I went from morbidly obese to 6 pack abs! Ask me Anything
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I don't ever get bored with squats, rows, deadlift and bench press. The progression of the weight is what keeps me going, not the novelty of the lift. Leg press is not exactly a good replacement for squat. Possibly something to be done in addition to squats, but not a replacement.Wow! What a long thread.
Sorry I did start reading from the first couple of pages, then started missing some pages and skipped through to the end/at the moment it's this page. I did watch the clip about working out cals, protein, fat and carbs - a few pages back - though. Will give that a go. I did C25k too and from that experience I love running/walking/doing anything cardio more than strength training. Yep I know, weights is important so I haven't neglected that part at all. I get bored with it though. I've tried to mix it up with increasing the weights (barbell) after each set, using hand weights, body weight, weight machine at the gym - like a leg press machine - instead of squats with a barbell, just to add some variety over the week when I'm doing my strength training. You recommend 5x5. I've looked at the You Tube clips for that. I will give that a go though, but have you ever gotten bored with your workout routine and what did you do to get yourself back on track or what did you change? 
Low weight/high rep is not ideal for a cut. Heavy weight with low reps is generally best. Heavy is subjective though. To me heavy means I can lift it around 5 times with good form. If I can't do that, I reduce the weight. Good form isn't really a condition of the number of reps you do. It's just as easy to let form slip on your last few reps of a set of 12 as it is to let it slip from the get go on a set of 3. My suggestion is to drop the weigh way down to where you are hitting all your reps with good form and to only increase weight if you can maintain that good form. I'd also consult your doctor and see what they think.Vismal,
I'm male, 40 years old, 6'1", and 250 lbs. I estimate I'm at 27% body fat. I've been lifting for a month and I began getting my food squared away about 2 months ago. My goal is body transformation, I want to get to 10% BF and be strong doing it. I'm making progress and frankly I'm pretty happy with how it's going. But, I got hurt while lifting and I'm nervous.
I've been following an ICF 5x5 program. I hurt my back with bad lifting form while doing stiff legged deadlifts. I visited my doctor and followed his recovery and I'm feeling better. I've spoken with a few trusted friends that lift and they're suggesting I stick with a lower weight/high rep routine to focus on learning form.
As I said, I trust these folks. I'd like your opinion on focusing on lower weight/high rep during my fat loss cut. I feel that while less efficient in terms of muscle gains, it may be smarter as a beginner to be dealing with weights that I can handle with best form.
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Natural sources such as wheat bran, vegetables, whole wheat breads/pasta, fruits, and beans are a good place to start. If that isn't enough, any product made by fiber-one should have a lot. Certain protein bars also contain a good deal of fiber.I have such a hard time with fiber, I want to eat it but am having trouble finding things I will actually eat DAILY. I'm not a fan of mixing it up in a glass and drinking it either. What do you do for consistant daily consumption that would be sustainable?
I usually train when I wake up so I'm not much help here.lucytyrrell15 wrote: »Thanks for sharing, very inspiring. How do you find the energy to train after a crazy busy day?
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I have a question. I started working out April 1, and my goal is to work out 5x a week. Cardio 5 days and Weight Lifting 4 days( upper body mon & wed and lower body on tue and thur). Im a female and dont want to look to bulky. I need to lose about 50 pounds. Do you think I have a good plan? My goal when doing cardio is to burn 500 calories0
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How long did it take yu0
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It all depends on diet. IF your goal is weight loss, diet will be the single most important factor. Your exercise regime is fine but if your diet doesn't compliment that regime, you will not achieve your goal.I have a question. I started working out April 1, and my goal is to work out 5x a week. Cardio 5 days and Weight Lifting 4 days( upper body mon & wed and lower body on tue and thur). Im a female and dont want to look to bulky. I need to lose about 50 pounds. Do you think I have a good plan? My goal when doing cardio is to burn 500 calories
The dates are all on the original picture from the very first post.koko1991carrillo wrote: »How long did it take yu
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Awesome progress0
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My question is if I have two beers everyday can I still lose body fat0
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Hello. Great job man. I have a question as well. I just started my weight loss journey and need to lose about 150-200lbs. I know this is a slow process and I am prepared for that. My question is do you have any tips for a newbie like myself?
Currenlty, I am doing a combo of lifting in 3 day splits with cardio 2 days. My cardio consists of the treadmill and I have worked my way up to running, albiet only for a few minutes at a time. I have also gotten a food scale and track my food daily making sure to stay under calories.
Any other tips you can provide?0 -
Great job. You look amazing.0
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Absolutely. The beers aren't special. They are just liquids that contain calories. Account for those calories and remain in a deficit. If you do, you will still lose weight.alberticko253 wrote: »My question is if I have two beers everyday can I still lose body fat
You are doing the two most important things, dieting and exercising. Furthermore, your are weighing you food on a scale. This is literally all you'll ever need to do. Weighing your food to ensure accuracy is always my number one tip to anyone. Now it's just a matter of consistency and time.nescastanon wrote: »Hello. Great job man. I have a question as well. I just started my weight loss journey and need to lose about 150-200lbs. I know this is a slow process and I am prepared for that. My question is do you have any tips for a newbie like myself?
Currenlty, I am doing a combo of lifting in 3 day splits with cardio 2 days. My cardio consists of the treadmill and I have worked my way up to running, albiet only for a few minutes at a time. I have also gotten a food scale and track my food daily making sure to stay under calories.
Any other tips you can provide?
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I have begun the novice ICF 5x5 programme 4 weeks ago, making steady progress on all the exercises so far. I am eating at a calorie surplus of 200 calories, measuring my food etc on digital scales and tracking it on MFP every day. I ensure I am hitting my macro goals and hit my TDEE at least and usually hit my surplus most days.
My stats are 180 cm, current weight is 73.7kg.
Overall I am not looking to lose or gain weight particularly, I am looking to increase muscle and by definition also then lose fat.
I plan to 'bulk' for 3 months with 200 calorie surplus and then 'cut' at a 200 calorie deficit for 2 months. And continue that cycle if effective for at least 12 months.
With your expertise and first hand experience, would you say I'm on the right path?
love reading your posts, absolute legend0 -
did you have the excess skin problem ? how did you deal with it ?0
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congratulations on your success.
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What are your workouts like? I'm doing 3-4 days of work outs treadmill and elliptical0
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orangbatak wrote: »For the first 3 months, how many calories were you consuming a day?
During the same time for fitness, did you focus more on cardio or resistance?
Any issue with loose skin? Did you get surgery done?
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While bulking on 200 calories is appropriate, because you want the surplus small to avoid fat gains, cutting on a 200 calorie deficit is too conservative. I usually recommend people start with a 500 calorie deficit and adjust based on results. A 200 calorie deficit will only net around 1 lb lost every 3.5 weeks. That's pretty slow.I have begun the novice ICF 5x5 programme 4 weeks ago, making steady progress on all the exercises so far. I am eating at a calorie surplus of 200 calories, measuring my food etc on digital scales and tracking it on MFP every day. I ensure I am hitting my macro goals and hit my TDEE at least and usually hit my surplus most days.
My stats are 180 cm, current weight is 73.7kg.
Overall I am not looking to lose or gain weight particularly, I am looking to increase muscle and by definition also then lose fat.
I plan to 'bulk' for 3 months with 200 calorie surplus and then 'cut' at a 200 calorie deficit for 2 months. And continue that cycle if effective for at least 12 months.
With your expertise and first hand experience, would you say I'm on the right path?
love reading your posts, absolute legend
Read back a few pages. I've answered this question probably 5 times and posted a video on the topic within this thread.joeseph166 wrote: »did you have the excess skin problem ? how did you deal with it ?
I am currently doing Jonnie Candito's 6 week strength training program.blessingsldc wrote: »What are your workouts like? I'm doing 3-4 days of work outs treadmill and elliptical
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Hard work pays off, you're proof of that. Good job!0
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Toning doesn't exist. You cannot tone a muscle. Muscles can do 2 things, get bigger or get smaller. The toned look is achieved by having a moderate muscular base with low body fat. My advice to you would be drop resistance band training for a dumbbell/barbell routine. As for loose skin, sometimes there's no way to prevent it. It will get better with time. Its 10x better/healthier to have loose skin and be fit then be fat IMONice work.
Just starting on the same journey with the same weight to lose. Lose skin is the thing I dread the most. It will be such a turn off to have it hanging there.
I'm doing cardio and resistance bands for the weights. Trying to lose and tone at the same time. Fingers crossed.
Thank you. You just covered a very important subject for me. Now I know there's no such thing as toning which is what I want to do. And weight lifting is better than resistance bands. I will keep this in mind and will start lifting. You look super great and hopefully I can do the same
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Wow! You have worked so hard, amazing transformation
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hi Vismal - thanks for all the wisdom. I really like your notes on the IIFIYM technique...but do you have any thoughts "Gary Taubes, Why We Get Fat: And What to Do About It", where in part he says the below (the part that confuses me is that he seems to be saying we should all go super low carb....but that isn't in keeping w/ IIFYM right...ie, you say that other than needing a minimum level of Fats and Protein, the rest can be anything .... so basically calories in vs calories out?):
“Of all the dangerous ideas that health officials could have embraced while trying to understand why we get fat, they would have been hard-pressed to find one ultimately more damaging than calories-in/calories-out. That it reinforces what appears to be so obvious - obesity as the penalty for gluttony and sloth - is what makes it so alluring. But it's misleading and misconceived on so many levels that it's hard to imagine how it survived unscathed and virtually unchallenged for the last fifty years.
It has done incalculable harm. Not only is this thinking at least partly responsible for the ever-growing numbers of obese and overweight in the world - while directing attention away from the real reasons we get fat - but it has served to reinforce the perception that those who get fat have no one to blame but themselves. That eating less invariably fails as a cure for obesity is rarely perceived as the single most important reason to make us question our assumptions, as Hilde Bruch suggested half a century ago. Rather, it is taken as still more evidence that the overweight and obese are incapable of following a diet and eating in moderation. And it put the blame for their physical condition squarely on their behavior, which couldn't be further from the truth.”
― Gary Taubes, Why We Get Fat: And What to Do About It0 -
Did you clean up your diet entirely? Meaning do you ever eat pizza or ice cream? Is it a super strict diet or are you pretty balanced and flexible?0
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Taubes is wrong. That's not my opinion, that's a fact. He says that calories in vs calories out (CICO) is not why people are obese. It is. It absolutely is. People are eating more (calories) and moving less than any other time in history. Taubes like to point to food choices as the culprit. He is very anti sugar. Now don't get me wrong, certain foods are created to make you overeat. Foods today are hyper-palatable. A serving size of Dorritos is 11 chips, yet the food is designed to make you want to eat much more than that. There are countless other examples. Delicious, high calorie, and not very high in "nutrition". One could say these foods are "to blame" and they are partly right. It doesn't negate calories in vs calories out though. This is where Taubes is wrong. It goes right along with CICO.rocket_ace wrote: »hi Vismal - thanks for all the wisdom. I really like your notes on the IIFIYM technique...but do you have any thoughts "Gary Taubes, Why We Get Fat: And What to Do About It", where in part he says the below (the part that confuses me is that he seems to be saying we should all go super low carb....but that isn't in keeping w/ IIFYM right...ie, you say that other than needing a minimum level of Fats and Protein, the rest can be anything .... so basically calories in vs calories out?):
“Of all the dangerous ideas that health officials could have embraced while trying to understand why we get fat, they would have been hard-pressed to find one ultimately more damaging than calories-in/calories-out. That it reinforces what appears to be so obvious - obesity as the penalty for gluttony and sloth - is what makes it so alluring. But it's misleading and misconceived on so many levels that it's hard to imagine how it survived unscathed and virtually unchallenged for the last fifty years.
It has done incalculable harm. Not only is this thinking at least partly responsible for the ever-growing numbers of obese and overweight in the world - while directing attention away from the real reasons we get fat - but it has served to reinforce the perception that those who get fat have no one to blame but themselves. That eating less invariably fails as a cure for obesity is rarely perceived as the single most important reason to make us question our assumptions, as Hilde Bruch suggested half a century ago. Rather, it is taken as still more evidence that the overweight and obese are incapable of following a diet and eating in moderation. And it put the blame for their physical condition squarely on their behavior, which couldn't be further from the truth.”
― Gary Taubes, Why We Get Fat: And What to Do About It
Mindlessly eating tons of high sugar, minimally nutritious, foods is a very easy way to let calories in get out of hand. Combine that with an all to common desk job and you have a recipe for obesity. Food choices will always matter, but they only matter in the context of CICO. If you have the discipline to actually portion out Dorritos, weigh them on a scale, and eat few enough of them to fit your calorie goals, they are not going to be a problem. You can do this with any high calorie, minimally nutritious food. After you do this long enough you learn a few things. The most important is that those minimally nutritious foods need to be a minority of your diet and things like lean meats, vegetables, fruits, and whole grains need to dominate your diet. Why? It's the only way to stay full! Now 11 dorritos for 150 calories might be something I can work in to my diet, but if hunger is an issue, are 11 dorritos or a full lb of broccoli (also 150 calories) going to be the best choice. This is where IIFYM shines. Anyone who achieves long term success with it will eventually realize that the majority of your diet must come from minimally processed, whole, foods. If it doesn't, you will probably be too hungry to adhere to the diet in the first place.
There are no foods I do not eat. I will work in what I want in moderation on a daily basis.nancyjay__ wrote: »Did you clean up your diet entirely? Meaning do you ever eat pizza or ice cream? Is it a super strict diet or are you pretty balanced and flexible?
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1. Myfitnesspal of course. It wasn't until I began tracking my intake that my success really started to take offCongratulations, that's an amazing transformation. What do you think are the top 5 things that led to your success?
2. Understanding that "eating clean" is meaningless and that in order to have true life long success I had to eat foods I enjoyed (ice cream, cookies, etc) on a regular basis but in moderation
3. Lifting heavy weights
4. Not listening when people say "you lost enough already" or "you are getting too skinny"
5. Learning as much about the science behind nutrition and dieting as possible. There is more pseudoscience and myths in this field then any other on earth! So much BS to cut through to find the truth.
Excellent answers! Love this whole thread btw
Congratulations on your success and great job for sticking to it and having such dedication! 0 -
Looking amazing I've been using MFP for 8 months lost four stone , gained 7 pounds back as got fed up of staying the same
Wow your weight loss not only that more to your fitness levels I want to start running training because I now think it's so much more to keep fit
How do you keep motivated and Amy tips on diet please0 -
I am ready for a book, with all of this info in one place. I have read this entire thread and watched some of your videos. It's on point and I love reading your replies to questions here. Congratulations on all of your success!0
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I starting lifting maybe 6 months into my weight loss. Originally it was just diet and running. I wish I would have started lifting from the get go though. That would be what I consider my number 1 mistake. As for the type of lifting, I did it wrong at first by doing a typical "bro split" where you do a body part a day with high reps and low weight. I later switched to 5x5 training which is what I would have started with day 1 if I had to go back and do it again. I currently do a upper/lower 4 day a week split for intermediate lifters.
What were your workouts like? How many minutes did you run?0 -
Question.. As a women starting my weight loss journey. I want to get toned I'm 244 lbs would it be wise for a women to do the 5X5 PROGRAM? I do not want to bulk up from lifting weight but also do not want hangy skin..0
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That's great, I have been trying to live a healthier life style myself. I quit drinking pop about a month ago and that huge for me considering that was the only thing I drank. I finally signed up for the gym been doing 30 min cardo and about 30 min weights. I feel like I'm not getting results as of yet but I know it takes time any suggestions you can give me to help me get the results I want?0
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Woooa im impressed and amazed by your transfomation and hard work you put on. You have my highest respect and gratitude0
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Please add me!0
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