A PHOTO COLLAGE

12357

Replies

  • HeidiMightyRawr
    HeidiMightyRawr Posts: 3,343 Member
    Hoping you can give some advice.
    You said that you do weight training 3-4 days a week, how long each day?
    do you eat all of your exercise calories back, or do you not eat at a deficit on the days that you weight train?
    Sorry I just really want results even 1/2 as good as yours, and it is so confusing because everyone says you can't gain muscle with a calorie deficit but yet all of the weight trainers I have looked at are eating with one.
    Thank you, you are very inspirational!

    Mainly bumping so that the OP can see, since nobody has answered in a while.

    If you don't mind another opinion though: You generally can't build muscle on a deficit, but you can build a little in certain circumstances.
    1) you're obese
    2) you're new to lifting
    3) you're returning to lifting after a long break

    If you're none of those it's unlikely that you will build any without a surplus of calories BUT with lifting and adequate protein you can help maintain your muscle on a deficit. Most people, when they lose weight, lose both fat and muscle. By maintaining your muscle, it can look like you've ended up with more once you've stripped the fat away, and you'll look better & more muscled than a person with the same weight and fat % but who hadn't done lifting while losing weight.
  • BerryH
    BerryH Posts: 4,698 Member
    Hell's bells, that's an incredible transformation, well done you!
  • momof3and3
    momof3and3 Posts: 656 Member
    You look AMAZING!!!!! Such an inspiration and role model for everyone!

    You should submit your before and after into a fitness magazine...

    Can you let us in one your workout routine .... Would love to know your workouts...
  • Amazing
  • Hoping you can give some advice.
    You said that you do weight training 3-4 days a week, how long each day?
    do you eat all of your exercise calories back, or do you not eat at a deficit on the days that you weight train?
    Sorry I just really want results even 1/2 as good as yours, and it is so confusing because everyone says you can't gain muscle with a calorie deficit but yet all of the weight trainers I have looked at are eating with one.
    Thank you, you are very inspirational!

    Mainly bumping so that the OP can see, since nobody has answered in a while.

    If you don't mind another opinion though: You generally can't build muscle on a deficit, but you can build a little in certain circumstances.
    1) you're obese
    2) you're new to lifting
    3) you're returning to lifting after a long break

    If you're none of those it's unlikely that you will build any without a surplus of calories BUT with lifting and adequate protein you can help maintain your muscle on a deficit. Most people, when they lose weight, lose both fat and muscle. By maintaining your muscle, it can look like you've ended up with more once you've stripped the fat away, and you'll look better & more muscled than a person with the same weight and fat % but who hadn't done lifting while losing weight.

    Thank you
  • Hoping you can give some advice.
    You said that you do weight training 3-4 days a week, how long each day?
    do you eat all of your exercise calories back, or do you not eat at a deficit on the days that you weight train?
    Sorry I just really want results even 1/2 as good as yours, and it is so confusing because everyone says you can't gain muscle with a calorie deficit but yet all of the weight trainers I have looked at are eating with one.
    Thank you, you are very inspirational!

    Mainly bumping so that the OP can see, since nobody has answered in a while.

    If you don't mind another opinion though: You generally can't build muscle on a deficit, but you can build a little in certain circumstances.
    1) you're obese
    2) you're new to lifting
    3) you're returning to lifting after a long break

    If you're none of those it's unlikely that you will build any without a surplus of calories BUT with lifting and adequate protein you can help maintain your muscle on a deficit. Most people, when they lose weight, lose both fat and muscle. By maintaining your muscle, it can look like you've ended up with more once you've stripped the fat away, and you'll look better & more muscled than a person with the same weight and fat % but who hadn't done lifting while losing weight.


    Thank you.
  • :noway: ....!!!

    In-cred-ih-bul.

    Thank you for sharing, I am officially inspired to start lifting HEAVY.
  • Sophiepoo
    Sophiepoo Posts: 264 Member
    Amazing! :)
  • daboyzma
    daboyzma Posts: 8 Member
    What exercise regimen did you follow? You look great!
  • WandaVonDunajew
    WandaVonDunajew Posts: 183 Member
    I am in awe. And I found my inspiration. Honestly, I think you look absolutely stunning, and you are also extremely beautiful. Now if you dont mind my girl crush, Ill just go add you as a friend right now, because I really need to see what you are doing. By no means are you skinny let alone "anorexic" (also, people, please, anorexia is just the state of not having an appetite - orexis means appetite in greek, an is a prefix meaning lack of... Anorexia nervosa is a disease where appetite is willingly "lost" and I wont go into more detail, but check your damn facts. if you really want to say a person is way too thin then at least call them cachectic, cause this is the term for very thin:angry: ).

    Back to you, you look awesome, healthy and super sexy! :flowerforyou:
  • BeautyFromPain
    BeautyFromPain Posts: 4,952 Member
    Am I the only one who thinks you look too thin? Some of these pictures look downright anorexic! What are we doing to ourselves ladies?

    Kidding right?!

    She looks fit, toned and hot to me.
    Plus, you can't be anorexic and have muscles which look like that?

    I smell jealousy in the air.
  • BeautyFromPain
    BeautyFromPain Posts: 4,952 Member
    Everyone has their own opinion, and you may not like mine.....but I will try to say this in the nicest way possible...She's by no means anorexic, or Too skinny but if she is not going to compete in body building, why would you want so much muscle...Her arms and back, don't look, I don't want to say it but I can't think of another word, feminine...they don't look soft, supple and smooth like a woman's body should look. Her body looks hard, and meaty. I guess I think that woman should look more like Beyonce, Christina Aguilera or Kate Winslet more so than Leann Rimes, Nicole Ritchie and Lindsay Lohan....but like I said everyone has their own opinion.

    It's her body and her life, she can do what she wants?!
    Btw, CURVES is a body shape and people cannot help if they have different body shapes.
    Gtfo.
  • BeautyFromPain
    BeautyFromPain Posts: 4,952 Member
    BIKINI : All good.....I honestly do not mean to offend either..... all smiles here


    k0nfyo0zed honestly, i think she looks healthy, slender (not skinny), and well toned. a lot of our perception is skewed to think bigger is healthier because of the crazy amounts of people that are obese

    ^ I know for a fact that is NOT why I think the way I do....I was going to use celebrities like Greta Garbo, Jayne Mansfield and Marilyn Monroe....but was afraid people would only know who Marilyn is.... what can I say I think curves are on women are sexy.

    Again, curves is a body shape. If you are a true hour glass at 20% BF you would still have curves. Just as some people may NEVER achieve the curvaceous look.
  • stephr2014
    stephr2014 Posts: 311 Member
    Wow amazing job! 0_o
  • randi1213csc
    randi1213csc Posts: 10 Member
    Nice abs!
  • ttkg
    ttkg Posts: 357 Member
    What an amazing transformation (I want your back!!!!!!!!!) and it must have took some insane effort and dedication. be proud of it, you look incredible and so healthy and so fit. You're inspiring! :smile:
  • Abs are amazing.
  • arwensb
    arwensb Posts: 275 Member
    Amazing and inspiring.
  • HoLLyZ82
    HoLLyZ82 Posts: 467 Member
    Hoping you can give some advice.
    You said that you do weight training 3-4 days a week, how long each day?
    do you eat all of your exercise calories back, or do you not eat at a deficit on the days that you weight train?
    Sorry I just really want results even 1/2 as good as yours, and it is so confusing because everyone says you can't gain muscle with a calorie deficit but yet all of the weight trainers I have looked at are eating with one.
    Thank you, you are very inspirational!

    Mainly bumping so that the OP can see, since nobody has answered in a while.

    If you don't mind another opinion though: You generally can't build muscle on a deficit, but you can build a little in certain circumstances.
    1) you're obese
    2) you're new to lifting
    3) you're returning to lifting after a long break

    If you're none of those it's unlikely that you will build any without a surplus of calories BUT with lifting and adequate protein you can help maintain your muscle on a deficit. Most people, when they lose weight, lose both fat and muscle. By maintaining your muscle, it can look like you've ended up with more once you've stripped the fat away, and you'll look better & more muscled than a person with the same weight and fat % but who hadn't done lifting while losing weight.

    ^^ this. I have been at this for a year now. It didnt happen over night. ive realized diet is the biggest part of this journey. i do not think that i GAINED any muscle since I have been in a deficit....with the exception of the slip ups here and there. I do however eat around 200+ grams of protein a day while in my deficit. I did this from the beginning. I naturally have a lot of muscle...even when i was 160+lbs. Leaning out has surely made them more noticeable. Having a naturally muscular body i dont feel I would want to go through the "bulk" stage or eat in a surplus to gain more muscle. At this point im just looking to drop a little body fat.
  • HoLLyZ82
    HoLLyZ82 Posts: 467 Member
    BIKINI : All good.....I honestly do not mean to offend either..... all smiles here


    k0nfyo0zed honestly, i think she looks healthy, slender (not skinny), and well toned. a lot of our perception is skewed to think bigger is healthier because of the crazy amounts of people that are obese

    ^ I know for a fact that is NOT why I think the way I do....I was going to use celebrities like Greta Garbo, Jayne Mansfield and Marilyn Monroe....but was afraid people would only know who Marilyn is.... what can I say I think curves are on women are sexy.

    Again, curves is a body shape. If you are a true hour glass at 20% BF you would still have curves. Just as some people may NEVER achieve the curvaceous look.

    curves on a woman ARE sexy...and i have them too. Im a 36 - 26.5 - 36.5. i'd call that an hourglass.:drinker:
  • robinogue
    robinogue Posts: 1,117 Member
    wow!
  • Emilia6909
    Emilia6909 Posts: 309 Member
    I think you look FANTASTIC!!! :heart:

    It is not a look for me as I think it would require serious up keep and perhaps a bit of obsession. I could be wrong though... just my perception. A lady that lives in my town just won the National Champs and she is hot from the neck down.... neck up is a big NO NO! :noway:
  • jennileeb1680
    jennileeb1680 Posts: 73 Member
    :love: :love: :love: :love: :love: :love: :love: :love: :love: :love: :love:
    You are such an inspiration to me!!!
  • Congrats.... You inspire me right up there with Jillian M and Jackie Warner... :flowerforyou: :flowerforyou: :flowerforyou:
  • lemonadem
    lemonadem Posts: 398 Member

    journey-1.jpg

    Holly, you are GORGEOUS!! Look at you, you obviously put a look of work into transforming your body, and it shows!

    You are STRONG, HEALTHY, and SEXY! These aren't easy to achieve, but you definitely did.

    You look amazing lady!!!

    x
  • What kind of service are we doing the women on this board by saying that they can't be muscular unless they plan on competing? And how are we helping at all by insisting on comparing anyone to celebrities who have hired personal trainers and nutritionists at their beck and call. We can't forget the celebraties that we all compare ourselves to have a sole responsibility to look good. They don't have full-time jobs, big families, or the stress of losing weight and paying bills under an average income. These are not the people we should be holding our standards too.

    Anorexia is a mental and psychological disease. It's signs and symptoms manifest on the human body, but someone who logs 2600 calories of food intake a day, eats healthy, and exercises regularly is far from anorexic. Let's all try and educate ourselves before we go making assumptions or opinions. Not to mention, anorexia is usually a privately fought disease. Women and men with anorexia do not broadcast their weightloss, because the majority of them are still ashamed of their bodies at even 85lbs.

    Yes, you have the right to your own opinion, but I also have the right to explain to you how you are wrong.
  • laurastrait21
    laurastrait21 Posts: 307 Member
    I am so envious of your body and you look STUNNING!! <3
  • WOW!!!! I just joined a couple days ago, my goal is exactly what you've accomplished, amazing!! :) Thanks for the inspiration!!!
  • lemonadem
    lemonadem Posts: 398 Member
    Yes, you have the right to your own opinion, but I also have the right to explain to you how you are wrong.

    LMFAO! :heart:
  • HoLLyZ82
    HoLLyZ82 Posts: 467 Member
    What kind of service are we doing the women on this board by saying that they can't be muscular unless they plan on competing? And how are we helping at all by insisting on comparing anyone to celebrities who have hired personal trainers and nutritionists at their beck and call. We can't forget the celebraties that we all compare ourselves to have a sole responsibility to look good. They don't have full-time jobs, big families, or the stress of losing weight and paying bills under an average income. These are not the people we should be holding our standards too.

    Anorexia is a mental and psychological disease. It's signs and symptoms manifest on the human body, but someone who logs 2600 calories of food intake a day, eats healthy, and exercises regularly is far from anorexic. Let's all try and educate ourselves before we go making assumptions or opinions. Not to mention, anorexia is usually a privately fought disease. Women and men with anorexia do not broadcast their weightloss, because the majority of them are still ashamed of their bodies at even 85lbs.

    Yes, you have the right to your own opinion, but I also have the right to explain to you how you are wrong.
    well said , darlin'! lettin alllll my dogs out LOL. sterb041.gif
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