Question Posted Wednesday December 16 2009, 11:01 am
I have some concerns and I just want someone to maybe help me ease them. This is the first time I am weight training to lose weight, and I am just concerned that since I am not doing as much cardio and since muscle weights more than fat that it's going to be hard for me to tell if I am getting results. I heard from the trainers that if I do a good solid weight training for 30 min of almost non stop weight training that I will lose about 500 calories per session and that those calories will continue to burn over the next day or two, where as with cardio that wont happen, as soon as I stop it's done. Now I am definately sweating way more than when I just do cardio and I can really feel my body working, but how am I going to be able to tell if I am going in the direction of my goals if the scale is not going down persey...do i check inches? I am still doing cardio, don't get me wrong, I am doing it about 3-4 times a week, I am just focusing more on burning the calories through the weight training. Ok thank you for the advice.
Additional info, added Wednesday December 16 2009, 11:02 am: OH and the reason I am switching to weight training is because with the cardio I am always going up and down within a year or so and I am never looking tone when I get to the weight I want. So this time I want to look nice and tone when I get to my goal weight. I am also eating about 1500-1900 calories a day. . Want to answer more questions in the Health & Fitness category? Maybe give some free advice about: Fitness? Alin75 answered Wednesday December 16 2009, 11:38 pm: Hey there.
Its great that you are combining the two together, a cardio and weight lifting combo is about as effective as it gets.
You do not need to worry about not noticing the effects. For one thing, do not expect to gain a lot of muscle. Weight training for weight loss is about muscle preservation not muscle gain. The body works in such a way that it can lose or gain weight, not both at the same time (even if we are talking about two different things).
The problem is that when losing weight it is very easy to lose lean muscle. This slows your metabolism leading to the yo-yo effect you have been experiencing. Weight training will minimise this effect. However, to actually gain weight from weight lifting, you need a calorie surplus.
So, you will not lose as much weight, but this weight should be almost entirely fat. Unless of course you push too hard, then you will drop muscle as well. In most cases 1 to 2 pounds a week is recommended.
Also, pay special attention to your protein intake when weight lifting. It might be a good idea to look into getting some whey supplements.
Sublimation4all answered Wednesday December 16 2009, 9:44 pm: I went into football to lose weight. And trust me you don't get the results you want until the end. I weigh the same as I did back then before but I different. That's because you lose fat but gain muscle. Sure checking will be fine but it might get you angry if you think your not losing anything. Just do it for about a month or two then check. [ Sublimation4all's advice column | Ask Sublimation4all A Question ]
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