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What are your unpopular opinions about health / fitness?

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Replies

  • Rammer123
    Rammer123 Posts: 679 Member
    AnvilHead wrote: »
    tattygun wrote: »
    The whole notion of 'functional strength' and that compound lifts are the be all and end all.

    Newb's concentrating on only compound lifts and not doing enough to build whats most important...mind muscle connection.

    Dedicating whole workouts to just abs....fkn LOL.

    The notion that a calorie is a calorie, no if one causes me to hold more water then they're not equal when it comes to my goals...which leads me to another...

    Water has just as much as a detrimental effect on the appearance of a physique than fat.

    The stigma attached to PED's...yet it's socially acceptable to take something that literally disables you (alcohol). People wasting time chasing ever dwindling results when they could transform their life, yet they're too scared of the social stigma to do what should be seen as normal.

    People being too reliant on what hey read rather than walking the walk. I will nearly always put more value on the advice of someone who's actually where I want to be, than some skinny fat MFPer clutching a science paper.



    The best football coaches tend to not have been the best players in their active time. Go figure.

    True. I don't recall Bill Belichick having a stellar career as a player at any level.

    As far as in the gym and/or on MFP, I've seen some of the biggest dudes dispensing some of the worst, most bro-ey advice. Some people succeed in spite of what they do, not because of what they do.

    And if somebody is using PEDs, the value of their advice is further diminished. You can gain muscle just looking at a barbell if you're doing enough test. You could run a completely idiotic routine that would be useless for a natty and still be able to put on muscle. Be honest up front and admit that you're using drugs so people can gauge your advice accordingly.

    Not to even mention the fact that a PED using bodybuilder who has already gained a ton of muscle and is now running specialization routines to refine his physique will work out completely differently than a natty who just started lifting and is struggling to put on some mass. Yeah, you've got 20-inch arms, no kidding you're doing a ton of isolation exercises. But don't tell a newbie/natty that they should be doing 8 sets of 5 different varieties of curls for their biceps four times a week. They haven't developed the work capacity, they don't have the recovery capacity of a PED user and they don't have the foundation in place to support that kind of routine.


    100% agree.

    Same goes for people who have lost a ton of weight after being incredibly overweight and claiming they have all the answers to weight loss because they have done it, just like putting on muscle is easier with PED, so is weight loss at a higher bf%.
  • Need2Exerc1se
    Need2Exerc1se Posts: 13,575 Member
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    What would cause you to lose fat and not weight?
    Recomp. It's actually doable, just need a lot of patience.

    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



    A menopausal women who cannot lose weight, will not successfully recomp.

    What? Why not?
  • Rammer123
    Rammer123 Posts: 679 Member
    because if you cannot lose fat, you will not be able to recomp.
  • Need2Exerc1se
    Need2Exerc1se Posts: 13,575 Member
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    What would cause you to lose fat and not weight?
    Recomp. It's actually doable, just need a lot of patience.

    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



    A menopausal women who cannot lose weight, will not successfully recomp.

    And yet, there are menopausal women on MFP who have successfully recomped.


    Where?

    Right here. I actually haven't a second DEXA to prove reduced BF% but I have lost inches without losing weight. I expect I might lose a few more now that spring is here. I'm very active in spring.
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    edited June 2017
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    lemurcat12 wrote: »
    CSARdiver wrote: »
    The concept of intuitive eating. The idea that we are somehow supposed to know when to start or stop eating to maintain a subjective weight is entirely absurd. The endless threads of people leaving MFP and starting up again give a small degree of insight into this.

    Expecting people to manage a checkbook without balancing is a little more plausible because once your expenses overtake your income, the consequences are immediate and direct. There are no such immediate consequences in weight management.

    I love this. I do think there are alternatives to calorie counting that work, but they aren't intuitive eating and require some kind of monitoring.

    Sure, some people don't have to think about it, perhaps, but they didn't get fat.

    Why would intuitive eating mean not thinking about it?? It's quite the opposite really.

    Many people who claim we should be able to "intuitively eat" mean we should be able to just eat and not have to every think about it and we just won't want to eat too much. That's what I think is unrealistic.

    I can maintain or lose without counting, but I do other things, like watch portion sizes, avoid snacking (or actively pay attention and compensate), make sure I am reasonably active. But that's something more than just going by "instinct." It's mindful.

    I guess it's just semantics but I think mindful eating and intuitive eating are the same thing. Intuition is something that must be mindfully adhered to. It's usually by ignoring our intuition that we run into problems.

    I think some people use intuitive eating to mean the same thing as mindful eating, although I prefer the latter term.

    However, as GottaBurnEm noted, there have been people lately claiming that it's some sign that humans are messed up that we have to think about it at all, and that means that only sick people (or mentally ill) get fat or some such nonsense. In accordance with that some use the term "intuitive eating" to mean "don't have to think about it."

    Well 'some people' pretty much kidnap and ruin every single term that relates to diet, don't they? I would say intuitive eating is 'not having to think about it much'. It's not mindless eating, it's just listening to your intuition when it comes to eating. Which may be a learning process if you are used to mindlessly eating everything that your taste buds might desire.

    I'm not slamming the term intuitive eating. The point I was agreeing with (and how this started) was that there's no reason to think that humans would normally, without thinking, be able to just eat whatever we want in a situation of surplus and not gain. That was the point being made, the person called it "intuitive eating." You think that's not really intuitive eating? Great, that isn't the bit that interests me. (For once I don't have strong opinions about semantics.) ;-)

    I would say that what works for me (mindful eating) isn't about listening to my "intuition" at all, my intuition has nothing to do with it. It's using judgment and reason when it comes to how much I should be eating in a day, which I find is easy when I mostly eat to a usual schedule, am reasonably active, and don't snack much, pay attention to the amounts I eat, understand what is more calorie dense, stuff like that. I don't think of that as "intuitive" (although I don't eat identically every day, of course), but more mindful, like I said, being aware both of what works for me and of what I'm eating (which also includes focusing on enjoyment).

    I don't have a problem with "intuitive eating" as I know it's a term that means a lot of different things. I have a problem (again) with the idea that if only we were healthy we could never get fat since we'd never overeat. That strikes me as bunk for many or most people.

    I've never seen anyone use the term "intuitive eating" to mean that if we were healthy we could never get fat since we'd never overeat. I would agree that's so ridiculous that's it's funny.

    But your second paragraph makes some good points on the differences between mindful eating and intuitive eating. I tend to think of them as the same, but I guess intuitive eating is eating a diet you know to be healthy without a lot of thought, though certainly not without a lot of knowledge. At some point you would have to learn what a healthy diet is for it to become intuitive.

    My mindful eating doesn't really require a lot of thought either, mostly it's just habit. I like the idea of mindful eating, because I think being actively mindful about it in a broad array of ways -- including appreciating the food when eating it, being aware of what you are eating, enjoying the cooking process -- are things that are helpful to me. It really has nothing to do with needing a lot of thought to know what's healthy (I don't think most people need much thought to know what's generally a healthy diet vs. not).

    Intuitive eating to me goes along more with the idea that one can just listen to hunger feelings and eat to hunger. I don't think that's a matter of practice or learning to or knowledge. I think maybe some people are just better at it than others. For me, hunger never seems to be the issue, and I don't believe that eating to hunger would ever be the answer (not saying it can't be for others). I do find that when I routinely eat to a schedule I adapt easily to that schedule. If I graze, it's disaster -- I overeat without being really really (uncomfortably) mindful, and so it's better for me to eat to schedule or eat set meals. It's generally been this way for me; I don't think it's that I don't understand what's healthy well enough or that I haven't learned something that is learnable (or that I should for some reason aspire to learn).

    I guess this is why I shy away from dieting terms in general. None seem to have a universal definition. *shrug*

    Sure, but like I said, I'm not debating terms, but the specific claim that the one poster mentioned (to disagree with -- I agreed with his disagreement). Whether or not you call that intuitive eating as he did (if you don't want to, I'm cool with that), I think it's absurd to assume that people will naturally not overeat, regardless of the food environment, if they are only just healthy, and thus if they do they must be ill. (This is a specific claim that I've seen made on MFP, I understand that you are not agreeing with it.)

    Personally, I think it's natural that humans will overeat in certain food environments (not everyone, obviously, but many or most), and therefore need to have some kind of strategies, whatever one calls it, to avoid it. (I don't think it must be calorie counting, of course.)

    At this point, I have no clue if your idea of intuitive eating is the one where people just learn to follow their hunger or not, or if what you are talking about and what I'm talking about with "mindful eating" are similar or not, but I agree that the labels aren't really furthering the discussion.
  • Rammer123
    Rammer123 Posts: 679 Member
    right, but you're not having trouble with losing fat...? I wasn't arguing that it wasn't possible, I was saying that if you aren't able to lose fat, you wont be able to recomp.

    The reason this started is because ninerbuff was saying that recomping would cause someone to lose fat not weight (of course), but we were speaking about menopausal women who are apparently able to lose fat just fine, but the scale weight doesn't move, which is why I was asking, what would cause a menopausal women to lose fat and not lose weight.
  • Need2Exerc1se
    Need2Exerc1se Posts: 13,575 Member
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    because if you cannot lose fat, you will not be able to recomp.

    I assume you are attempting sarcasm or humor.
  • Need2Exerc1se
    Need2Exerc1se Posts: 13,575 Member
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    right, but you're not having trouble with losing fat...? I wasn't arguing that it wasn't possible, I was saying that if you aren't able to lose fat, you wont be able to recomp.

    The reason this started is because ninerbuff was saying that recomping would cause someone to lose fat not weight (of course), but we were speaking about menopausal women who are apparently able to lose fat just fine, but the scale weight doesn't move, which is why I was asking, what would cause a menopausal women to lose fat and not lose weight.

    Water. Hormones go crazy during menopause. It's possible to lose several lbs of fat and still gain weight. Been there, done that.
  • Rammer123
    Rammer123 Posts: 679 Member
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    because if you cannot lose fat, you will not be able to recomp.

    I assume you are attempting sarcasm or humor.

    No.... a recomp is (almost, since you're body is always either catabolic or anabolic) simultaneously losing fat and building muscle. SO, what I'm saying is in order to recomp, fat will need to be lost....
  • French_Peasant
    French_Peasant Posts: 1,639 Member
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    because if you cannot lose fat, you will not be able to recomp.

    I assume you are attempting sarcasm or humor.

    No.... a recomp is (almost, since you're body is always either catabolic or anabolic) simultaneously losing fat and building muscle. SO, what I'm saying is in order to recomp, fat will need to be lost....

    Maybe it's not what you mean, but when you originally said "A menopausal women who cannot lose weight, will not successfully recomp" you appear to be conflating fat with weight. I am not menopausal, but since I began lifting a year ago, I have not lost weight, but I have gone from a size 10 to a size 6 through successful recomping. But yeah, losing the *fat* part is kind of crucial. :p
  • Need2Exerc1se
    Need2Exerc1se Posts: 13,575 Member
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    because if you cannot lose fat, you will not be able to recomp.

    I assume you are attempting sarcasm or humor.

    No.... a recomp is (almost, since you're body is always either catabolic or anabolic) simultaneously losing fat and building muscle. SO, what I'm saying is in order to recomp, fat will need to be lost....

    So, if not humor or sarcasm, do you believe fat cannot be lost during menopause?
  • Rammer123
    Rammer123 Posts: 679 Member
    edited June 2017
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    because if you cannot lose fat, you will not be able to recomp.

    I assume you are attempting sarcasm or humor.

    No.... a recomp is (almost, since you're body is always either catabolic or anabolic) simultaneously losing fat and building muscle. SO, what I'm saying is in order to recomp, fat will need to be lost....

    So, if not humor or sarcasm, do you believe fat cannot be lost during menopause?


    No, I do not believe that.
  • stevencloser
    stevencloser Posts: 8,911 Member
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    because if you cannot lose fat, you will not be able to recomp.

    Good thing menopausal women can lose fat then.
  • Rammer123
    Rammer123 Posts: 679 Member
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    because if you cannot lose fat, you will not be able to recomp.

    Good thing menopausal women can lose fat then.


    guys..... you are literally picking things and not even knowing the context of what is being talked about....
  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,993 Member
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    What would cause you to lose fat and not weight?
    Recomp. It's actually doable, just need a lot of patience.

    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



    A menopausal women who cannot lose weight, will not successfully recomp.
    Untrue. I've trained many menopausal women with difficulty losing weight on their own, but with proper training it can happen. They may have to work MUCH HARDER than the average person, but it's not impossible to successfully do it.

    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

  • Rammer123
    Rammer123 Posts: 679 Member
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    tattygun wrote: »
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    tattygun wrote: »
    SezxyStef wrote: »
    tattygun wrote: »
    The whole notion of 'functional strength' and that compound lifts are the be all and end all.

    Newb's concentrating on only compound lifts and not doing enough to build whats most important...mind muscle connection.

    Dedicating whole workouts to just abs....fkn LOL.

    The notion that a calorie is a calorie, no if one causes me to hold more water then they're not equal when it comes to my goals...which leads me to another...

    Water has just as much as a detrimental effect on the appearance of a physique than fat.

    The stigma attached to PED's...yet it's socially acceptable to take something that literally disables you (alcohol). People wasting time chasing ever dwindling results when they could transform their life, yet they're too scared of the social stigma to do what should be seen as normal.

    People being too reliant on what hey read rather than walking the walk. I will nearly always put more value on the advice of someone who's actually where I want to be, than some skinny fat MFPer clutching a science paper.



    I don't do "accessory" lifts...waste of time IMO...what's the point they don't help me achieve my goals...notice how that can be turned around using your logic

    Calories are a unit of measure and if a carb impacts "YOUR" goal that's one thing but for the majority of people it is a fact...and a calorie is just that...a calorie...but not sure that this is "unpopular" just debated a lot...

    PED's are a personal choice IMO...if you want to pump your body full of those things go ahead...but they are just as dangerous when abused as any other drug...including alcohol...again not that unpopular just those who want to use them vs those who don't are sure they are right.

    As for your last statement...are you saying that you wouldn't heed the advice of someone like oh..Arnold? he's not where you want to be...but probably was at some point...

    regardless of if someone now doesn't "look" how you think they should be doesn't mean they don't have good advice...

    I mean I know people who look good...and I wouldn't listen to their drivel ever...

    If creating a stronger mind muscle connection isn't part of your goals when you lift then I don't really know what to say to you, regardless, isolation exercises will achieve just that. Note how I don't say omit compounds.
    But not all people lift to make the mind/muscle connection a part of the goal. Some do it just to be active and keep basic strength up. Not all people are looking to increase mass nor have prominent body parts.
    Why do you mention a carb? Could be anything that causes the water retention. My point is 500 calories of McDonalds will have a more detrimental effect on the appearance of my physique than 500 calories of chicken and rice, regardless if the macro's are the same. IDC that they will both have the same effect on fat levels, I care about water retention too.
    But that doesn't change the fact that a calorie is a calorie. A liter of gas is different than a liter of water, but they are both still a liter. WHAT they do for someone is entirely different.
    The point I'm making about PED's has gone completely over your head. Yes I realise they can be just as dangerous as almost any drug, it's the fact there is a huge social stigma attached to taking them that I take issue with.
    I won't disagree here. The REAL issue with them is when KIDS are illegally taking them just to enhance their sports performance with no actual medical advice.
    It isn't about someone looking how 'I think' they should look. People can look however they want but if you're going to be doling out lifting advice AND telling other people they're wrong then yes, look the part. I'm interested in someone who's put the practical work in and actually lived it rather than geeked out on the theory but not actually gone and put the work in. This forum is a meme at this point for that one. Also again...note how I said I nearly always, not always because of course there are exceptions to the rule but I didn't think I need to put that so clearly...
    Well there are lots and lots of coaches out there who may not have played at a high level in a sport, but intricately know how to coach it. Look at coaching specialists like Hany Rambod. NEVER competed on the professional stage and I would hardly thought he was nothing more than a bro gym lifter based on his physique. You can actually figure out if someone really knows what they are talking about or not on here though.

    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


    I'm saying though...if you lift, if you do yoga, if you run, basically if you do anything physical with the need to control your body then mind muscle connection SHOULD be an aim. Isolation work will help you achieve that and I feel like on this forum it's seen as the devil and a waste of time...which is entirely wrong.
    You don't need much mind/muscle connection to run. It's a natural movement that needs absolutely minimal training if any at all. You're thinking in terms of perfecting how people workout and many people just don't go that deep into it. Lots of great athletes do well with just reaction and pure talent and don't lift weights or anything else.
    Yes I take your point about Hany, hence why I said in nearly all cases plus I'm not talking about coaches because let's face it Hany HAS walked the walk. His yardstick is champions he's produced, not his own physique. It's the general forum member with limited experience, telling a seasoned gym goer they're wrong using parroted information, that's what i have a problem with.
    But how do you know that general forum member is wrong? There's a biochemical engineers on the forum who denounce how supplements actually work. They may not train like an athlete, but they damn sure know how chemistry actually works. And the reality is if they know how it works in the body, why wouldn't you believe them just because they haven't walked the walk?

    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



    And you're a trainer genuinely implying that the mind muscle connection is not very important for every movement? Every movement is a "natural movement". The primal movements being push, pull, squat, bend, lunge, twist and yes gait. Just because it's a "natural movement" doesn't mean that it doesn't need to be using the correct muscles to be done most efficiently to prevent injuries.
  • NorthCascades
    NorthCascades Posts: 10,968 Member
    Here's one: I think our fears about giardias are overplayed.
  • Rammer123
    Rammer123 Posts: 679 Member
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    tattygun wrote: »
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    tattygun wrote: »
    SezxyStef wrote: »
    tattygun wrote: »
    The whole notion of 'functional strength' and that compound lifts are the be all and end all.

    Newb's concentrating on only compound lifts and not doing enough to build whats most important...mind muscle connection.

    Dedicating whole workouts to just abs....fkn LOL.

    The notion that a calorie is a calorie, no if one causes me to hold more water then they're not equal when it comes to my goals...which leads me to another...

    Water has just as much as a detrimental effect on the appearance of a physique than fat.

    The stigma attached to PED's...yet it's socially acceptable to take something that literally disables you (alcohol). People wasting time chasing ever dwindling results when they could transform their life, yet they're too scared of the social stigma to do what should be seen as normal.

    People being too reliant on what hey read rather than walking the walk. I will nearly always put more value on the advice of someone who's actually where I want to be, than some skinny fat MFPer clutching a science paper.



    I don't do "accessory" lifts...waste of time IMO...what's the point they don't help me achieve my goals...notice how that can be turned around using your logic

    Calories are a unit of measure and if a carb impacts "YOUR" goal that's one thing but for the majority of people it is a fact...and a calorie is just that...a calorie...but not sure that this is "unpopular" just debated a lot...

    PED's are a personal choice IMO...if you want to pump your body full of those things go ahead...but they are just as dangerous when abused as any other drug...including alcohol...again not that unpopular just those who want to use them vs those who don't are sure they are right.

    As for your last statement...are you saying that you wouldn't heed the advice of someone like oh..Arnold? he's not where you want to be...but probably was at some point...

    regardless of if someone now doesn't "look" how you think they should be doesn't mean they don't have good advice...

    I mean I know people who look good...and I wouldn't listen to their drivel ever...

    If creating a stronger mind muscle connection isn't part of your goals when you lift then I don't really know what to say to you, regardless, isolation exercises will achieve just that. Note how I don't say omit compounds.
    But not all people lift to make the mind/muscle connection a part of the goal. Some do it just to be active and keep basic strength up. Not all people are looking to increase mass nor have prominent body parts.
    Why do you mention a carb? Could be anything that causes the water retention. My point is 500 calories of McDonalds will have a more detrimental effect on the appearance of my physique than 500 calories of chicken and rice, regardless if the macro's are the same. IDC that they will both have the same effect on fat levels, I care about water retention too.
    But that doesn't change the fact that a calorie is a calorie. A liter of gas is different than a liter of water, but they are both still a liter. WHAT they do for someone is entirely different.
    The point I'm making about PED's has gone completely over your head. Yes I realise they can be just as dangerous as almost any drug, it's the fact there is a huge social stigma attached to taking them that I take issue with.
    I won't disagree here. The REAL issue with them is when KIDS are illegally taking them just to enhance their sports performance with no actual medical advice.
    It isn't about someone looking how 'I think' they should look. People can look however they want but if you're going to be doling out lifting advice AND telling other people they're wrong then yes, look the part. I'm interested in someone who's put the practical work in and actually lived it rather than geeked out on the theory but not actually gone and put the work in. This forum is a meme at this point for that one. Also again...note how I said I nearly always, not always because of course there are exceptions to the rule but I didn't think I need to put that so clearly...
    Well there are lots and lots of coaches out there who may not have played at a high level in a sport, but intricately know how to coach it. Look at coaching specialists like Hany Rambod. NEVER competed on the professional stage and I would hardly thought he was nothing more than a bro gym lifter based on his physique. You can actually figure out if someone really knows what they are talking about or not on here though.

    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


    I'm saying though...if you lift, if you do yoga, if you run, basically if you do anything physical with the need to control your body then mind muscle connection SHOULD be an aim. Isolation work will help you achieve that and I feel like on this forum it's seen as the devil and a waste of time...which is entirely wrong.
    You don't need much mind/muscle connection to run. It's a natural movement that needs absolutely minimal training if any at all. You're thinking in terms of perfecting how people workout and many people just don't go that deep into it. Lots of great athletes do well with just reaction and pure talent and don't lift weights or anything else.
    Yes I take your point about Hany, hence why I said in nearly all cases plus I'm not talking about coaches because let's face it Hany HAS walked the walk. His yardstick is champions he's produced, not his own physique. It's the general forum member with limited experience, telling a seasoned gym goer they're wrong using parroted information, that's what i have a problem with.
    But how do you know that general forum member is wrong? There's a biochemical engineers on the forum who denounce how supplements actually work. They may not train like an athlete, but they damn sure know how chemistry actually works. And the reality is if they know how it works in the body, why wouldn't you believe them just because they haven't walked the walk?

    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



    And you're a trainer genuinely implying that the mind muscle connection is not very important for every movement? Every movement is a "natural movement". The primal movements being push, pull, squat, bend, lunge, twist and yes gait. Just because it's a "natural movement" doesn't mean that it doesn't need to be using the correct muscles to be done most efficiently to prevent injuries.

    You learn using the correct muscles for a movement by doing the movement, not by using each of the involved muscles on its own.


    Thanks bud, I wasn't the one that said that.
  • GottaBurnEmAll
    GottaBurnEmAll Posts: 7,722 Member
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    rdridi12 wrote: »
    What would cause you to lose fat and not weight?
    Recomp. It's actually doable, just need a lot of patience.

    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



    A menopausal women who cannot lose weight, will not successfully recomp.

    And yet, there are menopausal women on MFP who have successfully recomped.


    Where?

    @AnnPT77 for one


    how fat did she lose during this "recomp"?

    I believe she went from obese to profile pics flexing her back and arm muscles.


    That wouldn't be a recomp, just awesome fat loss.

    Well, she became a competitive rower traveling around the country, so I suspect that she has also been able to add some muscle; not as much as a 20 year old kid obviously, but still, every little fiber is valuable. I have not quizzed her as to DEXA scans and such; she will have to weigh in herself.

    How about middlehaitch?
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