Hey guys, i used powerlifting for quite some time, so i know my way around a few weights. However when i was doing this i always always bulking up, so im not too sure on the weight loss side of things.But i stopped and basically gained quite alot of weight (dam takeaways lol) but i really want to lose this, however i was wondering if it is possible for me to lose it through lifting heavy (like i did when i was powerlifting) and maybe doing a little cardio if i feel upto it?Just to note, in the past year my asthma has been very bad and the doctor gave me a stronger inhaler, so lots and lots of cardio isnt really a option . Also i can go to the gym to train anytime i want for free as my brother manages 2 different ones so i get in for free .Also is there any powerlifters on here?As i was wondering, how do you go about training on your own with the bench etc, as my old trainer has moved house and i unfortunately dont know where he lives.
As i was wondering, how do you go about training on your own with the bench etc, as my old trainer has moved house and i unfortunately dont know where he lives.
From my understanding having a lot of muscle tissue gives you a metabolic advantage because (and I am not saying to soley rely on this) having a high percentage of muscle you are burning calories even when you are not training, while your sleeping. The other fact if you combine weight training with only eating good carbs (no white bread, no regular potatoes, etc) and eating good fats, and eating high protein foods like chicken or fish, baked not fried, and get your phytonutrients from green leafy vegetables like spinach.The last thing I know from my understanding of working out is that, if you do very heavy weights but low number of reps, you will build bulk and not that much definition, however the opposite is true if you do lower weights but a high number of reps, you will tone up and get high definition instead of the other situation.I am interested in this stuff because I am coming back to the gym after a 10 year break, so if what i said above is not accurate let me know.Fred Man
Well, doesn't definition come from a low-percentage of body-fat? Everything else is true, but the tone--low weight high-rep thing just seems like a myth to me.