If you starve yourself for the entire day, every day you will lose weight. Shocking.
I've been hearing many people bring this up on the boards and wonder what kind of special concept this is. Skip breakfast and lunch and fight through hunger every day, and you will drop pounds. No sh*t. The physiological and psychological cravings that will affect most people on this diet will likely prove to be counterproductive with frustration leading to eventual diet breakdown. Ori Hoffmekler is an knowledgeable fella but he is promoting a diet that is made for a rare body type.
I cant imagine doing any type of athletic activity or weightlifting regimen without eating a reasonable amount of food ALL day. Yea you may snack on a few little things during the day that will evaporate by your stomach acids in a millisecond. I remember watching Hakeem Olajuwon playing basketball during the month of Ramadan when he was eating no food during the day...he looked like a ghoulish zombie who was about to pass out at any moment on the court. Not how I want to feel. Some people who say they actually have "more" energy from this diet must be people who are not very active.
The only component about this diet that is sensible is the focus on anti-estrogenic foods. Other than that its a pretty much a diet that very few people will be able to stick to.
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Thread: My take on "The Warrior Diet"
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05-23-2010, 08:15 PM #1
My take on "The Warrior Diet"
Iron. Boxing. NFL. Mob stuff. New York City breed.
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05-23-2010, 08:22 PM #2
"The warrior diet"...? Fitting name for a lame diet. Personally I could never eat only once a day. However I just started Intermittent fasting and I eat lunch and dinner only, the hell with breakfast. I like eating two bigger meals per day opposed to six small 'meals' (more like snacks) thru out the day. Just a personal preference though. I've knows quite a few people who say they only eat once a day simply because they forget to eat or just not hungry. Funny enough most of them have been over weight and out of shape.
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05-23-2010, 08:25 PM #3
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If you make some modifications to it, allow for protein, AA's and berries throughout the day, etc, it can be a very strong recomp diet. It is not a 20 hour "starvation" period and a 4 hour meal, but a 20 hour "underfeeding" and 4 hour "overfeeding" period. Check out IA's mods to it before you knock it. And my energy has been fine on it (including modifications), getting stronger/leaner slowly.. and it's very flexible.
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05-23-2010, 08:27 PM #4
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05-23-2010, 08:28 PM #5
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05-23-2010, 08:31 PM #6
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05-23-2010, 08:49 PM #7
i have to agree that this warrior diet, or any sort of fasting diet is probably unsustainable for a long period of time. im talking, can the average dieter do this for 6months+ or even years and stay lean? doubtful and impractical
i dont doubt the effectiveness of either diet, but unless u are prepping for some contest, or trying to "win a biggest loser" race with ur co-workers, there is no practical need to even do a sort of fasting diet... once again, what is the liklihood that u r going to be on IF in like...10 yrs when u got kids, a family..and u have reunions or BBQs. "oh sorry i cannot eat, b/c im on this IF that ive been on for 10 years" yea ok
one thing ive learned while taking on my first cut is that id rather look lean all year round, rather than "just those few months of summer" then fat bulk up.. this means constructing a GOOD diet plan that u can stick to for years on end...
to each his own, just my thoughts.. dont take it personally
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05-23-2010, 08:51 PM #8
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05-23-2010, 08:56 PM #9
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05-23-2010, 08:59 PM #10
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05-23-2010, 09:03 PM #11
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05-23-2010, 09:25 PM #12
Bam.
I am an advocate on pursuing a lifestyle diet. A diet that will become ingrained in your routine and eating mentality for years or even your whole life. Not a diet that will work for a few months then you will eventually give up on - and probably wind up adding more weight than you did before you started it.
Hoffmekler's premise for advocating this diet is that when man was a hunter he was out hunting all day and would only eat at night. Yea maybe 10,000 years ago when Wooly Mammoths roamed the earth, but the human race has since evolved to a community dweller with a busier lifestyle where more fuel is needed to keep the body functioning optimally.Iron. Boxing. NFL. Mob stuff. New York City breed.
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05-23-2010, 10:02 PM #13
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05-23-2010, 10:08 PM #14
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05-24-2010, 07:04 AM #15
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05-24-2010, 07:12 AM #16
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That's kinda missing the point. If you are cutting, by having your meals in a smaller window allows for wider food choices. Intermittent fasting diets aren't magic, they just work better for some people in regards to diet adherence. If its a diet that's easier for you to stick to, then it's obviously going to work.
An example would be if you were cutting at 1600 calories. At 3-4 meals spread from 8am to 8pm, you could do 4 400 calorie meals. If you were doing a 2 meal IF plan, you could do 2 800 calorie meals and eat things you like to eat that might happen to be over 400 calories.March 2008: 407 lbs
06/25/2011: 201.4lbs
Total Lost: 205.6
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05-24-2010, 07:18 AM #17
Agree. I dont deny myself really anything and just enjoy eating lots of healthy food. I eat 3000cals per day and maintain 8-9%BF. Fasted training included and have a high BMI as well. More muscle = higher BMI = more food.
To each his own which is why I really can't knock the Warrior Diet as I have never really tried it. May work for some as every individual is different.
I do understand some of your points though.Last edited by PBateman2; 05-24-2010 at 07:23 AM.
BRAINS & GAINS
Strong Mind + Strong Body = UNSTOPPABLE
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05-24-2010, 07:20 AM #18
Not really what I was getting at...if you are more or less fasting throughout most of the day as The Warrior Diet instructs, then you are basically not eating much of anything. Is restricting your body to no food all day, or at the very most some nuts and oranges, seem to be a satisfying and effective way to lose fat without losing your mind with it also? Not to me.
Iron. Boxing. NFL. Mob stuff. New York City breed.
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05-24-2010, 07:25 AM #19
No doubt, I think fasted training is whole other story though. I train without haven eating anything for a few hours very often and find myself feeling a great pump when I do it. I don't see anything wrong with training fasted if you've already given yourself the nourishment you need throughout the entire day. I usually have a snack at about 5pm and dont work out til around 9 pm. When I walk in to the gym hungry, I usually lose that feeling of hunger after the first set.
Iron. Boxing. NFL. Mob stuff. New York City breed.
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05-24-2010, 07:26 AM #20
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05-24-2010, 07:28 AM #21
There was a guy on this board who was doing the Warrior Diet. He was eating assloads of food at night and was actually getting leaner. He didn't seem like he was suffering much. Intermittent fasting is a good idea if you can do it (releases GH, and I think other hormones). Many people have done IF for years and made it part of their lifestyle. I wouldn't be so quick to dismiss it out of hand.
2/14: 218
7/7: 183
"The poison is in the dose." ~ Brad Pilon
"What matters is actually doing something. You usually won't find out if something is right for you ahead of time unless you just hunker down and try it. So stop worrying and start hunkering." ~ Lyle McDonald
" 'Why' is one of the most powerful words you can put in your vocabulary." ~ Alan Aragon
"I'm lucky because I can eat whatever I want and I just get really, really fat." ~ Louis C.K.
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05-24-2010, 07:29 AM #22
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I guess it just depends. If your calories for a cut are 1600 and you can eat 1600 calories and get enough protein in 4 hours, I guess that works. I personally have thought about doing the 20/4 window, but like you said I'd rather enjoy food and a 16/8 window is much more convenient.
March 2008: 407 lbs
06/25/2011: 201.4lbs
Total Lost: 205.6
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05-24-2010, 07:30 AM #23
Not about calories., i understand The Warrior Diet concept pretty well. I read all about it and Hoffmekler also has a bunch of videos on Youtube I've watched. Yes I understand if you have a 300 calories throughout the day then eat a 1700 calorie dinner, its evened out but...what about the physiological and psychological feelings of deprivation you have to bear all day?
Food is not the enemy!Iron. Boxing. NFL. Mob stuff. New York City breed.
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05-24-2010, 07:33 AM #24
Sure, I said it would work for some people. Definitely. Intermittent fasting IS a good cleanse of toxins in the body and has other benefits...but intermittent, and daily fasting are 2 different things really, the latter is just not practical in the long run.
True.Iron. Boxing. NFL. Mob stuff. New York City breed.
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05-24-2010, 10:22 AM #25
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Aren't you contradicting yourself? You state you understand the Warrior Diet concept pretty well however then question the physiological and psychological feelings of deprivation. According to the diet, your body will run off the sympathetic nervous system while fasting, and switch to the parasympathetic nervous system while eating.
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05-24-2010, 10:30 AM #26
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05-24-2010, 10:35 AM #27
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been doing IF for the past 5 months with only a few random days exception. I started with 16 hour fasts and they just kind of crept up to 20 by itself. I don't even feel hungry during the day. Maybe fasting isn't for you, but you don't represent the human species, so i wouldn't base an entire concept as unreasonable. I feel absolutely fine during the day, in fact I noticed about a week and a half into it that i was more and more active, almost restless during the day. I usually have a small protein snack before I lift at around 5 (usually like FF cottage cheese 160 cal 30g protein 10g carbs), come back from the gym, eat, and just eat until bedtime around 10-12pm. Works for me (and more convenient.
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07-05-2010, 05:38 PM #28
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07-05-2010, 06:19 PM #29
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Was doing warriorish until recently. Now I don't eat anything until 2-3pm (light meal a few hours before workout) and finish around 8pm
- More sleep (not eating breakfast #1 and preparing breakfast #2)
- No bloating
- More energy
- More control over how clean the food is and macros
- Less temptation (no way I feel deprived I actually care less about eating)
- When I do eat I am satisfied. Actually over satisified.
- Warrior was good because I didn't have to worry about hunting down food during the day. While trying to gain weight though had to open up a few extra hours for eating so I lost that benefit. I can't physically eat more than 2000Cal of *clean* food in one sitting.Tips for making food http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=108736051
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07-05-2010, 06:35 PM #30
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