Jaekus wrote:
nukchebi0 wrote:
Great lift today. Went easy on the legs (2 plate reduced motion leg press) to ease the groin back into functionality, but easily did 4x6 of 140 bench press and 70 pound dumbbell row. Definitely going to have my upper body back to where it was in a week or two.
Also lol Jaekus, everyone has muscle even if they never lift; how else would they walk?
That's because walking is maintaining the muscle you need.
Think of it this way: you spend time and ate to build your muscles to a point where you can squat 100kg 3x8. If you then stop doing that workout and lose weight, your body is going to use some of the muscle you gained and turn it into energy it needs to basically do whatever it needs the energy for. You've stopped telling your body you need to keep lifting 100kg 3x8 on a regular basis, so it gets the message it no longer needs that muscle and find another use for it that is more pressing.
Speaking from my own experience, I took five weeks off when I went on holiday to the US. When I came back I found that despite gaining a few kilos my strength had depleted, and I found what was 80-90% of what I was lifting before to be really hard to lift - evidence I had lost muscle.
Like I said, I had the same experience in Russia. It's very depressing seeing four months of hard work neutralized so quickly, but such is the nature of body adaptation.
Kmar wrote:
I don't think anyone is going to argue against getting some potassium in before you workout. I realize energy is needed to maintain intensity, that's why I said if you can. But some people are capable of bringing it on a relatively small amount of calories in their system. As said earlier in this thread, certain elements of any workout/diet need to be adjusted to accommodate different energy levels, biochemistry, and lifestyle habits.
Like I said this is what has worked for me, over two decades of working out.
I was simply adding to what you said, not contradicting it.
In my case, I perform much better when I have so energy before the exertion. When I ran track, I'd be incapacitated with nausea for ten minutes after a 200m if I forgot to eat a couple apple slices 20 or 30 minutes before the race, but would be perfectly fine if I did. I like to apply the same principle to my lifting since the nature of the work is similar.