Hmm, I don't really track what I eat. I like food, period. What I've tried to do is stop eating late at night, up my water intake, and cut out beer.
I have a half ass diet and exercise plan, but its moreso just what I've been doing to try and get in shape. I have free weights at home, and I've been walking and doing light jogging a few times a week.
I could invest an hour a day, and honestly I'd like to. I have no injuries.
Thanks for the info. I guess I should get a stricter regiment.
Mop wrote:Lyion are you looking for a work out routine, a diet plan, how much time do you want to invest into it, what kind of equipment do you have access too, do you have any injuries that would prevent you from doing things ?
Second set of questions *deep breath* what kind of foods do you like, sweet, salty... Protienss ( chicken, red meat, fishes ) or are you more of a carbohydrate person( chips, candies potatoes, sodas, beer ), How often do you eat 1 time a day, or 10 times a day.
Just off of the top of my head basic things I can give you as ideas to think of:
-Purchase a heart rate monitor a polar a1 is fine then run like 50 bucks ( you dont need the 500 dollar model those are for very serious people it is like running with a nasa computer. I am not sure on other brands quality I have been working with polar for about 5 years and it is the best thing in the industry . To figure out your HR 'zones to stay in during cardio just take 220 - (your age) x .65 (longer cardio) .80(shorter cardio)
- Get at least 3 work outs a week combining cardio and weights - do you get bored with cardio ?
- Honestly shoot for 10 -14 reps or so when lifting, less than that is too much muscle building not condusive to weight loss, and more than that tends to fuck form up. Your weight selection should be based on how you feel on a given day, if you do 14 reps and feel like you can do 10 more- too little weight, if you are struggling at 10 to much weight - you should feel as if you can get 2 - 3 more reps at most.
- You live in CA - I would suggest a pool and a swim coach -there is swimming and then there is real swimming. I can tell you there is a difference there is being tired after 3 laps and not being tired after 40 laps ( I had this happen with in two weeks of working with a coach )
-Lastly - Medicine balls - bands/tubes - balance balls - free weights are your friends. Machines don't do a whole lot for you except hinder form and tend to put the pressure on joints instead of muscles.
Personally if you dont work out in a gym - you can have everything you need for a quality home work out with the following:
Step
Bands
Balance ball
2 Medicine balls of varied weights
Adjustable free weight bar ( I perfer body bars as they go from 1 lb to 100 )
and some form of cardio bike, run outside, walk uphill, swim, poweryoga, or even use the step for that.
kk done.