Is it necessary for me to have a caloric deficit?
AnAwesomeWave2014
Posts: 2
I am not too concerned with weight loss, I mostly want to get stronger and more toned. Is it still necessary for me to have a caloric deficit?
I'm just getting a little confused because I do want to lose fat, and also want to gain muscle, but don't want to lose too much weight.
Thanks a lot for helping this newb out!
I'm just getting a little confused because I do want to lose fat, and also want to gain muscle, but don't want to lose too much weight.
Thanks a lot for helping this newb out!
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Replies
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If your aim is to gain muscle in most cases you're going to gain weight. If you can disassociate weight on the scale to equal weight then you will be ok, weight doesn't mean someone is healthy or unhealthy.
To lose weight be in a caloric deficit
To gain weight be in a small surplus.
if you do either slowly it minimises fat gain when in a surplus and muscle loss when in a deficit.
In this picture each women weighs 154 pounds but look completely different it all depends on the amound of body fat, muscle you have plus other factors
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I am not too concerned with weight loss, I mostly want to get stronger and more toned. Is it still necessary for me to have a caloric deficit?
I'm just getting a little confused because I do want to lose fat, and also want to gain muscle, but don't want to lose too much weight.
Thanks a lot for helping this newb out!
you can do recomp at maintenance. To look more 'toned' a small deficit might help.0 -
So to gain muscle, I must gain weight and therefore need at least a small caloric surplus? Or would maintenance be enough? Would a small deficit hurt muscle gain?0
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Do you want to have more muscle tissue or just be stronger and look more muscular? Only building more muscle tissue requires a surplus. You can get strong and have more defined muscles without gaining muscle tissue. Most women don't easily build muscle tissue.0
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Welcome to MFP! There are groups for women who lift, on MFP. I suggest you check them out for correct advice. Good luck0
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Eating at maintenance while lifting will get you toned.0
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If you don't want to lose weight, then you don't want to eat at a calorie deficit. Log your food and figure out at which calorie level you maintain your weight at. If you continue to exercise hard and eat at this level, you'll get more lean and toned while maintaining your weight.
Allan0 -
You can eat at maintenance and don't eat the exercise calories back from lifting (they're minimal anyway) and create a very slight deficit that way. Then you'll slowly cut fat while retaining most LBM.0
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I'm guessing with the build up of muscles, you'll gain weight. If you're not looking to lose weight, don't have a calorie deficit, or at the very most, a very slight one. Iif you don't want to gain a lot, there are some TDEE and BMI (remember, your BMI is your basal metabolic rate- pretty much how many calories your body would burn if you were in a coma) calculators online you can calculate to eat at a maintenance.
I did insanity one and a half times before switching to PiYo. I didn't switch because insanity didn't work- on the contrary. It worked- my bottom half (waist down) and my face is more defined than what I started with, but due to genetics, it would be a while before my midsection would see some changes and I was also reaching a low BMI. I also wanted to start doing more strength stuff than cardio. So I switched to PiYo for strength and flexibility to continue to lose fat, but also gain muscle so I could gain a bit more weight.
If I can find it, I'll link it, but someone gained weight in her after photo and someone else weighed the same as before, but both showed results.
Also, is your username an Alt-J reference?0 -
I'm guessing with the build up of muscles, you'll gain weight. If you're not looking to lose weight, don't have a calorie deficit, or at the very most, a very slight one. Iif you don't want to gain a lot, there are some TDEE and BMI (remember, your BMI is your basal metabolic rate- pretty much how many calories your body would burn if you were in a coma) calculators online you can calculate to eat at a maintenance.
I did insanity one and a half times before switching to PiYo. I didn't switch because insanity didn't work- on the contrary. It worked- my bottom half (waist down) and my face is more defined than what I started with, but due to genetics, it would be a while before my midsection would see some changes and I was also reaching a low BMI. I also wanted to start doing more strength stuff than cardio. So I switched to PiYo for strength and flexibility to continue to lose fat, but also gain muscle so I could gain a bit more weight.
If I can find it, I'll link it, but someone gained weight in her after photo and someone else weighed the same as before, but both showed results.
Also, is your username an Alt-J reference?
Or American Psycho?0 -
I am not too concerned with weight loss, I mostly want to get stronger and more toned. Is it still necessary for me to have a caloric deficit?
I'm just getting a little confused because I do want to lose fat, and also want to gain muscle, but don't want to lose too much weight.
Thanks a lot for helping this newb out!0 -
I'm guessing with the build up of muscles, you'll gain weight. If you're not looking to lose weight, don't have a calorie deficit, or at the very most, a very slight one. Iif you don't want to gain a lot, there are some TDEE and BMI (remember, your BMI is your basal metabolic rate- pretty much how many calories your body would burn if you were in a coma) calculators online you can calculate to eat at a maintenance.
I did insanity one and a half times before switching to PiYo. I didn't switch because insanity didn't work- on the contrary. It worked- my bottom half (waist down) and my face is more defined than what I started with, but due to genetics, it would be a while before my midsection would see some changes and I was also reaching a low BMI. I also wanted to start doing more strength stuff than cardio. So I switched to PiYo for strength and flexibility to continue to lose fat, but also gain muscle so I could gain a bit more weight.
If I can find it, I'll link it, but someone gained weight in her after photo and someone else weighed the same as before, but both showed results.
Also, is your username an Alt-J reference?
I think that you have BMI and BMR confused. BMI stands for Body Mass Indicator. BMR is your Basal Metabolic Rate. Calculators will give you very different numbers if you swap them.0 -
Do you want to have more muscle tissue or just be stronger and look more muscular? Only building more muscle tissue requires a surplus. You can get strong and have more defined muscles without gaining muscle tissue. Most women don't easily build muscle tissue.
I'm unsure about the middle bit. How do you gain strength without gaining muscle tissue?0 -
Do you want to have more muscle tissue or just be stronger and look more muscular? Only building more muscle tissue requires a surplus. You can get strong and have more defined muscles without gaining muscle tissue. Most women don't easily build muscle tissue.
I'm unsure about the middle bit. How do you gain strength without gaining muscle tissue?0 -
That does sound interesting. How do the muscles get stronger if not by gaining more mass? Is it hypertrophy? I haven't got my head around this yet.
ETA - ah, no, reading my references shows that hypertrophy does increase mass.0
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