- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message
re: Anyone Here Tried Carb Backloading?
Posted on 6/25/15 at 9:17 am to Phat Phil
Posted on 6/25/15 at 9:17 am to Phat Phil
quote:
realistically most people won't eat just 2000 calories of refined sugar as their only meal though.
That was a hyperbolic example, obviously. Using calories to count nutritional value is an antiquated system which needs to be pushed to the wayside. Furthermore, using # of calories burned is also a silly system since it is almost impossible to calculate the number of calories burned from lifting weights as well as those burned during the recovery process. Can calories in vs calories out be a decent method to use for general tracking? Sure, but is it the most important factor? Absolutely not.
Its like those people who get so excited when their fitbit vibrates because they walked 10000 steps. Who gives a frick? 10000 steps, especially if it something you do routinely, will burn less and less calories as your muscles get more efficient at performing the exact same task.
Posted on 6/25/15 at 9:29 am to iAmBatman
Thanks for the anecdotal evidence. from the article you linked:
And he went from 33.4 to 29% body fat. So, for fatties looking to lose weight, doing ALMOST ANYTHING will help. For those who are already at a "healthier" level, as we were originally discussing, the twinkie diet would not be ideal.
Furthermore, the numbers don't really seem to add up. They claim he went from 33.4 to 29% body fat and his BMI went from "28.8, considered overweight, to 24.9, which is normal. He now weighs 174 pounds." bullshite. 29% body fat is not considered normal, and no one at 29% body fat has a BMI of 24.9.
ETA:
Age Essential Athletes Healthy Overweight Clinically Obese
18-40 2-4% 5%-12% 13%-19% 20%-25% Over 25%
41-60 3-5% 6%-14% 15%-21% 22%-27% Over 27%
61-80 4-6% 7%-15% 16%-22% 23%-29% Over 29%
quote:
"It's a great reminder for weight loss that calories count," she said. "Is that the bottom line to being healthy? That's another story."
quote:
"I wish I could say the outcomes are unhealthy. I wish I could say it's healthy. I'm not confident enough in doing that. That frustrates a lot of people.
And he went from 33.4 to 29% body fat. So, for fatties looking to lose weight, doing ALMOST ANYTHING will help. For those who are already at a "healthier" level, as we were originally discussing, the twinkie diet would not be ideal.
Furthermore, the numbers don't really seem to add up. They claim he went from 33.4 to 29% body fat and his BMI went from "28.8, considered overweight, to 24.9, which is normal. He now weighs 174 pounds." bullshite. 29% body fat is not considered normal, and no one at 29% body fat has a BMI of 24.9.
ETA:
Age Essential Athletes Healthy Overweight Clinically Obese
18-40 2-4% 5%-12% 13%-19% 20%-25% Over 25%
41-60 3-5% 6%-14% 15%-21% 22%-27% Over 27%
61-80 4-6% 7%-15% 16%-22% 23%-29% Over 29%
This post was edited on 6/25/15 at 9:32 am
Posted on 6/25/15 at 9:33 am to guedeaux
It's funny that you said in a previous post that calories are an antiquated measure yet you're posting about BMI like that number has any meaning whatsoever
This post was edited on 6/25/15 at 9:36 am
Posted on 6/25/15 at 9:34 am to wope
quote:
No need to make things complicated. If you want to lose weight, stay in a caloric deficit (burn more calories than you consume). That is the only thing that will truly cause you to lose weight.
This. Losing weight is really freaking simple.
People just have to come to terms that that process comes easier to some than others. That doesn't mean that simple process doesn't work for them. It's works for everyone.
This post was edited on 6/25/15 at 9:35 am
Posted on 6/25/15 at 10:00 am to iAmBatman
quote:
It's funny that you said in a previous post that calories are an antiquated measure yet you're posting about BMI like that number has any meaning whatsoever
I think BMI numbers are terrible; however, they showed that the article you posted was bullshite. You are either a terrible troll or an ignorant person. Either way, I feel sorry for you.
This post was edited on 6/25/15 at 10:02 am
Posted on 6/25/15 at 10:03 am to guedeaux
Is carb backloading ideal for someone who wants to gain mass?
Posted on 6/25/15 at 10:07 am to guedeaux
Sorry you don't know how to read. That article was anything but bullshite
Posted on 6/25/15 at 10:10 am to guedeaux
quote:
I think it is important to note that refined carbs should still be avoided like the plague regardless of time
nutella krewe
pop tarts krewe
sushi krewe
burger king chicken fries krewe
11% bf krewe
you mad?
Posted on 6/25/15 at 10:16 am to SabiDojo
quote:
Is carb backloading ideal for someone who wants to gain mass?
Yes, it definitely looks like it.
You work out in the afternoon/early evening, correct?
Eat a passel and a half of quality carbs after, hermano.
Posted on 6/25/15 at 10:26 am to iAmBatman
quote:
Sorry you don't know how to read. That article was anything but bullshite
So terrible troll is the verdict hahaha Good try, almost had me.
Posted on 6/25/15 at 10:27 am to inadaze
Carb back loading sounds like a terrible idea.
Posted on 6/25/15 at 10:29 am to guedeaux
Enjoy your chicken and rice. I'm gonna have a hamburger then some ice cream and still stay shredded
Posted on 6/25/15 at 11:14 am to iAmBatman
carb backloading is not the complicated. Leangains uses this principle. You essentially eat all your carbs right after you workout. allows you to be a little loose with the diet.
No doubt carb backloading works but, its kind of an advanced technique though. most people here just need to do if it fits your macros iifym.com
iifym will get 99% of the people on here to where they need to be. I combine it with intermittent fasting more specifically alternate day fasting and it works really well for me. Rocket does something similar.
Dunno why almost every poster on the OT tries to make this shite so complicated. its pretty simple
1) follow iifym
2) combine with some form of IF so you don't have to eat bird meals
3)lift heavy shite and put it down 3 or 4 times a week including squats and deads
4) when in the fasted state move around a lot
not that complicated.
No doubt carb backloading works but, its kind of an advanced technique though. most people here just need to do if it fits your macros iifym.com
iifym will get 99% of the people on here to where they need to be. I combine it with intermittent fasting more specifically alternate day fasting and it works really well for me. Rocket does something similar.
Dunno why almost every poster on the OT tries to make this shite so complicated. its pretty simple
1) follow iifym
2) combine with some form of IF so you don't have to eat bird meals
3)lift heavy shite and put it down 3 or 4 times a week including squats and deads
4) when in the fasted state move around a lot
not that complicated.
Posted on 6/25/15 at 11:15 am to iAmBatman
quote:
rice
carbs :(
actually today I'm having pizza for lunch and don't really give a shite, and you are still a douchebag
This post was edited on 6/25/15 at 11:17 am
Posted on 6/25/15 at 11:16 am to Dan Bilzerian
for those that think its a terrible idea please explain?
let me guess, eating carbs at night is bad huh?
let me guess, eating carbs at night is bad huh?
Popular
Back to top
Follow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News