Trying to gain muscle after losing 100 lbs
jswigart
Posts: 167 Member
I have been using cardio for some time now. By exercise and eating less, I’ve managed to bring my weight down 100 lbs to 145. I am 5’6” and 63 years old. Now I want to start gaining muscle. I have upped my calorie intake and am lifting heavy weights. I feel like I am pushing myself but I’m not getting muscle soreness. Am I not pushing hard enough? I lift on one day and off one day. Eating a lot of protein. Any suggestions? I’ve been eatin about 200 calories above my maintenance.
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Replies
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Wow, congratulations on your weight loss! My method of gaining muscle is doing what I can. Sometimes it hurts and becomes a set back, at which time I try to time or otherwise measure my workouts, gradually increasing. Gaining muscle doesn't happen overnight, so be patient. Hope that helps.1
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Great work so far!
Get on a solid lifting program. There's a thread around here somewhere about choosing the best lifting program for yourself.
And then it's about consistency and patience.1 -
Muscle soreness is not a good indicator of workout quality or progression. Are you following a prescribed program? If not, I would recommend one that incorporates some sort of structured progressive overload. Starting Strength is the tried-and-true beginner program that is very commonly recommended. If you've been at it for a while or have prior lifting experience I'm a fan of the program PHUL.
As far as nutrition, 0.8-1g protein /lb body weight is usually sufficient but should be treated as a minimum. Set other macros to personal preference to hit your calorie goal. A 200 calorie surplus should also be sufficient for lean muscle gain without too much extra fat.
Congrats on losing the weight and migrating to weights.5 -
I started lifting after the age of 60+, 65 now.
When I am lifting consistently, using the same programme, I don't get DOMS. If I take a break for a few weeks I get DOMS for the first couple of weeks back.
Agree with @steveko89, DOMS isn't an indicator of progression or effort.
For clarity, I lift medium, not heavy, following AllPro, get 0.8-1g protein, and recomp-ing.
Great work on your loss and your gains so far (looking at your profile pic) @jswigart.
Cheers, h.5 -
Im trying the same. I had a SECA test and Metabolic Test to see how many calories I really need at rest to lose and maintain weight. I Also wanted to know if my metabolism was slow, which it was. I wanted to know how much of my body was muscle, how much was fat and how much was other body parts and organs. It made me feel better because although I had gained weight and I was building muscle. At first you don't see the muscle because its deep within. It also takes time to build if you had a body full of fat. Also, fat and muscle weight the same. So my thinking that the extra 10 pounds I gained was muscle wasn't true. It was fat. And my clothes had not changed how they fit either.
I was working out strength training for a year and half now at least 4 days minimum per week. I had increased my calories but not on purpose and that's why I was gaining. When you build muscle it will take the place of the fat your burning. But if you gain weight by eating more and strength training you are gaining fat as well as muscle. My approach now is to lose more body fat and gain more muscle. For my sex, age height and activity level. 1500 is maintenance and I am on a 1200 calorie diet to lose weight or get to my desired weight but I am building muscle. Another note, too much cardio will cause you to lose muscle so you have to be careful when losing. it has to balance so you don't lose muscle.4 -
Im trying the same. I had a SECA test and Metabolic Test to see how many calories I really need at rest to lose and maintain weight. I Also wanted to know if my metabolism was slow, which it was. I wanted to know how much of my body was muscle, how much was fat and how much was other body parts and organs. It made me feel better because although I had gained weight and I was building muscle. At first you don't see the muscle because its deep within. It also takes time to build if you had a body full of fat. Also, fat and muscle weight the same. So my thinking that the extra 10 pounds I gained was muscle wasn't true. It was fat. And my clothes had not changed how they fit either.
I was working out strength training for a year and half now at least 4 days minimum per week. I had increased my calories but not on purpose and that's why I was gaining. When you build muscle it will take the place of the fat your burning. But if you gain weight by eating more and strength training you are gaining fat as well as muscle. My approach now is to lose more body fat and gain more muscle. For my sex, age height and activity level. 1500 is maintenance and I am on a 1200 calorie diet to lose weight or get to my desired weight but I am building muscle. Another note, too much cardio will cause you to lose muscle so you have to be careful when losing. it has to balance so you don't lose muscle.
So, do I understand, you are trying to gain muscle while in a calorie deficite? My understanding is that you must go over your maintenance calories with a lot of protein to gain muscle.1
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