Working out/Gym time

3 times a week. Just lifting. Chest arms and then legs all on different days. Free weights mostly. Bench, squats , hang and power cleans and push jerks. Love it all.
Run twice a week with my wife.
 
Just curious, how many of you here go to the gym and lift/work out or just exercise in general at a consistent rate? If yes, what's your exercise routine like?

4 days in the week, we go with my wife in the gym and work with iron, on each muscle group one day, sports nutrition: protein, complex amino acids, BCAA, arginine, glutamine.

Ashamed to admit, but my wife went for first time without wish, but was involved and achieved a better result than I.
 
Just curious, how many of you here go to the gym and lift/work out or just exercise in general at a consistent rate? If yes, what's your exercise routine like?

A general weight management rule of thumb: "its much easier to keep it off than trying to lose it". Translation you gotta work out and have a great diet to consistently burn more calories than you gain from eating.

I go jogging for 1.5 miles sometimes 2 miles at least 3x a week, then hit pull-ups, Ab-roller, and other calisthenic exercises. I do more when I got the energy to get it all in.

Cross-fit is one of the best things you could do but could be hard on the body so the best longetivity full body work out is swimming if you have access to a full length pool

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  • It may be harder than ever to maintain a healthy weight, according to a top Harvard researcher who's studied people's diets for decades.

  • The best way to avoid gaining weight in the long run may be to pick a healthy diet you can stick to and eat a little less.

  • You may need to re-think your relationship with fat and ramp up intake of plant-based foods like vegetables, nuts, and seeds, while consuming less meat and sugar.

Nutritionists agree that it is getting harder and harder for people to maintain a healthy weight — and that's not all your fault.

"There is so much great-tasting food, and it's abundant and in your face all the time," Dr. Meir Stampfer, an epidemiologist and nutrition expert at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, wrote in a recent blog post. "To me it's kind of a miracle that people aren't even heavier than they are."

Stampfer, who has pioneered many long-term top-notch health studies, said the easiest way to get people to lose weight is to simply limit how much they eat every day.
"But for free-living people that's really hard," he said.


Average portions in the US have ballooned as much as 138% over the past five decades, and sugar is hiding in everything we eat, from salads to plain bagels and almost every low-fat product out there.
Sara Seidelmann, a cardiologist and nutrition researcher at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, sees the issue in a similar way.


"There's absolutely nothing more important for our health than what we eat each and every day," she recently told Business Insider.
Here are some of the best tips for how to slim down for the long term, from Stampfer and Seidelmann:
5b7715ffe361c019008b502d-750-563.jpg
Hearty enough for a main dish or served as a side, this bean salad is packed with fiber, protein, and other plant-based nutrients.Larry Crowe/AP Healthy eating isn't necessarily low-carb


Seidelmann recently published a study involving more than 447,000 people around the world. The results revealed that people who eat too many or too few carbs don't live as long as those in the middle who eat a moderate amount.

Her team's data suggests people should focus on putting whole, healthful foods on their plate, like vegetables, whole grains, nuts, and beans.
Even though some veggies and beans might be considered "high-carb," eating them is associated with a longer life than low-carb diets that push people to eat large quantities of meat and ******* products.


Focus on choosing healthy fats
"Eating fat doesn't make you fat," Stampfer said. That sound advice has been backed up by study after study after study.
"Eating healthy fats helps people control their weight better than diets than exclude them," he added.
Fatty foods have more energy gram per gram than carbs or proteins, and they can also help keep you full and satisfied until your next meal.


Some of the best plant-based sources of healthy fats include olive oil, avocados, walnuts, and chia seeds. Even oatmeal has a potent dose of fat, making it a great way to fuel up in the morning.

Eat 'just a little bit' less
Although incorporating movement into your day can yield immense benefits for your brain and body, nutritionists agree that the most surefire way to control your weight is to properly gauge (and perhaps reduce) how much food you're putting in your mouth.


Eating less and forgoing food for an occasional fast may even help you live longer, studies suggest. Some Silicon Valley biohackers have even decided to skip one meal a day, a version of the "intermittent fasting" craze that eliminates about a third of a day's calories.

But we're not suggesting anyone has to starve themselves. Just remember that a standard serving of whole-grain bread is one slice, a slice of meat should fit in an imaginary checkbook, and your cut of cheese should be about the size of four dice.

As Stampfer put it, "adopt a healthy diet, and eat just a little bit less."

Don't discount strength training
Your brain and your heart are some of the biggest calorie-burning machines in your resting body. But muscles can help keep your metabolism going all day, which means that incorporating some strength training into your routine can be a great way to maintain a healthy weight. But the benefits don't end there.


"Muscle building can not only bring up your body's metabolic rate, but also brings its own distinct health benefits that are often not as well appreciated as those associated with aerobic activity," Stampfer said.

Those benefits include improving mental health, fighting off depression, and even reversing some of the physical effects of aging. The American College of Sports Medicine suggests regular strength training two or three times per week.

You don't need a wide or colorful variety of foods — just find the healthy ones you like
Many principles of healthy eating that you might have learned as a kid are being debunked.


One such idea is that everyone should try to eat a varied, colorful "pyramid" of foods. Instead, the American Heart Association now suggests focusing on getting enough plants, protein, and healthy fats like nuts into your diet and not worrying as much about a diverse diet.

Recent studies suggest that people with the most varied, colorful diets also tend to eat more food of all kinds, including processed foods. That can wind up meaning they have less healthy, whole foods on their plates and bigger waistlines as a result.

"It's O.K. if your diet is not very diverse if you're focusing on healthy foods and trying to minimize consumption of unhealthy foods," University of Texas epidemiologist Marcia Otto recently told the New York Times.

REF: https://www.businessinsider.com/weight-loss-harder-than-ever-tips-2018-8
 
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If I had the time to get a membership and use it, I would, but working 2 jobs that allows me maybe 1 true off day a month, it's virtually impossible. When I had a gym membership about 5-6 years ago I was going 3-4 days a week with a chest-biceps-triceps and legs-back-shoulder split.

As it is now, my second job is as a fuel attendant at a gas station/convenience store (New Jersey is a full service state) and I walk close to a mile per hour. Since I started in March I've lost about 20 lbs.
 
I do. On average. I do three days per week. I do mostly anaerobic exercises, training with weights, and little cardio.

I do full boy workouts all the time, with an emphasis on a particular body part or parts per workout. A general example is, I may concentrate on chest Mondays, then legs on Wednesday, then back on Friday or Saturday, thereby giving the parts the I stressed a week or more to recover after breaking the muscle down. I always incorporate giving my shoulders a good blast too or either chest or back days.

That's just a general approach of how I do things.
 
Upper body and lower body on alternate days...also swimming and elliptical for cardio.
Recently I am trying to incorporate more stretching and yoga and Pilates classes. The latter are very new.
 
I go five times a week and my workout is pretty vigorous! To myself I have to earn the right to leave the gym and go home.

My motto is: turn every individual activity into it's own workout. I always do three different types of cardio because I'm like a muscle 💪 car high octane endurance is what I am about. Then I do sbbs to machines and free weights!

The women are getting more and more bootylicious in the gym too. They go out of their way to walk through the equipment just to walk pass me so I can see them goodies they have. They are lucky that I have a rule against messing with women in the gym. I don't mess around where I work, where I live, or where I workout! Especially those little young twenty something year olds looking like they want to try this BBC! Sweetie it would take you a couple of years to get over what I would do to those little goodies you've got!

I workout hard and I play hard. When I'm pounding you deep that's when I let you know that I didn't come to play with that pussy I came to dominate it!♠️
 

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