So you want a nice stomach

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Replies

  • ElizabethKalmbach
    ElizabethKalmbach Posts: 1,415 Member
    reina1979 wrote: »
    Looks like we need to bump. How long did it take for some of you to see your flat stomach? I'm 5 weeks in, trying to look forward to the next mini milestone of two months :)

    My stomach is a ways away from "flat" but I've been doing progressive weight lifting for a few years and while I'm still in the "over weight" BMI range, I can see my obliques and the top 4 abdominal muscles are outlined. I'll probably need to lose about 12 more pounds before I start getting a center-line indent, but it's kind of cool that I can be this heavy and still see my muscles...

    It's also kind of cool to know my body well enough that I can tell you that I need to lose about 12 more pounds to see a specific change in my body.
  • My stomach ain’t flat but there’s less fat than when I was heavier and not strength training. I think I’m one of those people who needs to put some direct core work into their programming but honestly I can’t increase my time at the gym atm. I’m focussing in other body parts namely legs and bum. The 6 pack is likely not achievable for me ever or maybe only at a competition level of leanness. Which isn’t a goal of mine presently.
  • R1rainbows
    R1rainbows Posts: 129 Member
    I'll probably never have revealed abs or anything but I'd sure be happy with a tighter tummy..sitting at 21% body fat ATM so I still have a ways to go..but I'm finally just letting it happen now, no more "belly fat blasting" diets, compounds, potions, tinctures, herbs, magic spells, etc.. lol.
  • Carlos_421
    Carlos_421 Posts: 5,132 Member
    jm_1234 wrote: »
    IIFYM isn't the healthiest of diet plans. Yes, it get's results, but so does the Twinkie Diet. Abs and malnourished shouldn't be the goal.

    IIFYM doesn't leave people malnourished.
  • Wow, the IIFYM debate has livened this thread up.

    IIFYM has been a game changer for me. It’s not for everyone though. I like the flexibility and my diet is reasonably nutritious overall.
  • Theoldguy1
    Theoldguy1 Posts: 2,495 Member
    edited November 2019
    Carlos_421 wrote: »
    jm_1234 wrote: »
    IIFYM isn't the healthiest of diet plans. Yes, it get's results, but so does the Twinkie Diet. Abs and malnourished shouldn't be the goal.

    IIFYM doesn't leave people malnourished.

    It can. If one gets the vast majority their "correct" % of carbs from nutrient poor food as opposed to fruits, veggies, whole grains they will have a good chance of being malnourished.
  • sammivictoria1
    sammivictoria1 Posts: 3 Member
    Thank you!! I’ve tried this last week and already am seeing results! I did try to eat leaner meats to digest easily
  • Theoldguy1
    Theoldguy1 Posts: 2,495 Member
    edited November 2019
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    jm_1234 wrote: »
    It's actually pretty easy to be malnourished and hit your macros on any diet. My point with the original post was IIFYM is bad from a foundational/core principle perspective - eat whatever you want if it fits your macros. Yes, we can massage the definition into eat healthy and just have a cheat meal every so often as long as it fits your macros, but that is not truly IIFYM.

    Hidden hunger: America’s growing malnutrition epidemic
    https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2015/feb/10/nutrition-hunger-food-children-vitamins-us

    Americans Are Malnourished (But Not for the Reasons You'd Think)
    https://www.shape.com/healthy-eating/diet-tips/americans-are-malnourished-not-reasons-youd-think

    Quoted directly from IIFYM website:
    * Eat less food than you were eating when you gained weight
    * Move your body more than you currently are, to help get your blood flowing (this will also help with digestion which is a good thing).
    * Focus on being consistent. Though accuracy is super important and pretty much, undeniable.
    * …and if you can, try to get a wide variety of foods that are high in micronutrients, minerals, electoleyes, phytonutrients, plant sterols and probiotics (fermented foods are easy enough).

    Otherwise, get loads of sleep, lower stress and perform those things that add to your happiness rather than add to your chaos and before long, you will have the physique and the life you want.

    So terrible. Not.

    P.S. Misspellings are all theirs. Note that I didn't unfairly chop the "if you can".

    A zillion blogs and diet/fitness IG "experts" and such out there giving advice . . . the IIFYM advice is substantially better and more level-headed than most.

    Also note: I'm not any kind of disciple or devotee of formal IIFYM. I have nutritional goals, and I try to hit them the overwhelming majority of the time. That's it.

    Agree, not terrible, pretty much common sense. Personally don't like the "and if you can, try to get a wide variety of foods that are high in micronutrients, minerals, electoleyes, phytonutrients, plant sterols and probiotics (fermented foods are easy enough)." Be a *kitten* adult and do it.

    I didn't realize the self acknowledged founder if IIFYM has no formal training in nutrition.

    https://www.iifym.com/about-iifym/

    He's basically telling people to do what the CDC tells people to do for free and getting rich off it. It's all in the marketing. CDC does't up up random before and after pictures on their site. But I guess if it helps people great.

  • Unknown
    edited November 2019
    This content has been removed.
  • quiksylver296
    quiksylver296 Posts: 28,439 Member
    usmcmp wrote: »
    Bumping for the new year.

    *waves

    Hey, chica! Good to "see" you.
  • usmcmp
    usmcmp Posts: 21,219 Member
    usmcmp wrote: »
    Bumping for the new year.

    *waves

    Hey, chica! Good to "see" you.

    Hi! Might be actually seeing you at a meet (or randomly at a fight) this year. 2019 was harsh.
  • quiksylver296
    quiksylver296 Posts: 28,439 Member
    usmcmp wrote: »
    usmcmp wrote: »
    Bumping for the new year.

    *waves

    Hey, chica! Good to "see" you.

    Hi! Might be actually seeing you at a meet (or randomly at a fight) this year. 2019 was harsh.

    Sweet! I'll be at all the Mecca meets, I'm sure. I'm not competing until June, though.
  • kimny72
    kimny72 Posts: 16,011 Member
    Bumpity bump :flowerforyou:
  • angelexperiment
    angelexperiment Posts: 1,917 Member
    I can’t believe this thread is stil active lmao it’s been since 2016 last I logged before this week lol
  • friedpet
    friedpet Posts: 20 Member
    I have a few questions for the OP (and anyone else), but first, some context:

    Stats:
    • Height: 183cm
    • Starting Weight: 80kg (April 2019)
    • Current Weight: 68kg
    • BMI: 20.3
    • BF: ~15%
    • BMR: ~1653
    • TDEE (sedentary): 1984
    • TDEE (lightly active): 2273
    Diet:
    • Daily Calories: 1600-1700
    • Macros: 30P/30F/40C
    • Protocol: 17:7 intermittent fasting
    • Self-assessed quality: B
    Upper Body Routine (twice per week):
    • Cable Row: 3x9
    • Arnold Press: 3x9
    • Lying Tricep Extension: 3x12
    • Barbell Curl: 3x12
    • Bench Press: 3x9
    • Lat Pulldown: 3x9
    Lower Body Routine (twice per week):
    • Barbell Squat: 3x9
    • Calf Raise: 3x12
    • Weighted Captain's Chair: 3x12
    • Seated Leg Curl: 3x12
    • Cable Woodchopper: 3x12

    Perhaps obviously, I'm posting in this thread because I haven't yet achieved my target appearance; I've lost a full ring size and have visible ribs, but my belly still flops over my jeans in a maddening fashion. Not looking for bodybuilding adonis, just a nice stomach. Now, my questions:
    • Basing my intake on the sedentary TDEE - 20%, not eating back exercise calories (at ~400/week, not much point), and allowing myself one untracked day per week has resulted in a reliable weekly loss rate of 0.5-1.0 pounds. However, now that I've lost weight, this puts me below my BMR. In your experiences, will this lower my BMR and/or increase LBM loss?
    • My basic training approach has been to add weight when I can hit my rep and set targets relatively easily. Recently, I've noticed a severe plateau in my ability to do this. In some cases, I've started to regress slightly. Is this normal at my current BMI/BF% while in a 20% deficit? Should I increase intake to allow for overload or stay the course until my belly recedes?
    • Do you recommend any changes to my routine and/or diet (my food diary should be public) to expedite this final, infuriating stage?

    Thanks in advance!

  • quiksylver296
    quiksylver296 Posts: 28,439 Member
    edited February 2020
    WAIT: You're 6 ft tall and 149 pounds?!? Are you male or female? How old are you? Would you be willing to share a photo of this terrible belly? Maybe you need to check out this thread (if female)...

    https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10689837/does-this-uterus-make-my-stomach-look-fat/p1


    First response, before I converted height and weight: Where'd you get your workout plan from, @friedpet? It seems really random. The first thing I'd tweak is getting on a proven, progressive lifting program. Stay in a slight food deficit, 250 calories under Eat at maintenance, and hit the weights. Oh, and put on your patient pants. Stupid bellies are stupid. ;)

    http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10332083/which-lifting-program-is-the-best-for-you/p1
  • kimny72
    kimny72 Posts: 16,011 Member
    WAIT: You're 6 ft tall and 149 pounds?!? Are you male or female? How old are you? Would you be willing to share a photo of this terrible belly? Maybe you need to check out this thread (if female)...

    https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10689837/does-this-uterus-make-my-stomach-look-fat/p1


    First response, before I converted height and weight: Where'd you get your workout plan from, @friedpet? It seems really random. The first thing I'd tweak is getting on a proven, progressive lifting program. Stay in a slight food deficit, 250 calories under Eat at maintenance, and hit the weights. Oh, and put on your patient pants. Stupid bellies are stupid. ;)

    http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10332083/which-lifting-program-is-the-best-for-you/p1

    Profile says male.
    OP, you are approaching underweight status. As a 6' male, you are eating less calories than I am, and I'm a 5'4 female. You should at least be focused on recomp, and perhaps would see better aesthetic results from doing a bulk. You are either not seeing yourself accurately, or you are under-muscled, and neither will be benefited by continuing to eat at a deficit.
  • PAV8888
    PAV8888 Posts: 14,240 Member
    friedpet wrote: »
    I have a few questions for the OP (and anyone else), but first, some context:
    Recently, I've noticed a severe plateau in my ability to do this. In some cases, I've started to regress slightly. Is this normal at my current BMI/BF% while in a 20% deficit? Should I increase intake to allow for overload or stay the course until my belly recedes?
    [*] Do you recommend any changes to my routine and/or diet (my food diary should be public) to expedite this final, infuriating stage?
    [/list]
    Thanks in advance!

    You are eating at -20% from sedentary per your description; but, you are not sedentary, per your description. So you are eating at a paper deficit that is greater than 20%.

    BMI ~20 + the above quoted information from your post = you should probably be eating at maintenance or considering options other than losing even more weight as your vehicle to the physique you want.
  • friedpet
    friedpet Posts: 20 Member
    First response, before I converted height and weight: Where'd you get your workout plan from, @friedpet? It seems really random. The first thing I'd tweak is getting on a proven, progressive lifting program. Stay in a slight food deficit, 250 calories under Eat at maintenance, and hit the weights. Oh, and put on your patient pants. Stupid bellies are stupid. ;)
    The workout plan was adapted from my gym's (LifeTime Fitness) beginner upper/lower body training routines. A full circuit hits most of the major muscle groups. Also, I've had my patient pants on for the last ten months. Not terribly long, I know, but I'd find them easier to tolerate if they were loosening at the same rate as my wedding ring.
    kimny72 wrote: »
    Profile says male.
    OP, you are approaching underweight status. As a 6' male, you are eating less calories than I am, and I'm a 5'4 female. You should at least be focused on recomp, and perhaps would see better aesthetic results from doing a bulk. You are either not seeing yourself accurately, or you are under-muscled, and neither will be benefited by continuing to eat at a deficit.
    I'm likely somewhat under-muscled, as I have no serious history of strength training prior to last year. I recently had a medical Tanita bioimpedance scan report that 5/6 body areas contain "average" muscle (oddly, my left leg reported low), but I'm aware that such scans aren't overly accurate. I was steadily adding weight to my lifts up until about three months ago, so I'm at least a little less under-muscled than when I started.
    PAV8888 wrote: »
    You are eating at -20% from sedentary per your description; but, you are not sedentary, per your description. So you are eating at a paper deficit that is greater than 20%.

    BMI ~20 + the above quoted information from your post = you should probably be eating at maintenance or considering options other than losing even more weight as your vehicle to the physique you want.
    I have one untracked day per week, largely because my favorite Thai restaurant doesn't have nutrition info available. While I don't go full-tilt binge-mode on these days, I'm willing to bet I average 500 over sedentary maintenance, which brings my weekly average up to ~1,750 per day. Thus far, my weight loss hasn't exceeded the recommended cap of 1 pound per week, so I've been content with this estimation.

    Regarding the general consensus of eating at maintenance: I'm concerned that doing so would lead to unfavorable (read: belly) weight gain. Lifting weights doesn't burn a significant amount of calories, which I why I set my activity level at sedentary. My body clearly prefers storing the first available excess energy where I least desire, so it will be all too easy to lose what progress I've made.
  • quiksylver296
    quiksylver296 Posts: 28,439 Member
    edited February 2020
    It sounds like you aren't on board with our suggestions, @friedpet? I'll wish you the best of luck, then, and see myself out.