12-16-2003, 03:39 PM | #1 (permalink) |
Crazy
Location: Meeshagain
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My weight loss story with a few questions
I know it's not too big a deal, but I'm proud of myself, sue me.
In high school (I'm a college frosh now), I was a three sport athlete, so I was always doing something. Once high school got out, I was supposed to play basketball at the University of Michigan-Dearborn, but that didn't work out. Even so, I continued working on my game. Then, come July, I had an unfortunate leg injury involving a cutco knife. I couldn't do anything for two weeks, so I fell out of shape. I've always eaten poorly, but playing so many sports and having good genetics, I always stayed slim. Then I got a job at Subway. My weight, which was at about 190-195, started ballooning. All of the sudden it was October and I was 225. Everyone started telling me I looked bigger, old ladies at work, my football coach, my dad. So I decided to make a change. I quit Subway, and I decided I would run track for my school ( I go to Macomb CC). I'm a sprinter, so I don't do all those crazy ass distance runner workouts. Now, after less than two months, I'm down to 205. I'm noticably thinner and I have more confidence too. Here are my questions ( Plan9 this means you especially ) 1) How much of a difference does eating right make? I don't dedicate my life to eating properly, but I stopped eating fast food, I stopped drinking pop, and I don't eat junkfood anymore either. 2) Is it normal to lose that much, that fast? 3) Does it matter that most of my workouts are short? For example, today we ran six 200's, all at 19-20 seconds. Is this better or worse than say, 5 miles? 4) If I do upper body weight training, will that have any effect on my running? 5) Should I take any suppliments, and if so, what kind? 6) I eat a LOT of cereal. I've heard people say it's bad cause of the carbs, but since I work out a lot, aren't I correct in that I need the carbs? Same with bread. |
12-16-2003, 05:03 PM | #3 (permalink) |
Observant Ruminant
Location: Rich Wannabe Hippie Town
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1) Since you're young and getting a lot of exercise, you can get away to a degree with eating poorly. But you'll do better if you eat well. I'm big on pop being the invisible enemy, because you can down 1000 calories worth a day without even thinking of it.
2) That's a lot to lose, quickly. I think that most diets recommend 1.5 pounds a week as the max fat loss you should try for. Over 2 months at that rate you should have lost about 12 pounds. Of course you could also have lost several pounds of water weight and such, so when you factor that in you're not too much over the conventional limit. 6) I'm not one of those people who say carbs are bad, and you are burning them so you need the energy. But I prefer complex carbs without so much sugar. Doesn't goose your blood sugar as much, metabolizes more slowly for more energy over time, stays with you longer so you need to eat less. I'd switch from Wheat Chex to oatmeal, were I you. YMMV, of course. |
12-16-2003, 06:06 PM | #4 (permalink) | ||||||
Banned
Location: Orange County, California
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Bottom line, when losing fat, you need to aim for a caloric defecit; about 500 calories less then your BMR to be exact. At this rate you will be losing 1-2 lbs of fat a week which ensures it is only fat you are losing and not precious muscle. To give you a great ratio of what to eat, shoot for having a 40/40/20% protein/carb/fat ratio. I suggest, if you are serious enough, to go buy a book to help you look up calories/fat/carbs etc. which you can order online or find at any bookstore. A good one would be calorie king, and they also have a website www.calorieking.com . Hope I helped you a tad, and please keep us posted on your results or shoot me a PM if you have anymore questions. Last edited by Plan9Senior; 12-16-2003 at 07:21 PM.. |
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Tags |
loss, questions, story, weight |
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