33 Weight Status
#101
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166 this AM.
#102
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I'm at 160. Still. Saw a book review on the Frank Vandenbroucke and he was about my height and 140. That's pro weight, and I'm 46, but still, I'd like to split that difference. I think over the years not being about to lose that last 5 to 10 pounds has kept me from better results.
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166. 8 and 8.6% body fat per InBody test https://inbodyusa.com/products/inbody570/. We have the machine at the gym.
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still at my normal 145 - 150 lbs each morning. Was 155 - 160 prior to 2019.
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165.5 this morning. Lightest since before the pandemic.
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Weighed in 61.1kg; that means I’ve broken 135 for the first time since 2021. Completely lost the weight training gains since moving back to Korea last August.
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Just hit 142; I peaked at 158 when I was out but crawled my way back. I still have about 3-5 to go, but for the most part I measure using bodyfat calipers.
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164.2 - new low for me but no apparent change in muscle mass. Feel great.
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I have been on the new nutrition a.k.a. diet program for a month. Weight is 165.6 this morning. So far, the new plan has been transformational for me - hard to believe. I am much stronger in the gym, riding out of my mind on bike. I did 4 interval sessions this week and feel great. Some of my old guy aches and pains just vanished, skin is better/tighter, and my left knee that was starting to hurt on hard efforts just healed up. And this is just phase one of the program - adaptation without changing too many things.
The doc predicted the above result but I was skeptical and still am to a point. Let's see how it plays out long term.
The changes to my diet were pretty massive. I ate the same thing most of the time at meals and he eliminated 80% of the foods and replaced them with others in different combinations and forbid me, yes forbid me, from eating certain things - some of which I like and thought were healthy. And I have to eat constantly. 3 meals and 3 snacks per day. It is hard to eat all the food specified on my meal program per day. I am never hungry.
Water - drinking the required water per day is very hard to do. I am finally up to 85% of what is required. I pee all the time which is annoying. But I feel fabulous and I am scary fast on the bike.
The doc predicted the above result but I was skeptical and still am to a point. Let's see how it plays out long term.
The changes to my diet were pretty massive. I ate the same thing most of the time at meals and he eliminated 80% of the foods and replaced them with others in different combinations and forbid me, yes forbid me, from eating certain things - some of which I like and thought were healthy. And I have to eat constantly. 3 meals and 3 snacks per day. It is hard to eat all the food specified on my meal program per day. I am never hungry.
Water - drinking the required water per day is very hard to do. I am finally up to 85% of what is required. I pee all the time which is annoying. But I feel fabulous and I am scary fast on the bike.
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I have been on the new nutrition a.k.a. diet program for a month. Weight is 165.6 this morning. So far, the new plan has been transformational for me - hard to believe. I am much stronger in the gym, riding out of my mind on bike. I did 4 interval sessions this week and feel great. Some of my old guy aches and pains just vanished, skin is better/tighter, and my left knee that was starting to hurt on hard efforts just healed up. And this is just phase one of the program - adaptation without changing too many things.
The doc predicted the above result but I was skeptical and still am to a point. Let's see how it plays out long term.
The changes to my diet were pretty massive. I ate the same thing most of the time at meals and he eliminated 80% of the foods and replaced them with others in different combinations and forbid me, yes forbid me, from eating certain things - some of which I like and thought were healthy. And I have to eat constantly. 3 meals and 3 snacks per day. It is hard to eat all the food specified on my meal program per day. I am never hungry.
Water - drinking the required water per day is very hard to do. I am finally up to 85% of what is required. I pee all the time which is annoying. But I feel fabulous and I am scary fast on the bike.
The doc predicted the above result but I was skeptical and still am to a point. Let's see how it plays out long term.
The changes to my diet were pretty massive. I ate the same thing most of the time at meals and he eliminated 80% of the foods and replaced them with others in different combinations and forbid me, yes forbid me, from eating certain things - some of which I like and thought were healthy. And I have to eat constantly. 3 meals and 3 snacks per day. It is hard to eat all the food specified on my meal program per day. I am never hungry.
Water - drinking the required water per day is very hard to do. I am finally up to 85% of what is required. I pee all the time which is annoying. But I feel fabulous and I am scary fast on the bike.
I'm 152lb today.
#113
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Been on the low end for me the past few days, right at 145 lbs. I seem to weigh less when I'm not training heavily. On paper it seems counter intuitive, but to me it makes sense somehow, or at least feels correct. Like I'm not bloated from having to eat and drink all the time. Lower consumption in and out, but still enough exercise to be lean and have a high metabolism. More even baseline energy too. This is probably what a healthy person is supposed to feel like.
When the training and overall consumption go up, I tend to creep up a few lbs closer to 150. That's usually not till mid November or so.
When the training and overall consumption go up, I tend to creep up a few lbs closer to 150. That's usually not till mid November or so.
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"Your beauty is an aeroplane;
so high, my heart cannot bear the strain." -A.C. Jobim, Triste
"Your beauty is an aeroplane;
so high, my heart cannot bear the strain." -A.C. Jobim, Triste
#114
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I also think weight loss is doable during the race season, but the window of concurrently having high performance with steady weight loss is so slim it is best left to the off season where having bad days on the bike aren't as detrimental.
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Been on the low end for me the past few days, right at 145 lbs. I seem to weigh less when I'm not training heavily. On paper it seems counter intuitive, but to me it makes sense somehow, or at least feels correct. Like I'm not bloated from having to eat and drink all the time. Lower consumption in and out, but still enough exercise to be lean and have a high metabolism. More even baseline energy too. This is probably what a healthy person is supposed to feel like.
When the training and overall consumption go up, I tend to creep up a few lbs closer to 150. That's usually not till mid November or so.
When the training and overall consumption go up, I tend to creep up a few lbs closer to 150. That's usually not till mid November or so.
I weigh most at the first “peak” in TSS after a slump caused by “life”. Then as load becomes regular the weight comes back off.
I knew none of that, that’s what slowtwitch told me a couple times.
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Ate very clean yesterday, lots of water, no wine with dinner, and was 143# this morning . Almost feel like adjusting my weight down in Zwift (from 145) but I'm too lazy / don't care enough to do that. Plus, it's probably karmic payback for having it set there for years and usually being a couple lbs heavier, lol.
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"Your beauty is an aeroplane;
so high, my heart cannot bear the strain." -A.C. Jobim, Triste
"Your beauty is an aeroplane;
so high, my heart cannot bear the strain." -A.C. Jobim, Triste
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Winter is here, and I have no trainer (it's at my wife's apartment an hour away), so lots of gym work for me. I was down to 60.5kg at the beginning of October (lowest ever) and now building back up with some muscle - scale said 61.8kg on Friday night at the gym.
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156.4 this AM.
#119
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That's a lot of weight loss in 6 months! I'm curious how you are doing it, and what you are "forbidden" from eating, and if you are still doing that, and how the energy levels, sleep, mental state, etc are doing as well.
I've been slowly shifting to a much higher carbohydrate percentage, with lots of fruits, potatoes, rice, juice, etc. I eliminated pretty much all vegetable oils, which has nixed all pre-packaged foods, fried foods, etc. Your results sound very similar to what I'm seeing, so I'm wondering how close our diets are.
I've been slowly shifting to a much higher carbohydrate percentage, with lots of fruits, potatoes, rice, juice, etc. I eliminated pretty much all vegetable oils, which has nixed all pre-packaged foods, fried foods, etc. Your results sound very similar to what I'm seeing, so I'm wondering how close our diets are.
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procrit My weight loss was due to the cycling accident / crash and hospital stay last year. I went into the hospital at 165 at 9.5% BF and came out at 146 with my muscles and neurology shredded. Everything was shredded including chest wall, abs, postural, coordination and etc. It was pretty awful. Think concentration camp. The details are too gruesome, boring and quite frankly demotivating to post. They are behind me.
This AM 156.8 with a BF of 7.5% measured at the docs via skin calipers and with an InBody resistance machine. My legs are back but my ass needs some more work. This weight is too light for me. I am thinking more like back to 162 - 165 but maintain the lower BF. So I am not far off the mark. My endurance is still awful but improving. Blood is improving and not bad. Neurology is normal.
The problem with comparing diets is that genetics, blood markers, family medical history and past performances, according to my doc, play a key role in setting up an optimum diet. Broadly, he places people in three buckets - those the utilize carbs, those that utilize fat and protein and those that can utilize either.
I am in the dual bucket and can equally use carbs or fat and protein. So my diet is set almost equally of carbs, fat and protein and biased to carbs when riding. More than likely, you are the same but maybe not. And dual metabolisms only make up 2% of the population with most being in the protein / fat group followed by the carb group.
So my diet is set by the protein and since I am an elite athlete, my protein multiplier is 1.1 versus a sedentary person who would use .5. My lean body mass sets the protein level and everything else follows.
On the bike, I do splits, gel/peanut butter together, after 90 minutes. If it is going to be a long ride, I have a special snack before bed and a pre workout cocktail and mini breakfast before the ride. Even though, I metabolize carbs effectively, too many add body fat and too few result in lower performance.
The goal is to be very consistent on the diet and eat the same things all the time and then measure performance, body fat and blood metrics to see how the diet is working. Then modify if required. If you are all over the place on the diet, then this program is a meh. You are either in or out. The diet is not very functional in social / restaurant settings and a family with children would seem impossible. Not that it would not be excellent for all.
This AM 156.8 with a BF of 7.5% measured at the docs via skin calipers and with an InBody resistance machine. My legs are back but my ass needs some more work. This weight is too light for me. I am thinking more like back to 162 - 165 but maintain the lower BF. So I am not far off the mark. My endurance is still awful but improving. Blood is improving and not bad. Neurology is normal.
The problem with comparing diets is that genetics, blood markers, family medical history and past performances, according to my doc, play a key role in setting up an optimum diet. Broadly, he places people in three buckets - those the utilize carbs, those that utilize fat and protein and those that can utilize either.
I am in the dual bucket and can equally use carbs or fat and protein. So my diet is set almost equally of carbs, fat and protein and biased to carbs when riding. More than likely, you are the same but maybe not. And dual metabolisms only make up 2% of the population with most being in the protein / fat group followed by the carb group.
So my diet is set by the protein and since I am an elite athlete, my protein multiplier is 1.1 versus a sedentary person who would use .5. My lean body mass sets the protein level and everything else follows.
On the bike, I do splits, gel/peanut butter together, after 90 minutes. If it is going to be a long ride, I have a special snack before bed and a pre workout cocktail and mini breakfast before the ride. Even though, I metabolize carbs effectively, too many add body fat and too few result in lower performance.
The goal is to be very consistent on the diet and eat the same things all the time and then measure performance, body fat and blood metrics to see how the diet is working. Then modify if required. If you are all over the place on the diet, then this program is a meh. You are either in or out. The diet is not very functional in social / restaurant settings and a family with children would seem impossible. Not that it would not be excellent for all.
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#121
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Glad you are feeling better.
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Short of outright disease states (diabetes, PKU, liver, pancreas, or intestinal problems (gastric bypass, Crohns) people can thrive under an impressively wide range of macronutrient percentages. I disagree with this 3 bucket theory for generally healthy people.
Glad you are feeling better.
Glad you are feeling better.
#123
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If you want to debate the topic at hand (the 3 buckets theory) show publications supporting that concept. We can tell what people are metabolizing from their breath, outside of diseases peoples breath are very similar despite consuming different diets. . https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Respir...exchange_ratio
If you want to show us this Dr 3 buckets credentials please do. Perhaps I can learn from his literature.
Last edited by Enthalpic; 02-23-24 at 06:06 PM.
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#124
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Post Dr three buckets references. If you won't you don't have any real faith in his/her system. Why not help build up their client base?
Science is meant to be critiqued.
You probably pay money for it and therefore have a biased opinion due to cognitive dissonance. If it is garbage, and you pay for it, that means you are stupid for paying for garbage; to protect your ego you won't let others examine it and potentially point out flaws. You can't simultaneously be a smart person and a person who buys crap... show me it is not crap.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_dissonance
Last edited by Enthalpic; 02-29-24 at 01:39 PM.