Females only - lifting/weight training results?
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This was over year ago at my leanest, after 4-5 months of xfit and weight lifting; previously I was a cardio bunny with NO upper body strength.
The biggest change in my body that I have noticed was in my shoulders/arms not fitting into blazers/jackets/blouses. It's a rather expensive result of weight training. but I am otherwise pleased with the results.
Very pretty back, you still have such a tiny waist too.0 -
I do not have any proper before pics as I was very very camera shy due to the weight I had gained. However, I did find one taken on holiday just before I started on MFP at the age of 44.
I lost 37lbs through a reasonable caloric deficit and lifting over the course of a year. Since then I have done a bulk and a cut and am now reversing back up ready to bulk again. A couple of my most recent pictures, now at 46 years old:
Nice muscles! Good work!1 -
Bumping0
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Bump.1
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Love the bump0 -
WOW!!!0
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Tagging this for inspiration!0
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Amazing results!! This has me so pumped!! I was a bit disappointed in a 2lbs loss after a month of weight training and waking up at 4am to do it - this is so inspiring and motivational. Thanks, ladies!! I feel so accomplished when I add weights to my deadlifts and squats. I love lifting!1
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I do not have any proper before pics as I was very very camera shy due to the weight I had gained. However, I did find one taken on holiday just before I started on MFP at the age of 44.
I lost 37lbs through a reasonable caloric deficit and lifting over the course of a year. Since then I have done a bulk and a cut and am now reversing back up ready to bulk again. A couple of my most recent pictures, now at 46 years old:
Wow! Crazy transformation! Unbelievable abs... You're definitely an inspiration for women who feel like it's too late to have a better body.0 -
Hungry skeleton mode-February
Curl bro mode (tfw no legs :frown: )
Nice.....
Got some guns on you.
I am SO JEALOUS of those arms! nice work! I'm 6 months in, and my arms will not increase. Probably didn't help that I couldn't lift a gallon of milk when I started.0 -
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See photo!! :bigsmile:
Everyone looks awesome!!!0 -
I agree, you look amazing! I am just starting weights at 51, after losing 93 lbs, and my body is slightly smaller than your "before". I really dont know what to expect, I just know I need to challenge my body strength more than I am at this point. But your photos just gave me a great boost of inspiration and encouragement that I can achieve nice results too. A great thread, I love reading all of these!1
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Fantastic results. Everyone looks amazing!0
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My little results in 3 months with only 10 pound weights.0
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bump!!0
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My little results in 3 months with only 10 pound weights.
Annnnnnd now I'm jealous of you too! Nice arms lady!
I've been progressively increasing my weights, and have made no dang progress! I started with 5's (yeah i know) and progressed to the 35# curling bar or 15 pound dumbbells. Arms just got skinnier. ARGH1 -
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Wow everyone looks great!1
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update
Day 1 (Jan 20) @ 183.5lbs - Day 134 (today) @ 170.5lbs
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In for inspiration - amazing stuff girls ;D0
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Amazing! You all are an inspiration to me.1
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My profile pic is 16 months of weight lifting through Crossfit!
I'm very happy with the results thus far.0 -
This is how I calculated all that:
A pound of fat has about 3500 calories, and a pound of muscle has about 600 calories. So, if you know your weight loss and calorie deficit from TDEE, you can calculate the amount of muscle and fat that are gained or lost. There is only 1 way for the calorie deficit to make both the weight loss and calorie deficit work. So (3500 x lbs of fat) + (600 x lbs of muscle) will equal the total calorie deficit. And the (lbs of fat lost) + (lbs of muscle lost) has to equal the total weight loss. So then you have two equations. If X = lbs of fat lost and Y = lbs of muscle lost, you know ( 3500x + 600y = total calorie deficit ) and ( x + y = total lbs loss ) You can then solve those two equations to find where they are both true at the same time, giving your amount of each that were lost.
For example, here is my equation for this month:
I lost 8.4 pounds. My calorie deficit is 34199 (which is my TDEE - net calories)
x+y=8.4 and 3500x+600y=34199
x (fat)= 10.0548
y (muscle)= -1.65483
So I lost 10 pounds of fat and gained 1.6 pounds of muscle this month. But again, do whatever you feel comfortable with!
Except calorie counting is still highly inaccurate no matter how perfect we try to be. Packages are allowed to be off 10%, so unless you ate only fruits, vegetables and lean meat that you weighed perfectly you have a 10% margin of error (assuming you weigh and measure every bite, lick and taste too). TDEE is an estimation, even if you are using a Fitbit or other tracking device.
Also, for a woman to gain 1.6 pounds of muscle in a month on a deficit is nearly unheard of. I managed to gain 1.5 in a month while bulking and training hard. Unless you were using an accurate method to determine body fat your calculation is wrong. Even then, gaining lean mass does not mean you gained muscle because some methods of body fat calculation end up counting water as lean mass.
Worry more about the tape measure and mirror.
oh, math.
the weight equation at any time would be
x+y+z=loss
where x = fat, y=lbm and z=other (undigested food, water) For a single measure z might vary significantly. However, if you do a running sum of measurements or work with variance one can assume that z will average to zero over enough measurements.
And one shouldn't use calculated TDEE form the standard formulas as they can be off by more that 10% normally without being an outlier - instead calculate your working TDEE range from running gain/loss and calories consumed. Given that wTDEE is really not a single number (metabolic homeostasis allows for weight maintenance by up-regulating neuro/hormonal/NEAT factors) one would come out with a range number of possible gains/loss of LBM.0 -
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