Q&A Thread for June

SideSteel
SideSteel Posts: 11,068 Member
Hey everyone!

If you have any questions for Sara or for me, please post them in this thread.

Thanks everyone!
«134

Replies

  • PeachyCarol
    PeachyCarol Posts: 8,029 Member
    I'll start with an annoying noob question. I have medical problems and do work with a trainer. I am very slowly progressing. I'm still working with dumbbells.

    Anyway, I have some issues with my squats. My knees keep wanting to turn in.

    What muscles are weak/need more mobility that they want to do this, and what exercises can I do to help out this problem?
  • Sarauk2sf
    Sarauk2sf Posts: 28,072 Member
    ABC.....
  • SideSteel
    SideSteel Posts: 11,068 Member
    edited June 2015
    I'll start with an annoying noob question. I have medical problems and do work with a trainer. I am very slowly progressing. I'm still working with dumbbells.

    Anyway, I have some issues with my squats. My knees keep wanting to turn in.

    What muscles are weak/need more mobility that they want to do this, and what exercises can I do to help out this problem?

    Generally speaking it could be weak glutes. If your trainer is NASM certified and also follows NASM procedures he or she may also think that it could be caused from tight opposing musculature (adductor complex, etc) but on a personal note I don't quite buy into that theory in general.

    I'm going to link something from Bret Contreras on this because I think it's a good article but I'm also going to point to one possibility that could exist, and that could be that you just don't know how to properly keep your knees out. Sounds silly when I say it but in my experience a lot of times it has less to do with proper strengthening of muscle groups and even less so to do with over-active opposing muscles and more to do with teaching someone how to squat.

    My favorite tool for this is to just take a light resistance band or loop and place it around the knee area and squat with the band on with either body-weight or a very light load. The band will force the knees inward and you will then have to forcefully drive the knees out against the band.

    Now you could make a logical argument that this strengthens the muscles responsible for hip abduction and it probably does, but in some people this works so fast that I don't quite buy into it being a strength issue. This will cue you to drive the knees out.

    At any rate, see here for a more detailed explanation and some additional fixes:

    http://bretcontreras.com/knee-valgus-valgus-collapse-glute-medius-strengthening-band-hip-abduction-exercises-and-ankle-dorsiflexion-drills/


    EDIT: When I make that little knock on the NASM theory I'm specifically referring to the idea that tight opposing musculature is responsible and should be foam rolled and static stretched. Ankle mobility issues can definitely be problematic as Bret points out in the above article.
  • PeachyCarol
    PeachyCarol Posts: 8,029 Member
    SideSteel wrote: »
    I'll start with an annoying noob question. I have medical problems and do work with a trainer. I am very slowly progressing. I'm still working with dumbbells.

    Anyway, I have some issues with my squats. My knees keep wanting to turn in.

    What muscles are weak/need more mobility that they want to do this, and what exercises can I do to help out this problem?

    Generally speaking it could be weak glutes. If your trainer is NASM certified and also follows NASM procedures he or she may also think that it could be caused from tight opposing musculature (adductor complex, etc) but on a personal note I don't quite buy into that theory in general.

    I'm going to link something from Bret Contreras on this because I think it's a good article but I'm also going to point to one possibility that could exist, and that could be that you just don't know how to properly keep your knees out. Sounds silly when I say it but in my experience a lot of times it has less to do with proper strengthening of muscle groups and even less so to do with over-active opposing muscles and more to do with teaching someone how to squat.

    My favorite tool for this is to just take a light resistance band or loop and place it around the knee area and squat with the band on with either body-weight or a very light load. The band will force the knees inward and you will then have to forcefully drive the knees out against the band.

    Now you could make a logical argument that this strengthens the muscles responsible for hip abduction and it probably does, but in some people this works so fast that I don't quite buy into it being a strength issue. This will cue you to drive the knees out.

    At any rate, see here for a more detailed explanation and some additional fixes:

    http://bretcontreras.com/knee-valgus-valgus-collapse-glute-medius-strengthening-band-hip-abduction-exercises-and-ankle-dorsiflexion-drills/

    Thank you! Yes, he's NASM and does think it's my abductors, but I didn't think it was the case.

    After reading the link, I now know what my problem is -- my ankles. I broke one a couple years back and it's still pretty tight. I couldn't do the box squat without my knee turning in either. I'll do the drills he recommends to get more mobility.

    Thanks!

  • SideSteel
    SideSteel Posts: 11,068 Member
    SideSteel wrote: »
    I'll start with an annoying noob question. I have medical problems and do work with a trainer. I am very slowly progressing. I'm still working with dumbbells.

    Anyway, I have some issues with my squats. My knees keep wanting to turn in.

    What muscles are weak/need more mobility that they want to do this, and what exercises can I do to help out this problem?

    Generally speaking it could be weak glutes. If your trainer is NASM certified and also follows NASM procedures he or she may also think that it could be caused from tight opposing musculature (adductor complex, etc) but on a personal note I don't quite buy into that theory in general.

    I'm going to link something from Bret Contreras on this because I think it's a good article but I'm also going to point to one possibility that could exist, and that could be that you just don't know how to properly keep your knees out. Sounds silly when I say it but in my experience a lot of times it has less to do with proper strengthening of muscle groups and even less so to do with over-active opposing muscles and more to do with teaching someone how to squat.

    My favorite tool for this is to just take a light resistance band or loop and place it around the knee area and squat with the band on with either body-weight or a very light load. The band will force the knees inward and you will then have to forcefully drive the knees out against the band.

    Now you could make a logical argument that this strengthens the muscles responsible for hip abduction and it probably does, but in some people this works so fast that I don't quite buy into it being a strength issue. This will cue you to drive the knees out.

    At any rate, see here for a more detailed explanation and some additional fixes:

    http://bretcontreras.com/knee-valgus-valgus-collapse-glute-medius-strengthening-band-hip-abduction-exercises-and-ankle-dorsiflexion-drills/

    Thank you! Yes, he's NASM and does think it's my abductors, but I didn't think it was the case.

    After reading the link, I now know what my problem is -- my ankles. I broke one a couple years back and it's still pretty tight. I couldn't do the box squat without my knee turning in either. I'll do the drills he recommends to get more mobility.

    Thanks!

    It could be weak abductors but I doubt it's tight/overactive adductors.

    Try the ankle mobility drills, try elevating your heels slightly (squat shoes would be ideal but you could stand with heels on 5lb plates as an experiment), try the banded squats.

    If it's a cueing issue/motor pattern issue the banded squats will likely improve it rather fast. If it's ankle dorsiflexion depending on the severity you may see improvement immediately when you elevate the heel so at least these two things would give you relatively quick feedback and you could go from there.

  • celticlass69
    celticlass69 Posts: 61 Member
    Ok, I've been doing fairly well so far. However, lately I think I need to change what I'm doing. Perhaps as suggested earlier focus on toning. I have previous back and neck work injuries, and mva injuries. So perhaps you could suggest how I go about this? Also, I've got my calorie limit at 1320 should I raise it?
  • andylllI
    andylllI Posts: 379 Member
    I'm having a problem with a very tight t-spine and tight shoulders. The t-spine limits my squat depth and really starts to ache after about 5 reps. I do some mobility work during warm up and stretch it between sets and then roll it nightly and use a tennis ball for self-massage. The pain is pretty much located around the medial edge of my scapulae and the R is much much worse than the left. Anything else I can do? Any good mobility drills? Or assistance strengthening exercises? My job has me at a desk about 1x every two weeks for the day and at the end of that, sitting and typing for the day I can barely sleep it hurts so much...the two pregnancies and months spent carrying a baby in front of my body with rounded shoulders didn't help either. With respect to my shoulders...it might also be t-spine mobility but I can't do an overhead squat. Not even with a broom handle. I have to lean forward. Elevating my heels helps somewhat.
  • SideSteel
    SideSteel Posts: 11,068 Member
    edited June 2015
    Ok, I've been doing fairly well so far. However, lately I think I need to change what I'm doing. Perhaps as suggested earlier focus on toning. I have previous back and neck work injuries, and mva injuries. So perhaps you could suggest how I go about this? Also, I've got my calorie limit at 1320 should I raise it?

    Okay, first of all I am using voice recognition software to post this message from my iPhone. So forgive me if there's some strange grammatical errors, or words that don't seem right.

    First I would ask you why you need to change what you're doing if what you're doing seems to be working?

    Granted, I'm all for making improvements but if you feel like you're making progress and the progress is sustainable, then rock on.

    As far as raising your calorie intake, that something that would require some in-depth digging to really determine but The short answer is this: be accurate with your logging, and observe the results at a given calorie intake.

    So for example if you're feeling very hungry and food focused you can always add some calories and give it a couple of weeks and see what happens. Just make sure that you are monitoring the results and adjusting accordingly.

    As far as the injuries go, that's something that's really beyond the scope of personal training as it goes into physical therapy/rehab.

    The best answer I could give you would be to train around injuries rather than training through them. So if an exercise hurts an injured area, I would choose a different exercise.
  • ncboiler89
    ncboiler89 Posts: 2,408 Member
    Does *kitten* really cause blindness? I'll hang up now so that I can hear your answer.

    In your response can you please tell me what you are wearing?
  • arditarose
    arditarose Posts: 15,573 Member
    Hi, wondering if you could help me with my programming a little. The thing I'm struggling with now is how to make sure I'm adding weight appropriately every week. I used to do 5/3/1, so I just followed those calculations, and if I stalled I'd run the cycle at the same weight again. Now I'm doing PHUL and feel like I'm just adding weight/reps willy nilly when it comes to my compound lifts. That made me anxious so I went back to doing 5/3/1 for bench, squat, and deadlift just to have some structure.

    Am I over thinking this?
  • SideSteel
    SideSteel Posts: 11,068 Member
    ncboiler89 wrote: »
    Does *kitten* really cause blindness? I'll hang up now so that I can hear your answer.

    In your response can you please tell me what you are wearing?

    Could somebody please read this to me? I can't see.
  • SideSteel
    SideSteel Posts: 11,068 Member
    arditarose wrote: »
    Hi, wondering if you could help me with my programming a little. The thing I'm struggling with now is how to make sure I'm adding weight appropriately every week. I used to do 5/3/1, so I just followed those calculations, and if I stalled I'd run the cycle at the same weight again. Now I'm doing PHUL and feel like I'm just adding weight/reps willy nilly when it comes to my compound lifts. That made me anxious so I went back to doing 5/3/1 for bench, squat, and deadlift just to have some structure.

    Am I over thinking this?


    This is a good post and I think a lot of people are in a similar situation to you where they are just not sure quite how to follow progression when it comes to programming.

    How fast you can progress tends to be proportionate to training experience in that less experienced trainees can progress faster than more experienced trainees. Now there are probably going to be exceptions to this but for example it's feasible for someone relatively new to add 100-200lbs to a deadlift in a year whereas an advanced lifter isn't likely to get anywhere near that under normal circumstances.

    So no I don't think you're over-thinking anything.

    One thing I would look at would be whether your program is designed to increase total volume over several weeks.

    I have a bit more to say about this but my daughter is getting pissed at me. lol.
  • SideSteel
    SideSteel Posts: 11,068 Member
    I'll write a bit more later, just fyi :)
  • DopeItUp
    DopeItUp Posts: 18,771 Member
    SideSteel wrote: »
    ncboiler89 wrote: »
    Does *kitten* really cause blindness? I'll hang up now so that I can hear your answer.

    In your response can you please tell me what you are wearing?

    Could somebody please read this to me? I can't see.

    *spits out poptarts*
  • SideSteel
    SideSteel Posts: 11,068 Member
    edited June 2015
    SideSteel wrote: »
    arditarose wrote: »
    Hi, wondering if you could help me with my programming a little. The thing I'm struggling with now is how to make sure I'm adding weight appropriately every week. I used to do 5/3/1, so I just followed those calculations, and if I stalled I'd run the cycle at the same weight again. Now I'm doing PHUL and feel like I'm just adding weight/reps willy nilly when it comes to my compound lifts. That made me anxious so I went back to doing 5/3/1 for bench, squat, and deadlift just to have some structure.

    Am I over thinking this?


    This is a good post and I think a lot of people are in a similar situation to you where they are just not sure quite how to follow progression when it comes to programming.

    How fast you can progress tends to be proportionate to training experience in that less experienced trainees can progress faster than more experienced trainees. Now there are probably going to be exceptions to this but for example it's feasible for someone relatively new to add 100-200lbs to a deadlift in a year whereas an advanced lifter isn't likely to get anywhere near that under normal circumstances.

    So no I don't think you're over-thinking anything.

    One thing I would look at would be whether your program is designed to increase total volume over several weeks.

    I have a bit more to say about this but my daughter is getting pissed at me. lol.

    Ok so in addition to above and to attempt to possibly provide you with a bit more direction you could consider something like the following but keep in mind that there's plenty of ways to handle progression but they all revolve around increasing volume over time which usually means increasing weight on the bar at some point but not necessarily weekly.

    For example one thing you could do would be to follow something like 5/3/1 for the main lifts and add 1 rep per week on accessory movements, such as 3x8, 3x9,3x10 followed by a weight increase on week 4 and repeat.

    If you wanted to lay out 5/3/1 in an upper lower format I would consider the following and I'll simply denote "main" as the 5/3/1 calculated movement and "assist" as a separately progressed movement following the main.

    Bench Main
    BB OHP Assist
    Upper press accessory
    Upper Pull accessory
    Arm accessory

    Squat Main
    Deadlift Assist
    Lower Quad Accessory
    Lower Glute Accessory
    Calves

    OHP Main
    Bench Assist
    Upper Press accessory
    Upper Pull accessory
    Arm/Core accessory

    Deadlift Main
    Squat Assist
    Lower Ham accessory
    Lower Glute accessory
    Unilateral accessory

    And then generally speaking you could handle all the accessory movements somewhere between 8-15 reps and try to add 1 rep per week per session until you reach the top end range of the movement and then increase weight by the smallest increment and move to the lower end of the range.


    For Assist movements one thing I've experimented with that makes sense theoretically (I've had one client run it) is to run the assists in a %rm fashion but follow an intensity progression similar to 5/3/1 so that on 5/5/5 week the assist is slightly higher volume and lower % rm, and as you progress through the weeks (3/3/3, 5/3/1) the %rm on the assist goes up and the volume goes down.

    I believe I had it set up something like this but I'd have to go check my client sheet to confirm:

    5/5/5 week 65% 3-4x10-12
    3/3/3 week 70% 3-4x8-10
    5/3/1 week 75% 3-4x6-8

    Then as the main movement goes up every 4th week as it does in 5/3/1, the assist movement also goes up, and each week you're proportionately following a periodization scheme rather loosely in that as volume goes down, intensity goes up.

    Anyway there's plenty of ways to do it but the above should give you a rough idea.
  • nossmf
    nossmf Posts: 11,533 Member
    My right front delt has been painful for a day or so now. Not sure how it happened; I lifted OHP back on Friday for the first time in a few weeks, I figure it's a contributing factor, but my shoulder didn't begin to hurt until Sunday night. Specifically, I have full range of motion if I move slowly, and I can move my arm out in a lateral raise move easily enough, but if I try to move forward quickly there's a sharp pain which lasts for a split second. In addition, keeping my elbow to my ribs while twisting out is a trifle problematic.

    I figure on taking this week off from the gym entirely, see if that'll clear things up. Rather annoying, since lifting is one of my primary methods of stress relief.

    I know you guys aren't doctors, but do you think what I describe could be from my lifting? I.e. sharp pain when move quickly, but dull pain or none at all if move slowly?
  • SideSteel
    SideSteel Posts: 11,068 Member
    nossmf wrote: »
    My right front delt has been painful for a day or so now. Not sure how it happened; I lifted OHP back on Friday for the first time in a few weeks, I figure it's a contributing factor, but my shoulder didn't begin to hurt until Sunday night. Specifically, I have full range of motion if I move slowly, and I can move my arm out in a lateral raise move easily enough, but if I try to move forward quickly there's a sharp pain which lasts for a split second. In addition, keeping my elbow to my ribs while twisting out is a trifle problematic.

    I figure on taking this week off from the gym entirely, see if that'll clear things up. Rather annoying, since lifting is one of my primary methods of stress relief.

    I know you guys aren't doctors, but do you think what I describe could be from my lifting? I.e. sharp pain when move quickly, but dull pain or none at all if move slowly?

    I would tend to think that if you injured something during a lift it would show symptoms before 48 hours post training but that's entirely opinion on my part and obviously I'm not a physical therapist/etc.


    If I were you I would avoid any movements that cause pain either during or shortly after.
  • celticlass69
    celticlass69 Posts: 61 Member
    I started this journey in Dec 2014. Fairly consistent weight loss for the first 20 lbs. I've been hitting a wall lately, ie. a bit of plateauing for the last 2 months, will go weeks without change, then I'll loose a couple of pounds. So that is why I think I need to change things up. Plus, I want to tone up this flab I have. So should I do so many cardio, so many weight sessions a week? I know that at least 20 mins is good.
  • SideSteel
    SideSteel Posts: 11,068 Member
    I started this journey in Dec 2014. Fairly consistent weight loss for the first 20 lbs. I've been hitting a wall lately, ie. a bit of plateauing for the last 2 months, will go weeks without change, then I'll loose a couple of pounds. So that is why I think I need to change things up. Plus, I want to tone up this flab I have. So should I do so many cardio, so many weight sessions a week? I know that at least 20 mins is good.

    What have you been doing while you lost that 20lbs and are you using a food scale?

    Variety is fine for entertainment purposes and it's also okay to add activity to try and increase the deficit, but I'm a big fan of not fixing things that aren't broken. If you are still losing (even if it's in steps as you describe) then you don't need an overhaul.

    Regarding exercise there's many ways to do it but if I were to generalize it, 2-4 days/week will cover most people. Really depends on how you set that up.
  • LMJ1525
    LMJ1525 Posts: 3 Member
    edited June 2015
    This is a Noob question too. I have read through a number of the beginner files, and played with some of the calculators, but I am stills struggling with where to set my calories. I am 152lb, I would like to get down to about 130-135. I would say I am lightly active - though I also use a fitbit and get in about 10000 steps per day (at least, more on running days). Right now I am lifting 3x per week, and running or doing cardio 2-3x per week. I am also EBF, which I think is where the wrench gets thrown it for me.
    MFP says I should be eating 1500 per week for 1lb per week weight loss. I had previously been using that calculation, but eating back some of my exercise calories, which typically had me eating on average 1800 cals per day. I have tried the other calculators listed, and it comes out to about 1800 calories. I don't know then if I should eat 1800 + calories from EBF, or 1500 + exercise cals + ebf cals. I have been losing, but I don't want to be eating too little.

    Do you have any further guidance on this? Or would you recommend sticking with a certain number for a few weeks and monitoring how it goes?

    Thanks!
  • SideSteel
    SideSteel Posts: 11,068 Member
    zzia15 wrote: »
    This is a Noob question too. I have read through a number of the beginner files, and played with some of the calculators, but I am stills struggling with where to set my calories. I am 152lb, I would like to get down to about 130-135. I would say I am lightly active - though I also use a fitbit and get in about 10000 steps per day (at least, more on running days). Right now I am lifting 3x per week, and running or doing cardio 2-3x per week. I am also EBF, which I think is where the wrench gets thrown it for me.
    MFP says I should be eating 1500 per week for 1lb per week weight loss. I had previously been using that calculation, but eating back some of my exercise calories, which typically had me eating on average 1800 cals per day. I have tried the other calculators listed, and it comes out to about 1800 calories. I don't know then if I should eat 1800 + calories from EBF, or 1500 + exercise cals + ebf cals. I have been losing, but I don't want to be eating too little.

    Do you have any further guidance on this? Or would you recommend sticking with a certain number for a few weeks and monitoring how it goes?

    Thanks!

    I would start by erring on the side of additional calories given EBF even if that means slowing down your weight loss temporarily. Beyond that though I would observe your results and use rate of loss to dictate which direction to bring calories.

    I know that's a horrendously vague answer on my part.
  • LMJ1525
    LMJ1525 Posts: 3 Member
    Haha, no worries. I appreciate you taking time to respond. I haven't come up with anything better!
  • Lisa1971
    Lisa1971 Posts: 3,069 Member
    Ok, stupid question here.....I lost 70lbs in 2011 while doing medifast. Once I went off that crazy diet I of course, gained it all back. Now I want to lose it again but I want to do it healthy. Why is it SO hard this time around? The weight is barely coming off if at all and some weeks I gain when I've been under my calorie goal! I'm frustrated! Any advice for me? I'm NOT going back to medifast because I believe that screwed up my metabolism. Is it really harder losing weight the 2nd time around? Thanks so much!
  • SideSteel
    SideSteel Posts: 11,068 Member
    Lisa1971 wrote: »
    Ok, stupid question here.....I lost 70lbs in 2011 while doing medifast. Once I went off that crazy diet I of course, gained it all back. Now I want to lose it again but I want to do it healthy. Why is it SO hard this time around? The weight is barely coming off if at all and some weeks I gain when I've been under my calorie goal! I'm frustrated! Any advice for me? I'm NOT going back to medifast because I believe that screwed up my metabolism. Is it really harder losing weight the 2nd time around? Thanks so much!

    It's very likely that the difference is that your energy intake was much lower while on Medifast, and now that you're eating food and tracking your deficit isn't as large.

    If you don't mind tracking I think the best thing you could do for now would be track accurately and focus on eating mostly whole and nutrient dense foods.
  • SideSteel
    SideSteel Posts: 11,068 Member
    Also Lisa, that's not a stupid question. Please feel welcome to ask anything you like.
  • Sued0nim
    Sued0nim Posts: 17,456 Member
    Boring Protein macro question .. sorry

    But I go from pillar to post with this one ..
    rabbitjb wrote: »

    I read a month or so back that protein macros should be set at 0.64 - 0.82 g P per lb of bodyweight based on studies on a range of different athletes .. there would be no harm in exceeding but there was no further benefit .. I believe the 0.82 per lb bodyweight was for serious bodybuilder types

    Link from heybales http://bayesianbodybuilding.com/the-myth-of-1glb-optimal-protein-intake-for-bodybuilders/
    Lyle McDonald, and his book based on over 500 references, recommends 1.1 - 1.4g per pound for men. Alan Aragon is in the same ballpark, depending on the size of the person involved and whether the goal is gaining or losing (1g per pound of target bodyweight).

    I guess, like most questions like this, opinion is divided.

    Your opinion would be appreciated

    We're talking about normal (wo)man in the street, not pro bodybuilders,

    I'm 158lb and try to hit around 100g protein as a minimum and lift 3 x a week which fits with the first recommendation but not the second (possibly on recomp at maintenance but not overly concerned as I'm happy just keeping on keeping on)
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  • SideSteel
    SideSteel Posts: 11,068 Member
    I'm currently on the 6th week of my first bulk. I started a 5x5 workout off of bodybuilding.com that seems to be working pretty well. I've been eating a moderate surplus and it seems that I have gained roughly around just under 1 pound a week. I want to get to about 205lbs and then cut. I know I could probably run this 5x5 program forever. The way that the program is set up, is that it increases most of the weight by 12.5% each week. I know my strength gains are eventually going to plateau. My question is, when that time comes, should I experiment and just try to gain something each week? Is there a set percentage I should try? Or would you recommend trying another program entirely? Thank you for your time.

    Anytime you stall on a lift the solution to that tends to depend on why you are stalling.

    But generally speaking on a 5x5 program or any program with an aggressive linear addition of weight I would first suggest doing a deload where you drop the weight down on any stalled lift by about 10% and then ramp back up to see if the next time you hit the previously stalled weight, you are able to break through the plateau. After you try this a couple of times, if you start repeatedly stalling on the same load I'd look at changing the progression model or changing the program.
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  • SideSteel
    SideSteel Posts: 11,068 Member
    rabbitjb wrote: »
    Boring Protein macro question .. sorry

    But I go from pillar to post with this one ..
    rabbitjb wrote: »

    I read a month or so back that protein macros should be set at 0.64 - 0.82 g P per lb of bodyweight based on studies on a range of different athletes .. there would be no harm in exceeding but there was no further benefit .. I believe the 0.82 per lb bodyweight was for serious bodybuilder types

    Link from heybales http://bayesianbodybuilding.com/the-myth-of-1glb-optimal-protein-intake-for-bodybuilders/
    Lyle McDonald, and his book based on over 500 references, recommends 1.1 - 1.4g per pound for men. Alan Aragon is in the same ballpark, depending on the size of the person involved and whether the goal is gaining or losing (1g per pound of target bodyweight).

    I guess, like most questions like this, opinion is divided.

    Your opinion would be appreciated

    We're talking about normal (wo)man in the street, not pro bodybuilders,

    I'm 158lb and try to hit around 100g protein as a minimum and lift 3 x a week which fits with the first recommendation but not the second (possibly on recomp at maintenance but not overly concerned as I'm happy just keeping on keeping on)
    rabbitjb wrote: »
    Boring Protein macro question .. sorry

    But I go from pillar to post with this one ..
    rabbitjb wrote: »

    I read a month or so back that protein macros should be set at 0.64 - 0.82 g P per lb of bodyweight based on studies on a range of different athletes .. there would be no harm in exceeding but there was no further benefit .. I believe the 0.82 per lb bodyweight was for serious bodybuilder types

    Link from heybales http://bayesianbodybuilding.com/the-myth-of-1glb-optimal-protein-intake-for-bodybuilders/
    Lyle McDonald, and his book based on over 500 references, recommends 1.1 - 1.4g per pound for men. Alan Aragon is in the same ballpark, depending on the size of the person involved and whether the goal is gaining or losing (1g per pound of target bodyweight).

    I guess, like most questions like this, opinion is divided.

    Your opinion would be appreciated

    We're talking about normal (wo)man in the street, not pro bodybuilders,

    I'm 158lb and try to hit around 100g protein as a minimum and lift 3 x a week which fits with the first recommendation but not the second (possibly on recomp at maintenance but not overly concerned as I'm happy just keeping on keeping on)

    You are getting opinion with the following, just FYI:

    Menno Henselmans did a great job with that link above and I'd tend to go by that for the general population but I'd make a few potential mentions worth noting:

    - Helms paper points to some evidence that higher intakes may be beneficial.
    - I'm about 99% sure that Helms would also recommend exceeding the .82g/lb bodyweight recommendation that Menno lists in his paper for lean athletes in a caloric deficit.


    As far as my own coaching recommendations -- for overweight and obese clients I primarily lean on protein intake purely for satiety and I structure that balancing out satiety with personal preference/ease of use. So for example if a calculator tells me I should stick someone at 180g and they are way happier at 150g and they are also satiated at 150g you can bet that I'll move them to 150g and distribute the rest according to preference and satiety.

    For leaner clients and people who are primarily training for physique I'll tend to go around 1g/lb bodyweight as a safe target to hit, or just slightly under.

    For clients in a caloric surplus I'll freely drop as low as about .8g/lb bodyweight and not have any concerns over maximizing muscle gains.

    Generally speaking, energy deficits increase protein demands and energy surpluses reduce protein demands due to the availability of other nutrients.