Comment by lazarus01

Comment by lazarus01 15 hours ago

8 replies

I can share a very simple incentive for exercise.

As you age, you will lose lean muscle and bone density. But you do have some control in maintaining a healthy level of strength for your elder years.

You can maintain strength and density by engaging in resistance training.

The total amount of training required is up for debate. I follow Dr. Peter Attia and he discusses needing about 1 hr a week of resistance training.

The other aspect of maintaining strength is protein intake. Dr. Attia describes it as a “chore”, that is to consume 1g of protein supplement for each pound of body mass. That’s a lot!

Think about your future, do you want to be strong and mobile into your later years? I see older unhealthy people walking the streets and don’t envisage myself letting that happen.

You must take good care of yourself and put in the time to exercise and eat properly.

CalRobert 15 hours ago

I am embarrassed to admit I always thought people focused too much on protein and it was bro science but I also never managed to get stronger despite resistance training. Then in my forties I finally started eating 150-180 g of protein a day and doing resistance training to exhaustion a couple days a week and the difference has been huge. I wish I’d done this 20 years ago.

  • hombre_fatal 13 hours ago

    I'm 6'1 and 190-200lb, and I went from 130g to 80g a day of protein for the last year and have only gained more lean mass.

    I do think proteinmaxing is mostly food/supp industry hype + advice for people who need to tricked into replacing donuts with something healthier. So YMMV.

    But I think the training until exhaustion part of your comment is the important bit.

    • gruez 13 hours ago

      >I'm 6'1 and 190-200lb, and I went from 130g to 80g a day of protein for the last year and have only gained more lean mass.

      And everything else was held constant? Moreover the claim isn't that you need absurdly high amounts of protein to build muscle, just that it's easier to build muscle if you have higher protein intake, all things being equal.

      • hombre_fatal 13 hours ago

        I just don't see it. The main connection I see is with calorie intake being slightly above vs below maintenance. How does "easier" quantify? What if it's a technically true statement but you're just talking about 2%?

        It's like when you hear that steaming vegetables retains more nutrients than boiling them so everyone repeats this bit of trivia, but then you find out it's talking about a 7% difference so who cares.

    • CalRobert 13 hours ago

      Maybe it’s the phase? I did a body recomp and part of the appeal was how satiating a low calorie meal could be

  • lazarus01 14 hours ago

    That’s fantastic! Don’t beat yourself up. What’s important is that you're taking good care of yourself today! You took control!

  • deadbabe 13 hours ago

    I think a lot of people simply aren’t aware of how little protein they are eating per day. Some people are only getting a pathetic 30-40g a day which isn’t really enough to build new muscle and barely even maintains muscle you already have.

EPWN3D 13 hours ago

Yep this. Every time I see an old person who can't walk normally or without a walker, is really overweight, etc., I tell myself that's not going to be me.