- Jul 17, 2004
- 357
- 13
damn i was expecting them to carry a lot more supps like bodybuilding.com, a bit disappointing since there's nothing i really want on there...
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Originally Posted by Al Audi
Originally Posted by retrospect90
I'm trying to loose about 30 pounds. One step I have taken is to eliminate eating fast food. Its my 4th day Not eating it. Would it be wise to continue this course, or are there health options at fast food places (i.e. grilled chicken) that I can partake.
is your lifestyle that busy or are you lazy?
not an attack.......i mean really why not cook your own grilled chicken thats so easy, why would you waste that at fast food for like 4+ dollars?
how often were you eating fast food? only your 4th day? you can save yourself a lot of money and get more/better quality food if you do it yourself.
Pause ... but good looking out .. I might just invest in one!Originally Posted by AJChick23
Cop a George Foreman or something similar.. chicken breast only takes 5-10 min on that thing depending on how thick it is.
No.Originally Posted by Cronicmolemolereturns
Originally Posted by Durden7
Thats not even close to appealing.
U MAD?
Originally Posted by brettTHEjett
Originally Posted by wawaweewa
Originally Posted by DEMIZE
wats the point of a sauna?
Go in there free as a bird just waving your dingaling around.I'm Russian so I've been going to the sauna ever since I was a little kid. I just love the feeling after a training session. It might be good for your skin/pores but that's about it.
I'ms till haunted by nekkid old dudes beating each other with branches.
Privet.
Traditional russian steam room > *
My friends have one at their home in Kopeisk
id never wanna look like an IFBB proOriginally Posted by Dakingii
seems to me that alot of yall dudes been on the Misc. for to long
I would advise yall to get a reality check quick, in the real world there is nothing attractive about the bodybuilder look.
Al Audi wrote:
The optimal averaged 24 hour intake of dietary protein to maximize lean body mass gains induced by RT is not precisely known. The best sophisticated data comes from a study in which daily protein intake was varied from 1-3 grams per kilogram of body weight and stable isotope methodology was used to assess protein "turnover" (composite rates of synthesis vs breakdown).
This study was significant in that:
What this suggests is that the relationship between total 24 hour intake of protein and muscle gain with effective RT protocols is essentially linear (at least within the range of this study, i.e. 3 gr/kg/day).
- Rates of both synthesis and breakdown (hence total turnover) increased linearly with increasing protein dose.
- Increases in synthesis and breakdown when plotted produced virtually super-imposable graphics, thus suggesting that the two metrics of protein balance literally cancelled one another out.
- Despite the above, increases in lean body mass gain basically doubled with every increment in protein intake.
The subjects in the study struggled to get to 3 gr/kg/day and thus no data was collected beyond this point.
Another important point is that the protein that was ingested was usual and customary whole food cooked protein sources which reliably produced superior nitrogen retention than do proteins with very rapid digestion and assimilation characteristics and thus cannot be extrapolated to elemental protein diets (free form aminos or hydrolysates) or rapidly assimilated proteins such as whey and soy.
Whey is useful in one context in particular and that is the post workout period (from immediately after training up to 3 hours later) in which the exercise induced increment in fractional rates of muscle protein synthesis can be synergistic-ally augmented by the ingestion of a rapidly assimilated complete protein source (with a PDCAAS of > 1.0 or greater) that delivers net 3 grams of leucine. The duration of this threshold dose of whey lasts only about 3 hours in humans, so it is more efficient to use the whey post workout and then load up on more slowly assimilated proteins during the rest of the day to optimize whole body protein metabolism and nitrogen retention.
Well that was anticlimactic
Originally Posted by Al Audi
that guy is phil heath
i def prefer the golden era of boldybuilding..........example. serge nubret