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Friday, October 25, 2013

Reverse Dieting Bullshit

About a month ago I wrote about my peeves regarding the use of the phrase "metabolic damage," which leads me into my peeves with the overuse of this new popular phrase, "reverse dieting."

Reverse dieting is the phrase coined to define the process of slowly increasing caloric consumption after a period of dieting so as not to rebound and gain a tremendous amount of weight in a short period of time (yo-yo) post-competition. Some gurus recommend an increase of roughly 20 Calories a week so that the body can adjust to the energy increase, and so the least amount of weight is gained in the process of going back to eating at maintenance. In a sense, it is considered a "solution" to metabolic damage. Bleghk.

There are so many issues with these concepts that I don't even know where to begin.

First off -- If you are consuming 1400 Calories the week before you step on stage, and your maintenance is 2000 Calories, and you were to follow this guru advice and add in 20 calories each week, it would take you 30 weeks or 7 and a half months to get back up to maintenance calories. This means that you would still be at a deficit for almost 8 months post-competition. I don't know if this seems realistic to any of you, but I know I sure as hell wouldn't want to be in a deficit for the course of an entire year: 3-4 months prep, 7-8 months post-comp, no thank you.

Second -- 20 calories is a whopping 5 grams of protein or carbs, or a little over 2 grams of fat. Even the most meticulous dieters often don't control their diets to that degree, especially post-competition.

OMG, five extra pieces of broccoli?! Yayyyy. 

Third -- Your training post-competition is so different from prep, that this minor caloric increase wouldn't make much of tangible difference. How can someone advise changes in nutrition based off of a training protocol that's not even being implemented post-comp?

Lastly -- Rebounding from a competition isn't even that big of a deal. Most of it is water weight and bloat, and easily comes off once the dieter is eating at maintenance again. Nobody stays competition lean unless they're following a competition diet. That's how it works. You can't stay lean on a diet that doesn't make you lean. You will look the way you eat and train.

In my opinion, all these fancy new bullshit terms are there to scare people into thinking they need more help than they really do. You're not going to die from binging a day or two after your competition (as far as I know, but I'm not a doctor so don't blame me if you suffer from a heart attack post-comp after binging on donuts and ice cream). Just enjoy yourself, take some time off, eat normally, then get right back into the swing of things once you feel mentally and physically ready. Don't go off and diet more after you just got finished dieting, that's just stupid. Our bodies and minds need a break!

A competitor doesn't build their body in a few days, and won't destroy it in a few days, either. As with all things, you need time and consistency to achieve your goals. Just stick with it and stop over-complicating things.

Monday, October 21, 2013

Strength Training

Here's a rundown of my current programming:

Last week, I started my strength training cycle in preparation for a powerlifting meet in the beginning of next year. I decided to go with Madcow 5x5 which is designed for intermediate lifters like myself. It starts off pretty slow the first few weeks using weight we're already used to moving, but once the second month of the program comes along, PRs get smashed weekly.


Taken from: http://stronglifts.com/madcow-5x5-training-programs/


Here are some numbers from my gym max effort lifts vs. meet lifts:

Squat: 230 vs. 165
Bench: 120 vs. 115
Deadlift: 285 vs. 297

Yeah, my squats completely bombed. That's nerves for ya. 

I'm currently doing my working sets at 180x5 for squats, 100x5 for bench, and 240x5 for deadlifts. By the end of this 12-week cycle, I expect to be doing 235x5 squats, 130x5 bench, and 320x5 deadlifts. I'd be ecstatic with a ~700lb total at the meet.

Set goals and crush them.

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Unsolicited Lifting Advice on Instagram


There’s always that one person who says you shouldn’t put ketchup on your In-N-Out Burger, that a Benz is so much better than a BMW, or that the person you’re dating isn’t right for you (they know so much better!), and although this advice might be annoying to hear when you don’t ask for it, it’s rarely ever dangerous.

You know what is? Giving people lifting advice. More specifically, giving people lifting advice via Instagram. 

A few weeks ago, I posted a lifting video, and the next morning I woke up to a whole mess of unsolicited advice. Now I’m the first to admit that I ask for advice and form checks from people over the internet. I record my lifts, upload them, and send them to people to have my lifts critiqued. You know how that’s different from the comments I get on Instagram? Because on one hand, I’m soliciting advice from relatively reputable sources, while on Instagram, I’m not. Mind blown.

Why does Mel not want people on Instagram to correct her form?

      1.       Who are you?

No, seriously. Okay, you’re strong, but do you powerlift? Have you ever competed? Are you a trainer? Are you a lifting coach? Have you written a book, studied technique, or worked with advanced athletes? If your answer is “yes” to any of these, see below.

      2.       Do I know who you are?

The people who critiqued that video on Instagram are people who I have never had a single conversation with. I clicked a few of the profiles to see if they might have had a bio written; for all I know, one of them could have been a world famous lifting coach. But no, no luck there.

      3.       Why, WHY would I take your advice?

It’s pretty evident that people have differing opinions on how to execute a lift. One person says look up, another says look down. Point toes in, point toes out. If neither are people I know, and neither offer a reason as to why I should use their technique over my own, how would I possibly be convinced to change my technique? Oh, I wouldn't? Cool. 

      4.       Nobody reads the fucking caption.

More often than not, I point out a form flaw in my lifts. And there will always be people who point out the same flaws over and over and over. It's not helpful, it's obnoxious.

Don't be one of those people.

Unless someone is doing something that could potentially result in a serious injury, I always stay out of their business, because at the end of the day, no matter how qualified I believe I am, and no matter how much more I think I know than the other person, I don't want the carry the burden of potentially ruining someone else's training because I can't control my urge to spew training advice at others' without their request.

Lifting heavy shit doesn't make you an expert lifting coach, much like eating food your whole life wouldn't make you a culinary expert. So unless someone asks for your opinion, don't be the bad guy with verbal training diarrhea. Laissez-faire.


www.instagram.com/melsmoves