So you want a nice stomach
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Wow, there is a lot to read here, save for later!0
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BUMPING TO READ LATER0
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Following are the steps to follow for gaining a nice stomach:-
1.Don't eat anything for two to three hours before sleep- When you sleep,your body slows down, which will prevent your body from digesting the food in your stomach properly.
2. Eat healthier
• Eat lots of lean protein
• Eat low-fat dairy products
• Lower your sodium intake
3. Reduce your portion sizes -You should eat just enough until you feel full, then stop. If you're eating regular, healthy snacks throughout the day, this shouldn't leave you feeling hungry.1 -
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Most useful post of the morning.0
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Following are the steps to follow for gaining a nice stomach:-
1.Don't eat anything for two to three hours before sleep- When you sleep,your body slows down, which will prevent your body from digesting the food in your stomach properly.
2. Eat healthier
• Eat lots of lean protein
• Eat low-fat dairy products
• Lower your sodium intake
3. Reduce your portion sizes -You should eat just enough until you feel full, then stop. If you're eating regular, healthy snacks throughout the day, this shouldn't leave you feeling hungry.
Nope.
I regularly eat right before bed.
My sodium is through the roof.
I do eat lean meats and lots of veggies, but only because I eat a lot of food, and need as much volume for the calories I'm allowed.
I also do eat lots of little snacks... But try to save a lot of cals for dinner and bedtime snacking. (That's when I seem to be the hungriest)
What you DO need :
A caloric deficit.
Patience.
Some form of exercise that strengthens the abs a little, if you want them to pop.3 -
Bumpity-bump for sound advice.0
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Bumping for the great advice!0
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Good information!0
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Following are the steps to follow for gaining a nice stomach:-
1.Don't eat anything for two to three hours before sleep- When you sleep,your body slows down, which will prevent your body from digesting the food in your stomach properly.
2. Eat healthier
• Eat lots of lean protein
• Eat low-fat dairy products
• Lower your sodium intake
3. Reduce your portion sizes -You should eat just enough until you feel full, then stop. If you're eating regular, healthy snacks throughout the day, this shouldn't leave you feeling hungry.
No.
1. I frequently eat at 10:00pm and then climb right in bed. Meal timing is irrelevant, your body will digest the food. If it didn't digest your food properly then eating immediately before bed would be beneficial because your body would just pass those calories and you'd lose weight without effort. The REAL reason they say to not eat before bed comes from GERD/heartburn issues, but if your lower esophageal sphincter is in good shape there's no reason to avoid eating at night.
2. People will find if they are serious about sticking to their calorie goal they'll naturally eat more whole foods (more filling).
I covered the protein thing.
You need fat, so eating low fat dairy isn't really that important.
Sodium might mask weight loss and it could retain water in the skin, but it won't keep you from losing fat.
3. Intuitive eating doesn't work for everyone (if it did we wouldn't be here). The only way to ensure you are eating less calories than you burn is to track it. Under eating can be just as counterproductive as over eating because if your body starts burning lean mass it will make it harder for you to lose fat (that's why people yo-yo diet their way to being obese).
I already offered real solid advice. Your way may work for you, but my way is guaranteed to work for everyone.
1. Slight calorie deficit.
2. Resistance training with some cardio.
3. Time5 -
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the advice. :flowerforyou:0
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You want to lose belly fat and have a nice flat toned mid section? We see that a lot on this site. Hell, that was my goal for my birthday last year. We all want to be able to take our shirt off at the pool or beach and look great, but how do we do it?
1. Slight calorie deficit. Eating 800 calories and killing yourself in the gym is not going to get you there any faster. You need to fuel your body appropriately. I suggest the TDEE-20% method. www.1percentedge.com/ifcalc (If you have questions please feel free to ask them here). Make sure to weigh everything you eat! Guessing could put you well over your calories.
2. Strength training. If you want that toned mid section look you have to put some muscle there. If you just want a nice flat stomach muscle will still help it look tight. You can begin with Strong Lifts, a hypertrophy routine or a strength program from bodybuilding.com (free!). One that includes compound lifts like deadlift, squat, bench press and pull ups will help. Work on increasing the amount of weight you use. When the weight gets heavier you engage your core more and it builds the muscle.
3. Muscle insurance. There are a variety of studies done on the amount of protein the body needs. I like to think of higher protein as muscle insurance. My suggestion is about 1gram of protein per pound of lean mass. Make sure to get fat in your diet to help joints and metabolic processes. Make sure to get carbs in your diet to fuel workouts.
4. Cardio. I like cardio once or twice a week for 30 minutes. It's good for the heart and lungs. It doesn't add much to the calorie burn for the week, but it helps even things out in case you haven't been completely accurate weighing food.
5. Patience! It is not going to happen overnight. If you stick with it you could lose around 1% body fat a month. We aren't going to be perfect all the time. Enjoy birthdays and holidays. It is life and things will happen. Don't stress, learn to love the process.
FINALLY: Losing fat is like trying to dry out a sponge. You can't dry a corner while the rest of it is still wet. You won't magically lose belly fat or thigh fat or any other fat. It will come off where it wants to. Keep working at it! It is possible!
IN so i get the thread on my list.... BOOM! #womancrushwednesday although its not wednesday! lol0 -
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bump bump bummmp!!!!! :drinker: advice i desperately needed!!!!!!!1
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Um I do all of these and incorporate a lot of cardio and mountain biking and it works GREAT for me as long as I don't eat junk... I dont get the whole hate on cardio thing. I love weight training, but if you like cardio - do it. . My most successful routine is alternating between yoga, cadio and mountain biking and lifting three times a week.0
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Um I do all of these and incorporate a lot of cardio and mountain biking and it works GREAT for me as long as I don't eat junk... I dont get the whole hate on cardio thing. I love weight training, but if you like cardio - do it. . My most successful routine is alternating between yoga, cadio and mountain biking and lifting three times a week.
As I said, I don't enjoy cardio. I didn't tell people not to do it and if I really hated it that much I would have left it out of my post entirely. I've explained my stance behind that many times over the last 14 pages. The reason I specifically pointed out that I personally only do one or two cardio sessions a week is because of the misconception that cardio is the way that you lose belly fat. Calorie deficit is what reduces belly fat (and all fat). You can do 2 hours of cardio a day and still never lose fat if you don't have your diet on track.
I provided a simple outline to explain why counting calories is the most important part of losing fat and why protein as well as resistance training are key to body composition in the end. These points were all to clear up the confusion we see over and over again in the forum (for example: lifting makes women bulky, protein makes you bulky/fat, cardio is how to lose belly fat).
I'm glad you found what worked for you. It sounds like you did basically what I outlined (calorie deficit and lifting) with additional cardio since you enjoy doing it.1 -
Um I do all of these and incorporate a lot of cardio and mountain biking and it works GREAT for me as long as I don't eat junk... I dont get the whole hate on cardio thing. I love weight training, but if you like cardio - do it. . My most successful routine is alternating between yoga, cadio and mountain biking and lifting three times a week.
As I said, I don't enjoy cardio. I didn't tell people not to do it and if I really hated it that much I would have left it out of my post entirely. I've explained my stance behind that many times over the last 14 pages. The reason I specifically pointed out that I personally only do one or two cardio sessions a week is because of the misconception that cardio is the way that you lose belly fat. Calorie deficit is what reduces belly fat (and all fat). You can do 2 hours of cardio a day and still never lose fat if you don't have your diet on track.
I provided a simple outline to explain why counting calories is the most important part of losing fat and why protein as well as resistance training are key to body composition in the end. These points were all to clear up the confusion we see over and over again in the forum (for example: lifting makes women bulky, protein makes you bulky/fat, cardio is how to lose belly fat).
I'm glad you found what worked for you. It sounds like you did basically what I outlined (calorie deficit and lifting) with additional cardio since you enjoy doing it.
bump again... oohhh yeah!0 -
Bump, makes sense to me +1!0
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This is the best line I've seen in a long time:
"Losing fat is like trying to dry out a sponge. You can't dry a corner while the rest of it is still wet. You won't magically lose belly fat or thigh fat or any other fat. It will come off where it wants to. Keep working at it! It is possible!"
LOL thanks for the trueism and the chuckle!0 -
How much cardio should I add to compensate for Olive Garden Never Ending Pasta? Would three 30 minutes sessions do it?
Depends on how never ending it was for you.
LOL I love it!0
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