
Bl0odKn1ght
𝓩𝓐 𝓦𝓐𝓡𝓤𝓓𝓞 ★ 𝓐𝓼𝓬𝓮𝓷𝓭𝓲𝓷𝓰 𝓪𝓽𝓶
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- Dec 25, 2024
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Title.
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Would it not take forever to gain mass tho?no its good
no, you don't need anything more than a slight surplus and minimizing fat gain is meta right now anyway.Would it not take forever to gain mass tho?
slight surplus is not really maingaining tho, is it?no, you don't need anything more than a slight surplus and minimizing fat gain is meta right now anyway.
maingaining literally is a slight surplusslight surplus is not really maingaining tho, is it?
Also what is "slight" a 100, 200?
This is my main problem with it, really vague definition that changes alot based on who you ask
no maingaining is literally just the natural way most people gain muscle. going to the gym and just eating decently, not too much or too little, just consistent levels of calories. i did it and it workedTitle.
Seriously considering learning more abt itOver if you don’t roid. Don’t have to worry about this shit
Just eat in a 100 calorie surplusTitle.
What do you mean by nutrients? Protein or what?no it's not. There is no evidence that increasing calorie intake will directly assist in muscle gain.
Notice the "Directly" part. If you can't get enough nutrients on maintenance diet, then you'd see more gains on bulk.
Not at allTitle.
If your maintenance diet is: 150g fat, 60g carbs, 160g protein, and then you go for a bulk and your bulk diet is: 160g fat, 300g carbs, 180g protein - then you will see more gains on the bulk.What do you mean by nutrients? Protein or what?
Yes. I maingained first year of lifting and made zero gains. If you’re like skinnyfat(slight gut) just cut down all the way and then lean bulk.Title.
You need the fucking calories(energy) to build muscle unless it’s like your first fucking month in the gym and even in that case you’re not building muscle, just learning how to use it.no it's not. There is no evidence that increasing calorie intake will directly assist in muscle gain.
Notice the "Directly" part. If you can't get enough nutrients on maintenance diet, then you'd see more gains on bulk.
Thats what i thought aswellYes. I maingained first year of lifting and made zero gains. If you’re like skinnyfat(slight gut) just cut down all the way and then lean bulk.
If you’re fat do the same as above but with a longer cut. Maingaining only works first 2 months or something in the gym. Youtubers overhype that shit.
They’ll first say “keep your calories at maintainance to grow muscle and lose fat at the same time!!1!!1”Thats what i thought aswell
The youtubers also all have their own vague definition of the term
Yeah. You need calories, for example bodyfat.You need the fucking calories(energy) to build muscle unless it’s like your first fucking month in the gym and even in that case you’re not building muscle, just learning how to use it.
No your tdee includes the calories needed to gain weight u adding more will only leave u more plump.Title.
Yeah. You need calories, for example bodyfat.
And there is plenty of evidence when advanced athletes put on muscle mass in a caloric deficit.
I value my own experiences that say otherwise and the experiences of countless other gymgoers who’ve told me what happened when they tried “maingaining” over the ramblings of some gurus and scientists.No your tdee includes the calories needed to gain weight u adding more will only leave u more plump.
U can also gain in a deficit
"I value my own experience and experiences of countless other gymgoers that I can not measure correctly nor can I gauge other factors like changes in training intensity or program hopping over science where they literally put people in a consistent caloric deficit and put them on the program with consistent tracking and then take reliable measurements"I value my own experiences that say otherwise and the experiences of countless other gymgoers who’ve told me what happened when they tried “maingaining” over the ramblings of some gurus and scientists.
Factors that might influence if person does or does not put muscle in a caloric deficit:I value my own experiences that say otherwise and the experiences of countless other gymgoers who’ve told me what happened when they tried “maingaining” over the ramblings of some gurus and scientists.
Scientists will take 8 untrained sedentary men, put them on an 8 week program, then assume because they put some muscle on and lost fat in those 8 weeks they can do so forever. If intensity, and program hopping were the problems, then how did altering an unrelated variable(calorie intake) seemingly fix said problem? Science glazers will skim through the abstract and take it as gospel but if you ask em what a “p value” is, they blank out."I value my own experience and experiences of countless other gymgoers that I can not measure correctly nor can I gauge other factors like changes in training intensity or program hopping over science where they literally put people in a consistent caloric deficit and put them on the program with consistent tracking and then take reliable measurements"
yeah ok
Why does everyone assume studies are being done on untrained people and in small sample sizes lol. There are so many great studies done on experienced athletes with big enough sample groups.Scientists will take 8 untrained sedentary men, put them on an 8 week program, then assume because they put some muscle on and lost fat in those 8 weeks they can do so forever.
Maybe they started to program hop when they started the maintenance/cut diet, or they dropped training intensity because they are retards who can't diet correctly (e.g. they eat 120g of fat and 100g of carbs on maintenance diet) and therefore they lack carbs to perform well on training sessions.If intensity, and program hopping were the problems, then how did altering an unrelated variable(calorie intake) seemingly fix said problem?