Dankster Morgan
It is better this way
Only if a smaller eating window keeps you from going over your calories, but not necessarily in my experienceIs there any benefit to Intermittent Fasting?
Only if a smaller eating window keeps you from going over your calories, but not necessarily in my experienceIs there any benefit to Intermittent Fasting?
I've found it very helpful because I struggle immensely at keeping consistent with physical activity. Figured that until I get around to messing with the CO part of CICO, I needed to focus on the CI piece.Is there any benefit to Intermittent Fasting?
There's so much research into all of the various popular diet trends like keto, intermittent fasting, etc. etc. etc., and they all say they have they have positive health benefits, but imo the actual best diet is the one that you can actually adhere to and stick with long term.Is there any benefit to Intermittent Fasting?
Be careful if you have any health problems. For example, if you have epilepsy it can he highly detremental and can make you more susceptable to having seizures. Check with your doctor first if you have any health issues.Is there any benefit to Intermittent Fasting?
yeah i found keto pretty easy to stick to and felt better from it. Ruins lifting ive found though.My successful strategy for losing weight from being obese was avoiding carbs. I still eat pretty much everything sometimes, but things like pasta, bread, rice.. I don't eat them and I don't crave them anymore. You stay away from some of that stuff long enough and you don't even think of it as food anymore. I eat a lot more meat. I don't know if the low carb thing or carb watching is for everyone but lots of carbs and sugars can get you
Yeah I can never lift carb depleted, any pressing movement in particular is obliteratedyeah i found keto pretty easy to stick to and felt better from it. Ruins lifting ive found though.
yeah glycogen reserves go to shit. Good for cardio type stuff i found though. I think i lost 15kg on bench in a month last time i went keto.Yeah I can never lift carb depleted, any pressing movement in particular is obliterated
I agree, it can work for a lot of people. I’ve done it before and yeah, felt good but was weak af.yeah glycogen reserves go to shit. Good for cardio type stuff i found though. I think i lost 15kg on bench in a month last time i went keto.
also keto can be seriously misleading, people think they’re losing crazy weight then it plateaus, i lose 6kg in a week or so on keto just from water.
if you want a simple diet and dont do strenuous weights its a great option
Nice man, injury or illness setbacks are so frustrating, feels so good to finally get back to it / keep improvingJust got my first 175 bench after a shoulder injury that shelved me for months 4 plate club on the horizon.
Some day I’ll be there too, congrats dudeJust got my first 175 bench after a shoulder injury that shelved me for months 4 plate club on the horizon.
cheers man!Some day I’ll be there too, congrats dude
Gotcha, regardless 4 plates is insane.cheers man!
Its definitely my strongest exercise- i have proportionally not very long arms but super long legs.. so im terrible at deadlifts but strong on push exercises.
currently at 125kg at 196cm, just to put in perspective, probably about 40kg heavier than most dudes.
You’ll get more of a neurological strength adaptation from heavier weights for low reps relatively speaking.What's the difference between lifting a heavier weight for a smaller number of reps vs lifting a lighter weight for a larger number of reps?
For example doing 25 kettle bell swings with a 15 pound weight vs doing 10 kettle bell swings with a 30 pound weight. Is one or the other "better" for building strength? Or there pro's or con's for either?
rule of thumb thats worked well for me.What's the difference between lifting a heavier weight for a smaller number of reps vs lifting a lighter weight for a larger number of reps?
For example doing 25 kettle bell swings with a 15 pound weight vs doing 10 kettle bell swings with a 30 pound weight. Is one or the other "better" for building strength? Or there pro's or con's for either?