Newbie Weight Lifter at Age 49

In October 2023 I went to the Dr. for my annual biometric exam. Basically, I was/am overweight, I had high glucose with possible insulin resistance and high bad cholesterol.

I was given a list of to-dos by my Dr. who scheduled more blood work for 6 months later. I decided I would start eating right and exercising. Full body weightlifting workouts 2 times a week and cardio 3 times a week.

I've stuck with it since I made that decision. I've only lost 15 pounds in the 3 and a half months I've been at it. I was disappointed in this until my health coach pointed out that 1 pound a week weight loss is pretty good. That's the back story. Now on to my main question.

I've done TONS of research since I've started this. I'm 49 years old (in a few weeks) and have never really stuck to a weightlifting program for as long as and as consistently as I have now. I'm excited to see what changes will be made to my body at my next annual biometric exam, but I don't know what changes I can expect.

Most of the research I've done is geared toward young men, not middle-aged men. I still carry a lot of weight. I don't know how much of that is new lean muscle if any. I can't really see any changes. It seems on the interwebs the general consensus is one can expect to see (at least minimal) results in 3 to 6 months. I think that's geared toward young people.

I'm just curious if there are others out there who started lifting mid-life as basically a complete newb and stuck with it. What kind of results did you have? How long did it take before you finally started seeing a difference?

I am consistently adding more weight. My nutrition is pretty well dialed in. I'd give myself a B+. Maybe I'm still too fat? I've also wondered if I'm just an oddball for having waited so long to start lifting and there just aren't that many out there like myself to compare results against.

Replies

  • tomcustombuilder
    tomcustombuilder Posts: 2,228 Member
    What is your height and weight?
  • daymonh74
    daymonh74 Posts: 19 Member
    What is your height and weight?

    5' 9.75" and 239 lbs
  • tomcustombuilder
    tomcustombuilder Posts: 2,228 Member
    daymonh74 wrote: »
    What is your height and weight?

    5' 9.75" and 239 lbs

    You won’t visually see much in the way muscle gain until you lose more fat. As you lean out muscle will become more visible. You still have a ways to go so keep at it.

    If you’re adding weight to the bar after the first month or so of lifting it’s a good sign you’re adding muscle. Keep an eye on your diet so that you stay in enough of a deficit to continue losing fat.
  • Retroguy2000
    Retroguy2000 Posts: 1,848 Member
    It sounds like you're doing everything right and making great progress. Keep doing what you're doing. Make sure to maximize your chances of success by getting enough protein, about 150g in your case is a good daily target, no harm in going higher, and make sure you get plenty of sleep. You may also consider adding creatine too.

    Don't worry about how you might progress relative to someone in their 20's, say. Yes, it'll be harder as you know, but what's important is progress relative to your old self, and what you're doing will get you that progress. Ideally, you'll be doing this as long as you possibly can, and if you do then you'll be seeing more health benefits than just what the scale tells you.
  • DoubleG2
    DoubleG2 Posts: 123 Member
    I began lifting at 54. I ran a structured dumbbell routine for the first 6 months then began the first of several structured barbell routines. I'm still at it almost 5 years later - and I have never felt (or looked) better in my adult life. Initial gains were not quite exponential but I saw dramatic progress in six months. After one year, my chest, back and arms were measurably larger and I was significantly leaner. Progress is much more linear now but I continue to add weight to the bar regularly. In my experience there are three keys to successful progress: 1. Consistent workout schedule. 2. Proper nutrition - especially protein. 3. Sleep - at least 7 hours of good sleep nightly.

    As others have mentioned, continue a calorie deficit for fat loss ensuring you are getting adequate protein to promote muscle growth. Best of luck and congrats on your progress so far. There is life after 50!

  • nossmf
    nossmf Posts: 11,702 Member
    Remember that progress can be measured in a variety of ways, the majority of which are NOT how you look visually. You've already identified the lifts are continuing to progress heavier and heavier, which is a great marker. For guys our age (I'm almost 46), some other important milestones:

    ...easier climbing up stairs (less knee pain, no losing breath)
    ...gym time goes from dreaded to expected to anticipated to desired
    ...fewer episodes of lethargy, more willing to get up and move to help with chores, etc
    ...higher libido due to having more energy, lifting helps restore testosterone
  • MikePfirrman
    MikePfirrman Posts: 3,307 Member
    I started lifting at around 45ish. IMHO, too many make weight lifting too complex. Just start out really slow, get someone to help you with form, even if it's just a couple of trainer sessions.

    I'm 58 now and I've moved from lifting 3X a week down to 2X per week, but I do a pretty rigorous workout when I lift (and do a lot of other stuff like Rowing and Assault Bike, that also compliment weights for my cardio).

    I've been somewhat stunned, how over time, how much muscle I've been able to put on. Even in my late 50s. I'm around 208 right now (I'm just a bit taller than you), but I only really need to lose around 10 lbs.
  • daymonh74
    daymonh74 Posts: 19 Member
    DoubleG2 wrote: »
    I began lifting at 54. I ran a structured dumbbell routine for the first 6 months then began the first of several structured barbell routines. I'm still at it almost 5 years later - and I have never felt (or looked) better in my adult life. Initial gains were not quite exponential but I saw dramatic progress in six months. After one year, my chest, back and arms were measurably larger and I was significantly leaner. Progress is much more linear now but I continue to add weight to the bar regularly. In my experience there are three keys to successful progress: 1. Consistent workout schedule. 2. Proper nutrition - especially protein. 3. Sleep - at least 7 hours of good sleep nightly.

    As others have mentioned, continue a calorie deficit for fat loss ensuring you are getting adequate protein to promote muscle growth. Best of luck and congrats on your progress so far. There is life after 50!

    THIS!!! Is what I was looking for. My biggest struggles right now are sleep and protein. Who would have thought getting enough protein would be so hard? I've added shakes to help with that, but getting even 0.8 grams per pound of fat is tough! On the sleep front I go to bed early enough to get 8 hours, but I cannot stay asleep for more than 6.5 hours most of the time. I definitely need to work on that.

    I'm so glad to see someone who's started close to my age and had success with it. I've no plans of ever stopping (until I'm in a nursing home). I just needed that reassurance that I'm not too old and with consistency will come desirable results. Thank you.
  • daymonh74
    daymonh74 Posts: 19 Member
    nay0m3 wrote: »
    @daymonh74 I am a female and started a bit younger but I will share my experience in the hopes it may bring some comfort/reassurance that you are on the right path!

    I am almost 45 and I started weight training 3 years ago. The first 6 months or so, I actually saw my weight increase and saw my body visually become bigger as well. This was due to gain muscling under fat I still needed to lose. After that, I saw my body start to lean out and could see the muscle I had been working so hard for!

    Despite now being ~5 pounds or so more than I would like to be currently, I am still in the best shape of my life and plan to continue this way for the rest of my years!

    I also stopped drinking alcohol besides 1 or 2x/year for a special event, upped my protein, tracked macros, got enough sleep and just focused on movement in my daily life. Daily dog walks, parking far away, returning my cart all the way back inside the grocery store each time, standing desk, fidgeting consciously, all the little things add up.

    KUDOS to you for embarking on this journey and may you find the true fulfilment that comes from taking care of yourself and prioritizing health and wellness and making it who you are now <3

    You mentioned that you gained weight at first with lifting. Was this despite a caloric deficit? I'm curious because my goal was to lose about 2 pounds a week, but I don't think I'll be able to do that lifting weights. I've only lost 13 pounds so far which is just about a pound a week. I've no clue how much muscle I've added, but I add weight to the bar every week or two. I've added quite a bit of weight to the bar/bars since I've started actually.
  • daymonh74
    daymonh74 Posts: 19 Member
    nossmf wrote: »
    Remember that progress can be measured in a variety of ways, the majority of which are NOT how you look visually. You've already identified the lifts are continuing to progress heavier and heavier, which is a great marker. For guys our age (I'm almost 46), some other important milestones:

    ...easier climbing up stairs (less knee pain, no losing breath)
    ...gym time goes from dreaded to expected to anticipated to desired
    ...fewer episodes of lethargy, more willing to get up and move to help with chores, etc
    ...higher libido due to having more energy, lifting helps restore testosterone

    I definitely can't rely on visual improvements right now. I'm just not seeing it. Likewise, I experience all of the other positive aspects you've mentioned and they're absolutely worth the effort for now. One other thing I noticed is I have to lift heavy tanks at work. I don't struggle with them nearly as bad as most of the other guys or as much as I used to. It's the small things for now I guess...
  • daymonh74
    daymonh74 Posts: 19 Member
    daymonh74 wrote: »
    What is your height and weight?

    5' 9.75" and 239 lbs

    You won’t visually see much in the way muscle gain until you lose more fat. As you lean out muscle will become more visible. You still have a ways to go so keep at it.

    If you’re adding weight to the bar after the first month or so of lifting it’s a good sign you’re adding muscle. Keep an eye on your diet so that you stay in enough of a deficit to continue losing fat.

    I do still have a good bit of fat to get rid of. I just hope at my age having just started lifting (4 months in on the 26th) that all that work is going to pay off when the majority of fat does come off.
  • daymonh74
    daymonh74 Posts: 19 Member
    It sounds like you're doing everything right and making great progress. Keep doing what you're doing. Make sure to maximize your chances of success by getting enough protein, about 150g in your case is a good daily target, no harm in going higher, and make sure you get plenty of sleep. You may also consider adding creatine too.

    Don't worry about how you might progress relative to someone in their 20's, say. Yes, it'll be harder as you know, but what's important is progress relative to your old self, and what you're doing will get you that progress. Ideally, you'll be doing this as long as you possibly can, and if you do then you'll be seeing more health benefits than just what the scale tells you.

    I just started hearing about creatine recently. I've been taking protein shakes but thought about adding creatine to a smoothie for breakfast or something. I've read about people taking it before working out which makes me wonder if it makes people feel hyper or jittery.
  • daymonh74
    daymonh74 Posts: 19 Member
    I started lifting at around 45ish. IMHO, too many make weight lifting too complex. Just start out really slow, get someone to help you with form, even if it's just a couple of trainer sessions.

    I'm 58 now and I've moved from lifting 3X a week down to 2X per week, but I do a pretty rigorous workout when I lift (and do a lot of other stuff like Rowing and Assault Bike, that also compliment weights for my cardio).

    I've been somewhat stunned, how over time, how much muscle I've been able to put on. Even in my late 50s. I'm around 208 right now (I'm just a bit taller than you), but I only really need to lose around 10 lbs.

    So glad to hear you've had good success putting on muscle! Did you start lifting in your 50s? I lift twice a week. Full body heavy weights. I've been thinking about going to 3x a week, but I'm not sure if I'd be overtraining and I don't quite understand all of the mechanics related to doing splits just yet. I'm learning what my different muscles are and what they do. I'm just not 100% yet. I'm doing a lot of compound exercises right now too which if I understand correctly will kind of put my body into that muscle building mode (to dumb it down).
  • Retroguy2000
    Retroguy2000 Posts: 1,848 Member
    daymonh74 wrote: »
    I just started hearing about creatine recently. I've been taking protein shakes but thought about adding creatine to a smoothie for breakfast or something. I've read about people taking it before working out which makes me wonder if it makes people feel hyper or jittery.
    It's safe, cheap, well researched.

    It's a myth about needing to have it around your workout. Just get your 5g daily, doesn't matter when.
  • nossmf
    nossmf Posts: 11,702 Member
    daymonh74 wrote: »
    I lift twice a week. Full body heavy weights. I've been thinking about going to 3x a week, but I'm not sure if I'd be overtraining and I don't quite understand all of the mechanics related to doing splits just yet. I'm learning what my different muscles are and what they do. I'm just not 100% yet. I'm doing a lot of compound exercises right now too which if I understand correctly will kind of put my body into that muscle building mode (to dumb it down).

    Some thoughts on the bolded parts...

    Every person is different, and for some going 3x a week would be too much, for others it's not. Since you're still doing full-body, just make sure you have at least one day of rest between, so for example lift Mon-Wed-Fri taking Tues-Thur off. If you want to move one of those days to the weekend, no problem, just keep 24 hours between consecutive workouts. When and if you decide to try it, just monitor how you feel. If you are still feeling weak at the start of the next workout, then for your body at this moment in time you may not be ready yet for a third day. Likewise if your sleep starts to suffer or you are nonstop sore all the time. But realize that even if you aren't ready NOW, doesn't mean you'll never be ready, it just may take some more time getting used to lifting. Lots of people are able to graduate up to three lifting sessions per week just fine.

    Don't worry yet about doing split workouts. Some people never do them, just stick with full-body every time, and they are very satisfied with their results. Others reach a point where they want to try splits, whether for the sake of variety or because they feel they can get better gains. Both paths are completely valid and can yield terrific results. If/when you want to learn about splits, there are plenty of resources available to read, and lots of people on this site more than willing to teach.

    Now, for the part about compound exercises causing a "muscle building mode," let's stop right there. The way your muscles grow is a several-step process:
    • Muscle fibers are stressed/torn
    • The body sends nutrients to heal the damaged fibers
    • If the same fibers are repeatedly stressed/torn, the body does more than simply repair the damage, it adds reinforcement to help prevent future damage, aka builds bigger muscle
    This cycle can occur through lifting objects at work just as easily as through exercise of all forms. Yes, ALL forms, not just weightlifting...swimming, running, yoga can all spur increases in muscle, provided it first stresses the cells to the point of needing repair, then repeats the process until the body feels compelled to repair AND reinforce. This won't continue indefinitely. Think about walking: as an infant, walking was new and decidedly difficult, requiring lots of new brain coordination and muscle building, but as an adult you can walk around without causing any overt damage, thus there's no reason for building the muscles based strictly on walking. You CAN prompt the body into repair, such as by walking for hours on end or hiking over rough terrain/steep slopes.

    Anyway, back to the part about compound exercises causing magical muscle building. The fact you're lifting weights is causing strain on your muscles, prompting the body's healing process. Keep doing this, and that's why you gain muscle. Now, what's special about compound moves (bench press, deadlift) compared to isolation moves (curls, leg extensions)? From a purely biological perspective, nothing at all. Both cause the muscles to tear, both require the body to adapt. What sets compound moves as generally considered superior is two-fold:
    • Time-saving
    • Heavy-setting
    Think about it this way: You can spend ten minutes doing pushdowns (triceps), another ten minutes doing cable fly's (chest) and ten more minutes doing DB front raises (shoulders), hitting all three groups in a total of 30 minutes. Or you can do bench press, hitting the same three muscle groups in ten minutes total, saving time to either do more compound moves or just get on with your day.

    The other part about compound moves is how you can really load up the bar, since the combination of muscles working together are stronger than any one group by itself. Heavier weights cause correspondingly greater damage, which elicits a correspondingly greater healing/building reaction from the body.

    Thus compound moves let you lift heavier for less total time while achieving more body response. That's your "muscle building mode," which can be achieved using nothing but isolation moves, it just would take a lot longer, both in terms of per workout as well as more weeks due to lighter loads being used. Isolation moves have their place, but unless you have a specific reason for doing them (a certain goal, a trainer's instructions, medical rehab, etc) you're probably better off going with most, if not all, compound moves.
  • nay0m3
    nay0m3 Posts: 178 Member
    @daymonh74 Yes--I gained despite being in a deficit but a modest deficit! If I remember from my learning, this is a result of water retention as the muscles try to repair, glycogen in muscles and losing fat but gaining muscle which can result in either no loss or staying the same. This was only for a few months as my body adapted to the new changes! I definitely leaned out.

    Creatine is also a must and doesn't cause jitters or anything like that. There are so many research studies that have shown it is essential to speeding up the replacement of ATP which helps grow muscles as well as has cognitive benefits, even for those who don't lift! I take it after I lift but my husband takes it every morning before he has coffee and heads to work. Timing isn't important, nor is "loading" necessary. Just start taking 5g consistently.

    Curious what your lifting program looks like if you want to share with us!

    I started out with body part split 6 days per week which caught up with me after about a year and completely exhausted me, so I then moved to full body 4x/week and now I do upper lower splits 4x and a full body day 1x but I actually might reduce to just 4x and do more cardio. You will learn what works best for you like @nossmf suggested! There is no one way to do any of this, which is the cool part because you can become your own science experiment!
  • nossmf
    nossmf Posts: 11,702 Member
    nay0m3 wrote: »
    Creatine is also a must...

    For the record, I've never taken creatine and have been quite happy with the results of my hard work. I'm sure I ended up having some through my diet, but I never took it as a supplement. So while I won't argue it's potential benefits, I will argue the idea it's a "must."
  • nay0m3
    nay0m3 Posts: 178 Member
    @nossmf Agreed "must" is not 100% but for the cost and the benefits for the body (not speaking solely to bodybuilding--there are a lot of other benefits that have been proven more lately) it seems silly not to take it.
  • Retroguy2000
    Retroguy2000 Posts: 1,848 Member
    edited February 2023
    Technically, creatine isn't a "must", but the potential benefits weighed against how cheap and easy it is to add to your regimen, make it very compelling.

    I used to lift casually in my 20's and early 30's. This was before the internet, so it was harder to get good info. I'd go to the gym, do stuff with no real plan. I made some progress, nothing amazing. Then my habits changed. I got more sedentary, and gained weight.

    As I turned 50 a bit over 3 years ago I made changes. I got myself a little home gym of bench, loadable db's, ez-bar, barbell, pullup bar and various plates. I've since dropped over 50 pounds and sustained there. TBH I could probably drop another 10-20. My waist size is down about 6", and my tshirt size is the same, though some are baggier than others, but not enough to drop a size. I just got some blood work done, everything is in normal range though my glucose was higher than I thought it would be, at the high end of normal.

    I've tried various splits and what I've found works for me, that I can sustain, is an upper/lower split every other day. On the in-between days I may do a bit of cardio. Yes, that means Monday one week will be a lifting day, the next week not. Since I'm working out at home, that's not a problem. Every four days I'm getting bench, squat, row, etc., and at the end of leg day I may add in Myo-reps for arms to get a little extra volume.

    If you want to add a third day of weights you don't have to do entire full body again, which may well lead to overtraining even if you are (hopefully?) doing a deload every so often. Different parts recover faster than others. You don't need a convoluted split either. Keep doing bigger lifts like squats or deadlift twice a week, and on the extra day in between do more arms, accessories, etc.
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 34,231 Member
    nossmf wrote: »
    (snippety)

    This cycle can occur through lifting objects at work just as easily as through exercise of all forms. Yes, ALL forms, not just weightlifting...swimming, running, yoga can all spur increases in muscle, provided it first stresses the cells to the point of needing repair, then repeats the process until the body feels compelled to repair AND reinforce. This won't continue indefinitely. Think about walking: as an infant, walking was new and decidedly difficult, requiring lots of new brain coordination and muscle building, but as an adult you can walk around without causing any overt damage, thus there's no reason for building the muscles based strictly on walking. You CAN prompt the body into repair, such as by walking for hours on end or hiking over rough terrain/steep slopes.
    (snip)

    There's very much goodness in @nossmf's post, IMO, but I snipped this part. Can I be a witness (in a way that I think could be encouraging to OP)?

    I gained noticeable muscle after mid-40s, while not doing much lifting at all, but mostly from doing a lot of something most would consider cardio, but a form that has a slightly progressive-strength-challenge element to it (rowing, both boats and machines, and plenty of it, for years). And I'm not only old, but female besides. (This was during a period of maintenance, when I was over-fat, not in a calorie deficit.)

    Not gonna lie, it happened really slowly, because rowing (though slowly progressive) is not an efficient way to build muscle if that's the goal, compared to weight lifting. I'd recommend rowing as a thing that's fun, not as an ideal way to build muscle!

    But I suspect that if a middle-aged woman doing sub-optimal exercise can slowly add muscle, a similar-aged man who's strength training has plenty of reason for optimism. Patience still required, probably. ;)

    Creatine: There's been some debate about whether it can cause some muscle cramping, but most recent sources seem to say it doesn't. I've never heard of it making people hyper or jittery, and I certainly don't experience that. It seems to be very safe, it's pretty cheap, and there are hints in research that it's especially helpful as a supplement when aging, plus for (maybe) cognitive benefits as well as for certain exercise-related reasons. (A friend's neurologist told her to take it for cognitive reasons, for example.) There are also hints that it could have benefits for athletes who are vegan or vegetarian with limited dairy/egg intake, but IMU the studies on that front have not been very well controlled.

    Best wishes!
  • daymonh74
    daymonh74 Posts: 19 Member
    nay0m3 wrote: »

    Curious what your lifting program looks like if you want to share with us!

    I workout every weekday. Treadmill on Monday, Lift Tuesday, Exercise Bike Wednesday, Treadmill again Thursday and Lift Friday.

    For lifting I do the same thing each day since I think there's plenty of recovery time between. Incline bench press, barbell squats, deadlifts, overhead military press, pendlay rows, barbell curls, bent over dumbbell rows, arnolds, and then I usually finish with dumbbell lateral raises and dumbbell face pulls. All free weights.

    All free weights.

    Friday is a busy day. There are times I have to skip Friday and do it Saturday instead. I'm not sure if this is slowing my progress or not. I started The last week of October 2022 and have been consistent. I only added protein shakes in the last couple of weeks. I thought I could get most of my protein from food alone. Nope... not happenin'.
  • nossmf
    nossmf Posts: 11,702 Member
    Sounds like a solid full-body routine. Moving from Friday to Saturday will not delay your results any, though if you skipped Friday completely that would slow things down.

    MFP members are a mixed bag when it comes to feelings on protein shakes. Some live by them; some think they're the devil incarnate. Most are somewhere in the middle, thinking that if you can get enough protein from regular food then do it, if not then adding a shake is fine. Personally I only add shakes on lifting days, or rarely on days when I'm running light (such as hotdog over a fire night). Otherwise I eat enough meat and drink enough milk that reaching my goals is easy. What's your protein goal?
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 34,231 Member
    daymonh74 wrote: »
    nay0m3 wrote: »

    Curious what your lifting program looks like if you want to share with us!

    I workout every weekday. Treadmill on Monday, Lift Tuesday, Exercise Bike Wednesday, Treadmill again Thursday and Lift Friday.

    For lifting I do the same thing each day since I think there's plenty of recovery time between. Incline bench press, barbell squats, deadlifts, overhead military press, pendlay rows, barbell curls, bent over dumbbell rows, arnolds, and then I usually finish with dumbbell lateral raises and dumbbell face pulls. All free weights.

    All free weights.

    Friday is a busy day. There are times I have to skip Friday and do it Saturday instead. I'm not sure if this is slowing my progress or not. I started The last week of October 2022 and have been consistent. I only added protein shakes in the last couple of weeks. I thought I could get most of my protein from food alone. Nope... not happenin'.

    I share @nossmf's question about your protein goal. Also, are you an omnivore?

    (Honest bias admission: I have no difficulty getting enough protein, like routinely over 1g/pound of lean body mass, even as a vegetarian, and doing it without protein powders/bars or in my case faux meats. Even though I understand in the abstract that different people have different taste preferences, I always wonder about the scenario when omnivores say they struggle to get adequate protein from food. Some of them have simply cut calories too far, though it sounds like you're on a more moderate loss-rate track. As an aside, I don't think there's anything wrong with protein supplements or faux meats, I just don't personally find them tasty or satisfying.)

    If you'd like to be getting more of your protein from food, this thread may be helpful:

    https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10247171/carbs-and-fats-are-cheap-heres-a-guide-to-getting-your-proteins-worth-fiber-also

    It helped me when I was first trying to get plenty of protein on reduced calories at the start of loss, even though it's very much an "all eating styles" thread, and many of the most calorie-efficient protein choices are meaty/fishy.

    Again, supplements are fine, but if you're strongly motivated to be more food-focused (optional!), I could make some suggestions to you about how to get there, because it's a game that many of us veg people need to play when we first adopt this dietary style (as I did in *1974*). The approach would work fine for an omnivore, with the bonus that y'all can utilize foods that we veg people won't/can't. I won't belabor it on speculation, because if you prefer to use a protein supplement, that's fine.
  • daymonh74
    daymonh74 Posts: 19 Member
    nossmf wrote: »
    What's your protein goal?

    About 0.8 grams per pound which right now puts me at about 190 grams. Even with shakes I struggle to get close to 150 grams.

    More lean meat would probably help, but it takes time that I don't have cooking steaks, pork and chicken breast.

    Working 2nd shift doesn't help since I would basically need to eat the cooked meal for lunch.

    That's why I decided to add in shakes.

  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 34,231 Member
    edited February 2023
    daymonh74 wrote: »
    nossmf wrote: »
    What's your protein goal?

    About 0.8 grams per pound which right now puts me at about 190 grams. Even with shakes I struggle to get close to 150 grams.

    More lean meat would probably help, but it takes time that I don't have cooking steaks, pork and chicken breast.

    Working 2nd shift doesn't help since I would basically need to eat the cooked meal for lunch.

    That's why I decided to add in shakes.

    If we haven't already linked it, there's an evidence-based protein calculator you could take a look at, from a generally well-respected site:

    https://examine.com/protein-intake-calculator/

    Full explanation of their basis for these recommendations in this document:

    https://examine.com/guides/protein-intake/

    On a quick re-skim of the thread, I didn't see an indication of how much weight you think you need to lose, though your BMI at 239 would be 34.5 (class 1 obese, technically). BMI isn't perfect for individual assessment, to say the least, but it's a semi-reliable screener. Men with normal-to-moderate muscle often are better in the upper end of the normal BMI range (that full range would be 128-172 pounds at your height), or even the lower part of the theoretically overweight range (173-207 is the full overweight range at your height). Some men are objectively not over-fat at even higher weights, but that tends to be men with really high muscularity and/or an unusual build.

    IMO, you'd probably be OK at a minimum of 0.8g daily per pound of a healthy goal weight, or 1g per pound of estimated lean body mass (LBM). This is a case where even the probably-inaccurate estimate of LBM from a home scale or online calculator (like the "Navy Body Fat Calculator" ones) can be OK to use, because the arithmetic leads the final protein estimate to be pretty close even if the body fat percent (BF%) estimate is questionable.

    I'm sure some of the guys will have more nuanced ideas about this, but even if you end up at the upper end of the overweight BMI range at a satisfying-to-you body composition, 0.8 x 207 would be a protein minimum of about 166 g daily.
  • Retroguy2000
    Retroguy2000 Posts: 1,848 Member
    edited February 2023
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    1g per pound of estimated lean body mass (LBM).
    ^ This. The "X grams per pound bw" adage falls apart for non-lean people. Your fat doesn't need all that protein. It's either a sliding scale of X to Y grams per pound bw, X if you're at a high body fat range, Y if you're lean, or just use a lean body mass estimate, which at 1g per pound lbm comes out to about 160g being plenty for you. I don't think a bit higher will be harmful, but it could be an inconvenience to try and fit into your daily intake and macros.

    I assume the people in this study were generally leaner than OP, which means the following ratio could drop somewhat:

    Protein supplementation beyond total protein intakes of 1.62 g/kg/day (0.73g/lb) resulted in no further RET-induced gains in FFM.

    https://bjsm.bmj.com/content/52/6/376

    EDIT: I see the examine link shows 160g being the upper range of a good target. I got the 160g estimate from a lean body mass calculator and applying 1g per pound to that.
  • nossmf
    nossmf Posts: 11,702 Member
    daymonh74 wrote: »
    About 0.8 grams per pound which right now puts me at about 190 grams. Even with shakes I struggle to get close to 150 grams.

    More lean meat would probably help, but it takes time that I don't have cooking steaks, pork and chicken breast.

    Working 2nd shift doesn't help since I would basically need to eat the cooked meal for lunch.

    Admittedly, cooking steak can take time to do right, but pork and chicken can be cooked in no time flat. Seriously, if you have 15 minutes I can show you how to make a very high-protein meal. How high? With 8oz of chicken, a cup of egg noodles, a cup of broccoli and a 12oz cup of milk we're talking 93g of protein for only 650 calories in 15 minutes. That's a single meal in less time than it takes some people to take a shower. So while I understand time crunch is a real thing, the statement "I have no time" doesn't hold water with me. Even if you don't have time during the week, a couple hours spent on the weekend mass producing food, putting into tupperware in the fridge, and pulling out to nuke will set you up for success.

    As far as working 2nd shift, do you mean working from 2pm-10pm or something similar? I did that for years, and yep, I ate protein-heavy at lunch time before work. Combined with tupperware leftovers which can get nuked at work, and it's still doable.
  • daymonh74
    daymonh74 Posts: 19 Member
    edited February 2023
    AnnPT77 wrote: »

    Thanks for that link. After reading through this thread and doing more digging online I definitely want to try and get most of my protein from food which I did initially. Back to the drawing board...