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You're wrong there Marty, but then again, whatever you prefer and can stick to is better than some "ideal" theory. a calorie deficit is the only way you can lose weight. It makes no difference if you eat it in 1 big go or in 10 little goes. What does matteri s what keeps you on track. If lots of small meals help you avoid raiding the cookie jar, then it'll result in less overall calories. Your body is awesome at digesting food, eat a 12 ounce steak, let me know if any of it makes it all the way through without getting digested on the way :D here is A scientific look at the research data on this, scroll down to Alan's article. http://www.leangains.com/2011/04/cri...d-on-meal.html |
Not sure how often he eats (lol) but this NFL defensive coordinator turns 75 Sunday:)
http://i87.photobucket.com/albums/k1...azz/lebeau.jpg
Sunday is Dick LeBeau's 75th birthday. After you pick your jaw up off the floor -- the Steelers' Hall of Fame defensive coordinator could pass for 57, easy -- consider the gift the football gods have given him: On the day he turns three-quarters of a century, he gets to playcall Pittsburgh's opener. Against Peyton Manning. "That's not a real appetizing part of this birthday, trying to defend one of the greatest quarterbacks of all time," LeBeau said from his Steelers office Wednesday night. "But honestly, playing the game Sunday soothes the fact that it's my 75th a little bit." Now for how LeBeau stays young. He runs before practices, on the field. He golfs a lot in the offseason. He does crossword puzzles and mental games. He hangs around the youngest players on his unit, to learn the latest in youth-think."It's a young man's game, but in my heart, I still think I qualify," he said. "I'm surrounded by young people, which helps. I honestly don't think about it much, but I have made a promise to myself: If I ever feel myself slipping, I'll get out. I haven't felt it yet. ''No one's pushing him out the door. At 74, LeBeau orchestrated the league's No. 1 defense, both in yards and points allowed. Keep doing those crosswords, coach. |
If you care at all about cancer, check out this link:
http://www.burzynskimovie.com/ And this video: |
How's everyone doing.
I've been doing Myfitnesspal for almost 2.5 months. I've lost a bit over 20 lbs and am 1.4 lbs away from my target weight of 195. My body fat % as of tonight is at 15.7% from somewhere in the mid/high 20's. Tomorrow my wife and I are starting a round of P90X. I will be doing it for increased health and fitness and my wife will be doing it for that and weight loss. If anyone else was thinking about P90X there is no time like the present! Quote:
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I am not a morning person and I hate working out but I got up today and finished the Day 1 P90X work outs first thing this morning at 6:00am. Any other P90X takers want to do this thing?
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P90X looks like a lot of effort for minimal gain. I think there are easier ways of getting in shape, but it's whatever floats your boat
Martin Berkhan has done a lot of research into intermittant fasting, you can find him at Leangains.com He's a bit of an asshat though :D but definitely in shape. Intermiittant fasting or "skipping breakfast" is suprisingly easy to stick to and may have some benefits that aren't entirely clear yet. What he does do though that makes the most difference is always cover his protein needs and keep an eye on overall calories. John Berardi who is possibly the most friendly and innofensive face of the fitness industry tried out all of the variants of fasting and wrote it all up in this free book http://www.precisionnutrition.com/intermittent-fasting |
Day 2 Plyometrics is DONE! Got up early and did it first thing at 6:00 am again. Man that workout is murder for folks not in good shape or with weak cores like myself. Put I pushed through and modified where I had to.
Also, I am following the nutrition plan. Day 1 consisted of: Breakfast: egg white mushroom scramble, cup of strawberries and 12 oz non fat milk snack 1: protein bar Lunch: green apple & chicken salad snack 2: 30 pistachios Dinner: 9.5 oz of chicken (lunch was a bit light), 2.5 cups of broccoli, single multi grain English muffin with no topping. Also supplemented with recovery drink and a protein drink. You sure don't go hungry on P90X. Quote:
If all you want to do is loose weight then P90X is a lot of extra work. If all you are looking to do is get mildly better shape then again it is a lot of extra work. However, if you want huge gains in a short period of time it kicks ass. EDIT: I wanted to add that the first time I did P90X I was out of shape and overwieght a little bit (lost 20 lbs the first time). This time, I'm starting after 3 months of just trying to be more active in the form of fast paced walking and biking and 2+ months of using myfitnesspal to track what I eat but still eating the things I like that happen to be a bit healthier. That means that this time I'm starting P90X only a few pounds heavier than when I ended P90X last time, I'm also close to the same body fat % as what I ended at last time. However, I don't have near the muscle size or definition and my chronic back pain is bad. I'm looking forward to blowing my previous results out of the water since I'm starting off not having to loose a bunch of weight. I'd love to get down to single digit body fat % or even close to ~10% in my mid 30's. |
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Eat the whole egg, including the yolk! and drink vitamin D milk. Include dark meat chicken Steam the broccoli and include other veggies like carrots and cauliflower and add real butter and real sea salt! Skip the 'whole grain' anything and eat very minimal amounts of breads. Skip the 'protein' drink... synthetic protein is rancid and unhealthy. The myth that saturated fat is bad for us is simply NOT true! It is essential for our bodies to have that. Sugars, flours, fillers, processed grains, vegetable oils are bad for us. Google Weston A Price for more info. |
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If you want protein, drink raw milk. You guys out in CA are lucky, you can buy raw milk! If you can get raw milk, do it. Otherwise settle for whole milk, eggs, seafood, meat, chicken and nuts as a protein source. Each of these items naturally contain the essentially fats needed with protein intake. |
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