Thread: 2 questions
-
10-14-2004, 07:55 PM #1Associate Member
- Join Date
- Aug 2004
- Posts
- 169
2 questions
ok i got two question, first one is wich is better to eat after morning cardio a pro and fat meal or a carb and protein meal ? The second one is that substituting my flax oil with some natural penut butter in one protien shake a day be bad on a cutting diet? and one more lol i dont like drinking my shakes with water i like using Soy milk is that a bad idea ?
-
10-14-2004, 08:06 PM #2
first question, if ya read the cutting stickey it would clearly state pro/fat would be ur best choice. 2nd no. 3rd not really but i wouldent do it.
-
10-14-2004, 08:08 PM #3
Why don't you use regular milk?
-
10-14-2004, 08:37 PM #4
ne kind of milk is not good for a cutting diet IMO
DCB
-
10-14-2004, 09:03 PM #5AR Hall of Fame
- Join Date
- Dec 2002
- Posts
- 25,737
Yeah makin' shakes w/milk while "cutting" is not wise.
~SC~
-
10-14-2004, 10:12 PM #6Associate Member
- Join Date
- Aug 2004
- Posts
- 169
Thanks tool for clearing that up for me
-
10-14-2004, 10:14 PM #7Associate Member
- Join Date
- Aug 2004
- Posts
- 169
but why wouldnt you use the soy milk ?
-
10-15-2004, 05:07 AM #8Associate Member
- Join Date
- Jul 2004
- Location
- England
- Posts
- 350
Originally Posted by FLOo
-
10-15-2004, 05:51 AM #9Originally Posted by Mass Quest
*In this case.**
** Added to prevent someone from saying "nuh-uh" and quoting some pub-med article to prove how cool they are, and how dumb I am.
-
10-15-2004, 01:17 PM #10Female Member
- Join Date
- Apr 2003
- Location
- CT
- Posts
- 314
I know no one agrees with me on this, but just to put my 2 cents in...not all sugars are created equal, and I don't believe that milk is such a bad thing.
-
10-15-2004, 01:55 PM #11
I never thought fat free milk was bad?
-
10-15-2004, 02:03 PM #12
i will also say that i have eaten pro/carb for breakfast for 8 weeks and still have gotten really d@mn lean.
-
10-15-2004, 03:59 PM #13AR Hall of Fame
- Join Date
- Dec 2002
- Posts
- 25,737
In regards to the "sugars" not being created equal and such, sugar is sugar. If it's present, you won't burn fat for fuel, period. Lactose/dairy also bloats quite a few people WHILE cutting, thus not being such an "encouraging" supplement.
Try milk while cutting.
If you look how you wish, great! If you don't, take it out. Simple............
I can tell you that no one that I work w/who is serious utilizes dairy when it really matters.
You just don't do that, it's foolish. Then again, the company I'm with is not just your weekend warrior type, so I may be more serious about this than others who do not compete, take pics, post pics, have a rock hard physique, etc. Point is, if you want fast results and wish to eliminate any possible error from this, take it out. If not, then suck that milk up like an infant. U just gotta find your niche.
~SC~
-
10-15-2004, 04:52 PM #14Associate Member
- Join Date
- Aug 2004
- Posts
- 169
Soo you guys are saying unsweetened soy milk is just as bad as regular low fat milk? as far as sugars, i see on back of the box it shows it only has 1g of sugar, not sure why it would be bad .
-
10-15-2004, 09:03 PM #15AR Hall of Fame
- Join Date
- Dec 2002
- Posts
- 25,737
Once more, to take an already dead horse and further beat him into submission, I personally was referring to REGULAR AZZ MILK.
If you desire SOY in your diet, then drink it. I'll "steer" clear, no pun intended.
So, drink up!
~SC~
-
10-15-2004, 09:51 PM #16Originally Posted by Kim2884
-
10-16-2004, 03:27 AM #17
right now during my contest phase i have not had milk...then again i dont have much and i am hard as a rock...during my maintenance/bulker i may just have a little here and there to see how my body likes it.
-
10-16-2004, 06:47 AM #18Female Member
- Join Date
- Apr 2003
- Location
- CT
- Posts
- 314
Originally Posted by SwoleCat
Also, the body burns a combination of carbohydrate AND fat for energy all the time, no matter what you are eating. It is true that high insulin levels make fat oxidation difficult and storage easy, but if the carbohydrates and sugars present in the diet are LOW GI, then the insulin levels will be low as well. The mere presence of glucose in the blood does not prohibit fat oxidation.
Now I can't speak for the effects of milk on a diet intended to prepare one for a contest, nor was I trying to before....pre-contest dieting is an entirely different animal. But for the general population of people trying to achieve or maintain a lean and fit physique, I do not believe there's any reason for milk to be forbidden.
-
10-16-2004, 08:27 AM #19AR Hall of Fame
- Join Date
- Dec 2002
- Posts
- 25,737
OH DEAR! CAPS BELOW...........
Originally Posted by Kim2884
TO CUT AND CONTINUE TO HAVE PROGRESS, I'D HAVE TO SAY TO LEAVE THE COW PISS ALONE. AGAIN, THIS IS DIRECTED AT THE MAJORITY OF THOSE WHO ARE OVER-WEIGHT LOOKING TO DROP PURE FAT AS QUICKLY AS THEY CAN. (AS I SAID, THERE WILL ALWAYS BE EXCEPTIONS, SO I AM NOT SAYING MY ADVICE IS THE END ALL TO IT ALL) HOWEVER, IT DOES INDEED APPLY TO THE MAJORITY OF THOSE WHO ARE OVERWEIGHT, YES!
KIM, AGAIN I MEANT NO OFFENSE BUT JUST WANTED TO OPEN THE DOORS OF CONVO EVEN MORE SO PEOPLE CAN UNDERSTAND. I DON'T WANT TO COME OF AS DEFENSIVE, BUT BEING THAT THERE IS SO MUCH THAT IS OVER-LOOKED HERE, IT'S HARD TO NOT TYPE AS SUCH. AS WELL, I DON'T BELIEVE WE'VE EVER SEEN ANY PICS, BUT I'D LIKE TO SEE SOME IF YOU HAVE THEM. W/YOUR EXTENSIVE DIETARY KNOWLEDGE AND CONFIDENCE, I BET YOU SPORT ONE OF THE BEST BODS ON A.R.! NOT CALLING YOU OUT, BUT IT'D BE GREAT TO SEE THE TANGIBLE ADVICE AND THE "PRACTICE WHAT YOU PREACH" ASPECT. PROVIDING PICTURES DOES NOT MEAN YOU ARE RIGHT/WRONG, SO THAT IS NOT WHAT I MEAN. HOWEVER, IT DOES SERVE TO VALIDATE ONE'S KNOWLEDGE ON THE SAID SUBJECT, JUST AS PICS OF THOSE YOU HAVE HELPED WOULD DO ALSO! IF YOU HAVE THEM GREAT, IF NOT NO BIGGIE AT ALL. THANKS FOR THE DISCUSSION.
PEACE!
~SC~Last edited by SwoleCat; 10-16-2004 at 10:44 AM.
-
10-16-2004, 11:13 AM #20
+
LOL , the milk debate continues.......
-
10-16-2004, 01:07 PM #21Female Member
- Join Date
- Apr 2003
- Location
- CT
- Posts
- 314
I don't know why I bother...but I will attempt a brief rebuttle
#1: The reason I kept talking about GI is because I believe it is the most important factor to consider when choosing carbohydrate sources. And I believe it is more important than whether or not a type of sugar is present.
#2: Whatever your reasoning is for believing that fat oxidation cannot happen unless ther is no sugar in the blood (which I'm still not entirely clear on what that is), it goes against everything I have read or learned anywhere. It is true that the brain's preferred source of fuel is glucose, but there are many other metabolically active tissues in the body that primarily burn fat when the body is at rest, or lightly active. (This is why there is an "optimal fat burning zone" for doing cardio. As heart rate increases, the amount of fat utilized decreases, and the amount of carbohydrates used increases).
#3: When I talk about fat oxidation, I do not mean stored-fat loss. Obviously, one can oxidize fat for energy and then promptly replace it by eating a pizza an hour later. My point was that if all other aspects of proper diet and exercise are in place, fat loss can still result from a diet containing low-GI sugars.
#4: I did not mean to imply that everyone's insulin response is the same. I apologize if I was unclear. Each individual can handle a different amount of sugar. However, I would not agree that the MAJORITY of people cannot handle milk. Until there is a large-scale study on this, there will be no convincing me..(and please, spare me your anecdotes. While I appreciate your experience as a trainer and your observations of your clients, I am a skeptic and until someone can prove your hypothesis through a controlled, scientific study, I won't be swayed).
I do not have any pics right now, and I don't think I will ever be happy enough with my body to want to show it to people I don't know, but I can tell you this: I have tweaked my diet and exercise programs many times in the last 2 yrs, and after trying the low-carb thing, as well as the popular "AR approach," I decided to do what made the most sense to me. My diet consists of about 40%carb, 40%protein, and 20% fat. I eat fruit or yogurt, and sourdough bread almost everyday, and I occasionally have skim milk in the form of a cappuccino. I am leaner now than I have ever been, having dropped 17lbs and anywhere from 5-10% body fat (I don't really trust the instruments I use to measure it, so I can't be sure) since I started doing this, and if anything, increasing my carbs and allowing dairy in my diet has only helped me.
I guess we will just have to agree to disagree, Swole...I want you to know I do respect your opinion, and find you to be a worthwhile debate partner...I hope you give me the same respect. After spending so much time studying nutrition in classes, through my own research, and in my own life by trial and error, it's a little unsettling to be told that I don't have a clue what I'm talking about.
Kim
-
10-16-2004, 02:02 PM #22AR Hall of Fame
- Join Date
- Dec 2002
- Posts
- 25,737
Agree to disagree is probably the best bet!
No one will win debating back/forth, and I simply don't have the time nor energy to do so on a subject that has been beaten to death.
Be well!
~SC~
-
10-16-2004, 05:36 PM #23
so leave out the milk
-
10-16-2004, 05:57 PM #24AR Hall of Fame
- Join Date
- Dec 2002
- Posts
- 25,737
Originally Posted by craneboy
~SC~
Thread Information
Users Browsing this Thread
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Expired dbol (blue hearts)
01-11-2025, 04:00 PM in ANABOLIC STEROIDS - QUESTIONS & ANSWERS