Lifting progress while cutting.

BeccaLoves2lift
Posts: 375 Member
Question... So I'm eating at a slight deficit to lose about 5 pounds. Should I expect to still progress in my lifts? Or will they likely stay pretty stable? Or will they decrease? Last time I was at a deficit I started weight training and made lots of progress but then stalled out. I then went into maintenance where I have made tons of strength gains. I realize that this may be very individual.
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Replies
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If you're still relatively new to lifting you shouldn't notice a considerable change; even less so if the deficient is small and over a longer time.0
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BeccaLoves2lift wrote: »Question... So I'm eating at a slight deficit to lose about 5 pounds. Should I expect to still progress in my lifts? Or will they likely stay pretty stable? Or will they decrease? Last time I was at a deficit I started weight training and made lots of progress but then stalled out. I then went into maintenance where I have made tons of strength gains. I realize that this may be very individual.
Yeah. That's your answer.
I'm usually good if it's a slow cut. Trying to drop weight faster definitely affects my strength.4 -
My poverty bench does when I start cutting.0
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If you're still relatively new to lifting you shouldn't notice a considerable change; even less so if the deficient is small and over a longer time.
I've been lifting for about 8 months so still pretty new. I'm trying to cut slowly because I don't have much to lose. I guess I just don't want to feel disappointed if it's normal to have to go down in weight when cutting. I also want to lose as little muscle as possible. When I lost weight last year I didn't know what I was doing and ate at a huge deficit and did mostly cardio0 -
If you manage the deficit over a long time you'll be fine. Five pounds really isn't that much. I'd say you're still very well into the newbie gains category. You'll be fine.2
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If you don't want the weight to go down, you can always slightly decrease the volume if you need to. Try to keep the weights up, but maybe decrease by a rep or a set.3
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I just started lifting a few months ago and a few months before that started dieting, i too often wonder if my gains would be much better if i wasn't dieting...0
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You can still build muscle if you're forcing them to grow. Of course everybody's body is its own machine but i've found i can increase muscle even when i'm not eating as much because my bmi is higher. I guess what i'm saying is if you have certain amount of fat you can still grow muscle. Right? I"m not claiming to be an expert.1
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Ya I'm gaining, quite a bit actually... Just wondering if the diet is slowing me down. I take special care to get plenty of protein but I'm not an expert either. =\0
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Tapering for a meet while cutting (12 pounds) and my RPE for my openers has consistently become easier, ie from a 7.5 or 7 to a 6 or 5.5.
So no, you do not necessarily become weaker.0
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