric deficit, they aren't adding any new blocks to their house, so they are not building muscle, especially in a matter of days.
It's not a question of averages, it's a question of physics and biology.
Exactly. Perfect explanation as always!
8 pounds in 2 weeks. Heh....
As far as I'm concerned, you still have not addressed my point, nor proven me wrong. You cannot prove 100% that there never was a person in existence that did this. I never said that it was common. In fact, I said it was unlikely. I just admitted that I could believe it was possible.
I know a woman that has 16 extra bones in her body. I bet those extra bones make her weigh more. If she didn't know that, she could be fighting the pounds from those bones for years thinking it was stubborn fat deposits.
Just stop demeaning people and insulting people that have a differing understanding, way of wording things, etc. It really is best help, for us to encourage the confused to get personalized assistance, and not defer to the people on here. Face it, we all have some sort of lack of education and ability. At least a personalized source of information could be assessing the actual situation, instead of just the details the person chose to share.0 -
Agreed!0
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I agree.0
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Good point, I agree.0
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I totally agree. My scale has went up 5lbs since Monday and I know it's water not muscle.0
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no no no, the fat turns INTO muscles.... and it WEIGHS more!
no no no, the white stuff in your pee is really your body getting rid of the fat. :bigsmile:0 -
To those that say that. Please just stop it... just stop.. I see tons of posts on here daily where someone has gained 5-8lbs in a couple days to a week and the answer people give is "You've gained muscle" No... Not even likely if they are on a prohormone/gear(steroids)
This extra weight is usually water.
When you start doing more exercise, your body begins storing more fuel in your muscle cells, where it can be used easily and quickly to fuel your workouts. The process of converting glucose (carbohydrates) into fuel that your muscles actually store and use (glycogen) requires three molecules of water for every molecule of glucose. As your muscles are building up glycogen stores, your body has to retain extra water for this purpose. That's what causes most of the initial weight gain or lack of weight loss. This is a good thing—not something to worry about.
However, despite what the scale says, you are actually losing fat during this time. The extra water retention will stop once your body has adjusted to its new activity level.
Other reasons if they aren't working out included:
•Sodium intake
•Food weight (especially if eating more heavy proteins than usual)
•If they had ate low carb for a few days then carbing up.
•They aren't measuring their food right and estimating wrong.
Thank you for explaining this, and so clearly. You're right about so much of what's posted. It easy to become very confused, especially regarding weight-training.0 -
The thing that gets ME is when people don't post the time over which the gain has happened, or their lifestyle before/after starting, or their build, or anything. It bothers me when people say something is impossible only because we all carry, hold, and adjust weight differently.
It's like when people say 10lbs = 7 inch loss. No, not for everyone. Same with this muscle business. If you have a lot of muscle to begin with, if all of that muscle bulks just a little bit, you can easily gain several pounds... However, it's outside of the "averages" and is not the case in most circumstances.
So, say someone posts they gained 8 in 2 weeks. Well, if they were very tall, this is possible. Not LIKELY, but it's possible. I just get tired of it when people make blanket statements, because this is a journey that is very specific to the individual, and though it can be a good jumping off place to start at the averages... I think people should encourage those that are freaking out to get personalized professional assistance, instead of asking for MFPinions.
The human body doesn't work like that. You don't gain tiny bits in different places to add up to huge gains. The human body is a whole system. It breaks down and builds up muscle tissue all over on a daily basis. Net gain or loss depends solely on the body's physical need, and appropriate nutrition. Even if your body did put on an extra pound of muscle in your arms, it probably removed 1 pound of muscle from other parts of the body that wasn't using it. It can't magically create something out of nothing.
Think of a house made from blocks. You can build one of the walls higher by taking blocks off of the other 3 walls, but you still have the same amount of blocks. You can't build up all the walls without going out and getting more blocks. When a person is eating at a caloric deficit, they aren't adding any new blocks to their house, so they are not building muscle, especially in a matter of days.
It's not a question of averages, it's a question of physics and biology.
Exactly. Perfect explanation as always!
8 pounds in 2 weeks. Heh....
As far as I'm concerned, you still have not addressed my point, nor proven me wrong. You cannot prove 100% that there never was a person in existence that did this. I never said that it was common. In fact, I said it was unlikely. I just admitted that I could believe it was possible.
I know a woman that has 16 extra bones in her body. I bet those extra bones make her weigh more. If she didn't know that, she could be fighting the pounds from those bones for years thinking it was stubborn fat deposits.
Just stop demeaning people and insulting people that have a differing understanding, way of wording things, etc. It really is best help, for us to encourage the confused to get personalized assistance, and not defer to the people on here. Face it, we all have some sort of lack of education and ability. At least a personalized source of information could be assessing the actual situation, instead of just the details the person chose to share.
LMAO um... I never, ever said that. All I said is I can believe there is a scenario that a person can gain 8 pounds of muscle in 2 weeks. That it was unlikely, but possible. *I* never said that a deficit existed for this to occur... However, I know that I ate a deficit and built up anyway. I don't go by a man-made theory used to explain the unexplainable. Have fun though, being so uppity0 -
I know a woman that has 16 extra bones in her body. I bet those extra bones make her weigh more. If she didn't know that, she could be fighting the pounds from those bones for years thinking it was stubborn fat deposits.
But that woman would have always had those extra bones, so it would have just been what she weighed, part of what she always weighed because her entire life she was a few pounds more. It's not like she gained 16 extra bones in two weeks.0 -
I know a woman that has 16 extra bones in her body. I bet those extra bones make her weigh more. If she didn't know that, she could be fighting the pounds from those bones for years thinking it was stubborn fat deposits.
But that woman would have always had those extra bones, so it would have just been what she weighed, part of what she always weighed because her entire life she was a few pounds more. It's not like she gained 16 extra bones in two weeks.
What if she got bone implants....... I bet Q is talking about a Kardasian, those Kardaians will do anything when it comes to plastic surgery! :-) Q I love ya, and I just really wanted to use the Kardasians in a sentance. If I was a girl they'd give me FBB.. (THANKS BREE FOR THAT ONE!)0 -
To those that say that. Please just stop it... just stop.. I see tons of posts on here daily where someone has gained 5-8lbs in a couple days to a week and the answer people give is "You've gained muscle" No... Not even likely if they are on a prohormone/gear(steroids)
This extra weight is usually water.
When you start doing more exercise, your body begins storing more fuel in your muscle cells, where it can be used easily and quickly to fuel your workouts. The process of converting glucose (carbohydrates) into fuel that your muscles actually store and use (glycogen) requires three molecules of water for every molecule of glucose. As your muscles are building up glycogen stores, your body has to retain extra water for this purpose. That's what causes most of the initial weight gain or lack of weight loss. This is a good thing—not something to worry about.
However, despite what the scale says, you are actually losing fat during this time. The extra water retention will stop once your body has adjusted to its new activity level.
Other reasons if they aren't working out included:
•Sodium intake
•Food weight (especially if eating more heavy proteins than usual)
•If they had ate low carb for a few days then carbing up.
•They aren't measuring their food right and estimating wrong.
ok so in everyone's experience how long does it take the water weight to leave? sometimes it feels like that extra weight that suddenly appears hangs around a few weeks... just started insanity and that is just what happened. i know it's not muscle, so it has to be water.0 -
To those that say that. Please just stop it... just stop.. I see tons of posts on here daily where someone has gained 5-8lbs in a couple days to a week and the answer people give is "You've gained muscle" No... Not even likely if they are on a prohormone/gear(steroids)
This extra weight is usually water.
When you start doing more exercise, your body begins storing more fuel in your muscle cells, where it can be used easily and quickly to fuel your workouts. The process of converting glucose (carbohydrates) into fuel that your muscles actually store and use (glycogen) requires three molecules of water for every molecule of glucose. As your muscles are building up glycogen stores, your body has to retain extra water for this purpose. That's what causes most of the initial weight gain or lack of weight loss. This is a good thing—not something to worry about.
However, despite what the scale says, you are actually losing fat during this time. The extra water retention will stop once your body has adjusted to its new activity level.
Other reasons if they aren't working out included:
•Sodium intake
•Food weight (especially if eating more heavy proteins than usual)
•If they had ate low carb for a few days then carbing up.
•They aren't measuring their food right and estimating wrong.
:ohwell: Yeah.... That does sound pretty funny about it JUST being muscle... But this also explains my increased joint pain since doing this circuit training thing. It gets pretty painful. I get really poofed up, and this makes my joints extra sore, as well as those muscles being sore. I guess that would be normal to experience that. I'm sure Im not the only one, for people with arthritis it sucks to be retaining the water. Ever drink that cactus juice for the inflamation?0 -
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What if she got bone implants....... I bet Q is talking about a Kardasian, those Kardaians will do anything when it comes to plastic surgery! :-) Q I love ya, and I just really wanted to use the Kardasians in a sentance. If I was a girl they'd give me FBB.. (THANKS BREE FOR THAT ONE!)
Quote
Heres my Kardashian online sentance..... Dear Kardashians... I think your rich enough, and Im not going to watch your show anymore.. Im boycotting the E Channel!!! Just kidding... I'll probably still watch that damm show anyway! :ohwell: And I can't miss Tosh or The Fashion Police either. Darn it.0 -
Agreed. I've gained about 10 lb since I started lifting. While some of it might be newbie muscle gain, I'm guessing maybe 1/4 of it at best is muscle.0
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To those that say that. Please just stop it... just stop.. I see tons of posts on here daily where someone has gained 5-8lbs in a couple days to a week and the answer people give is "You've gained muscle" No... Not even likely if they are on a prohormone/gear(steroids)
This extra weight is usually water.
When you start doing more exercise, your body begins storing more fuel in your muscle cells, where it can be used easily and quickly to fuel your workouts. The process of converting glucose (carbohydrates) into fuel that your muscles actually store and use (glycogen) requires three molecules of water for every molecule of glucose. As your muscles are building up glycogen stores, your body has to retain extra water for this purpose. That's what causes most of the initial weight gain or lack of weight loss. This is a good thing—not something to worry about.
However, despite what the scale says, you are actually losing fat during this time. The extra water retention will stop once your body has adjusted to its new activity level.
Other reasons if they aren't working out included:
•Sodium intake
•Food weight (especially if eating more heavy proteins than usual)
•If they had ate low carb for a few days then carbing up.
•They aren't measuring their food right and estimating wrong.
:ohwell: Yeah.... That does sound pretty funny about it JUST being muscle... But this also explains my increased joint pain since doing this circuit training thing. It gets pretty painful. I get really poofed up, and this makes my joints extra sore, as well as those muscles being sore. I guess that would be normal to experience that. I'm sure Im not the only one, for people with arthritis it sucks to be retaining the water. Ever drink that cactus juice for the inflamation?
Fish Oil and Cissus Powder is your friend if you are getting inflammation.0 -
DAILLLYYY BUUUUUMMMMMPPPPP...0
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