Calories in strength training?

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Replies

  • VeronicaA76
    VeronicaA76 Posts: 1,116 Member
    mmapags wrote: »
    BabyBear76 wrote: »
    BabyBear76 wrote: »
    HarlemNY17 wrote: »
    AnvilHead wrote: »
    HarlemNY17 wrote: »
    Why are you weight training for 4-5 days ? You don't really need to worry about the calories . Just get your protein in

    Since one of her stated goals is to lose weight, she does in fact need to worry about her calories. Calorie intake drives weight gain/loss.
    I understand that but I'm talking about calories burnt from weight training . You don't need to count them as long as your eating in a deficit and getting in protein . I've been doing this for soo long and I've gained a lot of muscle while losing weight also.

    At the same time?

    I've been doing that myself. Over 5 month, I've had a 20lb drop in weight and some real gains in muscles/strength. Two days ago I discovered a crevasse that went from my neck to my cleavage while flexed from pushing myself. That's muscle. I developed visual pectoral muscles, along with other muscles all over my body.

    Muscle tissue growth is not the same as muscle strength gains nor is it the same as being able to see defined muscles revealed by fat loss.

    IIRC, you were obese at one time.

    Muscle tissue gains are possible while eating at a deficit if progressively lifting in newbie lifters but it is usually obese males or teens doing this.

    You have said you've run bulk and cut cycles, so it's disingenous to chime in that "this is happening" to you, because you might have muscle gains, but they would likely have happened on a bulk.

    It is muscle growth. The visible muscle mass is increasing. Not just visible due to fat loss. I am not an obese male nor a teen. I just work really hard at it. As far as increases in strength, there is no way I can go from having a hard time doing just barbell squats (not those sissy barely parallel - but full Olympic squats) to warming up with 180lb squats without muscle gains. There is no way my shoulders got 3" wider while losing weight without an increase in muscle. I also never stop trying to gain muscle, even when cutting, I ramp up cardio but maintain the lifting regimen to keep building. Also can you provide a link or at least explain how it's possible to increase (substantial) strength without and increase in muscle.....

    Strength gains in a deficit can be the result of neuromuscular adaptations. Essentially, your existing muscles get more efficient. At a certain point there will be a rate of diminishing returns where the adaptations will max out. The existing muscle tissue can get more prominent and developed. That doesn't mean hypertrophy, increase in muscle mass has occured. This is pretty common knowledge. Google it if you don't believe me.

    So, you still insist on justifying your claim of muscle growth with visuals. Visuals are not reliable. Again, have you had a dexa scan or hydrostatic body composition testing?? Yes or no? Stop ducking the question. Either you have or you haven't. If you haven't, you are only speculating and probably inaccurately so.

    Yes I have have hydrostatic body composition testing. It's not speculation. So chill about being so knowledgeable about someone you don't know.
  • VeronicaA76
    VeronicaA76 Posts: 1,116 Member
    BabyBear76 wrote: »
    BabyBear76 wrote: »
    HarlemNY17 wrote: »
    AnvilHead wrote: »
    HarlemNY17 wrote: »
    Why are you weight training for 4-5 days ? You don't really need to worry about the calories . Just get your protein in

    Since one of her stated goals is to lose weight, she does in fact need to worry about her calories. Calorie intake drives weight gain/loss.
    I understand that but I'm talking about calories burnt from weight training . You don't need to count them as long as your eating in a deficit and getting in protein . I've been doing this for soo long and I've gained a lot of muscle while losing weight also.

    At the same time?

    I've been doing that myself. Over 5 month, I've had a 20lb drop in weight and some real gains in muscles/strength. Two days ago I discovered a crevasse that went from my neck to my cleavage while flexed from pushing myself. That's muscle. I developed visual pectoral muscles, along with other muscles all over my body.

    Muscle tissue growth is not the same as muscle strength gains nor is it the same as being able to see defined muscles revealed by fat loss.

    IIRC, you were obese at one time.

    Muscle tissue gains are possible while eating at a deficit if progressively lifting in newbie lifters but it is usually obese males or teens doing this.

    You have said you've run bulk and cut cycles, so it's disingenous to chime in that "this is happening" to you, because you might have muscle gains, but they would likely have happened on a bulk.

    It is muscle growth. The visible muscle mass is increasing. Not just visible due to fat loss. I am not an obese male nor a teen. I just work really hard at it. As far as increases in strength, there is no way I can go from having a hard time doing just barbell squats (not those sissy barely parallel - but full Olympic squats) to warming up with 180lb squats without muscle gains. There is no way my shoulders got 3" wider while losing weight without an increase in muscle. I also never stop trying to gain muscle, even when cutting, I ramp up cardio but maintain the lifting regimen to keep building. Also can you provide a link or at least explain how it's possible to increase (substantial) strength without and increase in muscle.....

    My shoulders look like they grew too.

    You know why?

    Because I lost so much arm fat that my shoulders are now more prominent than my arms are.

    As @mmapags keeps reiterating, visuals are an unreliable indicator.

    Also, you once again keep offering the intensity of your effort as evidence of the result you're claiming. That means nothing. I trained as hard as I could with weight lifting and plateaued with strength gains because I'm in that small percentage of people who don't make the neuro-muscal adaptations necessary to continue progressing. Doesn't mean I didn't work hard. Hard work =/= the result you necessarily think you're getting.

    3" wider, isn't looks. It's a quantitative measurement. While there are looks changing. My determination for real changes are measurable changes. Body fat composition and percentage, diameter/width of various body measurements, and so on.
  • mmapags
    mmapags Posts: 8,934 Member
    BabyBear76 wrote: »
    mmapags wrote: »
    BabyBear76 wrote: »
    BabyBear76 wrote: »
    HarlemNY17 wrote: »
    AnvilHead wrote: »
    HarlemNY17 wrote: »
    Why are you weight training for 4-5 days ? You don't really need to worry about the calories . Just get your protein in

    Since one of her stated goals is to lose weight, she does in fact need to worry about her calories. Calorie intake drives weight gain/loss.
    I understand that but I'm talking about calories burnt from weight training . You don't need to count them as long as your eating in a deficit and getting in protein . I've been doing this for soo long and I've gained a lot of muscle while losing weight also.

    At the same time?

    I've been doing that myself. Over 5 month, I've had a 20lb drop in weight and some real gains in muscles/strength. Two days ago I discovered a crevasse that went from my neck to my cleavage while flexed from pushing myself. That's muscle. I developed visual pectoral muscles, along with other muscles all over my body.

    Muscle tissue growth is not the same as muscle strength gains nor is it the same as being able to see defined muscles revealed by fat loss.

    IIRC, you were obese at one time.

    Muscle tissue gains are possible while eating at a deficit if progressively lifting in newbie lifters but it is usually obese males or teens doing this.

    You have said you've run bulk and cut cycles, so it's disingenous to chime in that "this is happening" to you, because you might have muscle gains, but they would likely have happened on a bulk.

    It is muscle growth. The visible muscle mass is increasing. Not just visible due to fat loss. I am not an obese male nor a teen. I just work really hard at it. As far as increases in strength, there is no way I can go from having a hard time doing just barbell squats (not those sissy barely parallel - but full Olympic squats) to warming up with 180lb squats without muscle gains. There is no way my shoulders got 3" wider while losing weight without an increase in muscle. I also never stop trying to gain muscle, even when cutting, I ramp up cardio but maintain the lifting regimen to keep building. Also can you provide a link or at least explain how it's possible to increase (substantial) strength without and increase in muscle.....

    Strength gains in a deficit can be the result of neuromuscular adaptations. Essentially, your existing muscles get more efficient. At a certain point there will be a rate of diminishing returns where the adaptations will max out. The existing muscle tissue can get more prominent and developed. That doesn't mean hypertrophy, increase in muscle mass has occured. This is pretty common knowledge. Google it if you don't believe me.

    So, you still insist on justifying your claim of muscle growth with visuals. Visuals are not reliable. Again, have you had a dexa scan or hydrostatic body composition testing?? Yes or no? Stop ducking the question. Either you have or you haven't. If you haven't, you are only speculating and probably inaccurately so.

    Yes I have have hydrostatic body composition testing. It's not speculation. So chill about being so knowledgeable about someone you don't know.

    Whether I "know" you or not is utterly and completely irrelevant. Data is data. Testing is testing. You continue to duck the real question. If you did indeed have hydrostatic testing, you would have been tested at first and subsequent times that would show lean mass% and body fat %.

    What were the results of each test? If what you are saying is true, this is easy peasy to prove. The fact that you resist showing actual results beyond your subjective assertions cast serious doubt on your credibility. Anyone can come on the internet and say anything. I can say I gained 10 lbs of lean body mass in the last week if I want. If I can't prove it with test result, I'm just blowing smoke.

    So please, share the proof or be just one more person on the internet that posts things that they can't back up.

    PS: I am very chill. You?
  • Psychgrrl
    Psychgrrl Posts: 3,177 Member
    Meelisv wrote: »
    Strength training calorie burn is quite difficult to measure, But providing that you keep your average heart rate constantly above 120 bpm, 300-400 kcal per hour should be close enough.

    Would be an over calculation for me. I'm 5'3 and 115, 46 and female. Depends on OPs stats as well.
  • HarlemNY17
    HarlemNY17 Posts: 135 Member
    BabyBear76 wrote: »
    HarlemNY17 wrote: »
    AnvilHead wrote: »
    HarlemNY17 wrote: »
    Why are you weight training for 4-5 days ? You don't really need to worry about the calories . Just get your protein in

    Since one of her stated goals is to lose weight, she does in fact need to worry about her calories. Calorie intake drives weight gain/loss.
    I understand that but I'm talking about calories burnt from weight training . You don't need to count them as long as your eating in a deficit and getting in protein . I've been doing this for soo long and I've gained a lot of muscle while losing weight also.

    Same here. Congratulations on doing something that is fairly difficult. Balancing calorie deficits and macros. Well done!

    Thank you same to you ❤️
  • HarlemNY17
    HarlemNY17 Posts: 135 Member
    HarlemNY17 wrote: »
    AnvilHead wrote: »
    HarlemNY17 wrote: »
    Why are you weight training for 4-5 days ? You don't really need to worry about the calories . Just get your protein in

    Since one of her stated goals is to lose weight, she does in fact need to worry about her calories. Calorie intake drives weight gain/loss.
    I understand that but I'm talking about calories burnt from weight training . You don't need to count them as long as your eating in a deficit and getting in protein . I've been doing this for soo long and I've gained a lot of muscle while losing weight also.

    Define "a lot".

    I started at 35.something%muscle . I just recently hit 40% about a week ago
  • HarlemNY17
    HarlemNY17 Posts: 135 Member
    HarlemNY17 wrote: »
    AnvilHead wrote: »
    HarlemNY17 wrote: »
    Why are you weight training for 4-5 days ? You don't really need to worry about the calories . Just get your protein in

    Since one of her stated goals is to lose weight, she does in fact need to worry about her calories. Calorie intake drives weight gain/loss.
    I understand that but I'm talking about calories burnt from weight training . You don't need to count them as long as your eating in a deficit and getting in protein . I've been doing this for soo long and I've gained a lot of muscle while losing weight also.

    How are you tracking this gain?

    Body fat scale , pictures and just looking in the mirror. Big difference
  • singingflutelady
    singingflutelady Posts: 8,736 Member
    edited August 2017
    Maxxitt wrote: »
    mmapags wrote: »
    BabyBear76 wrote: »
    BabyBear76 wrote: »
    HarlemNY17 wrote: »
    AnvilHead wrote: »
    HarlemNY17 wrote: »
    Why are you weight training for 4-5 days ? You don't really need to worry about the calories . Just get your protein in

    Since one of her stated goals is to lose weight, she does in fact need to worry about her calories. Calorie intake drives weight gain/loss.
    I understand that but I'm talking about calories burnt from weight training . You don't need to count them as long as your eating in a deficit and getting in protein . I've been doing this for soo long and I've gained a lot of muscle while losing weight also.

    At the same time?

    I've been doing that myself. Over 5 month, I've had a 20lb drop in weight and some real gains in muscles/strength. Two days ago I discovered a crevasse that went from my neck to my cleavage while flexed from pushing myself. That's muscle. I developed visual pectoral muscles, along with other muscles all over my body.

    Muscle tissue growth is not the same as muscle strength gains nor is it the same as being able to see defined muscles revealed by fat loss.

    IIRC, you were obese at one time.

    Muscle tissue gains are possible while eating at a deficit if progressively lifting in newbie lifters but it is usually obese males or teens doing this.

    You have said you've run bulk and cut cycles, so it's disingenous to chime in that "this is happening" to you, because you might have muscle gains, but they would likely have happened on a bulk.

    It is muscle growth. The visible muscle mass is increasing. Not just visible due to fat loss. I am not an obese male nor a teen. I just work really hard at it. As far as increases in strength, there is no way I can go from having a hard time doing just barbell squats (not those sissy barely parallel - but full Olympic squats) to warming up with 180lb squats without muscle gains. There is no way my shoulders got 3" wider while losing weight without an increase in muscle. I also never stop trying to gain muscle, even when cutting, I ramp up cardio but maintain the lifting regimen to keep building. Also can you provide a link or at least explain how it's possible to increase (substantial) strength without and increase in muscle.....

    Strength gains in a deficit can be the result of neuromuscular adaptations. Essentially, your existing muscles get more efficient. At a certain point there will be a rate of diminishing returns where the adaptations will max out. The existing muscle tissue can get more prominent and developed. That doesn't mean hypertrophy, increase in muscle mass has occured. This is pretty common knowledge. Google it if you don't believe me.

    So, you still insist on justifying your claim of muscle growth with visuals. Visuals are not reliable. Again, have you had a dexa scan or hydrostatic body composition testing?? Yes or no? Stop ducking the question. Either you have or you haven't. If you haven't, you are only speculating and probably inaccurately so.

    Yes I have have hydrostatic body composition testing. It's not speculation. So chill about being so knowledgeable about someone you don't know.

    Veronica, you have actual data. The "crevasse" you observe may be a functioning of dropping fat layers. The three inches in shoulder width (I do relate, having had to let go of some of my skinny shirts, thanks to traps, shoulders, and biceps) isn't merely a function of fat loss. What you are doing is working great for you. 'Nuff said. There are outliers in any population sample and apparently you are one of them.

    Babybear76, I mean VeronicaA76 from Texas I mean Manhattan has a history of exaggeration and making stuff up and isn't an outlier.
  • HarlemNY17
    HarlemNY17 Posts: 135 Member
    sijomial wrote: »
    HarlemNY17 wrote: »
    HarlemNY17 wrote: »
    AnvilHead wrote: »
    HarlemNY17 wrote: »
    Why are you weight training for 4-5 days ? You don't really need to worry about the calories . Just get your protein in

    Since one of her stated goals is to lose weight, she does in fact need to worry about her calories. Calorie intake drives weight gain/loss.
    I understand that but I'm talking about calories burnt from weight training . You don't need to count them as long as your eating in a deficit and getting in protein . I've been doing this for soo long and I've gained a lot of muscle while losing weight also.

    How are you tracking this gain?

    Body fat scale , pictures and just looking in the mirror. Big difference

    Take measurements because these metrics aren't accurate or reliable. It's certainly possible to add some muscle in a moderate deficit but those methods aren't the way to prove it.
    Body fat scale - dreadfully unreliable and inaccurate.
    Pictures and just looking in the mirror - you are describing getting leaner not confirming actual growth.

    If your arms or legs are growing while you are losing weight then it would confirm you are achieving what you think you are. "Gained a lot."
    Even if the measurements are staying the same whilst seeing more definition then it would be a sign there's something good going on. "Gained a little."

    I haven't lost fat in my arm area yet . I measure to make sure. I don't really care about the whole scale thing I know scales aren't always 100% accurate but I take pictures every month of my muscle and it's getting bigger ! And my chest is toning up . It's not from losing weight it's from adding in weight training
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