How is it not practical in a real world but having exactly 30 grams of protein perfectly timed in 6 meals is practical in real life?? Makes perfect sense to no one.
In credible scientific studies IF has been show to offer absolutely zero advantages over any other method of food consumption. Both the "breakfast is the most important meal of the day" and "IF will boost your GH levels" are not substantiated in any way shape or form.Are you trying to sell an IF book? Those were pulled from someone selling a IF diet, as the only thing you missed is that it cures cancer.
If it's the holy grail of diets, why isn't everyone on it, including yourself? Like all fad diets, it's no practical in the real world.
I hope you realise that those claims come from bias studies with small sample sizes, looking for the results that sell. You know, the exact same reason you're against BCAAs and anything else that comes from a sup store. Or is it that you're on team BCAAs this month?
I agree, that for the average person who eats healthy and regularly, it will give almost no benefit or change in results. I was comparing the optimal eating plan of 30g of protein at a time, 5 or so times a day vs only a single meal where you eat anything and everything (maccas from the looks of it).
With such an extreme intermittent fasting approach, when do you actually train? Afterwards when you body is trying to digest a stupid amount of food, or before where you're completely fasted and no immediate fuel?
I've posted a nice little concise podcast and linked the studies, but people ignore this and deny there are studies. I guess ignorance protects people's values, even if it does them a disservice.
Ok, I'm saying that 30g of protein 5x a day is optimal (as does the science). What would you suggest would be the inverse? For the same amount of calories and protein, what would be the most inefficient diet? I certainly would say one massive meal once a day. Not only is this inefficient for your body, but mentally you're going to have a very unhealthy relationship with food.
Building muscle and losing fat is a balance of peaks and valleys. When you eat you gain muscle and fat (simplified). When you train you break down muscle, and when you're not eating you're breaking down fat. To be optimal you want to smooth the peaks and valleys out.
Like I originally said, this is probably the best way to control weight and appetite. But there's a big difference in approaches to losing fat and gaining muscle.
Whoa, that escalated quickly. Calm down dude.
I never said protein timing is 25% of all training and diet. I said it would make 25% difference to the intermittent fasting approach bazza is using, as in my opinion that is the worst case scenario.
Why does everything have to be one extreme or the other? Carbs are the devil or fats are unicorn jizz. Intermittent fasting is the secret key to unlock god mode and eating regularly means you should give up lifting.
I had this out with baz a week or so ago. There's absolutely nothing wrong with average joes using the tactics of the so called elites to achieve the optimal performance.
And anyone who tells you any differently is a dick head.
I don't see a problem trying to be the best you can be. Elite or otherwise.
The lifting hobbyists or the person that wants to be their best only needs to do a small amount of exercise and not very often.
To quote ratios is moot and to go that extra in terms of diet, supplements and chemicals how that works out depends on the persons potential for looking the goods on the stage for which is genetics.
you'd be surprised how little some of the greatest actually worked.
Ffs. Here we go again. No baby, no bath water. I don't think anyone was even criticising Bazzas foray into IF. The fact is Steve got himself into good enough condition to get on stage. Half the ****s that profess to know it all probably train the least. This is an odd forum. The tall poppy syndrome is strong.
I'm fine though, you don't need to rescue me.
What is this hobbyist I keep hearing about? Someone that wants to be their best, assuming that means put on maximum muscle or be as strong as possible has to do more than a small amount of exercise irregularly, especially if they have been training for years. Whether someone wants to compete or not is irrelevant, there are non competitors with physiques every bit as good as competitors, and they train every bit as hard. Don't confuse natural and untested competition or training. They are two completely different beasts.The lifting hobbyists or the person that wants to be their best only needs to do a small amount of exercise and not very often.
To quote ratios is moot and to go that extra in terms of diet, supplements and chemicals how that works out depends on the persons potential for looking the goods on the stage for which is genetics.
you'd be surprised how little some of the greatest actually worked.
Yes.I don't see a problem trying to be the best you can be. Elite or otherwise.
I don't eat anything and everything. I eat to my calorie and macro targets. 95% of my meals are home cooked meals, not that it matters. If I'm out somewhere I'll allow for what I feel like at the time. I love how people try and make out there is something magically bad for you about eating Macca's but if I ate a burger at a hippy health food store with the same ingredients it would be ok.
I train in the morning. If you think by morning time you have no fuel after a big meal from the night before you are mistaken. Digestion takes a long time. In any case I've trained in the morning "fasted" for probably over 5 years. Never effected me, if anything I feel and train better.
Your 25% claim is absolute fairyland stuff. If you are correct I should see some significant muscle loss if I continue this for a couple months. Haha. The bulk of human nutrition "ideals" is all a grey area. We don't know exactly what is ideal because it's so hard to do controlled studies in humans. We can't lock people up and feed various diets for their lifetime and compare results of different diets.
We know certain farm animal nutrition down to the ideal grams per day and ratios of various amino acids for ideal muscle growth, even with the comparative ease of researching farm animal diets compared to humans we are still finding out how much we don't know about what is ideal for them.
I'm not competing, I don't care about the maybe 1% shit. Ideal of 30g of protein per meal. Haha. Hello the 90s called.
What is this hobbyist I keep hearing about? Someone that wants to be their best, assuming that means put on maximum muscle or be as strong as possible has to do more than a small amount of exercise irregularly, especially if they have been training for years. Whether someone wants to compete or not is irrelevant, there are non competitors with physiques every bit as good as competitors, and they train every bit as hard. Don't confuse natural and untested competition or training. They are two completely different beasts.
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