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  1. #241
    Banned gnidliubydob58's Avatar
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    Very good thread, worth the read. Glad i stumbled across this one bud.
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  2. #242
    Banned muscleformula's Avatar
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    Arrow

    The goal now (read: not tomorrow, not next week, now) is to just make better food choices and improve your daily eating habits. There's no need to get cute or technical with things. There's no need to count calories daily, nor is there any need to worry about macronutrient percentages.

    Instead, I want you to follow these simple rules for the next six to twelve months. In doing so, I can guarantee you'll feel and look better.


    1. Eat Breakfast Every Day!

    This is simple. There's no excuse not to eat breakfast every day. It takes no more than two minutes to whip up a bowl of oatmeal or blend a protein shake with a piece of fruit. Anyone who says they don't have time to make breakfast in the morning is being flat-out lazy and just doesn't want to make the effort to change. Get up fifteen minutes earlier if you have to.

    Studies show that people who eat breakfast on a consistent basis tend to be significantly leaner than those who don't. Additionally, breakfast is a great way to stunt the release of cortisol (a hormone that tells your body to store fat). Start each day with breakfast, no excuses.


    2. Eat Every 2-3 Hours, No Matter What!

    Never skip a meal to "save calories." In doing so you're more likely to overeat later in the day. One of the worst things you can do is to go for prolonged periods of time without eating. You should eat to prevent hunger, not because you're hungry. Even if you're not hungry and it's been three hours, eat something. A protein shake with a handful of mixed nuts would suffice.

    Strive for five to eight "feedings" per day. Doing so will go a long ways in keeping blood glucose levels in check and providing some arbitrary improvements in overall metabolism.

    It's simple math really. If you're awake 15 hours out of the day, that equates to at least five meals (15/3 hours = 5). So if it's 9 PM and the last time you ate was 6 PM, it's time to eat again. Granted, what you eat during this time will make a difference (I wouldn't suggest a bowl of cereal or a bagel), but it stands to reason that you can and should eat a small meal prior to bed.

    The Perfect Pre-Bed Meal:

    Half to 1 cup low-fat cottage cheese

    1 scoop chocolate Metabolic Drive
    1 oz raw almonds

    Half a serving of a quality "greens" supplement


    3. Eat Lean Protein With Every Meal

    Protein has the greatest Thermic Effect of Feeding (TEF) compared to fats and carbohydrates combined, which translates to more calories being burned during digestion.

    Simply put, the body will burn more calories (upwards of 30%) assimilating and digesting protein than carbs (6%) and fats (3%). So for every 100 calories of protein ingested, the body will burn 30 calories just digesting it.

    Additionally, protein provides essential (and non-essential) amino acids, which are the building blocks of precious lean muscle. Protein also takes longer to digest which will give you a greater feeling of satiety and prevent hunger pangs.

    4. Eliminate Calorie Containing Beverages

    Alcohol is basically a poison to the body, and when it's ingested the body's main objective is to get rid of it. Fat loss is impossible or at least stunted when alcohol is present in the body. The liver must metabolize and excrete all the alcohol before it can go on doing anything else.

    I'm not saying a glass of wine here and there is a bad thing, but I will say that if your goal is fat loss, alcohol should be limited (if not eliminated entirely).

    Other beverages on the hit list:

    Soda: Nothing but sugar and/or artificial sweeteners

    Fruit juice: Highly processed and devoid of the "good stuff" (fiber)

    By eliminating calorie containing beverages from your daily diet, you're essentially reducing your daily caloric intake by quite a bit, which will equate to fat loss.

    Rule of thumb: Drink at least a gallon of water per day if you're a woman, 1.5 to 2 gallons if you're a man. A great way to judge if you're drinking enough water is the color of your urine. It shouldn't be yellow; it should be clear with a hint of off-yellow tone. If it isn't, you're not drinking enough water.

    5. Ingest Vegetables And/Or Fruit Every Time You Eat

    Remember, that lone leaf of lettuce you have on your sandwich doesn't count. You need to be eating vegetables and/or fruit with every meal and plenty of them.

    6. Save "Starchy" Carbs For After You Train

    Use your carbs, don't wear them. When it comes to starchy carbohydrates (think pasta, rice, and potatoes), your best bet would be to save them for only after you train. Please read that again. Save your starchy carbs for only after you train (which for most is three to four times per week). The rest of the day, focus on protein, veggies/fruit, and healthy fats.

    After you train your body will actually put those carbohydrates to good use: replenishing depleted glycogen stores, aiding with shuttling nutrients to muscle cells, and shutting down cortisol production (a very catabolic hormone which breaks down muscle). Your body will handle the carbs much more effectively in the hours after a workout than at any other time during the day, so save them for that time only.

    7. Eat Fat

    Let's say this together: dietary fat does not make me fat. We need to focus on the quality of the fats we eat, not necessarily the quantity.

    There are three types of fat – saturated, monounsaturated, and polyunsaturated. Eating all three kinds in a healthy balance can dramatically improve your health and even help you lose fat. Sounds like an oxymoron (you need to eat fat to lose fat), but when you concentrate on the "good" fats, that's what happens.

    Your saturated fat should come from animal products. You can even toss in some butter or coconut oil for cooking. Your monounsaturated fat should come from mixed nuts, olives, and olive oil. Your polyunsaturated fat should come from flaxseeds, flaxseed oil, fish oil, and mixed nuts.

    8. Don't Worry About Minutia

    Minutia: small or trivial details. Setting diets up based on percentages just doesn't make sense. When someone places protein, carbohydrate, or fat requirements in terms of percentages for a diet, it doesn't necessarily have any relevance to what that person actually needs. A diet consisting of 30% protein may be too little for one person (ingesting only 1000 kcals per day) and too high for someone else (ingesting 5000 kcals per day).

    Using the above example, someone who "needs" 150 grams of protein would only be ingesting 75 grams of protein per day on a 1000 kcal per day diet (half of what he actually needs), and 375 grams of protein per day (more than double what he needs) on a 5000 kcal per day diet (again, assuming 30% protein).

    Additionally, many diets are often labeled "high carbohydrate or high fat" when a specific macronutrient is over a certain percentage. Most dieticians would be quick to label a diet consisting of 35% fat as "high fat." However, if we were to take a 2000 kcal diet (with 35% of calories coming from fat) and add 200 grams (800 kcals) of carbohydrate to it without changing anything else (total calories are now 2800), a "high-fat" diet all of a sudden becomes a "low-fat" diet because the percentage of fat dropped from 35% to 25%, even though total grams of fat stayed the same.

    Save your energy for time under the bar. No need to worry about trivial minutia such as macronutrient percentages.

    9. Have 10% Foods

    Berardi has stated numerous times that 100% nutritional discipline is never required for optimal progress. The difference in results between 90% adherence to your nutritional program and 100% adherence is negligible.

    Weekends tend to be the time when people are tempted to stray from their normal eating habits. As long as you're strict 90% of the time, those three slices of pizza you ordered on Friday night won't be the end all/be all of your success. Planned cheat meals are actually quite beneficial to fat loss in general and have actually been shown to help people get out of their fat loss plateau.

    10. Food Preparation is Key

    The hardest part about eating well is making sure you can follow the rules above consistently. I can't stress enough how important food preparation is for your success. This should be your first priority!

    It takes time and discipline to prepare the foods you need to be eating. Sure, it's more convenient to order fast food rather than cooking a few chicken breasts and steamed veggies for dinner. But you need to look at the food you eat as either bringing you one step closer to your goal or two steps back!

    Cooking and preparing meals ahead of time will ensure that you're eating the right foods and not eating for convenience. If the good food is already there in your fridge, you're less inclined to eat the bad stuff. Make a grocery list every week and go shopping for all the foods you'll need to succeed.
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  3. #243
    Registered User notarg's Avatar
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    Originally Posted by muscleformula View Post
    The goal now (read: not tomorrow, not next week, now) is to just make better food choices and improve your daily eating habits. There's no need to get cute or technical with things. There's no need to count calories daily, nor is there any need to worry about macronutrient percentages.

    Instead, I want you to follow these simple rules for the next six to twelve months. In doing so, I can guarantee you'll feel and look better.


    1. Eat Breakfast Every Day!

    This is simple. There's no excuse not to eat breakfast every day. It takes no more than two minutes to whip up a bowl of oatmeal or blend a protein shake with a piece of fruit. Anyone who says they don't have time to make breakfast in the morning is being flat-out lazy and just doesn't want to make the effort to change. Get up fifteen minutes earlier if you have to.

    Studies show that people who eat breakfast on a consistent basis tend to be significantly leaner than those who don't. Additionally, breakfast is a great way to stunt the release of cortisol (a hormone that tells your body to store fat). Start each day with breakfast, no excuses.


    2. Eat Every 2-3 Hours, No Matter What!

    Never skip a meal to "save calories." In doing so you're more likely to overeat later in the day. One of the worst things you can do is to go for prolonged periods of time without eating. You should eat to prevent hunger, not because you're hungry. Even if you're not hungry and it's been three hours, eat something. A protein shake with a handful of mixed nuts would suffice.

    Strive for five to eight "feedings" per day. Doing so will go a long ways in keeping blood glucose levels in check and providing some arbitrary improvements in overall metabolism.

    It's simple math really. If you're awake 15 hours out of the day, that equates to at least five meals (15/3 hours = 5). So if it's 9 PM and the last time you ate was 6 PM, it's time to eat again. Granted, what you eat during this time will make a difference (I wouldn't suggest a bowl of cereal or a bagel), but it stands to reason that you can and should eat a small meal prior to bed.

    The Perfect Pre-Bed Meal:

    Half to 1 cup low-fat cottage cheese

    1 scoop chocolate Metabolic Drive
    1 oz raw almonds

    Half a serving of a quality "greens" supplement


    3. Eat Lean Protein With Every Meal

    Protein has the greatest Thermic Effect of Feeding (TEF) compared to fats and carbohydrates combined, which translates to more calories being burned during digestion.

    Simply put, the body will burn more calories (upwards of 30%) assimilating and digesting protein than carbs (6%) and fats (3%). So for every 100 calories of protein ingested, the body will burn 30 calories just digesting it.

    Additionally, protein provides essential (and non-essential) amino acids, which are the building blocks of precious lean muscle. Protein also takes longer to digest which will give you a greater feeling of satiety and prevent hunger pangs.

    4. Eliminate Calorie Containing Beverages

    Alcohol is basically a poison to the body, and when it's ingested the body's main objective is to get rid of it. Fat loss is impossible or at least stunted when alcohol is present in the body. The liver must metabolize and excrete all the alcohol before it can go on doing anything else.

    I'm not saying a glass of wine here and there is a bad thing, but I will say that if your goal is fat loss, alcohol should be limited (if not eliminated entirely).

    Other beverages on the hit list:

    Soda: Nothing but sugar and/or artificial sweeteners

    Fruit juice: Highly processed and devoid of the "good stuff" (fiber)

    By eliminating calorie containing beverages from your daily diet, you're essentially reducing your daily caloric intake by quite a bit, which will equate to fat loss.

    Rule of thumb: Drink at least a gallon of water per day if you're a woman, 1.5 to 2 gallons if you're a man. A great way to judge if you're drinking enough water is the color of your urine. It shouldn't be yellow; it should be clear with a hint of off-yellow tone. If it isn't, you're not drinking enough water.

    5. Ingest Vegetables And/Or Fruit Every Time You Eat

    Remember, that lone leaf of lettuce you have on your sandwich doesn't count. You need to be eating vegetables and/or fruit with every meal and plenty of them.

    6. Save "Starchy" Carbs For After You Train

    Use your carbs, don't wear them. When it comes to starchy carbohydrates (think pasta, rice, and potatoes), your best bet would be to save them for only after you train. Please read that again. Save your starchy carbs for only after you train (which for most is three to four times per week). The rest of the day, focus on protein, veggies/fruit, and healthy fats.

    After you train your body will actually put those carbohydrates to good use: replenishing depleted glycogen stores, aiding with shuttling nutrients to muscle cells, and shutting down cortisol production (a very catabolic hormone which breaks down muscle). Your body will handle the carbs much more effectively in the hours after a workout than at any other time during the day, so save them for that time only.

    7. Eat Fat

    Let's say this together: dietary fat does not make me fat. We need to focus on the quality of the fats we eat, not necessarily the quantity.

    There are three types of fat – saturated, monounsaturated, and polyunsaturated. Eating all three kinds in a healthy balance can dramatically improve your health and even help you lose fat. Sounds like an oxymoron (you need to eat fat to lose fat), but when you concentrate on the "good" fats, that's what happens.

    Your saturated fat should come from animal products. You can even toss in some butter or coconut oil for cooking. Your monounsaturated fat should come from mixed nuts, olives, and olive oil. Your polyunsaturated fat should come from flaxseeds, flaxseed oil, fish oil, and mixed nuts.

    8. Don't Worry About Minutia

    Minutia: small or trivial details. Setting diets up based on percentages just doesn't make sense. When someone places protein, carbohydrate, or fat requirements in terms of percentages for a diet, it doesn't necessarily have any relevance to what that person actually needs. A diet consisting of 30% protein may be too little for one person (ingesting only 1000 kcals per day) and too high for someone else (ingesting 5000 kcals per day).

    Using the above example, someone who "needs" 150 grams of protein would only be ingesting 75 grams of protein per day on a 1000 kcal per day diet (half of what he actually needs), and 375 grams of protein per day (more than double what he needs) on a 5000 kcal per day diet (again, assuming 30% protein).

    Additionally, many diets are often labeled "high carbohydrate or high fat" when a specific macronutrient is over a certain percentage. Most dieticians would be quick to label a diet consisting of 35% fat as "high fat." However, if we were to take a 2000 kcal diet (with 35% of calories coming from fat) and add 200 grams (800 kcals) of carbohydrate to it without changing anything else (total calories are now 2800), a "high-fat" diet all of a sudden becomes a "low-fat" diet because the percentage of fat dropped from 35% to 25%, even though total grams of fat stayed the same.

    Save your energy for time under the bar. No need to worry about trivial minutia such as macronutrient percentages.

    9. Have 10% Foods

    Berardi has stated numerous times that 100% nutritional discipline is never required for optimal progress. The difference in results between 90% adherence to your nutritional program and 100% adherence is negligible.

    Weekends tend to be the time when people are tempted to stray from their normal eating habits. As long as you're strict 90% of the time, those three slices of pizza you ordered on Friday night won't be the end all/be all of your success. Planned cheat meals are actually quite beneficial to fat loss in general and have actually been shown to help people get out of their fat loss plateau.

    10. Food Preparation is Key

    The hardest part about eating well is making sure you can follow the rules above consistently. I can't stress enough how important food preparation is for your success. This should be your first priority!

    It takes time and discipline to prepare the foods you need to be eating. Sure, it's more convenient to order fast food rather than cooking a few chicken breasts and steamed veggies for dinner. But you need to look at the food you eat as either bringing you one step closer to your goal or two steps back!

    Cooking and preparing meals ahead of time will ensure that you're eating the right foods and not eating for convenience. If the good food is already there in your fridge, you're less inclined to eat the bad stuff. Make a grocery list every week and go shopping for all the foods you'll need to succeed.
    I don't agree with the idea that eating every 2-3 hours should be a requirement. As a preventative measure to stop binging or overeating during times of extreme hunger, it can be helpful. However, it certainly shouldn't be enforced. If someone wants to have the best chance at success while dieting then a meal plan that fits best with their personnel preference and daily lifestyles should be followed. Whether that is 2 meals a day or 6, it really shouldn't matter much as long as the same amount of food is consumed.
    I believe some recent research also suggests that it is more beneficial to consume larger, infrequent meals as opposed to a larger frequency of snacking and smaller meals. I doubt a substantial difference would be noticeable in either case but if you really want to nit pick.
    Greg Notaro
    GregNotaro@TeamNotaro.com

    WNBF Professional Natural Bodybuilder
    2013 INBF Northern States Super Natural Champion

    YouTube:
    https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC14UvqIpMorHEOtiyDIKfsA

    Bodybuilding.com Journal:
    http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=152807213

    Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute:
    BS Electrical Engineering
    MS Electrical Engineering
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  4. #244
    Registered User Aerdn's Avatar
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    Nice thread!
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  5. #245
    Registered User jackalsilva's Avatar
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    Unhappy

    Originally Posted by determined4000 View Post
    You can't lose fat and gain muscle simultaneously.
    Well, you just broke my little newbie heart. :'(

    I guess bulking and shredding is a thing? Seeing as how I just finished a 15-year bulk, time to shred...
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  6. #246
    Registered User absman332's Avatar
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    Originally Posted by EomBomb View Post
    nice thread, bookmarked.
    This is fantasitc!
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  7. #247
    Registered User Lm93's Avatar
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    "Stabalizer: triphosphate" been eatings packets of chicken breast daily, it has on the back 99 % chicken breast an then next to it it says stabalizer: triphosphate. Is this legit to eat or am i best staying away? Thanks.
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  8. #248
    Registered User barrinkl's Avatar
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    stupid question... but what is a sticky and how do i read it?
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  9. #249
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    Great Posts through out this thread. Stay Motivated! It all Starts with eating right and getting enough sleep. I do like to use Organic when and if it is available for any meat or dairy products. Good Luck to Everyone!
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  10. #250
    Registered User gymbrains's Avatar
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    So many questions answered. Thanks guys!
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  11. #251
    Registered User Heavlifter's Avatar
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    anyone ever try an online trainer?
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  12. #252
    Registered User Heavlifter's Avatar
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    Originally Posted by gymbrains View Post
    So many questions answered. Thanks guys!
    yea great answers
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  13. #253
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    I have a couple quick questions about protein and hitting macro goals. (I'm new to nutrition and lifting)

    Question #1 What would happen if someone were to follow a legit workout plan, but could only afford to eat 70 grams of protein a day even though they were hitting their caloric goals?

    (I assume they would build muscle more slowly and reach a limit where they need more protein to put on muscle mass?)

    Question #2

    When planning out what foods I will be eating for the day, it can be hard to hit all of my macro goals and calories without going over one of my macro limits.

    For example, if my goal was 2215 calories a day and my macros were roughly 274 grams of carbs, 142 grams of protein, and 62 grams of fat and if I regularly ended up with roughly 30 less carbs, 20 more grams of fat, and 10 more protein, what would be the outcome?

    (From what I am understanding it's not that big of a deal and I should focus on my workouts even if these macro trends were an ongoing thing.)
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  14. #254
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    Originally Posted by ko300zx View Post
    Uh oh.
    lol
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  15. #255
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    All of this is good stuff
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  16. #256
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    Adisoy is India's driving Soy Milk maker situated in Ludhiana, Punjab. Adisoy's nutritious soy milk "Milsoy" is accessible in 5 diverse delectable kinds of mango, strawberry, chocolate, margarine scotch and elaichi.
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  17. #257
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    Tx helped alot
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    Yeaps u right
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  19. #259
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    Yea me too
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    This is a nice thread. I regularly go for a healthy protein diet aside the burning workout obviously and so far has not been disappointed.
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  21. #261
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    What a good thread. Im new to these forums and am glad i found this kind of information
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    Great information.. Thanks for sharing
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  23. #263
    Registered User Kasteren's Avatar
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    Great information indeed, thanks!
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  24. #264
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    I'm looking for some advice here. I work in a tough job and eat clean and lean all day, but when I get home I'm pretty hungry and its often late and I'm exhausted. I often eat a good size dinner, then fall asleep right away, and this is killing my fat loss endeavors. Any suggestions on how to avoid being so hungry after a hard day at work or how to avoid gaining weight in my sleep like this?
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  25. #265
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    Originally Posted by muscleformula View Post
    The goal now (read: not tomorrow, not next week, now) is to just make better food choices and improve your daily eating habits. There's no need to get cute or technical with things. There's no need to count calories daily, nor is there any need to worry about macronutrient percentages.

    Instead, I want you to follow these simple rules for the next six to twelve months. In doing so, I can guarantee you'll feel and look better.


    1. Eat Breakfast Every Day!

    This is simple. There's no excuse not to eat breakfast every day. It takes no more than two minutes to whip up a bowl of oatmeal or blend a protein shake with a piece of fruit. Anyone who says they don't have time to make breakfast in the morning is being flat-out lazy and just doesn't want to make the effort to change. Get up fifteen minutes earlier if you have to.

    Studies show that people who eat breakfast on a consistent basis tend to be significantly leaner than those who don't. Additionally, breakfast is a great way to stunt the release of cortisol (a hormone that tells your body to store fat). Start each day with breakfast, no excuses.


    2. Eat Every 2-3 Hours, No Matter What!

    Never skip a meal to "save calories." In doing so you're more likely to overeat later in the day. One of the worst things you can do is to go for prolonged periods of time without eating. You should eat to prevent hunger, not because you're hungry. Even if you're not hungry and it's been three hours, eat something. A protein shake with a handful of mixed nuts would suffice.

    Strive for five to eight "feedings" per day. Doing so will go a long ways in keeping blood glucose levels in check and providing some arbitrary improvements in overall metabolism.

    It's simple math really. If you're awake 15 hours out of the day, that equates to at least five meals (15/3 hours = 5). So if it's 9 PM and the last time you ate was 6 PM, it's time to eat again. Granted, what you eat during this time will make a difference (I wouldn't suggest a bowl of cereal or a bagel), but it stands to reason that you can and should eat a small meal prior to bed.

    The Perfect Pre-Bed Meal:

    Half to 1 cup low-fat cottage cheese

    1 scoop chocolate Metabolic Drive
    1 oz raw almonds

    Half a serving of a quality "greens" supplement


    3. Eat Lean Protein With Every Meal

    Protein has the greatest Thermic Effect of Feeding (TEF) compared to fats and carbohydrates combined, which translates to more calories being burned during digestion.

    Simply put, the body will burn more calories (upwards of 30%) assimilating and digesting protein than carbs (6%) and fats (3%). So for every 100 calories of protein ingested, the body will burn 30 calories just digesting it.

    Additionally, protein provides essential (and non-essential) amino acids, which are the building blocks of precious lean muscle. Protein also takes longer to digest which will give you a greater feeling of satiety and prevent hunger pangs.

    4. Eliminate Calorie Containing Beverages

    Alcohol is basically a poison to the body, and when it's ingested the body's main objective is to get rid of it. Fat loss is impossible or at least stunted when alcohol is present in the body. The liver must metabolize and excrete all the alcohol before it can go on doing anything else.

    I'm not saying a glass of wine here and there is a bad thing, but I will say that if your goal is fat loss, alcohol should be limited (if not eliminated entirely).

    Other beverages on the hit list:

    Soda: Nothing but sugar and/or artificial sweeteners

    Fruit juice: Highly processed and devoid of the "good stuff" (fiber)

    By eliminating calorie containing beverages from your daily diet, you're essentially reducing your daily caloric intake by quite a bit, which will equate to fat loss.

    Rule of thumb: Drink at least a gallon of water per day if you're a woman, 1.5 to 2 gallons if you're a man. A great way to judge if you're drinking enough water is the color of your urine. It shouldn't be yellow; it should be clear with a hint of off-yellow tone. If it isn't, you're not drinking enough water.

    5. Ingest Vegetables And/Or Fruit Every Time You Eat

    Remember, that lone leaf of lettuce you have on your sandwich doesn't count. You need to be eating vegetables and/or fruit with every meal and plenty of them.

    6. Save "Starchy" Carbs For After You Train

    Use your carbs, don't wear them. When it comes to starchy carbohydrates (think pasta, rice, and potatoes), your best bet would be to save them for only after you train. Please read that again. Save your starchy carbs for only after you train (which for most is three to four times per week). The rest of the day, focus on protein, veggies/fruit, and healthy fats.

    After you train your body will actually put those carbohydrates to good use: replenishing depleted glycogen stores, aiding with shuttling nutrients to muscle cells, and shutting down cortisol production (a very catabolic hormone which breaks down muscle). Your body will handle the carbs much more effectively in the hours after a workout than at any other time during the day, so save them for that time only.

    7. Eat Fat

    Let's say this together: dietary fat does not make me fat. We need to focus on the quality of the fats we eat, not necessarily the quantity.

    There are three types of fat – saturated, monounsaturated, and polyunsaturated. Eating all three kinds in a healthy balance can dramatically improve your health and even help you lose fat. Sounds like an oxymoron (you need to eat fat to lose fat), but when you concentrate on the "good" fats, that's what happens.

    Your saturated fat should come from animal products. You can even toss in some butter or coconut oil for cooking. Your monounsaturated fat should come from mixed nuts, olives, and olive oil. Your polyunsaturated fat should come from flaxseeds, flaxseed oil, fish oil, and mixed nuts.

    8. Don't Worry About Minutia

    Minutia: small or trivial details. Setting diets up based on percentages just doesn't make sense. When someone places protein, carbohydrate, or fat requirements in terms of percentages for a diet, it doesn't necessarily have any relevance to what that person actually needs. A diet consisting of 30% protein may be too little for one person (ingesting only 1000 kcals per day) and too high for someone else (ingesting 5000 kcals per day).

    Using the above example, someone who "needs" 150 grams of protein would only be ingesting 75 grams of protein per day on a 1000 kcal per day diet (half of what he actually needs), and 375 grams of protein per day (more than double what he needs) on a 5000 kcal per day diet (again, assuming 30% protein).

    Additionally, many diets are often labeled "high carbohydrate or high fat" when a specific macronutrient is over a certain percentage. Most dieticians would be quick to label a diet consisting of 35% fat as "high fat." However, if we were to take a 2000 kcal diet (with 35% of calories coming from fat) and add 200 grams (800 kcals) of carbohydrate to it without changing anything else (total calories are now 2800), a "high-fat" diet all of a sudden becomes a "low-fat" diet because the percentage of fat dropped from 35% to 25%, even though total grams of fat stayed the same.

    Save your energy for time under the bar. No need to worry about trivial minutia such as macronutrient percentages.

    9. Have 10% Foods

    Berardi has stated numerous times that 100% nutritional discipline is never required for optimal progress. The difference in results between 90% adherence to your nutritional program and 100% adherence is negligible.

    Weekends tend to be the time when people are tempted to stray from their normal eating habits. As long as you're strict 90% of the time, those three slices of pizza you ordered on Friday night won't be the end all/be all of your success. Planned cheat meals are actually quite beneficial to fat loss in general and have actually been shown to help people get out of their fat loss plateau.

    10. Food Preparation is Key

    The hardest part about eating well is making sure you can follow the rules above consistently. I can't stress enough how important food preparation is for your success. This should be your first priority!

    It takes time and discipline to prepare the foods you need to be eating. Sure, it's more convenient to order fast food rather than cooking a few chicken breasts and steamed veggies for dinner. But you need to look at the food you eat as either bringing you one step closer to your goal or two steps back!

    Cooking and preparing meals ahead of time will ensure that you're eating the right foods and not eating for convenience. If the good food is already there in your fridge, you're less inclined to eat the bad stuff. Make a grocery list every week and go shopping for all the foods you'll need to succeed.
    just this post alone is enough!
    got to stick to all the good infos here
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  26. #266
    Registered User archcherub's Avatar
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    Originally Posted by TheGuardner View Post
    I'm looking for some advice here. I work in a tough job and eat clean and lean all day, but when I get home I'm pretty hungry and its often late and I'm exhausted. I often eat a good size dinner, then fall asleep right away, and this is killing my fat loss endeavors. Any suggestions on how to avoid being so hungry after a hard day at work or how to avoid gaining weight in my sleep like this?
    i would like to suggest drink plenty of water and have food that are high in fibre to feel fuller.
    also, maybe exercise BEFORE u eat, it helps me.

    i also eat slower and focus on the food. i do not watch tv nor read while eating.. just focus on eating. it helps!
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  27. #267
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    Weight loss by Phytoscience 2slim cell 100% original Product

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  28. #268
    Registered User SRB98's Avatar
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    Very useful information!
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  29. #269
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    Helpful and nice explanation
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  30. #270
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    Nutrition advice for 143 5"10 male new to lifting weights

    I am new to lifting weights and this is my 2nd month. Recently, 3 Fridays ago to be exact, I have experienced headaches on and off. I assume it is from not eating enough calories. I recently cut my calories to 2,100 a day to lower my body fat percentage. I am 5'10 143. I am now eating 2,800 and working out hard 5 days a week and the headaches seem to intensify. I notice an increase muscle definition but am not sure how to get rid of this headache. Whenever I eat it seems to subdue for a minute then comes right back. I am very meticulous with how many calories I eat and I eat perfectly clean. I hear it is good to eat complex carbs when feeling low on energy. Anyway, Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
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