Did I bulk/recomp? Do I look leaner even though I’m heavier?
peachvine29
Posts: 400 Member
I’ve lost over 60 lbs. total, coming down from 200 lbs. in 2017 to averaging 133 over the summer. I wanted to keep losing from 133 but was too hungry and burnt out and tried to cut, but couldn’t meet my deficit.
I started seeing a personal trainer in November and have been working out hard six days a week, 4 days of lifting, progressive overload. I have not been watching my calories as closely as I should, many days at maintenance or surplus on the weekends.
I just took progress pics last night though and compared to over the summer and feel like I look better even though I am heavier! I was around 138 in May and am 141 today.
Do I look leaner in these pics to anyone? I think I successfully bulked?!
I am thinking my plan is to recomp until spring and cut until summer. Thoughts?
I started seeing a personal trainer in November and have been working out hard six days a week, 4 days of lifting, progressive overload. I have not been watching my calories as closely as I should, many days at maintenance or surplus on the weekends.
I just took progress pics last night though and compared to over the summer and feel like I look better even though I am heavier! I was around 138 in May and am 141 today.
Do I look leaner in these pics to anyone? I think I successfully bulked?!
I am thinking my plan is to recomp until spring and cut until summer. Thoughts?
7
Replies
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Def look leaner... weather you put on much muscle is hard to tell. With only a 3 lb difference it could be fat loss of 2 lbs, gain 2 lb of muscle and 3 lbs of water. A bulk is usually done with more than 3 lbs, and typically gain fat, where you look like you lost fat.
I would call what you did a successful recomposition. Keep up the good work!2 -
Def look leaner... weather you put on much muscle is hard to tell. With only a 3 lb difference it could be fat loss of 2 lbs, gain 2 lb of muscle and 3 lbs of water. A bulk is usually done with more than 3 lbs, and typically gain fat, where you look like you lost fat.
I would call what you did a successful recomposition. Keep up the good work!
Thank you! I was truly doubting whether recomposition was possible, I was hearing from certain sources online that it isn't really effective to recomp unless in certain specific situations and it's not really what I was aiming for, but I'm glad I did it! Now I believe
I am seeing a personal trainer for the next 3 months (already booked), I want to put on muscle as I am being held to 4 days lifting hard a week, don't want to miss out on any muscle, but also want to be lean for summer. Would anyone want to recommend whether I eat at maintenance or surplus? I could keep recomping or small surplus for 3 months, cut this spring, recomp summer and bulk next fall?1 -
peachvine29 wrote: »Def look leaner... weather you put on much muscle is hard to tell. With only a 3 lb difference it could be fat loss of 2 lbs, gain 2 lb of muscle and 3 lbs of water. A bulk is usually done with more than 3 lbs, and typically gain fat, where you look like you lost fat.
I would call what you did a successful recomposition. Keep up the good work!
Thank you! I was truly doubting whether recomposition was possible, I was hearing from certain sources online that it isn't really effective to recomp unless in certain specific situations and it's not really what I was aiming for, but I'm glad I did it!
I am seeing a personal trainer for the next 3 months (already booked), I want to put on muscle as I am being held to 4 days lifting hard a week, don't want to miss out on any muscle, but also want to be lean for summer. Would anyone want to recommend whether I eat at maintenance or surplus? I could keep recomping or small surplus for 3 months, cut this spring, recomp summer and bulk next fall?
If you want to put on noticeable amount of muscle in that amount of time, a slight surplus, and a later cut, would be the way to go... set your surplus to 200-250 cals/day and make sure you get adequate protein... given your stats should be in the 100 gram/day as a minimum, but more isn't bad.1 -
I think you would do fine to recomp the whole time or recomp until early spring and see how you look/feel then. If you still think you need to lean out a bit more, do a small cut. Maintain for the summer and you'll be in prime spot to bulk in the fall if you want.3
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Def look leaner... weather you put on much muscle is hard to tell. With only a 3 lb difference it could be fat loss of 2 lbs, gain 2 lb of muscle and 3 lbs of water. A bulk is usually done with more than 3 lbs, and typically gain fat, where you look like you lost fat.
I would call what you did a successful recomposition. Keep up the good work!
I agree with this, it is quite a small fluctuation so I wouldn't quite call it a bulk, but whatever it is you look great and definitely made awesome progress!
In terms of what to do next, it is really up to you. The thing is, if you gain weight, even with a small surplus, it will come with some fat gain... it really depends on how lean you want to be for summer. Most women will start a bulk when their bodyfat is 20% or under (unless they are underweight or close not sure if that applies to you). Not to say you can't bulk above 20% but it just gets harder to put on muscle and then cut down (again, this all depends on how lean you want to get.. this may not be your goal).
I would probably continue to recomp, then you can re-evaluate if you want to bulk at some point.4 -
Def look leaner... weather you put on much muscle is hard to tell. With only a 3 lb difference it could be fat loss of 2 lbs, gain 2 lb of muscle and 3 lbs of water. A bulk is usually done with more than 3 lbs, and typically gain fat, where you look like you lost fat.
I would call what you did a successful recomposition. Keep up the good work!
I agree with this, it is quite a small fluctuation so I wouldn't quite call it a bulk, but whatever it is you look great and definitely made awesome progress!
In terms of what to do next, it is really up to you. The thing is, if you gain weight, even with a small surplus, it will come with some fat gain... it really depends on how lean you want to be for summer. Most women will start a bulk when their bodyfat is 20% or under (unless they are underweight or close not sure if that applies to you). Not to say you can't bulk above 20% but it just gets harder to put on muscle and then cut down (again, this all depends on how lean you want to get.. this may not be your goal).
I would probably continue to recomp, then you can re-evaluate if you want to bulk at some point.
Thanks for the advice. I do want to be lean enough to be comfortable wearing a two piece swimsuit this summer, I was not ready for it last summer and don't feel ready now either, I want to be a bit leaner. I've been estimated to be about 25% bodyfat, I would like to get to 20% or under. I'm 5'8'', so I wouldn't be underweight until around 122 lbs., I'm quite aways away from that.
I think I am probably going to recomp considering I don't really want to put on more fat at all, and I've been getting progress with the recomp so far it seems.2 -
peachvine29 wrote: »Def look leaner... weather you put on much muscle is hard to tell. With only a 3 lb difference it could be fat loss of 2 lbs, gain 2 lb of muscle and 3 lbs of water. A bulk is usually done with more than 3 lbs, and typically gain fat, where you look like you lost fat.
I would call what you did a successful recomposition. Keep up the good work!
I agree with this, it is quite a small fluctuation so I wouldn't quite call it a bulk, but whatever it is you look great and definitely made awesome progress!
In terms of what to do next, it is really up to you. The thing is, if you gain weight, even with a small surplus, it will come with some fat gain... it really depends on how lean you want to be for summer. Most women will start a bulk when their bodyfat is 20% or under (unless they are underweight or close not sure if that applies to you). Not to say you can't bulk above 20% but it just gets harder to put on muscle and then cut down (again, this all depends on how lean you want to get.. this may not be your goal).
I would probably continue to recomp, then you can re-evaluate if you want to bulk at some point.
Thanks for the advice. I do want to be lean enough to be comfortable wearing a two piece swimsuit this summer, I was not ready for it last summer and don't feel ready now either, I want to be a bit leaner. I've been estimated to be about 25% bodyfat, I would like to get to 20% or under. I'm 5'8'', so I wouldn't be underweight until around 122 lbs., I'm quiet aways away from that.
I think I am probably going to recomp considering I don't really want to put on more fat at all, and I've been getting progress with the recomp so far it seems.
I love bulk/cut cycles but they are not for everyone and not to say you can't do it if you really are set on it, or if you wanted to give it a go in the future.
I would keep doing whatever you are doing right now!2 -
If being lean is important to you then don't bulk, recomp until summer. Maybe reassess your goals including your ultimate physique goal at the end of summer.
Great progress, well done.3 -
Yes, I think you do look leaner, especially at the waist and upper thigh. Weight went up so that weight must be from muscle--good job!
I don't know how to bulk and cut, so I can't advise you what to do next, but I can observe that whatever you did was effective.1 -
Yes, I think you do look leaner, especially at the waist and upper thigh. Weight went up so that weight must be from muscle--good job!
I don't know how to bulk and cut, so I can't advise you what to do next, but I can observe that whatever you did was effective.
Thank you everyone I am so happy today because I really did not realize my progress until looking at my pictures and comparing this morning... I had just been weighing myself for months, not taking hardly any pics, watching the weight stall and then go up, and thought I was failing.
I was sort of skinny fat (more fat and no muscle than skinny), wasn't sure whether I should be in a deficit, maintenance, or surplus, so just ended up maintenance or above because I was lifting hard and hungry, but focusing on lifting consistently and heavy.
My scale batteries died a few weeks ago and I stopped weighing. Then there was Thanksgiving, my birthday, a vacation; I was sure I was gaining fat, replaced my scale batteries finally, and was sad to step on the scale after 3 weeks to see 141.6 this morning. Then I uploaded my pic from last night I randomly took and compared it to the summer.
Now I am super happy now that I realize I've been making progress!
I'll let this be a testament to the importance of PICTURES!7 -
You look great. I think the improvement looks significant. Without a doubt a leaner physique. Great work!
If you're not comfortable gaining fat then just stick to recomp. It is certainly a slower process but if you're doing this for your health you're going to be doing it for a long time anyway, right? Like the rest of your life! Anyway, I think it's a great idea to start with recomp and see how happy you are with the results, although I'm not sure if spring gives you enough time for a recomp to work, especially since you may not have much of those early gains left as you're becoming more experienced with resistance training. Might want to give it six months instead. If your gains are too slow to suit you, and you decide you can live with a little fat, then try a bulk for a few months. Again, you have the rest of your life to figure out what works best for you. No rush.1 -
peachvine29 wrote: »Yes, I think you do look leaner, especially at the waist and upper thigh. Weight went up so that weight must be from muscle--good job!
I don't know how to bulk and cut, so I can't advise you what to do next, but I can observe that whatever you did was effective.
Thank you everyone I am so happy today because I really did not realize my progress until looking at my pictures and comparing this morning... I had just been weighing myself for months, not taking hardly any pics, watching the weight stall and then go up, and thought I was failing.
I was sort of skinny fat (more fat and no muscle than skinny), wasn't sure whether I should be in a deficit, maintenance, or surplus, so just ended up maintenance or above because I was lifting hard and hungry, but focusing on lifting consistently and heavy.
My scale batteries died a few weeks ago and I stopped weighing. Then there was Thanksgiving, my birthday, a vacation; I was sure I was gaining fat, replaced my scale batteries finally, and was sad to step on the scale after 3 weeks to see 141.6 this morning. Then I uploaded my pic from last night I randomly took and compared it to the summer.
Now I am super happy now that I realize I've been making progress!
I'll let this be a testament to the importance of PICTURES!
BAM that is the key! Honestly so many people will cut the cals low and stall out with their workout performance, not see results then get frustrated and give up. You are doing it right: fueling your body, training hard and making progress. That is really all there is to it, it sounds so simple but for many it is really hard balance to achieve5 -
I'm also hopeful that the fact that your hair got darker is related to your resistance training. I'm getting tired of the increasing "blonde" in my hair as I age and could use some of that darkening.4
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peachvine29 wrote: »Yes, I think you do look leaner, especially at the waist and upper thigh. Weight went up so that weight must be from muscle--good job!
I don't know how to bulk and cut, so I can't advise you what to do next, but I can observe that whatever you did was effective.
Thank you everyone I am so happy today because I really did not realize my progress until looking at my pictures and comparing this morning... I had just been weighing myself for months, not taking hardly any pics, watching the weight stall and then go up, and thought I was failing.
I was sort of skinny fat (more fat and no muscle than skinny), wasn't sure whether I should be in a deficit, maintenance, or surplus, so just ended up maintenance or above because I was lifting hard and hungry, but focusing on lifting consistently and heavy.
My scale batteries died a few weeks ago and I stopped weighing. Then there was Thanksgiving, my birthday, a vacation; I was sure I was gaining fat, replaced my scale batteries finally, and was sad to step on the scale after 3 weeks to see 141.6 this morning. Then I uploaded my pic from last night I randomly took and compared it to the summer.
Now I am super happy now that I realize I've been making progress!
I'll let this be a testament to the importance of PICTURES!
BAM that is the key! Honestly so many people will cut the cals low and stall out with their workout performance, not see results then get frustrated and give up. You are doing it right: fueling your body, training hard and making progress. That is really all there is to it, it sounds so simple but for many it is really hard balance to achieve
So... I just found a thread that I posted May which you replied to sardelsa, the thread was about my low energy and fatigue, you suggested recomp but I just wanted to keep losing I thought I remembered you suggesting recomp to me specifically in the past and had to find it...:
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10744281/low-energy#latest
I was totally one of those people!! After losing so much it is really hard to turn it around and maintain or gain, but I do feel and look SO much Better! I wish I would have listened fully then, my body was putting up a fight losing any more fat, I guess we all have our own learning process and learning curves... I really appreciate the insight you have, you were right on point with your suggestions6 -
I'm also hopeful that the fact that your hair got darker is related to your resistance training. I'm getting tired of the increasing "blonde" in my hair as I age and could use some of that darkening.
Haha well I guess you could say the increased comfortableness with myself after training contributed to being open to making a drastic hair color change I say go for any change you want, I'm not regretting it!1 -
Happy I could help! That's why I say it sounds so simple, but it's really hard to get your mind around eating more to lean out.. and you are correct it is a learning process. Some people even have to go through it to know for sure (which was me). I dieted when I should have maintained or gained, I did all the "wrong" things but learned so much from it all.3
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I have to say I was doubtful of seeing much change in such a short time frame until I clicked on the pictures! Just wanted to say well done!2
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I feel like I may have told you to focus on recomp 1 or 17 times in the past 😉. I am glad you did and the progress really shows!
I think you should keep doing what you are doing. You are definitely making progress.
Just remember the other thing that I know that I have preached: that confidence in our body ultimately comes from within, not what's outside. You should absolutely feel comfortable and confident in your body as it is now, even if you want to keep continue to make progress. So I think along with the recomp, self-acceptance and self-pride are things to focus on.6 -
I feel like I may have told you to focus on recomp 1 or 17 times in the past 😉. I am glad you did and the progress really shows!
I think you should keep doing what you are doing. You are definitely making progress.
Just remember the other thing that I know that I have preached: that confidence in our body ultimately comes from within, not what's outside. You should absolutely feel comfortable and confident in your body as it is now, even if you want to keep continue to make progress. So I think along with the recomp, self-acceptance and self-pride are things to focus on.
Hahaha... yes, yes you did... Many did. I guess I just had to find out for myself, let my body lead the way into it and show me the results before I could trust that recomp would be good for me...
And yeah I do agree. Thanks for the reminder.... I believe I will find my way in that eventually. Inner work is a bit harder than the outer work, much more intangible in process and results.
Honestly I'm not sure where to start with that one. !
Thanks Mike.4 -
rheddmobile wrote: »I have to say I was doubtful of seeing much change in such a short time frame until I clicked on the pictures! Just wanted to say well done!
Thank you I really thought I was going to look like my BF went up comparatively so it was hard to believe myself!0 -
I’m a fan of recomp here. Bulks and cuts are only one way of achieving a more muscular physique. They aren’t for everyone though.
I have similar stats to you.
One thing I have noticed is the difference between 140 and 133 for me visually. I look much more toned (hate that word) at the lower weight. Whereas a 7 pound drop say from 150 to 143 was not such a visible difference.
Basically I’ve been recomping at around 140 for 2 years with some good results. Just dropped another 7 pounds in last few months and I do look leaner.
I’d say if you don’t want to gain then just train and maintain. It kept things low stress for me. If you get fed up with it, you can always change your mind, nothing is set in stone.3 -
To add to the chorus of voices: you definitely look leaner and looks to be an ongoing recomp. Just offering my congrats and encouragement - cheers!1
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cupcakesandproteinshakes wrote: »I’m a fan of recomp here. Bulks and cuts are only one way of achieving a more muscular physique. They aren’t for everyone though.
I have similar stats to you.
One thing I have noticed is the difference between 140 and 133 for me visually. I look much more toned (hate that word) at the lower weight. Whereas a 7 pound drop say from 150 to 143 was not such a visible difference.
Basically I’ve been recomping at around 140 for 2 years with some good results. Just dropped another 7 pounds in last few months and I do look leaner.
I’d say if you don’t want to gain then just train and maintain. It kept things low stress for me. If you get fed up with it, you can always change your mind, nothing is set in stone.
I agree with you about recomp. I'm not sure it is any more or less efficient than bulk/ cut cycles. The results take about the same amount of time but the pace of change is much slower. So, more patience needed if you want to see observable changes.2 -
happysquatter wrote: »To add to the chorus of voices: you definitely look leaner and looks to be an ongoing recomp. Just offering my congrats and encouragement - cheers!
Thank you! I was questioning whether it was the lighting, angle, way I am wearing the clothes, but everyone is saying I do look leaner so that gives me confidence in my progress . Next time I'll do pics the exact same way as I did last time. I'm glad there is objectively a difference0 -
I agree with you about recomp. I'm not sure it is any more or less efficient than bulk/ cut cycles. The results take about the same amount of time but the pace of change is much slower. So, more patience needed if you want to see observable changes. [/quote]
I don’t know about whether it’s quicker to do bulks and cuts. Maybe for some who are good at dieting. For me weight loss takes forever. That said, I read something by Eric helms suggesting that lean bulks are more appropriate for intermediates and recomp once you are no longer a novice is less possible. He wasn’t saying impossible, just more time efficient to bulk and cut once you are past the novice stage.3 -
cupcakesandproteinshakes wrote: »I’m a fan of recomp here. Bulks and cuts are only one way of achieving a more muscular physique. They aren’t for everyone though.
I have similar stats to you.
One thing I have noticed is the difference between 140 and 133 for me visually. I look much more toned (hate that word) at the lower weight. Whereas a 7 pound drop say from 150 to 143 was not such a visible difference.
Basically I’ve been recomping at around 140 for 2 years with some good results. Just dropped another 7 pounds in last few months and I do look leaner.
I’d say if you don’t want to gain then just train and maintain. It kept things low stress for me. If you get fed up with it, you can always change your mind, nothing is set in stone.
I think recomp is definitely the best for me to pursue right now, because I still need a mental and physical break from the 1+ year deficit I was in, now I know recomp is effective for me so I can relax into it rather than constantly want to switch to deficit, and I don't want to gain any fat right now. I feel like when I am thinner where I am now is where I would want to bulk up to, but not go too far past. I'll relax into this recomp and see where I am when I am done with my trainer, which I believe will be March. That is my plan. I'm fine with slow but steady progress right now, much less stressful!3 -
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peachvine29 wrote: »One more thing I am wondering...
I got down as low as averaging 134.7 in late September, in mid-late November I was averaging 137, now I am averaging 141.3, and my clothes do feel tighter. I think I feel less flabby and more solid but also a little bigger and fuller. Probably fat gain since it happened so quick I'm sure? I also started personal training on 11/7....
Also just realized that my pic at 138 was taken in a mirror that makes everything look wider than it is (it is curved a bit - cheap mirror), recent pic I posted from 12/9 was taken with webcam on computer.
I'm confused at how I'm averaging six pounds heavier, possibly looking leaner, but clothes feeling tighter. Not to overthink this and be annoying but just wondering?
A lot of it is where the weight gain happened... in theory during a recomp you are losing body fat and gaining muscle... but although you lose body fat "all over" in a gradual sense (you can't target fat loss) - you may be adding muscle in very specific areas depending on your training. Take a dude who skips leg days and trains hard upper body. His pants might be getting looser but his shirts are getting tight. If you have relatively fitted cloths they might start feeling tight in the shoulders and chest but you aren't noticing them getting looser in other areas.
Also, progress pics are great - but please keep in mind change is very gradual. Take them frequently if you feel the need, but for me at least - seeing them year by year or at the very least every few months apart allows me to see the actual gains or losses without driving myself crazy trying to see something that is almost invisible on a day to day or weekly comparison.6 -
jseams1234 wrote: »peachvine29 wrote: »One more thing I am wondering...
I got down as low as averaging 134.7 in late September, in mid-late November I was averaging 137, now I am averaging 141.3, and my clothes do feel tighter. I think I feel less flabby and more solid but also a little bigger and fuller. Probably fat gain since it happened so quick I'm sure? I also started personal training on 11/7....
Also just realized that my pic at 138 was taken in a mirror that makes everything look wider than it is (it is curved a bit - cheap mirror), recent pic I posted from 12/9 was taken with webcam on computer.
I'm confused at how I'm averaging six pounds heavier, possibly looking leaner, but clothes feeling tighter. Not to overthink this and be annoying but just wondering?
A lot of it is where the weight gain happened... in theory during a recomp you are losing body fat and gaining muscle... but although you lose body fat "all over" in a gradual sense (you can't target fat loss) - you may be adding muscle in very specific areas depending on your training. Take a dude who skips leg days and trains hard upper body. His pants might be getting looser but his shirts are getting tight. If you have relatively fitted cloths they might start feeling tight in the shoulders and chest but you aren't noticing them getting looser in other areas.
Also, progress pics are great - but please keep in mind change is very gradual. Take them frequently if you feel the need, but for me at least - seeing them year by year or at the very least every few months apart allows me to see the actual gains or losses without driving myself crazy trying to see something that is almost invisible on a day to day or weekly comparison.
I think my clothes have gotten a tad tighter overall, however in my legs, butt, and waist actually feel tightest. But, I am squatting and deadlifting both twice per week, doing more abs than I ever have
I was thinking I would aim to take a monthly progress pic in the same conditions and setting each time0 -
YOU TOTALLY DID IT!! Awesome work!!
Do you take any body measurements? Like bust, waist and hips. Bicep and upper thighs.1
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