Too much weight lifting?
S_Evanson613
Posts: 62 Member
Hey everyone, happy monday
So I have a backwards question (sort of). I like to lift weights..a lot. While I am by no means "ripped" or "shredded" I thoroughly enjoy it, and add them to my routine about 4 days a week. My question is this...
I have noticed that my weight loss has stalled (even gone up) in the last three weeks. I know muscle weighs more than fat, but could I be lifting too much, and neglecting cardio too much? Should I up my cardio? I eat about 1200-1300 calories a day and am not trying ot gain muscle necessarily, just get the muscles I do have more defined. I currently do about 30-40 minutes of cardio 2-3 days a week...should I up this to start seeing the scale go down again?
THanks!
So I have a backwards question (sort of). I like to lift weights..a lot. While I am by no means "ripped" or "shredded" I thoroughly enjoy it, and add them to my routine about 4 days a week. My question is this...
I have noticed that my weight loss has stalled (even gone up) in the last three weeks. I know muscle weighs more than fat, but could I be lifting too much, and neglecting cardio too much? Should I up my cardio? I eat about 1200-1300 calories a day and am not trying ot gain muscle necessarily, just get the muscles I do have more defined. I currently do about 30-40 minutes of cardio 2-3 days a week...should I up this to start seeing the scale go down again?
THanks!
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Replies
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lifting 4 days a week and doing cardio 2-3 days a week is good but doing it on 1200-1300 calories a day probably isn't optimal. You're likely to get burnt out or injured before too long if you lift with any level of intensity.0
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So, I should up my calories - or just my protein? I am currently eating about 1 gram per weight of protein on the days that I lift.0
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both. also, muscle is denser than fat, not heavier.0
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I want to point this out...I do not think weight gain was muscle by any means..I am eating a deficit and will not gain muscle while on it... I just pointed that out because I don't want everyone to answer "muscle weighs more than fat" like most people would....
THanks for the advice, I will look into adding more cals/macros.0 -
- The scale should be the last thing you are concerned about when lifting. If your clothes fit the way you want, and your body looks like you want it to, then you are all good.
- Muscle doesn't weigh more than fat, it's just more dense. A given calorie intake can only support so much mass. But people all over the boards here weigh 10 pounds more after lifting, but are thinner than with strictly aerobics. You can't add muscle eating at a calorie deficit.
- The only reason to do cardio is to allow you to eat more food that day, or if you really love whatever that exercise is, or you are specifically targeting your cardio-vascular system through high intensity intervals, etc.
- Muscle repairs when at rest. Muscle uses protein to repair. Don't reduce your protein on non-lift days. That's when your body needs it.
If you are eating at maintenance or below, you won't gain weight, no matter how much lifting you do.0 -
Thank you.0
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Now I have a question, what is your exact bf%, and what is your target %? This is a far more effective target than weight.0
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I have no clue. I have not measure and don't know how to measure really.0
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S_Evanson613 wrote: »I have no clue. I have not measure and don't know how to measure really.
You can get a caliper check, those are ok. Or you can get into a bod pod or a dexa scan. both are super cheap, precise, and accurate.
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thanks so much!!0
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Deffo try.more cals, I've had to up mine while lifting x0
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I also agree with measuring, some weeks I'll gain weight but will lose inches keep track.of body fat too if poss0
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S_Evanson613 wrote: »I have no clue. I have not measure and don't know how to measure really.
You can get a caliper check, those are ok. Or you can get into a bod pod or a dexa scan. both are super cheap, precise, and accurate.
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So, OP wants more definition, and is wondering why she's not losing (and perhaps gaining) weight, and we are suggesting she increase cals?
What am I missing?0 -
So, OP wants more definition, and is wondering why she's not losing (and perhaps gaining) weight, and we are suggesting she increase cals?
What am I missing?
LOL, well i am open to all suggestions, but don't plan to up my cals just yet. Do you have a suggestion by chance? Should probably mention, that while I am looking for definition (not gaining muscle - well not yet in the journey anyway) I am still trying ot lose weight as well.
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just to be clear definition means low body fat- revealing your muscles (assuming you have some)
- If you don't have any and you have a low body fat- you just look... um. the term is skinny fat- and it's going out of style to say- but you don't look cut- you just look really skinny- it's *generally* not the look most people are aiming for- but I don't speak for everyone- so let me say that is NOT a blanket statment about all people everywhere.
Muscle in terms of actual size- means just that- actual size- and requires work.
I'm guessing you're wanting a combination of both- and where you are right now just getting on a solid lifting plan and lifting for 6-9 months is probably going to get you a lot closer to what you want. I'd leave calories more or less the same- or a slight slight deficit- and lift the hell out of your gym for a year and reevaluate then.0 -
thanks!0
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Just tossing in my vote to listen to Jo's comment above.0
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S_Evanson613 wrote: »So, OP wants more definition, and is wondering why she's not losing (and perhaps gaining) weight, and we are suggesting she increase cals?
What am I missing?
LOL, well i am open to all suggestions, but don't plan to up my cals just yet. Do you have a suggestion by chance? Should probably mention, that while I am looking for definition (not gaining muscle - well not yet in the journey anyway) I am still trying ot lose weight as well.
Well, first and foremost...
You said in your original post that your weight loss has stalled (or even gone up)... by how much? Over what period of time?
You also say you eat about 1200-1300 cals per day. How confident are you that you're eating that day in and day out for long stretches of time (several weeks)?0 -
S_Evanson613 wrote: »I have no clue. I have not measure and don't know how to measure really.
You can get a caliper check, those are ok. Or you can get into a bod pod or a dexa scan. both are super cheap, precise, and accurate.
Which is cheap.
Particularly to get data that would allow the OP to form a better goal target, and implement a far more efficient plan than, I looked at my weight, but not other metrics, I need advice on how to change everything based on this one single factor that only tells a fraction of the overall story.
or, whatever.0 -
S_Evanson613 wrote: »I have no clue. I have not measure and don't know how to measure really.
You can get a caliper check, those are ok. Or you can get into a bod pod or a dexa scan. both are super cheap, precise, and accurate.
Which is cheap.
Particularly to get data that would allow the OP to form a better goal target, and implement a far more efficient plan than, I looked at my weight, but not other metrics, I need advice on how to change everything based on this one single factor that only tells a fraction of the overall story.
or, whatever.
I use a scale. I know that it is pretty inaccurate but it is inaccurate in the same way with consistency so I am able to see trends in my body composition although the numbers themselves aren't spot on. This is a less precise but more affordable option for the OP. Or she could buy a pair of calipers and do a 7 site test.
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S_Evanson613 wrote: »I have no clue. I have not measure and don't know how to measure really.
You can get a caliper check, those are ok. Or you can get into a bod pod or a dexa scan. both are super cheap, precise, and accurate.
Which is cheap.
Particularly to get data that would allow the OP to form a better goal target, and implement a far more efficient plan than, I looked at my weight, but not other metrics, I need advice on how to change everything based on this one single factor that only tells a fraction of the overall story.
or, whatever.
I agree in that it's a good tool, but if you wanted to go more often, I'd hope for a type of discount multi-use haha. #dutchcheapiehere
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My bod pod test was 7 bucks. Don't know how accurate it is but I liked what they said. Going to get it done again soon.0
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S_Evanson613 wrote: »I have no clue. I have not measure and don't know how to measure really.
You can get a caliper check, those are ok. Or you can get into a bod pod or a dexa scan. both are super cheap, precise, and accurate.
0 -
S_Evanson613 wrote: »So, OP wants more definition, and is wondering why she's not losing (and perhaps gaining) weight, and we are suggesting she increase cals?
What am I missing?
LOL, well i am open to all suggestions, but don't plan to up my cals just yet. Do you have a suggestion by chance? Should probably mention, that while I am looking for definition (not gaining muscle - well not yet in the journey anyway) I am still trying ot lose weight as well.
Well, first and foremost...
You said in your original post that your weight loss has stalled (or even gone up)... by how much? Over what period of time?
You also say you eat about 1200-1300 cals per day. How confident are you that you're eating that day in and day out for long stretches of time (several weeks)?
It has gone up about 4 lbs over a two week time. I weighed this morning and it was back to what it was 2 weeks ago (-4lbs) but who knows just how accurate they are with water retention and blah blah blah.
I never eat more than 1300 (and yes, i do weigh/measure everything including salt and pepper). I stick between 1100-1300 consistently (1100 is typically on the weekends when i sleep in longer so i dont eat as much) for about 6 weeks now.
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