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How Much Protein You Really Need | Protein Wasting

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How much protein you really need

VEGAN MYTH BUSTED—HOW MUCH PROTEIN DO YOU NEED?

Written by JaQueen McNair, PMP on March 10, 2021

I know you’ve heard the saying, “Vegans don’t get enough protein,” and you’re not alone. Many people have concerns about embarking on a plant-based vegan diet. They believe they will lose muscle, gain unwanted weight, and develop health issues from carbs. But these concerns aren’t backed by science. Plant-based diet myths come from confusion about nutrition.

To dispel those myths, we will break down:

  • the science behind macro nutrients—protein, carbs, and fats
  • how much protein you need
  • the dangers of protein obsession and food propaganda

THE SCIENCE BEHIND MACROS

To understand how plants can help you build muscle and lose fat, you must know the science behind carbs, fats, and where protein comes from.

Protein’s Role in The Body

Protein is a vital nutrient needed to develop new tissue in the body, such as bone, hair, and skin. And its origin? The soil. A Stanford University study details that soil organic matter contains nitrogen primarily as protein which is the sole source of protein for microbes and animals. Plants use this protein as a nitrogen source to grow.

Additionally, the U.S. National Library of Medicine details that animal products are not the only sources of protein. The study affirms that protein is found in all plants—fruits, vegetables, nuts, seeds, beans, legumes, and grains. As a result, the animals you eat to get your protein got their protein by eating plants. Eating an animal to get protein—or any of earth’s nutrients—is unnecessary when you live in a society where plants are cheap and accessible. For this reason, vegans choose to get protein directly from plants and do not consume any animal products, including eggs and dairy.

Once consumed, regardless of the source, protein gets broken down into amino acids. In muscle building, there are three key amino acids called Branch Chain Amino Acids (BCAAs).  These BCAAs are:

  • Lysine
  • Isoleucine
  • Valine

Do our bodies store this protein? No. After breaking down into amino acids, the body uses what it needs and gets rid of the rest. Research from University of Nottingham explains some excess protein gets stored as fat, and the remaining amino acids are flushed out of the body as urea—through feces and urine—returning to the ground.

Now that we understand protein, we can discuss how carbs and fats are used in the body.

Carbs vs. Fats 

We are constantly told that carbs are bad. The keto and muscle-building crowds preach, “Animal protein and fat is the healthiest way to build muscle and lose weight.” Back in the 90s, the wave was low fat diets. The new wave is low carb diets. Unfortunately, these misinformation campaigns are inaccurate and dangerous. They don’t teach the dangers of eating animal fat vs plant-based fat, and they ignore the essential role carbohydrates play in the body.

The National Library of Medicine explains that out of the three macronutrients, carbs are the primary source the human body uses for energy. Using fat is more complicated. Carbs break down into two molecules—glucose & fructose—at roughly a 50/50 split.

As for fats, Cleveland Clinic tells us that fats breaks down into a chain of at least three molecules called triglycerides. As a result, like Livestrong Nutrition explains, the body takes the path of least resistance to get its energy up front–through carbs. Carbohydrates are a necessary nutrient.

The popular bodybuilding website Bodybuilding.com has several articles explaining the role of carbs in muscle building. They admit carbs give your body its upfront energy for exercise, strength training, and thinking. And since carbs are the fuel that power the body and brain, half of your food intake should come from carbohydrates.

Carbs give us fuel by supplying our glycogen storages. For this reason, eating low carb long term is bad for muscle building. Without enough available glucose, the body will breakdown muscle proteins to feed its demand for glucose in a process called gluconeogenesis. Lack of carbs limit muscle growth and creates mental and physical fatigue. Fatigue ruins our ability to sleep, workout, gain muscle, increases anxiety, and stress. These issues factor into ruining your chances to:

  • build muscle
  • reduce body fat
  • maintain weight loss

Carbs have been given a bad reputation by being associated with junk food. Pastries, donuts, cakes, and chips are not plant based natural carbs. These items are mostly fat and no fiber. Referring to edible junk food as “carbs” is a false equivalency and invalid.

With thousands of studies like those referenced by Everyday Health, carbs are the body’s main source of energy while fat is used primarily at rest and while we sleep. Fat is essential for things like recovery and hormone regulation. But consuming animal-based fat results in raising bad cholesterol and lowering inake of quality carbs and protein according to research by Cleveland Clinic.

Eating animal fat increases risk for heart disease—this includes eating animal butter, cheese, and eggs. This fact even makes a vegetarian diet dangerous. Eating animal products is the least effective or healthy way to build muscle and lose fat. The best way is eating a plant-based vegan diet full of protein and carbohydrate-packed plants that give energy, reduce body fat, and regulate cholesterol.

How Carbs and Fats are stored in the Body

Carbs are stored in the human body as glycogen (stored glucose) in the muscles, brain, spine, and liver. They make our muscles look fuller and give us that curvy fit or defined physique we seek in fitness. The body stores fat in the liver, subcutaneously (underneath your skin), attached to your organs (visceral fat), and inside muscle tissue.

Despite the science, many believe false claims that eating high carb foods like fruit and grains causes Type 2 Diabetes—one of the paths to preventable heart conditions. To resolve this misinformation, we must understand what Type 2 Diabetes is.

If we’re storing too much fat inside and around muscle tissue and organs, it creates insulin resistance, leading to Type 2 Diabetes, high blood pressure, and heart issues. According to The American Journal of Physiology, insulin resistance means there is too much fat covering muscle tissue and blocking glucose from being absorbed into the muscle for energy. As a result, the glucose piles up in the bloodstream creating health conditions.

When the body recognizes that our muscles didn’t absorb glucose and create energy, it sends insulin in response. The result is called Type 2 Diabetes. Type 2 Diabetes is a conditional result of fat being stored in the liver and muscle tissue due to overconsumption of fatty processed junk food. Following to conclusion, more fat develops on our organs as a protective layer against glucose still floating in the blood stream. This fat buildup on vital organs (visceral fat) ultimately leads to heart conditions. A plant based vegan diet is the healthiest way to reversal of these food-related conditions.

HOW MUCH PROTEIN DO YOU NEED?

Now that we understand the science behind macros, we can discover how much protein we require and discuss its over-estimation and over-consumption.

Protein Wasting—The Over-Estimation

Ask your friends and family how much protein they require, and the answers will shock you. Most Americans believe a 200lb male should consume 200g of protein per day—and they’re wrong. Your protein requirement isn’t based on overall body weight. Instead, it’s based on lean body mass.

Lean body mass is the overall weight of bones, organs, and muscle tissue. This weight does not include body fat. You only require 1g of protein per kilogram of lean mass unless you’re an advanced professional athlete. And according to the NCAA, NAIA, and Bleacher Report, less than 1% of the population are professional athletes.

In 2005, a study by the Institute of Medicine outlined that your body only needs 1 to 1.8 grams of protein per Kilogram of lean body mass—not your entire body weight. How close you are to the 1.8x depends on your fitness level and how close you are to your peak genetic potential.  If you are a beginner, 1g of protein per 1 kilogram of lean mass is plenty. But if you are an elite professional athlete who’s been training your muscle professionally for years to peak genetic potential, only then would you consume a target of 1.6 -1.8g of protein per kilogram of lean mass.

The formula is thus:

Your protein daily requirement = Your body weight in kilograms X 1.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Livestrong, the average American male aged 20 and up weighs about 200 lbs. Their average lean body mass percentage is 80%. Accordingly, the average male carries 160lbs of lean body mass and 40lbs of fat.

Let’s do the math.

To calculate daily protein requirement, do the following:

Body weight:              200lbs

Lean mass weight:      160lbs

Lean mass weight in Kilograms: 160 ÷ 2.2 = 72 Kilograms

Protein Requirement: 1 X 72kg = 72kg

The average American male’s daily protein requirement is 72g.

Protein Wasting—The Over-Consumption

Now that we know the math, we can make sense of the myth. If the average 200lb 20-year-old male consumes 200g of protein per day, his body will only use 72g of protein and eliminate 128g thru his feces and urine. Eating 128 extra grams of protein for no reason is called protein wasting, and it is happening every day. The American Society for Nutrition tells us consistent overconsumption of protein can potentially lead to kidney impairment, several clinical conditions, dehydration, diarrhea, and more because your kidneys can only process so much protein at a time. Furthermore, your body will pack on the extra calories from eating the excess food.

Hundreds of millions buy protein shakes, powders, bars, and supplements, wasting time and money. In addition, we’re adding processed fatty foods into our diet from these refined-proteins and increasing our risk for heart conditions. Since the body will turn those substances into glucose anyway, why not get glucose from natural fruits, vegetables, legumes, nuts, grains, and seeds?

When consuming plants, you’re not just getting glucose. Plants give you:

  • antioxidants
  • enzymes
  • probiotics
  • prebiotics
  • vitamins
  • essential minerals

Those are what your body needs to optimize health, recovery, and muscle building. The Centers for Disease Control tell us that eating fruits and vegetables reduce the risk of several cancers and chronic diseases.  Cleveland Clinic further explains that a plant-based diet leads to disease reversal. Therefore, to be smart about fitness and health, adding plants is a better diet strategy than increasing refined protein-packed items. More doesn’t always equal better.

WHY ARE WE SO OBSESSED WITH EATING MORE PROTEIN?

Blame our protein obsession on the billion-dollar media campaigns used to support the dairy & animal agriculture industry since the mid-1900s as a way to boost the economy. For this reason, the “Percent of U.S. Recommended Daily Allowance” protein listed on packaged items is intentionally misleading.

Food Propaganda

The National Cattlemen’s Beef Association, The National Pork Board, and the National Chicken Council together with powerful meat companies like Tyson Foods and JBS, spend billions of dollars so that we never lose our desire for animal protein, according to data collected by Salon. Data from The Federal Trade Commission shows that we are exposed to almost 4000 ads per day. By watching television, children are exposed to five fast-food ads per day, and food companies spend less than 1% of marketing budgets to promote fruits and veggies to kids.

Unfortunately, it doesn’t stop with ads. This same data shows that the meat industry specifically aims to hook children on burgers and drumsticks. They even created the “beef education” curriculums for K–12 classes and got animal products added to the food pyramids in classrooms for generations. They target Millennials born between the 1980s and early 2000s by encouraging them to eat more animal burgers, birds, and steaks, and posting recipe videos and picture ads on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, Twitter, and Pinterest to show off “delicious” animal-based meals.

We all know the slogan, “Beef. It’s what’s for dinner.” Millions are spent to make you want to eat meat, and a Salon article further admits that campaigns are forbidden to use images that look like animals. This prevents people from associating their food with the being, feeling remorse, and showing compassion. These campaigns continue to exist because (1) they are large and (2), according to Cornell Law, a U.S. Supreme Court case determined they are considered “government speech.” You read that right. These ads are not just marketing campaigns—they’re backed by government.

The propaganda is everywhere, but it’s not based on food science. It’s based on what earns money–food addiction. Due to these myths, the average 200lb American thinks they must consume 200g of protein or more daily to build muscle and have energy. What’s worse is many believe they’re fatigued because of protein deficiency—despite never knowing someone who died from a protein deficiency.

Instead of buying natural protein-packed carb-filled plants, our diets mainly consist of unnatural items containing 30 ingredients we can’t pronounce. We eat based on addiction—not health. We buy high protein labeled packaged products, animal cheese, and milk. Our grocery shopping goals are to get enough protein and find things labeled “low fat.” And now, many young adults are living with illnesses our grandparents didn’t have until they were 80.

We eat this way because of food propaganda. And this is not conducive to our health. It is meant to take our money and give it to the market, the doctor, the pharmacy, and the surgeon.  But we don’t have to keep falling for it. We can change our lives and save our loved ones with the truth. And the truth is:

  • You don’t need as much protein as you’ve been told.
  • Good carbs are necessary.
  • Carbohydrates give your body its energy upfront.
  • Every plant contains protein because protein comes from the soil.
  • Over-consumption of junk food is deadly and creates Type 2 Diabetes.
  • High consumption of plants is necessary for health and reversal of illness.
  • Instead of wasting money and calories on processed supplements, eat more plants.

Last, but not least—you will not lose muscle on a properly executed whole foods plant based vegan diet.

If you found this article helpful and want personalized coaching, click here for a free consultation to join the tribe and achieve the body, health, and life you deserve.

Are there any more plant-based vegan myths you would like for us to bust? Message us at TRIBE BY NOIRE to let us know! And don’t forget to follow us for free vegan fitness, nutrition, and mental wellness tips.

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I’ve created this platform to help you become the most powerful version of yourself through fitness, plant based nutrition, and mindset coaching.

copyright © 2021 Tribe By Noire. All Rights Reserved  

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The Perfect Full Body Home Workout With Resistance Bands

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Tribe By Noire

The Perfect Full Body Home Workout

2020 has completely reinvigorated the buzz around home fitness and along with that we’ve witnessed the rebirth of the resistance band industry. I saw this coming before the lockdowns started and sprung into action to create a whole game plan for building muscle and burning fat from home with minimal space and equipment. Let’s take a look at full body home workouts.

Fat Burn & Full Body Workouts

Full body workouts are the best way to maximize fat loss while building muscle because you’re targeting every muscle group in the body rather than just 1 or 2. Using more muscle groups within a workout forces more stimulation of your nervous system and a faster metabolic rate. All of this combined maximizes caloric burn.

The ideal fat loss method when it comes to full body workouts is the use of super sets and giant sets in conjunction with time intervals.

  • Super sets are when you do 2 exercises back to back as a pair with little to no rest time between them.
  • Giant sets are when you take 3 or more exercises one after in a group with little to no rest time between them.
  • Do each exercise on a fixed time interval of 60 seconds. Try to keep your rest time between exercises to a minimum of 10-15 seconds.

Full Body Workouts For Muscle Building

The most important training factors that drive muscle growth are intensity, frequency, and volume. With full body training you can utilize all 3 of these factors in a very time efficient way.

  • Intensity is how hard you push a muscle or muscle group in a given set or training session.
  • Frequency is how often you train a muscle or muscle group.
  • Volume is how many sets and reps you use to train a muscle, or muscle group.

Full Body Workout Structure

Every Workout should be centered around compound exercises that target multiple muscle groups at the time. Each exercise fits into 1 of 7 categories.

  1. Squatting/lunging – targets quadriceps and glutes
  2. Hip Hinging- targets lower back, glutes, hamstrings
  3. Horizontal Pressing – targets chest, shoulders and triceps
  4. Vertical Pressing – targets shoulders and triceps
  5. Horizontal Pulling – targets lower back, upper back, biceps
  6. Vertical Pulling – targets upper back and biceps
  7. Spinal Flexion/Trunk Rotation – targets abs and obliques

Each workout should have 6-8 exercises grouped together in giant sets, or super sets. With the right amount of intensity and rest time, you can finish the workout in 20-30 minutes. Here’s an example.

3 Giant Sets
  • Banded Prisoner Squat
  • Banded Standing Leg Curl
  • Banded Upright Row
3 Giant Sets
  • Banded Row
  • Banded Push Up
  • Banded Bicep Curl
3 Super Sets
  • Banded Wood Chop
  • S. Leg Hip Bridge + Leg Extension

*Do each exercise for 60 seconds (per side if it’s a unilateral exercise), or for a rep total of 16-20 reps (per side if it’s a unilateral exercise).

*Keep the rest time between 10-15 seconds between sets.

Looking for a good set of bands for a good price?

This is a good package that comes with everything you need to have a versatile and effective home workout. You can even train outside like I prefer to do.

  • The handles make it easy to grip the bands
  • The door anchor allows you to do pull downs, wood chops, and leg curls if you don’t have anything to tie the band around.
  • The ankle cuff is the ideal tool for leg curls, leg raise, and kick backs.
  • Everything fits in a fairly small bag, which makes it convenient for tavel.

Tribe By Noire

tribe by noire

I’ve created this platform to help you become the most powerful version of yourself through fitness, plant based nutrition, and mindset coaching.

copyright © 2021 Tribe By Noire. All Rights Reserved  

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Fitness & Training

Top 4 Muscle Building Mistakes Killing Your Gains

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Top 4 Muscle Building Mistakes Killing Your Gains

In my 13 years of being a fitness coach, I’ve noticed that there are 4 mistakes that almost everyone makes when struggling and failing to build muscle. Even if you’re skinny and trying to get big, or your overweight and trying to get lean, you more than likely are doing at least 2 of these. I’m gonna take some time with you explain it in detail and how to fix it.

1. Not Lifting Heavy Enough

This is a mistake that a lot of newbies make, women in particular. Going slow and steady with your progression is the best way, but this doesn’t give you license to start trying to grow your arms with 5 lb dumbbells. You gotta target the right effort level and there’s a solid way of doing that. Let’s measure effort on a scale of 1-10. 1 being as little effort as humanly possible and 10 being much as humanly possible. We call this relative perceived exertion (RPE). 

The target range you want to be in on this scale is anything from 7-9. For example, if you’re doing sets of 10, a 7 would be a weight that you can do a max of 13 reps with. A 9 would be a weight that you can do a max of 11 reps with. Using weight any lower than 7 RPE to build muscle is a waste of time. For warms ups, I recommend using a 5 or 6 RPE. 

2. Not Doing Enough Sets & Reps

This is pretty common with ego lifters and people who obsess over their 1 rep max. Strength gain is a primary driver of muscle growth, but you’ll plateau real early if the right training volume isn’t present in your program. The rep ranges you should be working with the most are 6-8 reps, 8-10 reps, or 10-12 reps. Smaller muscles like biceps, triceps, forearms, side delts, and calves respond well to rep ranges on the higher end of the spectrum.

Doing sets of 1,2,3 reps should mainly be done toward the end of your training weeks, or the last week of your training program. This depends on what type of program you’re on. However, 1 rep maxes aren’t really that important to test unless you’re powerlifting. If you’re just trying to develop your best physique, focus on hypertrophy. For a better understanding of program structure, take a look at this here.

3. Not Eating Enough

This right here is the number 1 mistake straight across the board! This goes for the skinny and the overweight people. In fact in my experience, over weight people do this the most. We all know that chubby person in the gym everyday working like a navy seal, but struggling to get that body right. Not only will under eating keep you from building muscle, but it’ll keep you from burning fat too.

This has a lot to do with hormonal function, so check this out. You need adrenaline and testosterone in order to burn fat and build muscle. Under eating cause these two hormone levels to plummet. This results in high cortisol and estrogen levels, which encourage fat retention and reduce muscle growth. 

Find out what your basal metabolic rate (BMR) is. That’s how much you need to eat in order to maintain optimal bodily function without any exercise. Now add 30% to that number to see how your body responds with training. 

Under eating also implies a protein deficit as well, so here’s a good rule to follow. At least 20% of your macros should come from protein. These are very general diet guidelines that may need to be tweaked for you specifically, but this is a good place to start. If this isn’t working you would either have to increase your calories by 5-10% or follow a better training program that fits your lifestyle and goals.

4. Over eating

This is typical with people who view themselves as hard gainers and respond with excessive force feeding. If you’re a skinny newbie to the gym you do not need to do silly things like eat 3000 calories per day, or eat 1 gram of protein per pound of body weight. Doing that is a great way to make yourself skinny fat and feel terrible while doing it. Don’t do it!

Here’s what’s going to work much better for you. Multiply your weight by 14 to get your maintenance calories. For example,

  • let’s say you’re 160 lbs
  • multiplying your weight by 14 will give you 2240 cal.
  • 20% of that 2240 calories equals 112 grams of protein.
  • You should be targeting 1.6 – 1.8 grams of protein per kilogram of lean mass.

Your body can only recover and build so much muscle at a time, so consuming more than you need will not help. 

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I’ve created this platform to help you become the most powerful version of yourself through fitness, plant based nutrition, and mindset coaching.

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Exercise Selection And How To Make The Right Choices

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Exercise Selection And How To Make The Right Choices

We all have our reasons for being regulars at the gym. Some people want to go to the gym just to have some adult playtime, while others just want to blow off steam, but maybe you want to create something real. Maybe you’ve made a commitment to yourself to achieve a true body transformation. If you’re working toward developing an athletic defined body that truly reflects the work you put in, then the information I’m giving you here is something you NEED to know.

I’m gonna go point by point through a few key rules and considerations when deciding what to do in your training routine

1. Keep It Simple

One of the biggest mistakes you can make in your training is implementing too many variations of the same kind of movement. Choose a primary lift and 1 or 2 accessory exercises for each muscle group and work on developing your strength and technique as much as possible in those exercises. Here’s a few examples of the best exercises for each muscle group.

Glutes & Quads
  • (Primary) Barbell Back Squat
  • (Accessory) Barbell Hip Bridge
  • (Accessory) Dumbbell Bulgarian Split Squat
Glutes & Hamstrings
  • (Primary) Barbell Conventional Deadlift
  • (Accessory) Dumbbell Bulgarian Deadlift
  • (Accessory) Prone Leg Curl
Chest, Shoulders & Triceps
  • (Primary) Barbell Bench Press
  • (Accessory) Dumbbell Shoulder Press
  • (Accessory) Weighted Dip
Back, & Biceps
  • (Primary) Barbell Hang Row
  • (Primary) Weighted Pull Up
  • (Accessory) Dumbbell One Arm Row
Abs & Obliques
  • Cable Wood Chop
  • Weighted Sit Up
  • Hanging Leg Raise

Knowing What's worth Your Time

Starting your 1st set of the workout puts you on the clock and your workouts should only be around 45-60 minutes, 90 minutes at the most. This means you just simply do not have the time to goof around with exercises that yield little benefit. Your primary focuses should be the big compound lifts and 1-2 accessory exercises that help you develop those lifts the most.

Here’s a quick hypothetical for you. If you could only choose 1 exercise to build your chest, which would it be, cable chest flys or Bench Press? The best choice would fit this criteria.

  • Its an exercise that I can add a substantial load to.
  • It develops the other smaller assistance muscles.
  • It won’t cause muscular imbalances.

Do What Your Body Responds To Most

There’s a whole variety of different ways to hit a muscle or muscle group, but the ideal exercise is the one that gives you the most gains. For example, my quads respond very well to the back squat, but yours may respond much better to the front squat. If your primary focus for squatting was getting the most growth in your quads, you would  choose the front squat. 

Another example would be grip width and stance width.

  • Bench Press – A more narrow grip on the bench press would target your shoulders and triceps more. A wider grip would activate more chest and shorten the range of motion.
  • Barbell Rows – A wide grip would target your rear delts and traps a lot. A narrow grip would target your lats mainly.
  • Sumo Deadlift – This wide stance deadlift is more geared towards developing a rounder fuller butt by targeting your glute medius way more than a narrow style deadlift.
  • Conventional Deadlift – This deadlift forces you to hinge more at the hip which places more tension on your back and hamstrings.

There’s tons of other examples, but these are some big ones.

Weaknesses and/or Injuries

Injuries are pretty easy to figure out for the most part, but identifying weaknesses is what you may need more of a trained eye for. Examples of weakness would be bad posture, or just bad form in general due to certain muscles not firing the way they should. 

Weak quadriceps would cause you to excessively lean forward in a squat. A good remedy for this would be goblet squats, or some kind of front loaded variation. These front loaded variations are meant to get you in a more vertical position that forces you to engage your quads more, rather than compensate using other muscles.

 

Other indications of weakness would be things like relative strength between lifts. For example, you should be able to row the same weight you bench press. Being able to press more than what you pull is a clear sign of a weak back and this will ultimately lead to injury.

We could talk for a whole hour just on this topic alone, but if you need any further answers, feel free to ask your questions in the comments, or request a consultation here.

Tribe By Noire

tribe by noire

I’ve created this platform to help you become the most powerful version of yourself through fitness, plant based nutrition, and mindset coaching.

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Nutrition & Supplements

The 2 Diet Traps Of Skinny Fat

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The 2 Diet Traps Of Skinny Fat

The 2 Diet Traps Of Skinny Fat

Being skinny fat is this frustrating paradox where you’re both skinny and fat at the same time. Its having skinny arms and legs, while having a high concentration of body fat wrapping around your torso. If this describes your situation, you’ll definitely want to take this info in.

  • The skinny fat dilemma
  • The body recomposition solution
  • The quality over quantity diet
  • Intermittent fasting & fat cutting

The Skinny Fat Dilemma

Here’s the dilemma in a nutshell. Do you focus on losing weight, or do you focus on gaining muscle? Here’s the problem with this mode of thinking. When you focus on losing weight, you do things like cut calories and increase how much cardio you do. This leads to you being even MORE skinny fat, because you end up losing muscle and retaining fat from under fueling the body. You can go the other way and focus on gaining muscle. This is not a bad idea outright but most people do this wrong. People typically take the approach of bulking where they focus on increasing calories and training hard. This often results in muscle gain, but even more fat gain. This leads to you being a heavier version of your skinny fat self.

The Body Re-composition Solution

The one and only true solution to the skinny fat trap is not cutting or bulking, but total body re-composition. Following the law of exchange you’d build muscle and drop body fat at the same time. Body fat is just stored energy, so you’d use that energy to fuel the training that leads to the muscle building. Instead of focusing on food quantity, you’d focus on food quality.

As far as training goes, you need a training program that is geared toward increasing muscle size. This program should focus on resistance training where the volume is high and the training load is moderately heavy. This leads to maximizing your muscle’s time under tension.

Think of your body as a pie. A certain ratio of your body is lean mass and the rest is fat mass. When you’re skinny fat, your body fat mass percentage is high, and your lean mass percentage is low, too low. As you gain more muscle, your lean mass ratio will increase, thus decreasing your fat mass ratio. You’re basically gradually inverting the fat mass to lean mass ratio. 

Quality Over Quantity

Retaining all of your body fat around your torso is an indication of poor gut health. Its important to understand that everything you put in your mouth is either improving your gut health or destroying your gut health. With this understanding it becomes pretty clear that your diet should be centered around quality rather than quantity. 

Everywhere you look there’s some fitness expert telling you to make better food choice, but not many of them actually explain what qualifies as a “better” food choice. The most you’ll get is “avoid processed foods”. That’s a good start, but lets take it a step further. Quite simply put, you want to target plant based whole foods. 

Think about this. If you had a chronic illness, or just plain ol obesity, what would a qualified doctor tell you to eat? I guarantee they’d tell you to eat more fruits and vegetables. To be specific, you want to target plant based whole foods. These types of foods all possess 3 key things.

Antioxidants

antioxidants protect cells from damage and or slow down deterioration. A few examples of antioxidants are beta-carotene, lycopene, and vitamin C. The only foods that have antioxidants in them are plant based. A few foods that possess the highest levels of anitoxidants are, goji berries, artichoke, dark chocolate, pecans, kidney beans, and cilantro.

micro-nutrients

micro-nutrients consists of all vitamins and minerals. These nutrients are absolutely essential for overall health including digestive health. Vitamin B is essential to the absorption and utilization of carbs, protein, and fat for energy. Vitamin C is needed for the production of collagen. This is especially important for maintaining the tissue quality of the digestive tract. Vitamin A maintains a healthy gut lining. Copper facilitates protein absorption. Potassium eliminates waste from the body. Selenium is needed for pancreas function. All of this is abundant in plant based foods.

Fiber

There are 2 main types of fiber found in food called soluble and insoluble fiber. Soluble fiber dissolves in water and regulates blood sugar levels, cholesterol levels, helps to create stomach acid for digestion, and protects stomach lining. Insoluble fiber does not dissolve in water, but instead helps to clean the intestinal walls, add bulk to your doodoo for an easy time in the bathroom, and feeds your good gut bacteria.  

Plant Based Whole Foods Are The Key

When choosing foods for your diet remember this check list. Antioxidants | Micro-nutrients | Fiber. This doesn’t have to be 100% of your diet, but it should be at least 70% of it. There are 5 categories of food to target here.

  1. fruits
  2. vegetables
  3. nuts & seeds
  4. grains
  5. Legumes

As long as you target these 5 categories daily, you’ll have a balanced and exciting diet that is easy to stick to. Finally to close on this topic, TRACK YOUR FOOD!! My top two picks are a couple of mobile apps called My Fitness Pal & Cronometer. This is key to knowing exactly how much of all the nutrients your getting and what you’re missing.

Intermittent Fasting

Aside from how you train and what you eat, when you eat can maximize your progress. This leads into one of the best strategies you can possibly use for cutting body fat, FASTING! There’s several different types of fasting for different reasons, but for anyone new to fasting for fat loss, intermittent fasting is the type I recommend. 

Intermittent fasting is where you have a daily eating window 6-8 hours and a fasting window of 18-16 hours. Basically the goal is to get all of your eating done for the day in a shorter time frame and then not eat for the other 16 to 18 hours. You won’t be eating during the fasting window, so you’re body will be mostly using your body fat as energy.

The before and after picture of me at the top of this article is where I went from 15% body fat to 7% bodyfat. I made the largest body fat cut I’ve ever made in my entire life while gaining muscle, using this strategy. Not only has this worked for me, but it is currently working for my clients as well.

Tribe By Noire

tribe by noire

I’ve created this platform to help you become the most powerful version of yourself through fitness, plant based nutrition, and mindset coaching.