A bit of help with intermittent fasting and weight lifting/exercising
FeebRyan
Posts: 738 Member
I exercise a lot, life is cardio and I work out during the week too.
I would like to do intermittent fasting again because it is a great way to lose weight and I need to lose about two stone really
My plan is to eat in a 4 hour window between 3/4pm - 8pm. Evenings will be difficult but I think I can manage.
Should I eat or drink something before/after weight training? A banana? A protein shake? or just stick with the eat nothing until that 3pm slot?
any advice would be great!
I would like to do intermittent fasting again because it is a great way to lose weight and I need to lose about two stone really
My plan is to eat in a 4 hour window between 3/4pm - 8pm. Evenings will be difficult but I think I can manage.
Should I eat or drink something before/after weight training? A banana? A protein shake? or just stick with the eat nothing until that 3pm slot?
any advice would be great!
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Replies
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CICO - doesn't matter when you eat your calories, as long as they are less than you burn. Whatever works for you. Just as it doesn't matter when you fill up your gas tank, the gasoline won't burn until you use it. You can fill it up a gallon a day or seven gallons a week. As long as you don't use all of the gallons, you're at a deficit.0
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I exercise a lot, life is cardio and I work out during the week too.
I would like to do intermittent fasting again because it is a great way to lose weight and I need to lose about two stone really
My plan is to eat in a 4 hour window between 3/4pm - 8pm. Evenings will be difficult but I think I can manage.
Should I eat or drink something before/after weight training? A banana? A protein shake? or just stick with the eat nothing until that 3pm slot?
It's up to you, and how your body feels. I do workouts in the morning, fasted. Unless I know I'm going to be burning more than ~600 calories or so (eg going on a 10k run) - then I'll have half a banana or something similarly carb-y.
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atypicalsmith wrote: »CICO - doesn't matter when you eat your calories, as long as they are less than you burn.
IF increases the rate at which the body can metabolize stored fat, which allows for either easier adherence to caloric deficits, or creation of a larger deficit, which leads to more rapid weight loss without sacrificing safety.
It's not necessary, but for those who are comfortable with the eating pattern, there are weight loss benefits.
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I typed my work-out schedule in the IF forum so I will copy it here,
I think from what I've gathered, Having a whey-based shake before or after a work out is acceptable
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I am 5'6 and 90kgs
I've had great successes with 5:2 but havent been doing this for some time
am planning on starting warrior diet tomorrow, I train a lot
Mondays PT session + spin session + 2hr MMA session and 7 mile school run
Tuesdays weights session and lots of cycling
Wednesdays spin and MMA
Thursdays active rest
Fridays PT session + spin + MMA
Saturdays active rest + weights and jog
Sunday rest
should I have a protein shake before I lift? Or simply follow the diet straight?
Thanks for your help :-)0 -
I workout in a fasted state....usually eat between 5 and 9. I will occasionally eat something small early afternoon if I feel like I need it. Otherwise just non caloric drinks all day.
You gotta do what feels right for you. IF shouldn't make you feel weak. If it does? Throw in a protein shake. Or a small snack. You just need to alter it to fit your needs!!0 -
atypicalsmith wrote: »CICO - doesn't matter when you eat your calories, as long as they are less than you burn.
IF increases the rate at which the body can metabolize stored fat, which allows for either easier adherence to caloric deficits, or creation of a larger deficit, which leads to more rapid weight loss without sacrificing safety.
It's not necessary, but for those who are comfortable with the eating pattern, there are weight loss benefits.
To answer the OP: Fasting isn't magic and doesn't create added weight loss. For that reason, having a protein outside your eating window won't really effect your fat loss results. Whether or not it effects your appetite will vary from person to person so we can't answer that for you. Training fasted then not eating anything for a while might not be the most optimal thing as far as lean mass retention, but it also probably won't make a huge difference in long term results. What you eat (macro nutrient totals for the day) are far, far more important than nutrient timing. Think of what you eat as the 95% and when you eat as the 5% of your results. Don't put all your efforts in to optimizing the 5%. Focus on what will allow you to optimize the 95%. You'll be better off in the long run if you do.
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atypicalsmith wrote: »CICO - doesn't matter when you eat your calories, as long as they are less than you burn.
IF increases the rate at which the body can metabolize stored fat, which allows for either easier adherence to caloric deficits, or creation of a larger deficit, which leads to more rapid weight loss without sacrificing safety.
It's not necessary, but for those who are comfortable with the eating pattern, there are weight loss benefits.
To answer the OP: Fasting isn't magic and doesn't create added weight loss. For that reason, having a protein outside your eating window won't really effect your fat loss results. Whether or not it effects your appetite will vary from person to person so we can't answer that for you. Training fasted then not eating anything for a while might not be the most optimal thing as far as lean mass retention, but it also probably won't make a huge difference in long term results. What you eat (macro nutrient totals for the day) are far, far more important than nutrient timing. Think of what you eat as the 95% and when you eat as the 5% of your results. Don't put all your efforts in to optimizing the 5%. Focus on what will allow you to optimize the 95%. You'll be better off in the long run if you do.
This strategy works for other stuff, too
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I'm not really interested in debates around IF, it has worked for me in the past and I would like to use it again.
I think by all accounts a protein shake before or after heavy training is acceptable0 -
mz_getskinny wrote: »I workout in a fasted state....usually eat between 5 and 9. I will occasionally eat something small early afternoon if I feel like I need it. Otherwise just non caloric drinks all day.
You gotta do what feels right for you. IF shouldn't make you feel weak. If it does? Throw in a protein shake. Or a small snack. You just need to alter it to fit your needs!!
Thanks, this is the plan :-)
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