Vaulting the MOST popular gym advices that hinder your gains

lIn this thread I will tell you why almost every advice you were even given by someone in the gym is redundant and what actually works. Sorry for formatting I’m lazy asf
I’m talking in this thread about natural guys ONLY!!!


the 3 most popular advices I heard people on social media, in the gym, outside the gym etc give are so popular you probably do it on a daily basis:
Tell me if I forgot anything else that’s redundant plz.

1. Bulking
2. Losing muscle while cutting is normal
3. You should prioritize protein


1.Bulking :
Yes, bulking as a natural guy is one if NOT the most retarded thing someone in the fitness industry can do, and the worst part is that most lifters don’t even know that, in this thread I will give thoroughly about bulking and why it’s 100% vaulted.



I will make a few sections so you will beter understand​
  • Why Bulking is vaulted and why the idea to bulk is redundant​
  • What actually creates stimulus​
  • When you SHOULD bulk?​
  • TLDR​

Why bulking is vaulted and why the idea to bulk is redundant
I’m sure you already heard that stupid phrase of “pick up the fork if you want more muscle mass”, which is true to an extent but being in a calorie surplus does NOT, and I will say again does NOT cause more muscle growth in any case (except for specific one that I will mention later).
Ever wondered why the bulk/cut cycle became popular ever since the roids became more popular as well in the body building industry ?
The idea of the bulk is to eat in a calorie surplus (between 250 to even 1,000 in some stupid cases) to give you more “energy”. the idea of eating more for more energy is definitely true, but you definitely do NOT need a surplus to have a better performance at the gym.
So, why bulking is vaulted exactly? Simple-
muscle gain is an not energy-dependent process, it’s a stimulus dependent process. muscles does require a bit energy but that amount is low, the higher end estimates that the maximum surplus you should reach for is 100-200 per day.
There is no biological mechanism that turns extra calories into muscle mass, and myofibrillar muscle protein synthesis won’t increase just because you’re in a surplus. You really think that if you ate that extra pack of Oreos you will get more muscle mass? Are you hearing yourself?
Anything beyond 100-200 calorie surplus will only result in more fat not more muscle mass and energy (100-200 surplus is also redundant but not as risky for your body fat as more than it does, also on paper you won’t actually reach 100-200 surplus you will probably eat less than that so you’re fine). The amount of fat gain you will gain in comparison to the muscle mass will get is crazy since you won’t get anymore muscle mass and only fat. so in the long term this will only hinder your progress in the gym not accelerate it since you will also spend another few months in a calorie deficit which makes you a bit more vulnerable to atrophy. So for exchange of no benefit in terms of muscle growth, the surplus will lead you to being in a calorie deficit during which you will get muscle slower.
What actually creates stimulus
the simplest thing ever- Mechanical Tension is the ONLY thing that will make your muscles hypertrophy.
For those who don’t know why machanical tendon is, it’s simply the pulling force your muscle fibers experience during slow
contractions. As velocity decreases, fiber force increases. (Inverse relationship).
During slow velocity contraction speeds, fibers has the most action-myosin crrosbridges- basically the most amount of force.
The force velocity curve:
IMG 5321
So how does MT create hypertrophy - it’s basically the stimulus that tells your body to add contractile tissue, mechanoreceptors within the muscle fibers detect MT, causing a series of signals that ultimately produce growth by increasing protein synthesis rate.
Heavier weight ≠ more mechanical tension btw, MT only exists on the force velocity curve, load doesn’t matter as long as contraction speed is slow. I’m not saying you shouldn’t lift heavier loads, heavier loads are helpful for other reasons. Mechanical tension and motor unit recruitment are 2. Different things.
For example, if I press a barbell with 5 kg each side (so 30 kg in total) but in slow velocity, will it create high fiber force ? The answer is yes since there is a slow contraction velocity. Don’t confuse MT with MUR.
So to clarify, you won’t grow if you only do slow contractions with light loads, This will only stimulate the active fibers, which will not be enough for growth because you are so low in the motor unit pool due to low effort.
BTW, micro tears do NOT mean more muscle gain it’s actually the opposite.
When you should bulk:
so now that we covered what actually creates stimulus and why bulking is vaulted, let’s talk about when you DO need to bulk.
Let’s keep it simple- you should bulk only when you’re either starting the gym as an underweight guy (below 17 BMI) or as an enhanced guy, why?
As a skinny guy (below 17 BMI), you are in a state where you don’t function well because your calories are so low so you don’t have energy, which will hinder your progress like CRAZY. Imagine training on 1 hour of sleep, that’s how it basically feels…

As an enhanced guy, literally everything you do will make your muscles grow like crazy, but when bulking you can basically make those extra 250-600 calories of surplus efficient for muscle mass because your MPS is elevated 24/7, I won’t get to it too much since I’m talking mainly about naturals here, but you get the point.
TL;DR
Muscle growth is driven by training stimulus (mechanical tension), not by eating in a large calorie surplus. Extra calories don’t directly increase muscle protein synthesis. After a small surplus (~100–200 kcal at most), additional calories mainly increase fat gain.
It goes in this order:

1.Large bulks unnecessary fat gain
2. longer cutting phases
3. slower overall progress.

You should only intentionally bulk if:
You’re underweight (very low BMI) and lacking energy and/or whenYou’re using anabolic drugs, where elevated muscle protein synthesis makes larger surpluses more effective.For most natural lifters I would advocate training hard, recover well, and eat around maintenance or a very small surplus/deficit depending on your goals.

2.losing muscle while cutting is normal:
I guess you heard this sentence at least a couple times in your training lifespan and it’s actually not that redundant, but people actually treat it as a binary state, as you will will lose muscle mass on a cut 100% without looking at the objective. While losing muscle on a deficit is actually easier than when at maintenance, it doesn’t mean losing muscle mass is something you don’t need to worry about.
To clarify again, I’m taking about natural lifters (obviously). Some mistakes new lifters have is that they think they lost a lot of muscle in their cut while they just didn’t have any significant muscle to begin with, so if you’re not a new lifter you SHOULD worry about losing muscle in a cut.

I will make a few sections so you will understand it better:
  • Why losing muscle, strength in a cut is not normal and shouldn’t be something that is obvious to you.​
  • How to properly programm your cutting phase​
  • TL;DR​

Why losing muscle, strength in a cut is not normal and shouldn’t be something that is obvious for you
losing muscle and strength in a cut is something that is very easy to do and very easy to avoid as well as long as you program your diet and cardio better.
Losing muscle and strength on a cut probably means you’re either going for more than 700 calorie deficit Which is a lot or not getting enough carbs (yes carbs are that important). For knowing how to cut properly you need to find your tdee (look in google), it’s never too realistic but it can give you a good idea of how many calories you should eat daily (I will talk about it more throughly the next section).
As long as your calories are not at the floor and you’re taking your preworkout carbs you WONT lose strength and muscle.
How to properly programm your cutting phase:
Ts is literally the easiest thing ever, all you need to do is to :
1. find your TDEE (go to google search) and then fill your stats. I will give you an idea of how it should be after you fill your stats -
IMG 5324
After you found your calorie maintenance (it’s never accurate remember) you will need to remove calories by how fast you want it, for example doing a 600 deficit will result in you eating roughly 2,000 calories which is a moderate cut, by then just experiment what’s best for you etc etc.

2. Do cardio, cardio is not just running or doing HIIT, it’s also doing bunch of steps daily and being on the stair master. So for example I do 15,000 steps minimum daily and it’s easy asf tbh, I counted it and every 10 minutes I walk 750-900 steps ish.

3. COUNT YOUR CALORIES, it should be fucking obvious, right? You should know what you’re getting in your body and what are the macros, kinda reasonable right?

4. Carbs>protein, I will talk about this more throughly in the next main section but you need to understand going over 30% of protein from your calories is just redundant.
Less protein, more carbs, especially before a workout. Leave room for carbs
TL;DR:
Losing muscle and strength on a cut shouldn’t just be something you accept. Most of the time it happens because you’re cutting way too hard or you dropped carbs too low and now your workouts suck.

If you’re in a crazy deficit, yeah, your lifts are going to go down. A cut doesn’t need to be extreme. Just find roughly where your maintenance is and eat a few hundred calories below that. Don’t eat too less. Move more during the day. And actually track what you eat so you’re not guessing.

Keep protein moderate, but don’t go so high. Carbs are your best friend . If your workouts stay strong and you’re not starving yourself, you shouldn’t be watching your muscle atrophy.

3. Prioritizing protein

Prioritizing protein as a natty gotta be the worst brainwashed thing after religion.
I will make three sections:​
  • Why prioritizing protein is vaulted​
  • Why carbs>protein​
  • TL;DR​

Why prioritizing protein is vaulted :
No, more protein≠faster muscle gain and more muscle gain.
Why is that?
Your body has a plateau for how much protein it can absorb, for 99.9999% of people eating more than 140 grams of of protein (considering they’re natural) will only give them useless calories that they could instead exchange with carbs (which is FAR more beneficial for muscle mass). Your MPS has a certain point (plateau) where after specific amount of protein is absorbed, it won’t contribute to anything except for MAYBE, just maybe some energy which carbs are better for anyway. So once you hit that plateau it doesn’t cause further hypertrophy, you’re just eating pointless calories atp.

People overrate protein SO FUCKING MUCH.
You need to eat your minimum effective dose of protein and leave the rest of your calories for carbs which are FAR MORE IMPORTANT FOR BUILDING MUSCLE, so stop overeating protein and torturing yourself and start eating more carbs.
Why carbs>protein:
so why? Stimulus happens in the gym, so you need to maximize that to have the best stimulus you can achieve while you’re in the gym, so how do you maximize that? It’s simple- YOU PRIORITIZE CARBS. Also, don’t you find it easier to eat carbs then to force feed yourself with breast chicken ? So how do you carb max? Your macros should be 50-60% of carbs and the rest are protein and fat. Just eating carbs through the day is not enough tho, to fully maximize your workout, you will need to have 2/3 phases of carbs absorption:

1. pre workout carbs which will help around 60-80 g of carbs (don’t do 1g of carb per kg plz), that will give you fuel for the workout
2. but that’s not enough if your workout is more than 1 hour and 30 minutes
then you will need to also add intra workout carbs (IWC) which will give you fuel for THE WHOLE workout. I would opt for absorbing them 10 minutes before halfway the workout ( for example if your workout is 2 hours, absorb them when you reach 50 minutes), and it HAS to be fast digesting carbs (low GI, low fat) so gummies imo is the best but rice cakes is good too just eat what ever Is more comfortable for you.

3.And lastly, your post workout carbs (PWC), this is not mandatory but it’s better especially for people who run a high frequency program since it will reduce the post workout fatigue which will eventually let you push yourself harder in the gym the next session, I would opt for 40-50 g of carbs.
TL;DR:
More protein doesn’t automatically mean more muscle. Your body can only use a certain amount to stimulate growth, and once you hit that level, adding more just gives you extra calories, not extra gains. As long as you’re eating enough protein to cover your needs, pushing it higher doesn’t speed things up. Find your minimum effective protein intake and eat it.
Carbs are just as important, if not more for actual progress because they fuel your workouts. Better fuel means better performance, and better performance means better stimulus for growth. If your training suffers because carbs are too low, muscle gain will suffer too.
So instead of obsessing over extremely high protein, hit a solid amount, then prioritize carbs to support training, recovery, and overall performance.


Okay I think that’s what I had in mind, would love you hear your insights guys.:feelsgood:
I will probably do more of this but these 3 are the ones that made me realize how many people are failing for it.

Dont lose your volume guys
CBFFAA1E 377A 41EE 8C43 21214FFA4FFB

if I did any mistake or wrote something wrong then fix me. My English is not the best so if you don’t understand something just copy paste it to an AI it will make it simple for you.

@LTNhell63 @seeyenar @idont @Jensonsahighlander
@Dr. Mog
 
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IMG 2614
 
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i’ll read this later but here’s ur first bump my goat
 
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@rotation @gymcelled im just tagging random mfs atp
 
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Muscle growth is driven by training stimulus (mechanical tension), not by eating in a large calorie surplus. Extra calories don’t directly increase muscle protein synthesis. After a small surplus (~100–200 kcal at most), additional calories mainly increase fat gain.​
The whole debate over bulking is more concerned with semantics than actual muscle growth. I think most people agree that a small caloric surplus is needed to maximize muscle growth.
However, if you only eat in a small (100-200) caloric surplus without recalibrating your maintenance calories, you will just metabolically adapt to the excess calories and effectively go back to maintenance calories without actually reducing your food intake. Not to mention the fact that you might not even be in a surplus at all due to variations in food macronutrient content. Therefore, "bulking" can still be useful in some cases to ensure that you are actually gaining the maximum amount of muscle possible.
Also, anecdotally, I have yet to see someone with a good physique naturally attain that physique through not bulking. If you want to get to 180 lean and you are 160, you have to eat in a caloric surplus, end of story.

I do think this is a fairly accurate thread, but saying that bulking is vaulted despite the definition of a bulk being a caloric surplus is a strange claim.
 
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Will read tomorrow, looks good
 
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Not to mention the fact that you might not even be in a surplus at all due to variations in food macronutrient content.
True, I mentioned this in the thread
Therefore, "bulking" can still be useful in some cases to ensure that you are actually gaining the maximum amount of muscle possible.
i also said that after 200-250 calories of surplus it’s just useless for muscle growth and it will mostly give you fat gain not muscle gain
I have yet to see someone with a good physique naturally attain that physique through not bulking
Anecdotally it’s not accurate at all, most big physiques of people I know irl never bulked, so it varies

Bulking beyond a certain point will only add fat as I said before
If you want to get to 180 lean and you are 160, you have to eat in a caloric surplus, end of story.
not true. If you get to 180 you will mostly get fat and your muscle mass would be the same as if you were just maintaining so no, if you want to get to 180 lean you will need to be on roids.

Also, that depends on someone’s height too, a 190 cm guy that is 70 kg is underweight and will need to bulk in oppose to someone who is in the same weight but his height is 175 cm
 
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I do think this is a fairly accurate thread, but saying that bulking is vaulted despite the definition of a bulk being a caloric surplus is a strange claim.
I feel like a broken radio, but I was obviously taking about a calorie surplus beyond 250 calories, bulking slowly with 100-200 calorie surplus is great
 
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True, I mentioned this in the thread

i also said that after 200-250 calories of surplus it’s just useless for muscle growth and it will mostly give you fat gain not muscle gain
Bulking beyond a certain point will only add fat as I said before
Yes, however, my point is that a 500-ish calorie bulk ensures that you will hit the 200 calorie surplus every day, whereas a perfect 200 calorie surplus on paper would be extremely difficult to calculate because 200 calories is such a drop in the bucket in terms of total daily calories. You can track everything perfectly and still be off 1-200 calories due to variances in size and nutrient content of the foods you are eating.
not true. If you get to 180 you will mostly get fat and your muscle mass would be the same as if you were just maintaining so no, if you want to get to 180 lean you will need to be on roids.
I meant that it would take multiple cuts and bulks to hit 180 lean for say a 6ft tall person. If you just ate at your 160lb maintenance +200, you would spin your wheels and never hit 180 lean.
You can hit 180 lean without steroids though. There are plenty of natural guys who do that. Steroids don't have as significant of an effect as you might think.
 
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lIn this thread I will tell you why almost every advice you were even given by someone in the gym is redundant and what actually works. Sorry for formatting I’m lazy asf
I’m talking in this thread about natural guys ONLY!!!


the 3 most popular advices I heard people on social media, in the gym, outside the gym etc give are so popular you probably do it on a daily basis:
Tell me if I forgot anything else that’s redundant plz.

1. Bulking
2. Losing muscle while cutting is normal
3. You should prioritize protein


1.Bulking :
Yes, bulking as a natural guy is one if NOT the most retarded thing someone in the fitness industry can do, and the worst part is that most lifters don’t even know that, in this thread I will give thoroughly about bulking and why it’s 100% vaulted.



I will make a few sections so you will beter understand​
  • Why Bulking is vaulted and why the idea to bulk is redundant​
  • What actually creates stimulus​
  • When you SHOULD bulk?​
  • TLDR​

Why bulking is vaulted and why the idea to bulk is redundant
I’m sure you already heard that stupid phrase of “pick up the fork if you want more muscle mass”, which is true to an extent but being in a calorie surplus does NOT, and I will say again does NOT cause more muscle growth in any case (except for specific one that I will mention later).
Ever wondered why the bulk/cut cycle became popular ever since the roids became more popular as well in the body building industry ?
The idea of the bulk is to eat in a calorie surplus (between 250 to even 1,000 in some stupid cases) to give you more “energy”. the idea of eating more for more energy is definitely true, but you definitely do NOT need a surplus to have a better performance at the gym.
So, why bulking is vaulted exactly? Simple-
muscle gain is an not energy-dependent process, it’s a stimulus dependent process. muscles does require a bit energy but that amount is low, the higher end estimates that the maximum surplus you should reach for is 100-200 per day.
There is no biological mechanism that turns extra calories into muscle mass, and myofibrillar muscle protein synthesis won’t increase just because you’re in a surplus. You really think that if you ate that extra pack of Oreos you will get more muscle mass? Are you hearing yourself?
Anything beyond 100-200 calorie surplus will only result in more fat not more muscle mass and energy (100-200 surplus is also redundant but not as risky for your body fat as more than it does, also on paper you won’t actually reach 100-200 surplus you will probably eat less than that so you’re fine). The amount of fat gain you will gain in comparison to the muscle mass will get is crazy since you won’t get anymore muscle mass and only fat. so in the long term this will only hinder your progress in the gym not accelerate it since you will also spend another few months in a calorie deficit which makes you a bit more vulnerable to atrophy. So for exchange of no benefit in terms of muscle growth, the surplus will lead you to being in a calorie deficit during which you will get muscle slower.
What actually creates stimulus
the simplest thing ever- Mechanical Tension is the ONLY thing that will make your muscles hypertrophy.
For those who don’t know why machanical tendon is, it’s simply the pulling force your muscle fibers experience during slow
contractions. As velocity decreases, fiber force increases. (Inverse relationship).
During slow velocity contraction speeds, fibers has the most action-myosin crrosbridges- basically the most amount of force.
The force velocity curve:
So how does MT create hypertrophy - it’s basically the stimulus that tells your body to add contractile tissue, mechanoreceptors within the muscle fibers detect MT, causing a series of signals that ultimately produce growth by increasing protein synthesis rate.
Heavier weight ≠ more mechanical tension btw, MT only exists on the force velocity curve, load doesn’t matter as long as contraction speed is slow. I’m not saying you shouldn’t lift heavier loads, heavier loads are helpful for other reasons. Mechanical tension and motor unit recruitment are 2. Different things.
For example, if I press a barbell with 5 kg each side (so 30 kg in total) but in slow velocity, will it create high fiber force ? The answer is yes since there is a slow contraction velocity. Don’t confuse MT with MUR.
So to clarify, you won’t grow if you only do slow contractions with light loads, This will only stimulate the active fibers, which will not be enough for growth because you are so low in the motor unit pool due to low effort.
BTW, micro tears do NOT mean more muscle gain it’s actually the opposite.
When you should bulk:
so now that we covered what actually creates stimulus and why bulking is vaulted, let’s talk about when you DO need to bulk.
Let’s keep it simple- you should bulk only when you’re either starting the gym as an underweight guy (below 17 BMI) or as an enhanced guy, why?
As a skinny guy (below 17 BMI), you are in a state where you don’t function well because your calories are so low so you don’t have energy, which will hinder your progress like CRAZY. Imagine training on 1 hour of sleep, that’s how it basically feels…

As an enhanced guy, literally everything you do will make your muscles grow like crazy, but when bulking you can basically make those extra 250-600 calories of surplus efficient for muscle mass because your MPS is elevated 24/7, I won’t get to it too much since I’m talking mainly about naturals here, but you get the point.
TL;DR
Muscle growth is driven by training stimulus (mechanical tension), not by eating in a large calorie surplus. Extra calories don’t directly increase muscle protein synthesis. After a small surplus (~100–200 kcal at most), additional calories mainly increase fat gain.
It goes in this order:

1.Large bulks unnecessary fat gain
2. longer cutting phases
3. slower overall progress.

You should only intentionally bulk if:
You’re underweight (very low BMI) and lacking energy and/or whenYou’re using anabolic drugs, where elevated muscle protein synthesis makes larger surpluses more effective.For most natural lifters I would advocate training hard, recover well, and eat around maintenance or a very small surplus/deficit depending on your goals.

2.losing muscle while cutting is normal:
I guess you heard this sentence at least a couple times in your training lifespan and it’s actually not that redundant, but people actually treat it as a binary state, as you will will lose muscle mass on a cut 100% without looking at the objective. While losing muscle on a deficit is actually easier than when at maintenance, it doesn’t mean losing muscle mass is something you don’t need to worry about.
To clarify again, I’m taking about natural lifters (obviously). Some mistakes new lifters have is that they think they lost a lot of muscle in their cut while they just didn’t have any significant muscle to begin with, so if you’re not a new lifter you SHOULD worry about losing muscle in a cut.

I will make a few sections so you will understand it better:
  • Why losing muscle, strength in a cut is not normal and shouldn’t be something that is obvious to you.​
  • How to properly programm your cutting phase​
  • TL;DR​

Why losing muscle, strength in a cut is not normal and shouldn’t be something that is obvious for you
losing muscle and strength in a cut is something that is very easy to do and very easy to avoid as well as long as you program your diet and cardio better.
Losing muscle and strength on a cut probably means you’re either going for more than 700 calorie deficit Which is a lot or not getting enough carbs (yes carbs are that important). For knowing how to cut properly you need to find your tdee (look in google), it’s never too realistic but it can give you a good idea of how many calories you should eat daily (I will talk about it more throughly the next section).
As long as your calories are not at the floor and you’re taking your preworkout carbs you WONT lose strength and muscle.
How to properly programm your cutting phase:
Ts is literally the easiest thing ever, all you need to do is to :
1. find your TDEE (go to google search) and then fill your stats. I will give you an idea of how it should be after you fill your stats -
View attachment 4713303
After you found your calorie maintenance (it’s never accurate remember) you will need to remove calories by how fast you want it, for example doing a 600 deficit will result in you eating roughly 2,000 calories which is a moderate cut, by then just experiment what’s best for you etc etc.

2. Do cardio, cardio is not just running or doing HIIT, it’s also doing bunch of steps daily and being on the stair master. So for example I do 15,000 steps minimum daily and it’s easy asf tbh, I counted it and every 10 minutes I walk 750-900 steps ish.

3. COUNT YOUR CALORIES, it should be fucking obvious, right? You should know what you’re getting in your body and what are the macros, kinda reasonable right?

4. Carbs>protein, I will talk about this more throughly in the next main section but you need to understand going over 30% of protein from your calories is just redundant.
Less protein, more carbs, especially before a workout. Leave room for carbs
TL;DR:
Losing muscle and strength on a cut shouldn’t just be something you accept. Most of the time it happens because you’re cutting way too hard or you dropped carbs too low and now your workouts suck.

If you’re in a crazy deficit, yeah, your lifts are going to go down. A cut doesn’t need to be extreme. Just find roughly where your maintenance is and eat a few hundred calories below that. Don’t eat too less. Move more during the day. And actually track what you eat so you’re not guessing.

Keep protein moderate, but don’t go so high. Carbs are your best friend . If your workouts stay strong and you’re not starving yourself, you shouldn’t be watching your muscle atrophy.

3. Prioritizing protein

Prioritizing protein as a natty gotta be the worst brainwashed thing after religion.
I will make three sections:​
  • Why prioritizing protein is vaulted​
  • Why carbs>protein​
  • TL;DR​

Why prioritizing protein is vaulted :
No, more protein≠faster muscle gain and more muscle gain.
Why is that?
Your body has a plateau for how much protein it can absorb, for 99.9999% of people eating more than 140 grams of of protein (considering they’re natural) will only give them useless calories that they could instead exchange with carbs (which is FAR more beneficial for muscle mass). Your MPS has a certain point (plateau) where after specific amount of protein is absorbed, it won’t contribute to anything except for MAYBE, just maybe some energy which carbs are better for anyway. So once you hit that plateau it doesn’t cause further hypertrophy, you’re just eating pointless calories atp.

People overrate protein SO FUCKING MUCH.
You need to eat your minimum effective dose of protein and leave the rest of your calories for carbs which are FAR MORE IMPORTANT FOR BUILDING MUSCLE, so stop overeating protein and torturing yourself and start eating more carbs.
Why carbs>protein:
so why? Stimulus happens in the gym, so you need to maximize that to have the best stimulus you can achieve while you’re in the gym, so how do you maximize that? It’s simple- YOU PRIORITIZE CARBS. Also, don’t you find it easier to eat carbs then to force feed yourself with breast chicken ? So how do you carb max? Your macros should be 50-60% of carbs and the rest are protein and fat. Just eating carbs through the day is not enough tho, to fully maximize your workout, you will need to have 2/3 phases of carbs absorption:

1. pre workout carbs which will help around 60-80 g of carbs (don’t do 1g of carb per kg plz), that will give you fuel for the workout
2. but that’s not enough if your workout is more than 1 hour and 30 minutes
then you will need to also add intra workout carbs (IWC) which will give you fuel for THE WHOLE workout. I would opt for absorbing them 10 minutes before halfway the workout ( for example if your workout is 2 hours, absorb them when you reach 50 minutes), and it HAS to be fast digesting carbs (low GI, low fat) so gummies imo is the best but rice cakes is good too just eat what ever Is more comfortable for you.

3.And lastly, your post workout carbs (PWC), this is not mandatory but it’s better especially for people who run a high frequency program since it will reduce the post workout fatigue which will eventually let you push yourself harder in the gym the next session, I would opt for 40-50 g of carbs.
TL;DR:
More protein doesn’t automatically mean more muscle. Your body can only use a certain amount to stimulate growth, and once you hit that level, adding more just gives you extra calories, not extra gains. As long as you’re eating enough protein to cover your needs, pushing it higher doesn’t speed things up. Find your minimum effective protein intake and eat it.
Carbs are just as important, if not more for actual progress because they fuel your workouts. Better fuel means better performance, and better performance means better stimulus for growth. If your training suffers because carbs are too low, muscle gain will suffer too.
So instead of obsessing over extremely high protein, hit a solid amount, then prioritize carbs to support training, recovery, and overall performance.


Okay I think that’s what I had in mind, would love you hear your insights guys.:feelsgood:
I will probably do more of this but these 3 are the ones that made me realize how many people are failing for it.

Dont lose your volume guys
View attachment 4713440

if I did any mistake or wrote something wrong then fix me. My English is not the best so if you don’t understand something just copy paste it to an AI it will make it simple for you.

@LTNhell63 @seeyenar @idont @Jensonsahighlander
@Dr. Mog
As a member of the sbl niche i think this is a great post. Good work bro
 
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As a member of the sbl niche i think this is a great post. Good work bro
just 1 thing you should add mechanical tension isnt the only thing that matters for your training for muscle growth. Mechanical tension just means the speed of your movement, having a very slow movement with no weight has high mechanical tension but something is missing : you gotta have a high degree of motor unit recruitement, that is why slowing down your concentrics is dumb because you lower motor unit recruitement for higher mechanical tension. The speed of your movement should be slower involontarely
 
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lIn this thread I will tell you why almost every advice you were even given by someone in the gym is redundant and what actually works. Sorry for formatting I’m lazy asf
I’m talking in this thread about natural guys ONLY!!!


the 3 most popular advices I heard people on social media, in the gym, outside the gym etc give are so popular you probably do it on a daily basis:
Tell me if I forgot anything else that’s redundant plz.

1. Bulking
2. Losing muscle while cutting is normal
3. You should prioritize protein


1.Bulking :
Yes, bulking as a natural guy is one if NOT the most retarded thing someone in the fitness industry can do, and the worst part is that most lifters don’t even know that, in this thread I will give thoroughly about bulking and why it’s 100% vaulted.



I will make a few sections so you will beter understand​
  • Why Bulking is vaulted and why the idea to bulk is redundant​
  • What actually creates stimulus​
  • When you SHOULD bulk?​
  • TLDR​

Why bulking is vaulted and why the idea to bulk is redundant
I’m sure you already heard that stupid phrase of “pick up the fork if you want more muscle mass”, which is true to an extent but being in a calorie surplus does NOT, and I will say again does NOT cause more muscle growth in any case (except for specific one that I will mention later).
Ever wondered why the bulk/cut cycle became popular ever since the roids became more popular as well in the body building industry ?
The idea of the bulk is to eat in a calorie surplus (between 250 to even 1,000 in some stupid cases) to give you more “energy”. the idea of eating more for more energy is definitely true, but you definitely do NOT need a surplus to have a better performance at the gym.
So, why bulking is vaulted exactly? Simple-
muscle gain is an not energy-dependent process, it’s a stimulus dependent process. muscles does require a bit energy but that amount is low, the higher end estimates that the maximum surplus you should reach for is 100-200 per day.
There is no biological mechanism that turns extra calories into muscle mass, and myofibrillar muscle protein synthesis won’t increase just because you’re in a surplus. You really think that if you ate that extra pack of Oreos you will get more muscle mass? Are you hearing yourself?
Anything beyond 100-200 calorie surplus will only result in more fat not more muscle mass and energy (100-200 surplus is also redundant but not as risky for your body fat as more than it does, also on paper you won’t actually reach 100-200 surplus you will probably eat less than that so you’re fine). The amount of fat gain you will gain in comparison to the muscle mass will get is crazy since you won’t get anymore muscle mass and only fat. so in the long term this will only hinder your progress in the gym not accelerate it since you will also spend another few months in a calorie deficit which makes you a bit more vulnerable to atrophy. So for exchange of no benefit in terms of muscle growth, the surplus will lead you to being in a calorie deficit during which you will get muscle slower.
What actually creates stimulus
the simplest thing ever- Mechanical Tension is the ONLY thing that will make your muscles hypertrophy.
For those who don’t know why machanical tendon is, it’s simply the pulling force your muscle fibers experience during slow
contractions. As velocity decreases, fiber force increases. (Inverse relationship).
During slow velocity contraction speeds, fibers has the most action-myosin crrosbridges- basically the most amount of force.
The force velocity curve:
So how does MT create hypertrophy - it’s basically the stimulus that tells your body to add contractile tissue, mechanoreceptors within the muscle fibers detect MT, causing a series of signals that ultimately produce growth by increasing protein synthesis rate.
Heavier weight ≠ more mechanical tension btw, MT only exists on the force velocity curve, load doesn’t matter as long as contraction speed is slow. I’m not saying you shouldn’t lift heavier loads, heavier loads are helpful for other reasons. Mechanical tension and motor unit recruitment are 2. Different things.
For example, if I press a barbell with 5 kg each side (so 30 kg in total) but in slow velocity, will it create high fiber force ? The answer is yes since there is a slow contraction velocity. Don’t confuse MT with MUR.
So to clarify, you won’t grow if you only do slow contractions with light loads, This will only stimulate the active fibers, which will not be enough for growth because you are so low in the motor unit pool due to low effort.
BTW, micro tears do NOT mean more muscle gain it’s actually the opposite.
When you should bulk:
so now that we covered what actually creates stimulus and why bulking is vaulted, let’s talk about when you DO need to bulk.
Let’s keep it simple- you should bulk only when you’re either starting the gym as an underweight guy (below 17 BMI) or as an enhanced guy, why?
As a skinny guy (below 17 BMI), you are in a state where you don’t function well because your calories are so low so you don’t have energy, which will hinder your progress like CRAZY. Imagine training on 1 hour of sleep, that’s how it basically feels…

As an enhanced guy, literally everything you do will make your muscles grow like crazy, but when bulking you can basically make those extra 250-600 calories of surplus efficient for muscle mass because your MPS is elevated 24/7, I won’t get to it too much since I’m talking mainly about naturals here, but you get the point.
TL;DR
Muscle growth is driven by training stimulus (mechanical tension), not by eating in a large calorie surplus. Extra calories don’t directly increase muscle protein synthesis. After a small surplus (~100–200 kcal at most), additional calories mainly increase fat gain.
It goes in this order:

1.Large bulks unnecessary fat gain
2. longer cutting phases
3. slower overall progress.

You should only intentionally bulk if:
You’re underweight (very low BMI) and lacking energy and/or whenYou’re using anabolic drugs, where elevated muscle protein synthesis makes larger surpluses more effective.For most natural lifters I would advocate training hard, recover well, and eat around maintenance or a very small surplus/deficit depending on your goals.

2.losing muscle while cutting is normal:
I guess you heard this sentence at least a couple times in your training lifespan and it’s actually not that redundant, but people actually treat it as a binary state, as you will will lose muscle mass on a cut 100% without looking at the objective. While losing muscle on a deficit is actually easier than when at maintenance, it doesn’t mean losing muscle mass is something you don’t need to worry about.
To clarify again, I’m taking about natural lifters (obviously). Some mistakes new lifters have is that they think they lost a lot of muscle in their cut while they just didn’t have any significant muscle to begin with, so if you’re not a new lifter you SHOULD worry about losing muscle in a cut.

I will make a few sections so you will understand it better:
  • Why losing muscle, strength in a cut is not normal and shouldn’t be something that is obvious to you.​
  • How to properly programm your cutting phase​
  • TL;DR​

Why losing muscle, strength in a cut is not normal and shouldn’t be something that is obvious for you
losing muscle and strength in a cut is something that is very easy to do and very easy to avoid as well as long as you program your diet and cardio better.
Losing muscle and strength on a cut probably means you’re either going for more than 700 calorie deficit Which is a lot or not getting enough carbs (yes carbs are that important). For knowing how to cut properly you need to find your tdee (look in google), it’s never too realistic but it can give you a good idea of how many calories you should eat daily (I will talk about it more throughly the next section).
As long as your calories are not at the floor and you’re taking your preworkout carbs you WONT lose strength and muscle.
How to properly programm your cutting phase:
Ts is literally the easiest thing ever, all you need to do is to :
1. find your TDEE (go to google search) and then fill your stats. I will give you an idea of how it should be after you fill your stats -
View attachment 4713303
After you found your calorie maintenance (it’s never accurate remember) you will need to remove calories by how fast you want it, for example doing a 600 deficit will result in you eating roughly 2,000 calories which is a moderate cut, by then just experiment what’s best for you etc etc.

2. Do cardio, cardio is not just running or doing HIIT, it’s also doing bunch of steps daily and being on the stair master. So for example I do 15,000 steps minimum daily and it’s easy asf tbh, I counted it and every 10 minutes I walk 750-900 steps ish.

3. COUNT YOUR CALORIES, it should be fucking obvious, right? You should know what you’re getting in your body and what are the macros, kinda reasonable right?

4. Carbs>protein, I will talk about this more throughly in the next main section but you need to understand going over 30% of protein from your calories is just redundant.
Less protein, more carbs, especially before a workout. Leave room for carbs
TL;DR:
Losing muscle and strength on a cut shouldn’t just be something you accept. Most of the time it happens because you’re cutting way too hard or you dropped carbs too low and now your workouts suck.

If you’re in a crazy deficit, yeah, your lifts are going to go down. A cut doesn’t need to be extreme. Just find roughly where your maintenance is and eat a few hundred calories below that. Don’t eat too less. Move more during the day. And actually track what you eat so you’re not guessing.

Keep protein moderate, but don’t go so high. Carbs are your best friend . If your workouts stay strong and you’re not starving yourself, you shouldn’t be watching your muscle atrophy.

3. Prioritizing protein

Prioritizing protein as a natty gotta be the worst brainwashed thing after religion.
I will make three sections:​
  • Why prioritizing protein is vaulted​
  • Why carbs>protein​
  • TL;DR​

Why prioritizing protein is vaulted :
No, more protein≠faster muscle gain and more muscle gain.
Why is that?
Your body has a plateau for how much protein it can absorb, for 99.9999% of people eating more than 140 grams of of protein (considering they’re natural) will only give them useless calories that they could instead exchange with carbs (which is FAR more beneficial for muscle mass). Your MPS has a certain point (plateau) where after specific amount of protein is absorbed, it won’t contribute to anything except for MAYBE, just maybe some energy which carbs are better for anyway. So once you hit that plateau it doesn’t cause further hypertrophy, you’re just eating pointless calories atp.

People overrate protein SO FUCKING MUCH.
You need to eat your minimum effective dose of protein and leave the rest of your calories for carbs which are FAR MORE IMPORTANT FOR BUILDING MUSCLE, so stop overeating protein and torturing yourself and start eating more carbs.
Why carbs>protein:
so why? Stimulus happens in the gym, so you need to maximize that to have the best stimulus you can achieve while you’re in the gym, so how do you maximize that? It’s simple- YOU PRIORITIZE CARBS. Also, don’t you find it easier to eat carbs then to force feed yourself with breast chicken ? So how do you carb max? Your macros should be 50-60% of carbs and the rest are protein and fat. Just eating carbs through the day is not enough tho, to fully maximize your workout, you will need to have 2/3 phases of carbs absorption:

1. pre workout carbs which will help around 60-80 g of carbs (don’t do 1g of carb per kg plz), that will give you fuel for the workout
2. but that’s not enough if your workout is more than 1 hour and 30 minutes
then you will need to also add intra workout carbs (IWC) which will give you fuel for THE WHOLE workout. I would opt for absorbing them 10 minutes before halfway the workout ( for example if your workout is 2 hours, absorb them when you reach 50 minutes), and it HAS to be fast digesting carbs (low GI, low fat) so gummies imo is the best but rice cakes is good too just eat what ever Is more comfortable for you.

3.And lastly, your post workout carbs (PWC), this is not mandatory but it’s better especially for people who run a high frequency program since it will reduce the post workout fatigue which will eventually let you push yourself harder in the gym the next session, I would opt for 40-50 g of carbs.
TL;DR:
More protein doesn’t automatically mean more muscle. Your body can only use a certain amount to stimulate growth, and once you hit that level, adding more just gives you extra calories, not extra gains. As long as you’re eating enough protein to cover your needs, pushing it higher doesn’t speed things up. Find your minimum effective protein intake and eat it.
Carbs are just as important, if not more for actual progress because they fuel your workouts. Better fuel means better performance, and better performance means better stimulus for growth. If your training suffers because carbs are too low, muscle gain will suffer too.
So instead of obsessing over extremely high protein, hit a solid amount, then prioritize carbs to support training, recovery, and overall performance.


Okay I think that’s what I had in mind, would love you hear your insights guys.:feelsgood:
I will probably do more of this but these 3 are the ones that made me realize how many people are failing for it.

Dont lose your volume guys
View attachment 4713440

if I did any mistake or wrote something wrong then fix me. My English is not the best so if you don’t understand something just copy paste it to an AI it will make it simple for you.

@LTNhell63 @seeyenar @idont @Jensonsahighlander
@Dr. Mog
will read

i also said that after 200-250 calories of surplus it’s just useless for muscle growth and it will mostly give you fat gain not muscle gain
thats usually a safe buffer amount cuz what if you undershoot calorie amount, you can only estimate
So that you have enough daily energy to make muscle
 
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Reactions: combatingNorwooding and chudpiller
Yes, however, my point is that a 500-ish calorie bulk ensures that you will hit the 200 calorie surplus every day, whereas a perfect 200 calorie surplus on paper would be extremely difficult to calculate because 200 calories is such a drop in the bucket in terms of total daily calories. You can track everything perfectly and still be off 1-200 calories due to variances in size and nutrient content of the foods you are eating.

I meant that it would take multiple cuts and bulks to hit 180 lean for say a 6ft tall person. If you just ate at your 160lb maintenance +200, you would spin your wheels and never hit 180 lean.
You can hit 180 lean without steroids though. There are plenty of natural guys who do that. Steroids don't have as significant of an effect as you might think.
it would be perfect if we had built in calorie calculators but unfortunately you aren't supposed to be super jacked in nature
 
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Reactions: chudpiller
dnr mirin
 
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Reactions: combatingNorwooding
lIn this thread I will tell you why almost every advice you were even given by someone in the gym is redundant and what actually works. Sorry for formatting I’m lazy asf
I’m talking in this thread about natural guys ONLY!!!


the 3 most popular advices I heard people on social media, in the gym, outside the gym etc give are so popular you probably do it on a daily basis:
Tell me if I forgot anything else that’s redundant plz.

1. Bulking
2. Losing muscle while cutting is normal
3. You should prioritize protein


1.Bulking :
Yes, bulking as a natural guy is one if NOT the most retarded thing someone in the fitness industry can do, and the worst part is that most lifters don’t even know that, in this thread I will give thoroughly about bulking and why it’s 100% vaulted.



I will make a few sections so you will beter understand​
  • Why Bulking is vaulted and why the idea to bulk is redundant​
  • What actually creates stimulus​
  • When you SHOULD bulk?​
  • TLDR​

Why bulking is vaulted and why the idea to bulk is redundant
I’m sure you already heard that stupid phrase of “pick up the fork if you want more muscle mass”, which is true to an extent but being in a calorie surplus does NOT, and I will say again does NOT cause more muscle growth in any case (except for specific one that I will mention later).
Ever wondered why the bulk/cut cycle became popular ever since the roids became more popular as well in the body building industry ?
The idea of the bulk is to eat in a calorie surplus (between 250 to even 1,000 in some stupid cases) to give you more “energy”. the idea of eating more for more energy is definitely true, but you definitely do NOT need a surplus to have a better performance at the gym.
So, why bulking is vaulted exactly? Simple-
muscle gain is an not energy-dependent process, it’s a stimulus dependent process. muscles does require a bit energy but that amount is low, the higher end estimates that the maximum surplus you should reach for is 100-200 per day.
There is no biological mechanism that turns extra calories into muscle mass, and myofibrillar muscle protein synthesis won’t increase just because you’re in a surplus. You really think that if you ate that extra pack of Oreos you will get more muscle mass? Are you hearing yourself?
Anything beyond 100-200 calorie surplus will only result in more fat not more muscle mass and energy (100-200 surplus is also redundant but not as risky for your body fat as more than it does, also on paper you won’t actually reach 100-200 surplus you will probably eat less than that so you’re fine). The amount of fat gain you will gain in comparison to the muscle mass will get is crazy since you won’t get anymore muscle mass and only fat. so in the long term this will only hinder your progress in the gym not accelerate it since you will also spend another few months in a calorie deficit which makes you a bit more vulnerable to atrophy. So for exchange of no benefit in terms of muscle growth, the surplus will lead you to being in a calorie deficit during which you will get muscle slower.
What actually creates stimulus
the simplest thing ever- Mechanical Tension is the ONLY thing that will make your muscles hypertrophy.
For those who don’t know why machanical tendon is, it’s simply the pulling force your muscle fibers experience during slow
contractions. As velocity decreases, fiber force increases. (Inverse relationship).
During slow velocity contraction speeds, fibers has the most action-myosin crrosbridges- basically the most amount of force.
The force velocity curve:
So how does MT create hypertrophy - it’s basically the stimulus that tells your body to add contractile tissue, mechanoreceptors within the muscle fibers detect MT, causing a series of signals that ultimately produce growth by increasing protein synthesis rate.
Heavier weight ≠ more mechanical tension btw, MT only exists on the force velocity curve, load doesn’t matter as long as contraction speed is slow. I’m not saying you shouldn’t lift heavier loads, heavier loads are helpful for other reasons. Mechanical tension and motor unit recruitment are 2. Different things.
For example, if I press a barbell with 5 kg each side (so 30 kg in total) but in slow velocity, will it create high fiber force ? The answer is yes since there is a slow contraction velocity. Don’t confuse MT with MUR.
So to clarify, you won’t grow if you only do slow contractions with light loads, This will only stimulate the active fibers, which will not be enough for growth because you are so low in the motor unit pool due to low effort.
BTW, micro tears do NOT mean more muscle gain it’s actually the opposite.
When you should bulk:
so now that we covered what actually creates stimulus and why bulking is vaulted, let’s talk about when you DO need to bulk.
Let’s keep it simple- you should bulk only when you’re either starting the gym as an underweight guy (below 17 BMI) or as an enhanced guy, why?
As a skinny guy (below 17 BMI), you are in a state where you don’t function well because your calories are so low so you don’t have energy, which will hinder your progress like CRAZY. Imagine training on 1 hour of sleep, that’s how it basically feels…

As an enhanced guy, literally everything you do will make your muscles grow like crazy, but when bulking you can basically make those extra 250-600 calories of surplus efficient for muscle mass because your MPS is elevated 24/7, I won’t get to it too much since I’m talking mainly about naturals here, but you get the point.
TL;DR
Muscle growth is driven by training stimulus (mechanical tension), not by eating in a large calorie surplus. Extra calories don’t directly increase muscle protein synthesis. After a small surplus (~100–200 kcal at most), additional calories mainly increase fat gain.
It goes in this order:

1.Large bulks unnecessary fat gain
2. longer cutting phases
3. slower overall progress.

You should only intentionally bulk if:
You’re underweight (very low BMI) and lacking energy and/or whenYou’re using anabolic drugs, where elevated muscle protein synthesis makes larger surpluses more effective.For most natural lifters I would advocate training hard, recover well, and eat around maintenance or a very small surplus/deficit depending on your goals.

2.losing muscle while cutting is normal:
I guess you heard this sentence at least a couple times in your training lifespan and it’s actually not that redundant, but people actually treat it as a binary state, as you will will lose muscle mass on a cut 100% without looking at the objective. While losing muscle on a deficit is actually easier than when at maintenance, it doesn’t mean losing muscle mass is something you don’t need to worry about.
To clarify again, I’m taking about natural lifters (obviously). Some mistakes new lifters have is that they think they lost a lot of muscle in their cut while they just didn’t have any significant muscle to begin with, so if you’re not a new lifter you SHOULD worry about losing muscle in a cut.

I will make a few sections so you will understand it better:
  • Why losing muscle, strength in a cut is not normal and shouldn’t be something that is obvious to you.​
  • How to properly programm your cutting phase​
  • TL;DR​

Why losing muscle, strength in a cut is not normal and shouldn’t be something that is obvious for you
losing muscle and strength in a cut is something that is very easy to do and very easy to avoid as well as long as you program your diet and cardio better.
Losing muscle and strength on a cut probably means you’re either going for more than 700 calorie deficit Which is a lot or not getting enough carbs (yes carbs are that important). For knowing how to cut properly you need to find your tdee (look in google), it’s never too realistic but it can give you a good idea of how many calories you should eat daily (I will talk about it more throughly the next section).
As long as your calories are not at the floor and you’re taking your preworkout carbs you WONT lose strength and muscle.
How to properly programm your cutting phase:
Ts is literally the easiest thing ever, all you need to do is to :
1. find your TDEE (go to google search) and then fill your stats. I will give you an idea of how it should be after you fill your stats -
View attachment 4713303
After you found your calorie maintenance (it’s never accurate remember) you will need to remove calories by how fast you want it, for example doing a 600 deficit will result in you eating roughly 2,000 calories which is a moderate cut, by then just experiment what’s best for you etc etc.

2. Do cardio, cardio is not just running or doing HIIT, it’s also doing bunch of steps daily and being on the stair master. So for example I do 15,000 steps minimum daily and it’s easy asf tbh, I counted it and every 10 minutes I walk 750-900 steps ish.

3. COUNT YOUR CALORIES, it should be fucking obvious, right? You should know what you’re getting in your body and what are the macros, kinda reasonable right?

4. Carbs>protein, I will talk about this more throughly in the next main section but you need to understand going over 30% of protein from your calories is just redundant.
Less protein, more carbs, especially before a workout. Leave room for carbs
TL;DR:
Losing muscle and strength on a cut shouldn’t just be something you accept. Most of the time it happens because you’re cutting way too hard or you dropped carbs too low and now your workouts suck.

If you’re in a crazy deficit, yeah, your lifts are going to go down. A cut doesn’t need to be extreme. Just find roughly where your maintenance is and eat a few hundred calories below that. Don’t eat too less. Move more during the day. And actually track what you eat so you’re not guessing.

Keep protein moderate, but don’t go so high. Carbs are your best friend . If your workouts stay strong and you’re not starving yourself, you shouldn’t be watching your muscle atrophy.

3. Prioritizing protein

Prioritizing protein as a natty gotta be the worst brainwashed thing after religion.
I will make three sections:​
  • Why prioritizing protein is vaulted​
  • Why carbs>protein​
  • TL;DR​

Why prioritizing protein is vaulted :
No, more protein≠faster muscle gain and more muscle gain.
Why is that?
Your body has a plateau for how much protein it can absorb, for 99.9999% of people eating more than 140 grams of of protein (considering they’re natural) will only give them useless calories that they could instead exchange with carbs (which is FAR more beneficial for muscle mass). Your MPS has a certain point (plateau) where after specific amount of protein is absorbed, it won’t contribute to anything except for MAYBE, just maybe some energy which carbs are better for anyway. So once you hit that plateau it doesn’t cause further hypertrophy, you’re just eating pointless calories atp.

People overrate protein SO FUCKING MUCH.
You need to eat your minimum effective dose of protein and leave the rest of your calories for carbs which are FAR MORE IMPORTANT FOR BUILDING MUSCLE, so stop overeating protein and torturing yourself and start eating more carbs.
Why carbs>protein:
so why? Stimulus happens in the gym, so you need to maximize that to have the best stimulus you can achieve while you’re in the gym, so how do you maximize that? It’s simple- YOU PRIORITIZE CARBS. Also, don’t you find it easier to eat carbs then to force feed yourself with breast chicken ? So how do you carb max? Your macros should be 50-60% of carbs and the rest are protein and fat. Just eating carbs through the day is not enough tho, to fully maximize your workout, you will need to have 2/3 phases of carbs absorption:

1. pre workout carbs which will help around 60-80 g of carbs (don’t do 1g of carb per kg plz), that will give you fuel for the workout
2. but that’s not enough if your workout is more than 1 hour and 30 minutes
then you will need to also add intra workout carbs (IWC) which will give you fuel for THE WHOLE workout. I would opt for absorbing them 10 minutes before halfway the workout ( for example if your workout is 2 hours, absorb them when you reach 50 minutes), and it HAS to be fast digesting carbs (low GI, low fat) so gummies imo is the best but rice cakes is good too just eat what ever Is more comfortable for you.

3.And lastly, your post workout carbs (PWC), this is not mandatory but it’s better especially for people who run a high frequency program since it will reduce the post workout fatigue which will eventually let you push yourself harder in the gym the next session, I would opt for 40-50 g of carbs.
TL;DR:
More protein doesn’t automatically mean more muscle. Your body can only use a certain amount to stimulate growth, and once you hit that level, adding more just gives you extra calories, not extra gains. As long as you’re eating enough protein to cover your needs, pushing it higher doesn’t speed things up. Find your minimum effective protein intake and eat it.
Carbs are just as important, if not more for actual progress because they fuel your workouts. Better fuel means better performance, and better performance means better stimulus for growth. If your training suffers because carbs are too low, muscle gain will suffer too.
So instead of obsessing over extremely high protein, hit a solid amount, then prioritize carbs to support training, recovery, and overall performance.


Okay I think that’s what I had in mind, would love you hear your insights guys.:feelsgood:
I will probably do more of this but these 3 are the ones that made me realize how many people are failing for it.

Dont lose your volume guys
View attachment 4713440

if I did any mistake or wrote something wrong then fix me. My English is not the best so if you don’t understand something just copy paste it to an AI it will make it simple for you.

@LTNhell63 @seeyenar @idont @Jensonsahighlander
@Dr. Mog
Good thread tbf. Wouldn’t you argue in some cases bulls should be carried out for example if a kid is underweight
 
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Reactions: combatingNorwooding
Yes, however, my point is that a 500-ish calorie bulk ensures that you will hit the 200 calorie surplus every day, whereas a perfect 200 calorie surplus on paper would be extremely difficult to calculate because 200 calories is such a drop in the bucket in terms of total daily calories. You can track everything perfectly and still be off 1-200 calories due to variances in size and nutrient content of the foods you are eating.
Maybe, but imo the bulk is just a coping mechanism for some people to just eat whatever they want it’s very hard to control yourself after you finish it.

Also there are people who find it very hard to force feed (like me), so they will eat junk food all day which is obviously not optimal
As a member of the sbl niche i think this is a great post. Good work bro
thanks, tried my best
just 1 thing you should add mechanical tension isnt the only thing that matters for your training for muscle growth.
I never said that, sorry if you understood it wrongly or I phrased it wrongly. I meant the only thing that will create stimulus inside the gym is mechanical tension, without mechanical tension your don’t have stimulus hence you don’t build muscle.

Of course your sleep, diet, and other indicators outside of the gym matter

Mechanical tension just means the speed of your movement, having a very slow movement with no weight has high mechanical tension but something is missing : you gotta have a high degree of motor unit recruitement, that is why slowing down your concentrics is dumb because you lower motor unit recruitement for higher mechanical tension. The speed of your movement should be slower involontarely
Looks like you didn’t read the whole thread. I literally explained the force velocity curve
thats usually a safe buffer amount cuz what if you undershoot calorie amount, you can only estimate
So that you have enough daily energy to make muscle
yeah
Yeah but I think it’s too risky to do a bulk over 250 since overshooting is also a factor you need to consider, it’s very easy to overshoot especially if you don’t count your calories.

I think just doing a 100-200 surplus is the maximum amount of surplus you should do,it’s not as risky for fat gain as 250+ is.
example if a kid is underweight
I literally explained it in the thread, in the “when you should bulk” subsection
30-30-40% total daily calories
protein fats carbs%
I disagree. First thing, fats should NEVER be that high (30% is a lot),protein is fine but I would say for most gymcels to eat 15-20% fat, 25-30% protein and the rest are carbs
 
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Maybe, but imo the bulk is just a coping mechanism for some people to just eat whatever they want it’s very hard to control yourself after you finish it.

Also there are people who find it very hard to force feed (like me), so they will eat junk food all day which is obviously not optimal

thanks, tried my best

I never said that, sorry if you understood it wrongly or I phrased it wrongly. I meant the only thing that will create stimulus inside the gym is mechanical tension, without mechanical tension your don’t have stimulus hence you don’t build muscle.

Of course your sleep, diet, and other indicators outside of the gym matter


Looks like you didn’t read the whole thread. I literally explained the force velocity curve

Yeah but I think it’s too risky to do a bulk over 250 since overshooting is also a factor you need to consider, it’s very easy to overshoot especially if you don’t count your calories.

I think just doing a 100-200 surplus is the maximum amount of surplus you should do,it’s not as risky for fat gain as 250+ is.

I literally explained it in the thread, in the “when you should bulk” subsection

I disagree. First thing, fats should NEVER be that high (30% is a lot),protein is fine but I would say for most gymcels to eat 15-20% fat, 25-30% protein and the rest are carbs
Technically if saturated fat is <10% then the 20% can be other fats (very easy if you megadose eggs) you need the fats for test and cognition.
 
I also forgot to mention that you need to eat protein 1.5/2 of your LBM not your total body weight @irrumator praetor @mikre
 
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Reactions: Revan and irrumator praetor
Maybe, but imo the bulk is just a coping mechanism for some people to just eat whatever they want it’s very hard to control yourself after you finish it.

Also there are people who find it very hard to force feed (like me), so they will eat junk food all day which is obviously not optimal
True it’s an excuse for a lot of people, plus I think staying small and lean would be better for appeal then going over 15% bodyfat regardless of weight tbh
 
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dnr but i just know this is a good thread
 
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Dnrd but well said
 
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