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  • MMA_scientist
    Senior Member
    • Nov 2009
    • 9857

    Originally posted by SPX
    I don't know how accurate the numbers are, but everything I've read seems to suggest that once you start losing more than about 2 lbs per weight the balance slowly shifts to losing MORE muscle than fat, and to me that's just not acceptable. I mean, if I lose 20 lbs and 15 of it is fat and only 5 lbs is muscle, then that's one thing. But if only 8 lbs of it is fat and 12 lbs of it is muscle (an actual figure from a book I'm reading) then that's really working against me, not for me. I've worked pretty hard to put on what muscle I do have. I for damn sure don't want to give it away too easily.

    I'm starting my cut at 175 lbs @ 20.5% bodyfat, according to my caliper measurements. If I'm under 150 when I get to 10% then that will just be gay.
    Oh, I have never heard that it was that severe. I can't believe that is true. I don't know because I never measure my BF, but just the effect it had on my body and face, it had to be more than 10 pounds of fat.

    I agree for you with your goals, that would suck. To me, it wouldn't bother me if I felt good.
    Last edited by MMA_scientist; 04-25-2013, 02:52 PM.
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    • SPX
      Senior Member
      • Aug 2009
      • 23875

      The theory behind it at least is that when you cut your calories low enough to where you're losing that much weight then a survival mechanism switches on in your body and your body wants to hold onto bodyfat because it senses that times are tough and there's a food shortage. And in its attempt to hold onto its fat reserves it starts burning muscle at a faster rate than fat.

      I would like to see some studies on this.
      Last edited by SPX; 04-25-2013, 03:03 PM.
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      • MMA_scientist
        Senior Member
        • Nov 2009
        • 9857

        Originally posted by SPX
        The theory behind it at least is that when you cut your calories low enough to where you're losing that much weight then a survival mechanism switches on in your body and your body wants to hold onto bodyfat because it sense that times are tough and there's a food shortage. And in its attempt to hold onto its fat reserves it starts burning muscle at a faster rate than fat.

        I would like to see some studies on this.
        Yeah, I have heard the theory many times, even when I was in HS way back in the last millenium. I just don't really believe it.
        2012: +19.33
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        • SPX
          Senior Member
          • Aug 2009
          • 23875

          I think it's the only way to explain girls who eat like birds and who weigh like 105 lbs and are 30% bodyfat (that's a real-life example).

          A lot of people who have aimed to lose weight didn't go about it right, in my opinion, and ending up being "skinny fat." Yes, they are smaller, but they're not lean. The only explanation is that in their quest for rapid weight loss they burned through too much muscle. Sure, they "lost weight" but they didn't really change their body composition.
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          • SPX
            Senior Member
            • Aug 2009
            • 23875

            Also, I bet the theory that you heard was the "starvation mode" theory, i.e. that the body adjusts its metabolism downward as calories decrease. That one, at least, there is some scientific evidence for. I've seen at least one study that supports it.
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            • MMA_scientist
              Senior Member
              • Nov 2009
              • 9857

              Originally posted by SPX
              Also, I bet the theory that you heard was the "starvation mode" theory, i.e. that the body adjusts its metabolism downward as calories decrease. That one, at least, there is some scientific evidence for. I've seen at least one study that supports it.
              Yeah, I have definitely heard that, but also the other theory that if you lose weight too fast you burn muscle. Maybe I just rely on my own experience too much and draw generalizations from that. I have gained and lost weight a lot as a life long wrestler and as a formerly morbidly obese person (still obese, just not morbidly so). I also don't care about muscle very much, as long as I have enough to stand up and run around, I am fine... so I really haven't paid a lot of attention to my strength levels. You're probably right, but in my mind, if you are fat your goal is to lose weight and if it coming off fast, I am not going to eat some cheeseburgers to slow it down. When I am eating clean, it just comes off, I literally cannot eat enough healthy crap and stay fat. I was gorging on shit last Oct, but I couldnt eat 2000 calories of beans and apples if you paid me.
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              • edman5555
                Senior Member
                • Apr 2010
                • 6628

                That's what I always tell people about eating healthy. You can't fuckin eat enough to get fat.
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                • SPX
                  Senior Member
                  • Aug 2009
                  • 23875

                  Originally posted by MMA_scientist
                  You're probably right, but in my mind, if you are fat your goal is to lose weight and if it coming off fast, I am not going to eat some cheeseburgers to slow it down.
                  It's interesting you say that because I'm down 2.3 lbs in 3 days and I'm trying to boost my calories to slow that shit down a bit.
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                  • MMA_scientist
                    Senior Member
                    • Nov 2009
                    • 9857

                    I think your case is more the exception that the rule. You purposely gained weight. Most people aren't trying yo hit very specific (and sort or random) numbers. They just want to slim down, and I think it is counterproductive to stop the progress on purpose. It will eventually balance out if it is lifetime change. You might lose some muscle, but eventually your calorie intake will meet your expenditure, and you can add muscle back.
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                    • SPX
                      Senior Member
                      • Aug 2009
                      • 23875

                      I don't agree that most people just want to "slim down." Most people who decide to actually take the steps to lose weight want to actually look good. They want to have toned/muscular bodies, not just be smaller versions of their pear-shaped selves. The guys want to look like the dudes on the cover of Men's Health and the girls want to look like Jamie Eason.
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                      • MMA_scientist
                        Senior Member
                        • Nov 2009
                        • 9857

                        Well, I disagree. Most people who want to lose some weight aren't committing to making diet and exercise the centerpiece of their lives. I don't doubt that people would want to have adonis-like physiques, but I do think that people know that to look like that is basically a part time job and requires way more discipline than they are willing to give.
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                        • SPX
                          Senior Member
                          • Aug 2009
                          • 23875

                          My point is that they want to improve their SHAPE not just their SIZE. While the goal may be Jamie Eason, I suspect that most girls who put in the diet and gym time AT LEAST want to not have a pudgy stomach when it's over with.
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                          • MMA_scientist
                            Senior Member
                            • Nov 2009
                            • 9857

                            yeah, I guess I just disagree with the idea that losing some muscle is going to prevent that. Your shape is going to change regardless of whether you lose muscle. If you lose fat too, you are going to change your shape for the better, even if it is not optimal.
                            2012: +19.33
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                            • SPX
                              Senior Member
                              • Aug 2009
                              • 23875

                              I think if you lose a proportional amount of muscle to fat then you'll end up just a smaller version of your bigger self. Less massive, but otherwise, the same.

                              I told you about the girl who lost a lot of weight and got down to 105 lbs, only to discover that she was like 30% bodyfat and still looked like shit. She's one of the posters in the Personal Trainer section on bb.com and a huge advocate, because of her personal experience, for holding onto all the muscle you can.
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                              • SPX
                                Senior Member
                                • Aug 2009
                                • 23875

                                Looks interesting. . .


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