Author Topic: New to This and Looking for Help  (Read 1859 times)

dlg_69

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New to This and Looking for Help
« on: October 28, 2009, 02:20:18 PM »
Well Ihave just come from the doctors and was told that I have high blood pressure and Type-2 Diabetes.  I am being told what I have already known for a long time, change my diet and exercise.  I just turned 40, 5'7" and 257lbs.  I am scheduled for some more test next week and then will meet with my dietician.

I am turning to you all for help in developing a healty and tastefull diet, book titles welcome.  I also will be hitting the gym starting tomorrow and plan to spend 4 days a week losing weight and trying to build muscle.  Supplements are there any that are ok to use that will not mess with my diabetes?  Sorry just too many questions and alot to absorb in one day.  Thanks

Hulkotron

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Re: New to This and Looking for Help
« Reply #1 on: October 28, 2009, 05:24:54 PM »
A lot of advice on this board is geared towards gaining muscle/mass, which generally involves gaining a little (or a lot) of fat too, so it may not be the best place for you assuming you want to drop a good amount of weight at the moment.

If I were you I'd focus on cardio at the moment, trying to get at least 15-20 minutes of continuous heart rate elevation on most days of the week.  If you can't do that much yet, just do what you can, you'll progress quickly.  Any mode of cardio is fine, walking, cycling, jogging if you can handle it.  It won't hurt to incorporate a simple 3x a week lifting program too.  Adding muscle helps you burn more calories throughout the day, which will help you lose weight quicker  8)

If you want further details just ask, there are plenty of folks here better at designing programs than myself.

Hulkotron

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Re: New to This and Looking for Help
« Reply #2 on: October 28, 2009, 10:54:03 PM »
A simple weight lifting program you could start with would be something like:

Day 1: Legs (Monday)
Squat or Leg press
Leg extensions
Leg curls
Calf raises

Day 2: Push (Wednesday)
Bench press
Military press
Tricep extensions
Some ab exercise

Day 3: Pull (Friday)
Deadlift
Row (bentover or cable)
Lat pulldown (or pullups)
Bicep curls

For all of these lifts, aim for doing a warm-up set or two followed by three sets of 8-12 repetitions per set.  The first set should be pretty easy, the last set pretty hard, but start with some light easy weights until you get the form down.  You can keep the same weight on each set or increase the weight each set.  There are tons of more detailed programs you can follow if you'd like, but this will give you a good start for getting the form down and just getting comfortable with moving the weight and pushing yourself.  If you're not an experienced lifter, get someone at the gym to show you the proper form for the Big 3 (squat, bench, deadlift).  You can find animations of these and many other lifts at http://www.exrx.net/Lists/Directory.html.  Using machines for some or all of these lifts is fine, but you'll want to switch to primarily free weights (barbells and dumbells) at some point.

I know fuck-all about nutrition, but a few basic tips are:
(1) Generally you want to eat 4-6 smaller meals throughout the day rather than 1-2 big meals.
(2) Always eat breakfast, no matter what, get something in you before you start your day.
(3) Try to get most of your carbs from veggies, fruits, and whole grains.
(4) Try to get most of your protein from whole foods (chicken, turkey, lean beef, fish, dairy, tofu) rather than supplements.
(5) Nothing wrong with a little fat too (you need to eat some), but avoid saturated and trans-fats.  Good sources of fat are things like olive oil, nuts, and peanut butter.  Avoid animal fats by buying lean meats.

Losing weight is simple from a mathematical perspective: change in weight = calories in - calories out.  So to lose weight, just burn more than you take in.  A pound of fat is I think 3500 calories, so you lose one pound for every 3500 calorie deficit that you wring up.  A dietician can help you with figuring out how many calories you should be eating and what your calorie deficit on a daily/weekly basis should be.  In general you should avoid drastic daily deficits. A deficit of like -500 calories per day is just fine for most people seeking to lose weight while maintaining good health and body function.

It's a good idea to ingest 20-30 grams of protein shortly after lifting.  You can get a protein powder supplement, or just drink a nice big glass of milk 8)

Hope this helps!  Good luck with achieving your goals.

_bruce_

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Re: New to This and Looking for Help
« Reply #3 on: October 29, 2009, 05:01:18 AM »
Take your time - you ll be in it for the long run...

Good Luck
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lesaucer

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Re: New to This and Looking for Help
« Reply #4 on: October 29, 2009, 06:32:20 PM »
2000 clean calorie diet 125g proteins/day+Full body training routine 2x week+45-1h cardio 4x week

dyslexic

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Re: New to This and Looking for Help
« Reply #5 on: October 30, 2009, 12:27:45 AM »
Eventually you will have to combine a low calorie diet with high intensity exercise.


Cutting carbs in the beginning will be a good start with the diet. Check out the Glycemic Index. If you are diabetic, you will have to familiarize yourself with carbohydrates and how they affect blood sugar/glucose levels.


Insulin will also become a familiar term...

rockyfortune

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Re: New to This and Looking for Help
« Reply #6 on: October 30, 2009, 06:32:29 AM »
take care of the diabetes now...i have a family member on dialysis three days a week because he failed to take care of hit when he was younger...lose the weight...start slow..build it up..and keep it simple...best bet is to see a nutritionist who can taylor a diet to your needs since you are diabetic. 
footloose and fancy free

dlg_69

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Re: New to This and Looking for Help
« Reply #7 on: October 30, 2009, 09:19:44 PM »
Thanks for all the feedback.  I have already started the healthier eating, lower calories and less bad carbs.   I will be hitting the gym tomorrow and have an appointment with PT to help get me started.  I have alway been a fan of BD's and wish that I had the time to dedicate.  So for now I will simply take it day by day. 

Thanks again.

Migs

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Re: New to This and Looking for Help
« Reply #8 on: November 28, 2009, 09:18:08 AM »
how's it going for you?

GAHusker72

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Re: New to This and Looking for Help
« Reply #9 on: December 27, 2009, 12:59:55 PM »
A simple weight lifting program you could start with would be something like:

Day 1: Legs (Monday)
Squat or Leg press
Leg extensions
Leg curls
Calf raises

Day 2: Push (Wednesday)
Bench press
Military press
Tricep extensions
Some ab exercise

Day 3: Pull (Friday)
Deadlift
Row (bentover or cable)
Lat pulldown (or pullups)
Bicep curls

For all of these lifts, aim for doing a warm-up set or two followed by three sets of 8-12 repetitions per set.  The first set should be pretty easy, the last set pretty hard, but start with some light easy weights until you get the form down.  You can keep the same weight on each set or increase the weight each set.  There are tons of more detailed programs you can follow if you'd like, but this will give you a good start for getting the form down and just getting comfortable with moving the weight and pushing yourself.  If you're not an experienced lifter, get someone at the gym to show you the proper form for the Big 3 (squat, bench, deadlift).  You can find animations of these and many other lifts at http://www.exrx.net/Lists/Directory.html.  Using machines for some or all of these lifts is fine, but you'll want to switch to primarily free weights (barbells and dumbells) at some point.

I know fuck-all about nutrition, but a few basic tips are:
(1) Generally you want to eat 4-6 smaller meals throughout the day rather than 1-2 big meals.
(2) Always eat breakfast, no matter what, get something in you before you start your day.
(3) Try to get most of your carbs from veggies, fruits, and whole grains.
(4) Try to get most of your protein from whole foods (chicken, turkey, lean beef, fish, dairy, tofu) rather than supplements.
(5) Nothing wrong with a little fat too (you need to eat some), but avoid saturated and trans-fats.  Good sources of fat are things like olive oil, nuts, and peanut butter.  Avoid animal fats by buying lean meats.

Losing weight is simple from a mathematical perspective: change in weight = calories in - calories out.  So to lose weight, just burn more than you take in.  A pound of fat is I think 3500 calories, so you lose one pound for every 3500 calorie deficit that you wring up.  A dietician can help you with figuring out how many calories you should be eating and what your calorie deficit on a daily/weekly basis should be.  In general you should avoid drastic daily deficits. A deficit of like -500 calories per day is just fine for most people seeking to lose weight while maintaining good health and body function.

It's a good idea to ingest 20-30 grams of protein shortly after lifting.  You can get a protein powder supplement, or just drink a nice big glass of milk 8)

Hope this helps!  Good luck with achieving your goals.

TY that was helpful!