About This Blog
This is nothing more than an
amateur blog recounting my experiences with Eat Stop Eat (the 24-hour,
2x per week fasting protocol), which was created by Brad Pilon.
5'9" tall
190 pounds (start)
Experienced lifter
Using Eat Stop Eat and ~1500 calorie restriction (lower-than-usual carb) with one refeed day (yay, carbs!).
The
only guarantee I can give you is that I won't be miserable doing this,
if that's what you're thinking. Trust me. I have seen misery in dieting.
It ain't pretty.
Brief Background
I
have lifted weights since I was 15-years old, although fitness and
nutrition have always interested me (growing up overweight will do that
to you). In my time, I have tried a lot of different workouts and a lot
of different diets/nutrition plans. A simple rundown would look like
this (no particular order):
Workout Plans
Turbulence Training (~two years) by Craig Ballantyne
1000-calorie workout (~two months) by I've Forgotten
Renegade Fitness plans (~6 months) by Jason Ferrugia
5x5 and Starting Strength (~6 months) by Not Sure
LeanGains-inspired workouts (~1 year) by Martin Berkhan
5-3-1 (~1 year) by Jim Wendler
I've
also followed my own workout plans that included high volume, low rep,
reverse pyramid, 20-rep squats, bodybuilder-style, and Arnold Schwarzenegger-inspired plans (the two muscle groups per day, twice per week from his encyclopedia).
Diets
Low fat
Low carb
Mediterranean
South Beach
Anything Goes
LeanGains
Carb Cycling
16/8
Eat Stop Eat
Rapid Fat Loss
Some
of these I tried for about a month, with varying degrees of adherence
and success. The one thing I learned was that complexity and rules are a
definite sign that I won't be able to follow the diet. If you have a
family or if you're planning on eating out a lot, you just cannot follow
most plans because, eventually, you'll get bored or you'll come to a
place that doesn't accommodate your little snowflake nutrition plan, and
you'll take your first step off the diet and into a spiral backward.
Intermittent Fasting (IF) and Me and What I'm Doing Now
Eat
Stop Eat was the first program that I was able to stick to (with 100%
adherence, actually) and that didn't make me miserable. It actually
changed my entire perspective on food, health, etc. I won a Get-in-Shape
contest with ESE and Turbulence Training (TT) a few years ago, going
from 215 to 170. I have followed some form of IF since then, and
have even managed to sway a few people into trying it. I have given up
talking to anyone about it though... too many people believe in
"starvation mode", don't understand how the body works, and (this is the
kicker) they truly believe eating more food causes your metabolism to
"rev up" to a point at which they burn more calories. Sigh.
I
swapped out TT for Renegade because I was lean but small. I did well
with Renegade, but it was a pay-site and I was tired of paying. Also,
Renegade is geared more for small guys who are naturally lean. The
opposite of me. I went to 5-3-1 and that really worked well, but I have
old injuries from my cheerleading days- right wrist and left knee- and I
eventually reached a weight that my muscles could support, but my
joints could not. I switched over to LeanGains, which is when I dropped
Eat Stop Eat, and used the Reverse Pyramid Training protocol. It was a
little kinder to me in terms of volume, and I made more progress.
Then
I got sloppy. Maybe it was the 16 hours of fasting and not really
thinking I could be overdoing it on the eating. Maybe it was the
Warcraft playing. Maybe it was the "extra calories" that I forgot to
log. It got complex, though, whatever it was... charts, graphs, lots of
thinking and planning. I swapped to the Rapid Fat Loss right before the
beach and it works if you follow it perfectly (which isn't that hard if
you're already used to controlling what you eat). I came back from the
beach in July of 2013 and I didn't feel right. And everything else I'd
ever read. I also had to stop working out to get over some injuries and I
just stopped caring for a month or so about being in shape. Brad Pilon
sent out the latest edition of Eat Stop Eat. I read it. A quote at the
end (his reworking of a Zen phrase) struck me and reset my perspective:
“Before you study Nutrition, food is food and drink is drink; while you
are studying Nutrition, food is no longer food and drink is no longer
drink; but once you have had enlightenment, food is once again food
and drink is again drink.” (pg.175, 2013 Expanded Edition)
(How
can you not like Brad, right? I'm all up in Zen, so I'm down with his
perspective.) Anyway, I realized that I was there. I knew everything I
could possibly know (without being an expert, without going back and
learning physiology and nutrition and... UGH... SCIENCE STUFF) about
weight loss and weight gain and lean muscle mass. I could tell you that
most of your fears about "losing muscle" are silly. I could even show
you the studies that supported it. So why was I so messed up?
I remembered this line from the Tao Te Ching (Stephen Mitchell, trans.):
Free from desire, you realize the mystery.
Caught in desire, you see only the manifestations.
I
was caught in desire (that's really my only point... nothing mystical
or insane), so much so that I had lost sight of my original goal from
years before. I didn't want to compete in any powerlifting contests. I
didn't even care if I could lift more than someone else or as much as
someone thought I should be able to lift. All I wanted was to be
healthy, be able to eat what I wanted, not complicate everything, and
look good when I took my shirt off. Once I was free from those desires
that I cared nothing for, I saw the answer: the thing that had gotten me
there in the first place, before I broke in with complexity and
strategy and a messed-up perspective, Eat Stop Eat.
My Plan Now
I
started August 1, 2013. I'll log (in general) what I eat every day. I'm
not about to get specific, for several reasons. I'm a private person,
for one, and for another, why does anyone care? I'll list calorie
totals, lift totals, etc. I may add a few notes about my day. Here's how
it will look:
1) Lift Heavy Stuff (8-10 reps) in Compound Movements (3x week)
2) 24-hour fasting (2x week)
3) 1500/day calorie total (low carb, but more as a result of personal preference... I luvz the meat)
4) One refeed day
5) I'll post my weight again in a few weeks.
I
have a picture from the beach that I thought about using. I look okay.
You can still see the ol' abs, but they're... soft. I decided to not
post it because I'm a teacher and that could get tricky. So, no
pictures.
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