My High Impact Regimen
preciousgirl012
Posts: 36 Member
Hey everyone,
So I've attempted a few parts of this regimen separately and they definitely worked for me, I SAW EXTREME RESULTS. However I think it's time to get serious with my workouts. I'm at a crucial point in my life where I feel like it's now or never with my weight loss. So... here's my version of a high impact workout regimen:
-Workout Days (5-7 days a week) def 7 for me
-2 miles a day (walking and/or running)
-Insanity
-Squat Challenge
-Daily
50 Pushups
100 Sit ups
50 Crunches
50 Cross Body sit ups
40 Lunges
50 Leg raises (both legs)
1 Minute plank
1 Minute wall sit
I'm sure for some this may seem a bit intense but I'll try it out and see. Hopefully my results will be reasoning enough for such an intense workout. (fingers crossed)
So I've attempted a few parts of this regimen separately and they definitely worked for me, I SAW EXTREME RESULTS. However I think it's time to get serious with my workouts. I'm at a crucial point in my life where I feel like it's now or never with my weight loss. So... here's my version of a high impact workout regimen:
-Workout Days (5-7 days a week) def 7 for me
-2 miles a day (walking and/or running)
-Insanity
-Squat Challenge
-Daily
50 Pushups
100 Sit ups
50 Crunches
50 Cross Body sit ups
40 Lunges
50 Leg raises (both legs)
1 Minute plank
1 Minute wall sit
I'm sure for some this may seem a bit intense but I'll try it out and see. Hopefully my results will be reasoning enough for such an intense workout. (fingers crossed)
-1
Replies
-
sounds like a recipe for burnout and injury...
why not find a routine that's sustainable and you actually enjoy?0 -
It is awesome to go at it with intensity
But rest is part of "it".
I would ask you to just consider a day off in the middle.
The numbers on the exercises are ok
The abs could be doubled and done three days a week. A simple 100 right left and center crunches each side done nonstop. I'm old and do that.
What is your heart rate target? Are you shooting for a segment of time in the 90% max heart rate? Interval bursts?
I don't see how your workout could not work!!
I hope you can really nail it and see the results you want!
A question though? What is your calorie target to support such a demanding workout and still drop a pound or two for leaning down?
I would have a hard time going at it as hard as you are with no rest days as that plan shows if there was much of a calorie deficit ?
Is that a two week on and a few days off program?
0 -
Sounds like a random collection of exercises not a workout plan. If you are worried about losing weight, focus on your eating habits, you will never out-exercise a bad diet. If you have fitness goals, look into either a sport that sounds interesting, or a fitness plan that matches your goals (weight loss, endurance, strenght, etc).0
-
Sounds like a random collection of exercises not a workout plan. If you are worried about losing weight, focus on your eating habits, you will never out-exercise a bad diet. If you have fitness goals, look into either a sport that sounds interesting, or a fitness plan that matches your goals (weight loss, endurance, strenght, etc).
0 -
-
This content has been removed.
-
-
preciousgirl012 wrote: »Sounds like a random collection of exercises not a workout plan. If you are worried about losing weight, focus on your eating habits, you will never out-exercise a bad diet. If you have fitness goals, look into either a sport that sounds interesting, or a fitness plan that matches your goals (weight loss, endurance, strenght, etc).
So, if you do not want feedback, was there a reason for posting this?
If the goal is to burn calories, anything that gets you moving would work. If the goal is to have a whole body workout, this is not it, because there is no upper to lower body balance.
If the goal is to strenght train, this is not it, because there are much more efficient ways to get there.
If the goal is something sustainable, this is not it, because no one can do this same intense cardio thing over and over again without (1) finally getting injured and (2) finally getting bored. Although injury will probably come first.
This is not how you lose weight and make a lifestyle change, this plan is like crying "I am fat and want to lose weight NOW, summer is here and I need to look good in a bikini" while stomping your feet. Your heart is at the right place, but this is not how you will reach your goals.
0 -
preciousgirl012 wrote: »Sounds like a random collection of exercises not a workout plan. If you are worried about losing weight, focus on your eating habits, you will never out-exercise a bad diet. If you have fitness goals, look into either a sport that sounds interesting, or a fitness plan that matches your goals (weight loss, endurance, strenght, etc).
So, if you do not want feedback, was there a reason for posting this?
If the goal is to burn calories, anything that gets you moving would work. If the goal is to have a whole body workout, this is not it, because there is no upper to lower body balance.
If the goal is to strenght train, this is not it, because there are much more efficient ways to get there.
If the goal is something sustainable, this is not it, because no one can do this same intense cardio thing over and over again without (1) finally getting injured and (2) finally getting bored. Although injury will probably come first.
This is not how you lose weight and make a lifestyle change, this plan is like crying "I am fat and want to lose weight NOW, summer is here and I need to look good in a bikini" while stomping your feet. Your heart is at the right place, but this is not how you will reach your goals.
Who said I didn't want feedback? My goal mostly is to burn said calories. Insanity is definitely a sustainable workout as well as running regularly, this will not be a yearly plan just one to work with during the summer. Injury is a possibility in all that you do. So of course I will be careful and rest as I said above. Boredom isn't that big a factor I'm regularly bored as is. However I do plan on incorporating dance as well as basketball into this regimen. Definitely has helped me to lose weight as I've also said above I've previously used parts of this plan and have lost over 40+ doing so. The lifestyle change definitely comes more so within and through the diet which I've already begun to change. And this plan doesn't cry anything besides "I need to lose weight. Period." The thought of a bikini hasn't crossed my mind. Simply not being revolted by my weight before getting in the shower will suffice for now. My heart is in the right place I'm well aware. But sitting around or the slow and steady approach won't get me their either.0 -
thats a very intense workout regimen.
Obviously whatever works for you is good but id suggest being smarter with your workout, you actually don't need to do that level of exercise every day.
Work out your MHR and train within a 65-80% zone of this, this will encourage optimal fat burning, anything lower won't get the burn you need and anything higher is more aimed towards endurance training, i.e. marathon runners etc.
and obviously, diet is key, diet is 90% of fitness and weight loss, you have to have nutritionally rich, high protein, low carb/fat balanced diet to support your training otherwise you will never see the results you want
good luck.
If anything I may cut out the the small excercises. I think insanity and at least a mile a day wouldn't be bad. And I'm working on a pretty raw and lean diet as we speak so that's not too much of a problem. Thanks for the advice!0 -
preciousgirl012 wrote: »preciousgirl012 wrote: »Sounds like a random collection of exercises not a workout plan. If you are worried about losing weight, focus on your eating habits, you will never out-exercise a bad diet. If you have fitness goals, look into either a sport that sounds interesting, or a fitness plan that matches your goals (weight loss, endurance, strenght, etc).
So, if you do not want feedback, was there a reason for posting this?
If the goal is to burn calories, anything that gets you moving would work. If the goal is to have a whole body workout, this is not it, because there is no upper to lower body balance.
If the goal is to strenght train, this is not it, because there are much more efficient ways to get there.
If the goal is something sustainable, this is not it, because no one can do this same intense cardio thing over and over again without (1) finally getting injured and (2) finally getting bored. Although injury will probably come first.
This is not how you lose weight and make a lifestyle change, this plan is like crying "I am fat and want to lose weight NOW, summer is here and I need to look good in a bikini" while stomping your feet. Your heart is at the right place, but this is not how you will reach your goals.
Who said I didn't want feedback? My goal mostly is to burn said calories. Insanity is definitely a sustainable workout as well as running regularly, this will not be a yearly plan just one to work with during the summer. Injury is a possibility in all that you do. So of course I will be careful and rest as I said above. Boredom isn't that big a factor I'm regularly bored as is. However I do plan on incorporating dance as well as basketball into this regimen. Definitely has helped me to lose weight as I've also said above I've previously used parts of this plan and have lost over 40+ doing so. The lifestyle change definitely comes more so within and through the diet which I've already begun to change. And this plan doesn't cry anything besides "I need to lose weight. Period." The thought of a bikini hasn't crossed my mind. Simply not being revolted by my weight before getting in the shower will suffice for now. My heart is in the right place I'm well aware. But sitting around or the slow and steady approach won't get me their either.
Just saw you are 19. Being revolted by your body at this age is usually more psychological than actually means your body is anywhere close as bad as you think. So, perhaps working on your self esteem with a therapist will help more than any exercise or training program on how you feel (no, I am not saying it is all in your head and to not lose weight, I am saying you need to learn to love yourself). As for the rest, thousands of people felt the same way as you do at your age "slow and steady is not for me". It is usually the beginning of yoyo weight fluctuations.
What is your height and current weight? What is goal weight, goal weight loss rate and how much are you eating on average to fuel this type of workout?0 -
preciousgirl012 wrote: »Who said I didn't want feedback?
Your reaction says you don't really want feedback, you seem to be after validation.
To me, your plan lacks structure, progression or any clear objective. It appears to be a random collection of things, rather than a balanced programme of cardiovascular improvement and strength training that'll complement diet. Your other comments about diet suggest that you're not all that structured there either.
I'd also agree that your phrasing suggests an unhealthy outlook to how this might contribute to improving your situation.
What I'd suggest is defining your objectives, then plan from there. Do you want to run a distance? In which case work up a plan to do that. Do you want to lift a particular weight, or do a particular exercise? In that case train towards that.
Notwithstanding anything else, insanity, running, dance etc are all cardiovascular biased. You probably need to plan in some structured, progressive, strength training as well.
0 -
I smell a snark here.0
-
I admire your enthusiasm, but the people advising you here are a lot more experienced and knowledgable than you; you should heed their advice.
Instead of taking the critique to heart, think of what your motivation and a properly designed diet and exercise plan could accomplish! This is a huge opportunity for you to reach your goals faster and more easily than you could on your own.0 -
MeanderingMammal wrote: »preciousgirl012 wrote: »Who said I didn't want feedback?
Your reaction says you don't really want feedback, you seem to be after validation.
To me, your plan lacks structure, progression or any clear objective. It appears to be a random collection of things, rather than a balanced programme of cardiovascular improvement and strength training that'll complement diet. Your other comments about diet suggest that you're not all that structured there either.
I'd also agree that your phrasing suggests an unhealthy outlook to how this might contribute to improving your situation.
What I'd suggest is defining your objectives, then plan from there. Do you want to run a distance? In which case work up a plan to do that. Do you want to lift a particular weight, or do a particular exercise? In that case train towards that.
Notwithstanding anything else, insanity, running, dance etc are all cardiovascular biased. You probably need to plan in some structured, progressive, strength training as well.
0 -
MakePeasNotWar wrote: »I admire your enthusiasm, but the people advising you here are a lot more experienced and knowledgable than you; you should heed their advice.
Instead of taking the critique to heart, think of what your motivation and a properly designed diet and exercise plan could accomplish! This is a huge opportunity for you to reach your goals faster and more easily than you could on your own.
I actually am looking into some of the advice I've been given, but critiques laced with sexist inuoendos aren't helpful in any way. I'm hoping to get helpful pointers though!0 -
atypicalsmith wrote: »I smell a snark here.
Okay lol0 -
preciousgirl012 wrote: »preciousgirl012 wrote: »Sounds like a random collection of exercises not a workout plan. If you are worried about losing weight, focus on your eating habits, you will never out-exercise a bad diet. If you have fitness goals, look into either a sport that sounds interesting, or a fitness plan that matches your goals (weight loss, endurance, strenght, etc).
So, if you do not want feedback, was there a reason for posting this?
If the goal is to burn calories, anything that gets you moving would work. If the goal is to have a whole body workout, this is not it, because there is no upper to lower body balance.
If the goal is to strenght train, this is not it, because there are much more efficient ways to get there.
If the goal is something sustainable, this is not it, because no one can do this same intense cardio thing over and over again without (1) finally getting injured and (2) finally getting bored. Although injury will probably come first.
This is not how you lose weight and make a lifestyle change, this plan is like crying "I am fat and want to lose weight NOW, summer is here and I need to look good in a bikini" while stomping your feet. Your heart is at the right place, but this is not how you will reach your goals.
Who said I didn't want feedback? My goal mostly is to burn said calories. Insanity is definitely a sustainable workout as well as running regularly, this will not be a yearly plan just one to work with during the summer. Injury is a possibility in all that you do. So of course I will be careful and rest as I said above. Boredom isn't that big a factor I'm regularly bored as is. However I do plan on incorporating dance as well as basketball into this regimen. Definitely has helped me to lose weight as I've also said above I've previously used parts of this plan and have lost over 40+ doing so. The lifestyle change definitely comes more so within and through the diet which I've already begun to change. And this plan doesn't cry anything besides "I need to lose weight. Period." The thought of a bikini hasn't crossed my mind. Simply not being revolted by my weight before getting in the shower will suffice for now. My heart is in the right place I'm well aware. But sitting around or the slow and steady approach won't get me their either.
Just saw you are 19. Being revolted by your body at this age is usually more psychological than actually means your body is anywhere close as bad as you think. So, perhaps working on your self esteem with a therapist will help more than any exercise or training program on how you feel (no, I am not saying it is all in your head and to not lose weight, I am saying you need to learn to love yourself). As for the rest, thousands of people felt the same way as you do at your age "slow and steady is not for me". It is usually the beginning of yoyo weight fluctuations.
What is your height and current weight? What is goal weight, goal weight loss rate and how much are you eating on average to fuel this type of workout?
I do very much love myself. I'm pretty great if I do say so myself. But I do want to improve on some things that are as bad as I think they are. Age doesn't play a factor in that. If one feels like they can do better they should it's kind of that simple. Instead of reasoning my age or my sex for that matter to be the reason behind, in your eyes, my lack of a proper workout plan, maybe just maybe actually giving workout alternatives or ideas would be more helpful.0 -
MeanderingMammal wrote: »preciousgirl012 wrote: »Who said I didn't want feedback?
Your reaction says you don't really want feedback, you seem to be after validation.
To me, your plan lacks structure, progression or any clear objective. It appears to be a random collection of things, rather than a balanced programme of cardiovascular improvement and strength training that'll complement diet. Your other comments about diet suggest that you're not all that structured there either.
I'd also agree that your phrasing suggests an unhealthy outlook to how this might contribute to improving your situation.
What I'd suggest is defining your objectives, then plan from there. Do you want to run a distance? In which case work up a plan to do that. Do you want to lift a particular weight, or do a particular exercise? In that case train towards that.
Notwithstanding anything else, insanity, running, dance etc are all cardiovascular biased. You probably need to plan in some structured, progressive, strength training as well.
0 -
The only comment I have is that your strength routine doesn't include much in the way of progression. If all you want to do is burn calories, you can just run more. If your goal is to increase strength, then you should include progressive resistance. For example: doing decline push-ups or push ups with resistance bands.0
-
preciousgirl012 wrote: »preciousgirl012 wrote: »Sounds like a random collection of exercises not a workout plan. If you are worried about losing weight, focus on your eating habits, you will never out-exercise a bad diet. If you have fitness goals, look into either a sport that sounds interesting, or a fitness plan that matches your goals (weight loss, endurance, strenght, etc).
So, if you do not want feedback, was there a reason for posting this?
If the goal is to burn calories, anything that gets you moving would work. If the goal is to have a whole body workout, this is not it, because there is no upper to lower body balance.
If the goal is to strenght train, this is not it, because there are much more efficient ways to get there.
If the goal is something sustainable, this is not it, because no one can do this same intense cardio thing over and over again without (1) finally getting injured and (2) finally getting bored. Although injury will probably come first.
This is not how you lose weight and make a lifestyle change, this plan is like crying "I am fat and want to lose weight NOW, summer is here and I need to look good in a bikini" while stomping your feet. Your heart is at the right place, but this is not how you will reach your goals.
Who said I didn't want feedback? My goal mostly is to burn said calories. Insanity is definitely a sustainable workout as well as running regularly, this will not be a yearly plan just one to work with during the summer. Injury is a possibility in all that you do. So of course I will be careful and rest as I said above. Boredom isn't that big a factor I'm regularly bored as is. However I do plan on incorporating dance as well as basketball into this regimen. Definitely has helped me to lose weight as I've also said above I've previously used parts of this plan and have lost over 40+ doing so. The lifestyle change definitely comes more so within and through the diet which I've already begun to change. And this plan doesn't cry anything besides "I need to lose weight. Period." The thought of a bikini hasn't crossed my mind. Simply not being revolted by my weight before getting in the shower will suffice for now. My heart is in the right place I'm well aware. But sitting around or the slow and steady approach won't get me their either.
0 -
If you want to lose weight, you could eat less instead of going for a very high intensity training program. How long have you been doing this? In my humble opinion, it is very hard to sustain such regimens over long periods. Slower rate of weight loss is more likely to be maintained.
0 -
Well, I'm almost 60, and I've done an hour of high intensity interval training everyday for over 3 months, followed a very strict protein diet religiously, and lost 60 pounds. Recently, I have needed to take a day off about every 10-14 days. Sometimes I try to do a zumba or yoga tape at home, but, I'm usually to tired. I realize that I wont be able to sustain this, and it's probably not the best approach, but I give up unless I see results. That's just the way I am. I have 30 more pounds to go,then I am going to OA to get help and support while I learn a healthy eating style. At that point, I also plan to incorporate strength training for definition and vanity as well as health. So far, I feel way better than. I have since I packed on the poundage. Friend me if you want to, and we can cheer each other on, and talk about concerns.0
-
The only comment I have is that your strength routine doesn't include much in the way of progression. If all you want to do is burn calories, you can just run more. If your goal is to increase strength, then you should include progressive resistance. For example: doing decline push-ups or push ups with resistance bands.
Thanks I'll definitely look both those exercises up!0 -
Well, I'm almost 60, and I've done an hour of high intensity interval training everyday for over 3 months, followed a very strict protein diet religiously, and lost 60 pounds. Recently, I have needed to take a day off about every 10-14 days. Sometimes I try to do a zumba or yoga tape at home, but, I'm usually to tired. I realize that I wont be able to sustain this, and it's probably not the best approach, but I give up unless I see results. That's just the way I am. I have 30 more pounds to go,then I am going to OA to get help and support while I learn a healthy eating style. At that point, I also plan to incorporate strength training for definition and vanity as well as health. So far, I feel way better than. I have since I packed on the poundage. Friend me if you want to, and we can cheer each other on, and talk about concerns.
That's amazing congrats!!! I'm the same way. Progress is really key to my motivation. I know prolonged intense workouts are difficult to maintain. But for shedding pounds it gets the job done! In the future I'll look towards other activities to maintain wait. Certaintly can't do this while I'm in school. I'm friending you as we speak!0 -
musicandarts wrote: »If you want to lose weight, you could eat less instead of going for a very high intensity training program. How long have you been doing this? In my humble opinion, it is very hard to sustain such regimens over long periods. Slower rate of weight loss is more likely to be maintained.
I'm doing this as well, I've lost 10 pounds its exciting! This is over 1 month of eating healthy and very light exercise. This regimen will probably only be sustained for this summer as I hope to lose a bulk of wait in this time. Over the school year just daily gym visits or zumba will suffice honestly lol0 -
preciousgirl012 wrote: »MakePeasNotWar wrote: »I admire your enthusiasm, but the people advising you here are a lot more experienced and knowledgable than you; you should heed their advice.
Instead of taking the critique to heart, think of what your motivation and a properly designed diet and exercise plan could accomplish! This is a huge opportunity for you to reach your goals faster and more easily than you could on your own.
I actually am looking into some of the advice I've been given, but critiques laced with sexist inuoendos aren't helpful in any way. I'm hoping to get helpful pointers though!
Sadly, I can't disagree with you there. My profile pic is pretty androgynous, and I often get quite different advice (and phrased very differently) than other women here, because a lot of people assume I'm a guy.
It would be interesting to change my profile pic to a wedding picture or swimsuit shot and see how people's reactions to me changed.0 -
MakePeasNotWar wrote: »preciousgirl012 wrote: »MakePeasNotWar wrote: »I admire your enthusiasm, but the people advising you here are a lot more experienced and knowledgable than you; you should heed their advice.
Instead of taking the critique to heart, think of what your motivation and a properly designed diet and exercise plan could accomplish! This is a huge opportunity for you to reach your goals faster and more easily than you could on your own.
I actually am looking into some of the advice I've been given, but critiques laced with sexist inuoendos aren't helpful in any way. I'm hoping to get helpful pointers though!
Sadly, I can't disagree with you there. My profile pic is pretty androgynous, and I often get quite different advice (and phrased very differently) than other women here, because a lot of people assume I'm a guy.
It would be interesting to change my profile pic to a wedding picture or swimsuit shot and see how people's reactions to me changed.
Yeah I don't think it's fair to assume all women are just here to look good in a bathing suit wedding dress or appeal to men in general. Everyone is on here for different reasons, reasons you can't simply grasp by their sex or age.
That would be a fun experiment though! Lol I feel if a male is gungho about some killer workout it's cool and interesting if a woman does it it's wayyyy to dangerous or not possible.0 -
preciousgirl012 wrote: »MakePeasNotWar wrote: »preciousgirl012 wrote: »MakePeasNotWar wrote: »I admire your enthusiasm, but the people advising you here are a lot more experienced and knowledgable than you; you should heed their advice.
Instead of taking the critique to heart, think of what your motivation and a properly designed diet and exercise plan could accomplish! This is a huge opportunity for you to reach your goals faster and more easily than you could on your own.
I actually am looking into some of the advice I've been given, but critiques laced with sexist inuoendos aren't helpful in any way. I'm hoping to get helpful pointers though!
Sadly, I can't disagree with you there. My profile pic is pretty androgynous, and I often get quite different advice (and phrased very differently) than other women here, because a lot of people assume I'm a guy.
It would be interesting to change my profile pic to a wedding picture or swimsuit shot and see how people's reactions to me changed.
Yeah I don't think it's fair to assume all women are just here to look good in a bathing suit wedding dress or appeal to men in general. Everyone is on here for different reasons, reasons you can't simply grasp by their sex or age.
That would be a fun experiment though! Lol I feel if a male is gungho about some killer workout it's cool and interesting if a woman does it it's wayyyy to dangerous or not possible.
Oh dear. I am a woman OP. I had been 19. And hated my body. And said all the things you are now saying. And I had friends. Who hated their bodies. And said all the things you are saying. And I have a daughter a bit younger than you. And I am hearing her talk to her friends. It is not sexism, and I do not even understand why it is negative. You want to lose weight. You think slow and steady will not work, you need to maximise calorie burn NOW. You think you look disgusting when you look in the mirror.
I am saying that (1) even if you are 200 lbs overweight you are 19 and are beautiful, and no, I do not need to see pics, all teenagers look beautiful, even though very few realise it. The confidence you get from loving your body, it will give you posture and attitude that will make you look better than any diet and workout regime, so work on this. It is sad to read words as "revolted" by body/weight, especially at your age.
And (2) have you ever heard the term "yoyo dieting"? Do you think that anyone ever said, "now I am going to yoyo diet", for real? Of course not. It always is "I want to see results fast, and I want them now" and then end up with a plan that simply is not sustainable. If you want to know how your plan will work, think of maintenace: How many calories are you eating? Is this sustainable and for how long? How long can you commit to this type of exercise and for what purpose? If you had started with "I love to hop around, this high impact regime is givign me so much energy", you would have gotten different kind of answer. But you did not chose a routine or sport that you love and you did not decide into a lifestyle you can maintain for the next years. You googled for the exercises and programs and challenges that appear to be "hard" and promise "fast" results and then put them all together to get even faster results. This is not sustainable, it is desperate. At only 19, stop thinking about "I am X lbs above where I want to be and need to change this today". Think of "I am only 19, have all my life ahead of me, what sport, class, routine sounds fun to try so I can change my lifestyle".0 -
preciousgirl012 wrote: »Simple critiques and advice are a blessing.
Which you've had. There's no structure, no clear objective, no progression and no opportunity for recovery.
I'd also observe that you mention eating clean/ safe. In the context of weight loss it's only being in calorie deficit that's significant. Playing withe the relative balance of proteins/ carbs and fats is only really important if you have a medical condition or specific sports outcome objectiivesAny thoughts on how I should incorporate said structured progressive strength training? lol
Identify a plan, and follow it.
Given that you're talking about bodyweight then I'd personally suggest You Are Your Own Gym or Body By You.
Similarly from a running perspective, short runs every day aren't going to give you sustainable outcomes, following a plan like C25K then B210K will help you make progress.
Rest days are important, and doing the same thing every day is a sure route to stagnation, boredom and potentially injury.
C25K and YAYOG will give you six days per week, and clearly identifiable progress.
0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.6K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 431 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.6K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.8K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions