Help me before I embark on the Body-for-Life program.
So I've read the
Body-for-Life book and I think I'm ready to try it. However, I have some questions/fears that I hope the Hive Mind will help me with. I am a 23 years old male, overweight by around 11 Kgs (I am around 80 Kgs, and around 169cm tall), with some fat concentrated around my stomach area. I've been exercising on and off for the last 4 months, mostly on a treadmill and a little bit of weight lifting for the arms/shoulders.
So...
1) My perfect body is something like
this (even though a little six-pack would be nice, too). However, the "before-and-after" pics at the beginning of the book give me the impression that the program can cause me to be one of those over-muscled people. While I want to have a nice, lean body, I don't want to be huge. What should I do?
2) How important is the diet-plan (six meals a day..etc.) detailed in the book? I think my main problem area is following this part especially that I live on take-outs/noodles/fruits and can't really cook.
3) Since I will be building muscles, will I be able to notice my progress using a scale? Can I lose weight AND build muscles through this program? Also, if my weight is mostly muscles and it is higher than my optimum BMI-suggested number, am I considered overweight (health-wise)?
4) My face is a bit..umm..fat, and it is the area (along with my waist) in which I would like to see the most change. Will I be able to get my slim face back through this program?
5) Is it safe to only use the illustrated exercise pages at the back of the book as the only reference to how to perform the weight exercises properly? I also plan to check some videos online to get a better idea (any suggested links?).
I am really thankful for any help/suggestions/anecdotes you awesome people can provide. :)
Regarding #1... adding muscle is hard work, and happens slowly. You don't need to worry about waking up one day looking like Mr. Universe.
Losing fat and adding muscle are, generally speaking, independent processes. If you want to be lean, lose fat (do cardio, eat less). If you want to add muscle, lift weights (eat more protein, use all the energy that you're consuming). You can do one or the other or both.
posted by mpls2 at 11:32 AM on October 7, 2007