Who supplements?
crittergirl222
Posts: 120 Member
And why? I am in the cloudy PNW, so I am thinking some vitamin D isn't a bad idea. But I also am not interested in paying for "expensive urine" (which is how vitamins were once explained to me by a nutritionist).
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Replies
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Yes, fish oil and creative. I hardly ever eat fish and creative had been proven time and time again in improving performance.0
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Creatine*. Lol damn iPhone0
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I take a couple.
Vitamin d and iron - doctors orders
Biotin and folic acid - estheticians orders
Fish oil - I heard it was good to take. I have no idea if it actually works or not.
Caffeine - addicted, can't function without it.
Melatonin - to sleep0 -
I take a rotating number of supplements at any given time for varying reasons.
Things I take for health:
Creatine
Protein
Vit D (doctor prescribed due to deficiency)
Vit b12 due to not eating meat
Multi
Things I take because I keep good records of health, fitness, how I feel, performance, etc and my job likes to have guinea pigs for new products:
Any number of stupid things that I would never pay for but take and give reviews on. Usually "this is useless and made me queasy, or something similar"
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BCAA's - bc I train fasted
L-glutamine - preserve muscle
L-carnatine - supposedly helps burn fat0 -
You are a vegetarian? It could be b12 you might be needing. Multivitamins are very cheap at stores like walmart or target. Buy the generic. They will also have some vitamin D in them.0
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JanetYellen wrote: »You are a vegetarian? It could be b12 you might be needing. Multivitamins are very cheap at stores like walmart or target. Buy the generic. They will also have some vitamin D in them.
I did this! Thank you for the advice.0 -
-Creatine
-BCAAs (I usually won't buy these, but I'm usually gifted them all the time so I take them. I do like to train fasted though, so will take around training time).
-caffeine (sometimes)
-arginine (sometimes)
My main supplements are basically creatine and food!0 -
Magnesium
Iron
B-12
Doctor's orders. Chronically low in all 3 along with having the blood pressure of a corpse.0 -
I used to take b12 pills, got to where it was hard to function without them so now it's fish oil, drink bcaas all day long, protein shakes to meet macros, and of course gotta have the preworkout to lift heavier.0
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datsundriver87 wrote: »I used to take b12 pills, got to where it was hard to function without them so now it's fish oil, drink bcaas all day long, protein shakes to meet macros, and of course gotta have the preworkout to lift heavier.
Why would you drink BCAA's all day long? Makes no sense. A pre-workout wont make you lift heavier by the way. Are your macros that bad you need to drink shakes (I assume you mean more than one since you said shakes) ?0 -
For living in the Pac Northwest, B Complex + C can help combat the seasonal affective disorder. I also recommend D, but keep in mind that D is NOT water-soluble, it's a fat soluble, so too much D stays in the body. Unless under doctor supervision, stick with a lower dosage.0
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I take vitamin D as my levels are a little low. However, I'm not taking a major dose (a little over 1,000 IU's a day).0
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B12: doctor's recommendation because of a tendency towards anemia
D3: doctor's recommendation because of SAD (also helps with the anemia)
MSM for the joints
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I take Vitamin D (because I don't get much sun in the winter), B12 (I'm vegan), iron (in consultation with my doctor because my iron tends to be low), and vegan DHA.0
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I just take biotin my doctor thinks I might need to be on a potassium supplement but no concrete decisions yet.0
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I use omega 3 for cardio support - helps with joints ect - which helps as I do a ton of HITT and plyo exercises.0
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I do. I take a lot of different vitamins: D, multi, calcium, fish oil, cumin, coQ10, C, Krill, DHEA-- and a bunch of others -- because I personally don't think one can get all of their nutrients from the food they eat. I get my blood tested a few times a year and adjust what I take accordingly.
If anything you should be taking vitamin D. I take close to 10,000 IU's and I'm still low.0 -
I recently started taking a multi-vitamin. Looking at my nutrition stats, I am consistently below what I should be getting for a number of items. Calcium and iron are the big one for me. I'm only getting about half of my recommended level through food. I'm doing better on iron , but it's also consistently low and I've had issues with anemia in the past. I'm also low on several other vitamins. I thought I was eating healthier than my numbers tell me, so I'm either not eating a sufficient quantity (very possible, as I've been restricting calories for weight loss), or not eating enough of a variety (also very possible, but I thought I was doing well), or a combination of both. a one a day multi-vitamin seemed like the easiest way to handle the situation.
I may start taking a fiber supplement as well. I thought I was doing reasonably well in this department, but, again, my numbers show me falling below my recommended levels consistently.0 -
crittergirl222 wrote: »And why? I am in the cloudy PNW, so I am thinking some vitamin D isn't a bad idea. But I also am not interested in paying for "expensive urine" (which is how vitamins were once explained to me by a nutritionist).
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