Cardio alone?
eringrace95_
Posts: 296 Member
Do i HAVE to do strength training in order to lose fat? I have been doing exclusively cardio since May 2022 and I've lost 34 pounds but I've found my weight has plateaued in recent months and I'm wondering if it's because I'm only doing cardio?
I am weighing and counting everything and I've been in a consistent deficit.
I am weighing and counting everything and I've been in a consistent deficit.
1
Replies
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No, you don't. Strength training, while good for you in terms of muscle maintenence, will not noticeably affect weight loss.1
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sollyn23l2 wrote: »No, you don't. Strength training, while good for you in terms of muscle maintenence, will not noticeably affect weight loss.
Thanks for the reply! This is good to hear, but I just have to try to switch some things up to break my plateau0 -
eringrace95_ wrote: »sollyn23l2 wrote: »No, you don't. Strength training, while good for you in terms of muscle maintenence, will not noticeably affect weight loss.
Thanks for the reply! This is good to hear, but I just have to try to switch some things up to break my plateau
Have you readjusted your calorie intake? I generally recommend including more veggies as a way to make meals a bit lower in calories.0 -
You don't HAVE to however dieting down is as much maintaining muscle as losing fat. No resistance training and you end up losing a decent amount of muscle when you start getting lower bodyfat1
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tomcustombuilder wrote: »You don't HAVE to however dieting down is as much maintaining muscle as losing fat. No resistance training and you end up losing a decent amount of muscle when you start getting lower bodyfat
Good point. I should incorporate some strength training then1 -
sollyn23l2 wrote: »eringrace95_ wrote: »sollyn23l2 wrote: »No, you don't. Strength training, while good for you in terms of muscle maintenence, will not noticeably affect weight loss.
Thanks for the reply! This is good to hear, but I just have to try to switch some things up to break my plateau
Have you readjusted your calorie intake? I generally recommend including more veggies as a way to make meals a bit lower in calories.
Yeah I have a Fitbit that tells me my exact CICO and I'm consistently under, I constantly update my weight on there as well as eat within my cals0 -
eringrace95_ wrote: »sollyn23l2 wrote: »eringrace95_ wrote: »sollyn23l2 wrote: »No, you don't. Strength training, while good for you in terms of muscle maintenence, will not noticeably affect weight loss.
Thanks for the reply! This is good to hear, but I just have to try to switch some things up to break my plateau
Have you readjusted your calorie intake? I generally recommend including more veggies as a way to make meals a bit lower in calories.
Yeah I have a Fitbit that tells me my exact CICO and I'm consistently under, I constantly update my weight on there as well as eat within my cals
Fitbits and devices like that are notorious for overestimating calories burned. I'd check out a couple calorie calculators to double check. It may be that you're not burning quite as many calories as the fitbit is estimating.1 -
sollyn23l2 wrote: »eringrace95_ wrote: »sollyn23l2 wrote: »eringrace95_ wrote: »sollyn23l2 wrote: »No, you don't. Strength training, while good for you in terms of muscle maintenence, will not noticeably affect weight loss.
Thanks for the reply! This is good to hear, but I just have to try to switch some things up to break my plateau
Have you readjusted your calorie intake? I generally recommend including more veggies as a way to make meals a bit lower in calories.
Yeah I have a Fitbit that tells me my exact CICO and I'm consistently under, I constantly update my weight on there as well as eat within my cals
Fitbits and devices like that are notorious for overestimating calories burned. I'd check out a couple calorie calculators to double check. It may be that you're not burning quite as many calories as the fitbit is estimating.
It's been doing well for me up until the past few months, I've lost 34 pounds with it, I always make sure to leave a couple hundred calories as "wiggle room" to try to surpass any errors0 -
eringrace95_ wrote: »sollyn23l2 wrote: »eringrace95_ wrote: »sollyn23l2 wrote: »eringrace95_ wrote: »sollyn23l2 wrote: »No, you don't. Strength training, while good for you in terms of muscle maintenence, will not noticeably affect weight loss.
Thanks for the reply! This is good to hear, but I just have to try to switch some things up to break my plateau
Have you readjusted your calorie intake? I generally recommend including more veggies as a way to make meals a bit lower in calories.
Yeah I have a Fitbit that tells me my exact CICO and I'm consistently under, I constantly update my weight on there as well as eat within my cals
Fitbits and devices like that are notorious for overestimating calories burned. I'd check out a couple calorie calculators to double check. It may be that you're not burning quite as many calories as the fitbit is estimating.
It's been doing well for me up until the past few months, I've lost 34 pounds with it, I always make sure to leave a couple hundred calories as "wiggle room" to try to surpass any errors
Have you still been losing weight, just more slowly? If so, that's normal and I would just roll with it.1 -
I was running 5km a day, 5 days a week.
Resistance training really kicked my weight loss into a higher gear as much as I HATE lifting weights/resistance training. Just find some exercise that you don't hate. I never lift for longer than 30 minutes. Just get my stuff done and get out.2 -
eringrace95_ wrote: »sollyn23l2 wrote: »eringrace95_ wrote: »sollyn23l2 wrote: »No, you don't. Strength training, while good for you in terms of muscle maintenence, will not noticeably affect weight loss.
Thanks for the reply! This is good to hear, but I just have to try to switch some things up to break my plateau
Have you readjusted your calorie intake? I generally recommend including more veggies as a way to make meals a bit lower in calories.
Yeah I have a Fitbit that tells me my exact CICO and I'm consistently under, I constantly update my weight on there as well as eat within my cals
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Hey! Don't rule out cardio, but ik what you mean because my ankle has been giving me trouble. Hula hooping and swimming are awesome for cardio. Also look into the short workout videos that are under 10 mins.1
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eringrace95_ wrote: »Do i HAVE to do strength training in order to lose fat? I have been doing exclusively cardio since May 2022 and I've lost 34 pounds but I've found my weight has plateaued in recent months and I'm wondering if it's because I'm only doing cardio?
I am weighing and counting everything and I've been in a consistent deficit.
Are you using a weight trending app like Happy Scale (iPhone) or Libra (Android?) How close are you to your goal weight? If you are within 20 pounds of goal, it's going to be slow, and easier to see with a weight trend app.
While you do not HAVE to do strength training in order to lose fat, you SHOULD do it for its other benefits.1 -
You should do what works for you, but I would suggest trying out a strength plan for at least 6-8 weeks and seeing how it goes. Muscle burns more calories! It also protects your joints and helps with a lot of daily struggles like carrying all the groceries into the house in one shot! Nothing to lose by giving it a go.0
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A year or so ago, I had pretty much the same question you're asking. I disagree with some of the opinions here, in my experience strength training is a boon to any fat loss regimen. And it will very likely enable you to break through a weight loss plateau. It did for me, and it's been confirmed by my personal trainer, although I established my weight routine before contacting him. He agrees with me that weight training is complementary to cardio in a fat loss plan.
It's not only to maintain the muscle mass that is inevitably pared down when eating at a deficit (because the body is dumb and doesn't know that you only want to lose fat, it will gladly eat from your muscle as well).
It's to gain the additional advantage of at-rest energy expenditure (search for "Exercise and weight loss: the importance of resting energy expenditure " online, Harvard Med has an excellent article). Muscle burns calories to build and rebuild when it's regularly stimulated.
It's also to get the multiplied health benefits that come with stronger muscles: less pain, less strain, better posture. You can't get that from cardio, in my experience.
It's also (more trivially) to have a shapely body after losing the fat. A body with toned muscles will generally look better than an untoned one. Of course, it depends on your esthetic preference. But I'm just going through my own list of reasons why I started strength training.
I encourage you to look up some options for strength/resistance training, I'm pretty sure it will help you break through the plateau 😊1 -
Strength training for me goes first than aerobics. Because this way we build the muscle . Rather than making the muscle tired0
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Going in the gym with good intentions and it cardi oh look, weights!0
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