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A good friend of mine and I were really in to strength training. Mostly 5x5 type programs with free weights. My freshman year in college, I ran all the time and was really weak. I also only weighed around 150 at 5'11.I started lifting my 2nd year in school, and by then end I was up to around 215. My bench had gone up to 315+, my squat was 430+, and my deadlift was 525.Earlier this year though I ran into a series of medical problems. In about 3 months I lost 35 pounds, most of which was muscle. I'm in the worst shape I've been in that I can ever remember. I'm finally starting to become healthy enough for exercise again, and hope to start back again this week. We'll still do strength training, but we are going to shift some of focus to cardio for more of a well rounded conditioning. Here's some old lifting vids I made if anyone is interested.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AsJySb1h_SIhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AAwGjJXiVQMhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=msakSyzw09Qhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=etXz0RBwzAs
I don't think you need strength training (as in weight lifting etc) or the chemicals and junk that you're supposed to buy that goes along with that whole culture. Spend your money on a good Yoga instructor instead. Ditch the sugars (fruit juice, chocolate etc), refined grains, and preferably the meat and poultry. Add some regular exercise like swimming or walking most days of the week. Hey, it worked for me
The only "chemical or junk" really needed is protein, and that's only if you don't get enough in your normal diet.
Oh, OK. So, how do you know if you're getting enough protein or not?
Actually, I do like the shape I'm in. I do aerobic exercise daily and eat a moderate, low carb and low saturated fat diet. I just started doing sprint type "burst" training which is really improving my shape, and I have lost 30 lbs and got down to my ideal BMI bodyweight at 160 and 5'10". Not bad for a guy approaching 40 and that had a massive heart attack 4 years ago
I've tried both and strength training is way better for my body.
I wouldn't worry about saturated fat: there's basically no scientific evidence that saturated fat is bad for you. I've finally stuck to a low carb (eating whatever saturated fat I want to eat) diet this year and have lost around 25 pounds so far. Previously, I would derail myself because I thought carbohydrates were necessary for workouts. I've been working out 3-4 days per week (HIIT and slow burn weightlifting) with absolutely no ill effects from low carb.