lifting for a flat belly? why?

christinelast
Posts: 76 Member
I thought you get a flat tummy with diet, meaning caloric deficit, plus there are no spot reduction exercies, so why lifting? Serious question, please donot feel offended or offend me neither. Thank you
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Well I lift.
When my fat is gone, my beautiful lean muscles will shine through and I will have a nice looking tummy then someone who just ate at a deficit and did cardio.0 -
A calorie deficit without lifting equals muscle loss. A calorie deficit with lifting equals muscle retention and majority of weight loss will be fat loss.1
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Corgarian, what are your top five strength moves you use for stomach? I've recently added a kettle bell workout to my routine and I can really feel it in my oblique's. I had a baby in July and my pouch is nearly extinct but there's always room for improvement0
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I thought you get a flat tummy with diet, meaning caloric deficit, plus there are no spot reduction exercies, so why lifting? Serious question, please donot feel offended or offend me neither. Thank you
correct, flat tummy = loss of bodyfat through a caloric deficit.... what we want to lose most will be last to go as you are correct, no spot reduction.
weights = increased lean muscle mass which increases calorie burn over a longer period of time than just cardio alone. you have to decide the body type you are seeking, for instance a female marathon runner, versus a female fitness contestant.... likely both could have the same bf% and weigh the same at the same height but because the fitness competitor incorporates significant weight lifting into her training program her body type will look completely different than that of the marathon runner. not good, not bad, just different body types due to the diet and training each one has focused on. hope this helps... good luck..0 -
I dont do super heavy weighted ab workouts. A normal day I do inclined situps with a 10-15lb plate. I do inclined leg lifts with 10lb (5lb each) ankle weights, I do leg raises (what is the thing called that you hang on by your forearms and your feet dangle? thats what I mean.. I'm so technical lol) with my anke weights.
(another technical one) There is a contraption that I lean against, it goest right below my hip flexers and I hold a 25lb plate and bend at the waist. I do that one facing forwards, and on both sides. It works my lower back and obliques.
(I do 3-4 sets of 10 on all the above)
And I always finish with 2 one minute planks.
**sorry for bad terminoligy, I'm a visual learner so the names of things leave my brain once I learn the movement.0 -
Weighted squats have done more for my abs then a sit-up ever did.
That being said, I am still doing planks, not as much for the exercise but for the physical challenge. I'm up to 45 seconds and tomorrow I'm going to do 50 (5 secs added each workout!)0 -
in for reads0
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I thought you get a flat tummy with diet, meaning caloric deficit, plus there are no spot reduction exercies, so why lifting? Serious question, please donot feel offended or offend me neither. Thank you
correct, flat tummy = loss of bodyfat through a caloric deficit.... what we want to lose most will be last to go as you are correct, no spot reduction.
weights = increased lean muscle mass which increases calorie burn over a longer period of time than just cardio alone. you have to decide the body type you are seeking, for instance a female marathon runner, versus a female fitness contestant.... likely both could have the same bf% and weigh the same at the same height but because the fitness competitor incorporates significant weight lifting into her training program her body type will look completely different than that of the marathon runner. not good, not bad, just different body types due to the diet and training each one has focused on. hope this helps... good luck..
Weights doesn't mean increased muscle.
In a deficit it more means RETAINED muscle.0 -
A calorie deficit without lifting equals muscle loss. A calorie deficit with lifting equals muscle retention and majority of weight loss will be fat loss.
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I thought you get a flat tummy with diet, meaning caloric deficit, plus there are no spot reduction exercies, so why lifting? Serious question, please donot feel offended or offend me neither. Thank you
correct, flat tummy = loss of bodyfat through a caloric deficit.... what we want to lose most will be last to go as you are correct, no spot reduction.
weights = increased lean muscle mass which increases calorie burn over a longer period of time than just cardio alone. you have to decide the body type you are seeking, for instance a female marathon runner, versus a female fitness contestant.... likely both could have the same bf% and weigh the same at the same height but because the fitness competitor incorporates significant weight lifting into her training program her body type will look completely different than that of the marathon runner. not good, not bad, just different body types due to the diet and training each one has focused on. hope this helps... good luck..
Weights doesn't mean increased muscle.
In a deficit it more means RETAINED muscle.
at least 1 person appears to have a different opinion...
http://www.livestrong.com/article/362906-can-you-build-muscle-on-a-calorie-deficit/0 -
Muscle is tight, too. I know I get at least an inch off my midsection just by how much I'm working the muscles and keeping them firm with resistance training. That's not fat reduction, but it's an inch smaller (for me) and feels nicer to boot
It also helps those postural imbalances like pelvic tilt issues that can make people look odd/poochy in the midsection. Just make sure to stretch everything well, too, because those imbalances involve both overly tight muscles and loose ones.0 -
I thought you get a flat tummy with diet, meaning caloric deficit, plus there are no spot reduction exercies, so why lifting? Serious question, please donot feel offended or offend me neither. Thank you
correct, flat tummy = loss of bodyfat through a caloric deficit.... what we want to lose most will be last to go as you are correct, no spot reduction.
weights = increased lean muscle mass which increases calorie burn over a longer period of time than just cardio alone. you have to decide the body type you are seeking, for instance a female marathon runner, versus a female fitness contestant.... likely both could have the same bf% and weigh the same at the same height but because the fitness competitor incorporates significant weight lifting into her training program her body type will look completely different than that of the marathon runner. not good, not bad, just different body types due to the diet and training each one has focused on. hope this helps... good luck..
Weights doesn't mean increased muscle.
In a deficit it more means RETAINED muscle.
at least 1 person appears to have a different opinion...
http://www.livestrong.com/article/362906-can-you-build-muscle-on-a-calorie-deficit/
Everybody knows there is an exception to that rule for the severely overweight but it's been said so many times and it's such a small exception that it goes without saying...0
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