Metabolism Help Please.

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Ok I'm not 19 anymore and my metabolism is slooooowww. What advice can you share about picking up the pace through food choices. I know activity is key but feel I need more strategies.

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  • BoxerBrawler
    BoxerBrawler Posts: 2,032 Member
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    When faced with unwanted weight, it’s easy to place the blame on your metabolism. However, it turns out that individuals have more control over their metabolism than previously thought. As mentioned above, body composition has a huge effect on how quickly someone’s body burns calories. One easy way to ramp up your metabolism is to build muscle through lifting weights. Alongside modifying your workout routine, there are several other ways to be sure you’re burning calories at a higher rate:

    ◾Sleep more. The amount of rest you get each night doesn’t only affect your mood and productivity the next day. Researchers have found that it also affects your metabolism. Sleep-deprived individuals have a decreased ability to manage blood sugar levels and also may find themselves hungrier (particularly for high carbohydrate foods). So, sleep more for a healthier metabolism. (Win, win!)

    ◾Gulp down some water. Ditch the sugary soft drinks. Researchers have found that consuming water may have a positive impact on how many calories you burn throughout the day. This is due to a process called thermogenesis wherein the body must burn calories to warm the water up to body temperature. Hydrating with water also saves calories over alternative beverages and plays a key role in helping to regulate whole-body metabolism (especially during exercise).

    ◾Don’t forget caffeine. Coffee lovers rejoice! It turns out that cup of java may give you more than just an energy boost midday. When researchers gave subjects coffee and then measured their caloric burn, they found that the caffeinated individuals burned more calories than their decaf-ordering counterparts.

    ◾Get enough protein. Dietary decisions (especially protein intake) have a profound impact on metabolism. Researchers examining the effect of dietary compositions on caloric burn have found that those taking in adequate levels of protein have a higher energy expenditure at rest.
  • DeguelloTex
    DeguelloTex Posts: 6,652 Member
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    One strategy would be to use some online BMR calculators with your current stats and then with your current stats except putting in 19 as your age. Then, when you see that the difference is maybe worth a couple of cookies a day, you can adjust your flawed perception of metabolism's being the problem.
  • scolaris
    scolaris Posts: 2,145 Member
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    All good tips!
  • SezxyStef
    SezxyStef Posts: 15,268 Member
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    I suspect it's normal....if you are packing on the pounds or can't seem to lose you are eating more than you think...

    Yes it slows as we age but not by such a large factor that you will all of the sudden gain so much weight that you are left wondering wth...
  • Liftng4Lis
    Liftng4Lis Posts: 15,150 Member
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    Your BMR drops a bit as you age, but not that much. It still comes down to CICO.
  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,583 Member
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    Eat less. Move more. At your age, you eat much less than you did when you were 19.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

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  • Nuke_64
    Nuke_64 Posts: 406 Member
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    Your metabolism probably hasn't slowed down as much you think it has. I ran some numbers starting at 19, for a 5'10" male weighing 160 lbs. With no weekly exercise, to maintain the current body weight, below are the age and the calories required:

    Age___Daily Calories

    19______2186
    29______2104
    39______2022
    49______1941
    59______1859
    69______1778


    Food choices are not going to impact your metabolism. Adding muscle will help, but you have the wrong focus. If you want to lose fat, you need to eat less calories than you use,i.e. CICO.
  • Camo_xxx
    Camo_xxx Posts: 1,082 Member
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    Nuke_64 wrote: »
    Your metabolism probably hasn't slowed down as much you think it has. I ran some numbers starting at 19, for a 5'10" male weighing 160 lbs. With no weekly exercise, to maintain the current body weight, below are the age and the calories required:

    Age___Daily Calories

    19______2186
    29______2104
    39______2022
    49______1941
    59______1859
    69______1778


    Food choices are not going to impact your metabolism. Adding muscle will help, but you have the wrong focus. If you want to lose fat, you need to eat less calories than you use,i.e. CICO.

    Run the numbers again and this time specify the percentage of body fat instead of allowing the calculator to choose.

    The reason online calculators show a lower calorie burn for older people when you keep the activety level and weigh the same is that they calculate less muscle and more body fat as you age.
  • Nuke_64
    Nuke_64 Posts: 406 Member
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    Camo_xxx wrote: »
    Nuke_64 wrote: »
    Your metabolism probably hasn't slowed down as much you think it has. I ran some numbers starting at 19, for a 5'10" male weighing 160 lbs. With no weekly exercise, to maintain the current body weight, below are the age and the calories required:

    Age___Daily Calories

    19______2186
    29______2104
    39______2022
    49______1941
    59______1859
    69______1778


    Food choices are not going to impact your metabolism. Adding muscle will help, but you have the wrong focus. If you want to lose fat, you need to eat less calories than you use,i.e. CICO.

    Run the numbers again and this time specify the percentage of body fat instead of allowing the calculator to choose.

    The reason online calculators show a lower calorie burn for older people when you keep the activety level and weigh the same is that they calculate less muscle and more body fat as you age.

    So a 19 year old with 15% BF and 160 lbs has the same caloric requirement as a 59 year old with same weight and BF% if they have the same activity level? That makes sense because I guess in actuality we tend become less active as we age as we tire more easily. Thus, the lower need for calories is due to the lower activity level as we age.

    Still, the point to the OP was, don't blame your metabolism.
  • Camo_xxx
    Camo_xxx Posts: 1,082 Member
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    Nuke_64 wrote: »
    Camo_xxx wrote: »
    Nuke_64 wrote: »
    Your metabolism probably hasn't slowed down as much you think it has. I ran some numbers starting at 19, for a 5'10" male weighing 160 lbs. With no weekly exercise, to maintain the current body weight, below are the age and the calories required:

    Age___Daily Calories

    19______2186
    29______2104
    39______2022
    49______1941
    59______1859
    69______1778


    Food choices are not going to impact your metabolism. Adding muscle will help, but you have the wrong focus. If you want to lose fat, you need to eat less calories than you use,i.e. CICO.

    Run the numbers again and this time specify the percentage of body fat instead of allowing the calculator to choose.

    The reason online calculators show a lower calorie burn for older people when you keep the activety level and weigh the same is that they calculate less muscle and more body fat as you age.

    So a 19 year old with 15% BF and 160 lbs has the same caloric requirement as a 59 year old with same weight and BF% if they have the same activity level? That makes sense because I guess in actuality we tend become less active as we age as we tire more easily. Thus, the lower need for calories is due to the lower activity level as we age.

    Still, the point to the OP was, don't blame your metabolism.

    My best research and experience indicates yes that is the case.

    Obviously in the real world at 59 you are not likely to have the same BF% as the 19yo nor the desire to be as active. However being 50 and recently went from from a obese couch potato to a ripped 12% BF and riding my bike hundreds of miles per week I can tell you it is possible.


    Moral of the story is, move more, eat less
  • DeguelloTex
    DeguelloTex Posts: 6,652 Member
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    And, really, you're not competing against the 19 year old you, anyway. Most likely, some of the (small) metabolic hit already took place when you (generic) got fat. At this point, you're just competing against the relatively recent you and the cost of that is probably less than a couple of cookies a day. Absent a medical condition, blaming metabolism is almost certainly a cop-out.
  • tayloralanj
    tayloralanj Posts: 137 Member
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    @cushman5279 good points, especially the water and protein because those are two of my guiding principles,,,,,,,,,,the others involve muscle confusion (which I understand is an urban myth but it makes me feel good) and don't drink fruit juice thinking it's healthy.
  • Camo_xxx
    Camo_xxx Posts: 1,082 Member
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    As far as the OP needing more strategies ......

    For me, I set a goal, the goal had a concrete non negotiable final completion date.
    Then I broke that goal down by month and then weekly and finally daily targets.
    The strategies I used to hit my D,W, M goals developed and varied during the 12 month process but the goal never wavered.

    12 months later at exactly 7am it was time to measure the final result:
    lost 90 lbs,
    A 100 mile bike ride was a walk in the park
    Doc had taken me off blood pressure and cholesterol Meds
    Had a decent 4 pack of abs ( those last 2 are a *kitten* )

    When I started I though I was just old and broken.... Turns out I was just fat.
  • cafeaulait7
    cafeaulait7 Posts: 2,459 Member
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    Y'all correct me if this is off, but I'd say what we can do as we age is:

    -- Add muscle, or don't lose any in the first place

    -- HIIT is supposed to help daily metabolism more than steady-state cardio (recent studies, anyone?)
  • StayThirstyMan
    StayThirstyMan Posts: 45 Member
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    Thanks for the insightful responses! Adding more muscle means an increase in weight but that's not the problem. The problem is burning fat off off the old frame. Will do and enjoy the results. Eventually the weight will be where I'd like it to be.
  • StayThirstyMan
    StayThirstyMan Posts: 45 Member
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    What's best for your metabolism to start each day.

    Exercise then eat....?
    Eat then exercise?

  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,583 Member
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    What's best for your metabolism to start each day.

    Exercise then eat....?
    Eat then exercise?
    Doesn't matter. It's more preference than needed. Metabolism is consistent whether you eat before or not.
    Don't fall for the "eat breakfast to kickstart your metabolism for the day". Once you get out of bed, it's kickstarted.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png

  • StayThirstyMan
    StayThirstyMan Posts: 45 Member
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    Good to know. Thanks for the response.