Eat lots of protein at meals and you probably won't need snacks!I agree, cut out my snacks, eating apples when I crave something sweet.
Eat lots of protein at meals and you probably won't need snacks!I agree, cut out my snacks, eating apples when I crave something sweet.
Following on a recent discussion here about amino acids and getting enough dietary protein, three amino acids--glycine, cysteine, and glutamine--combine in the liver to produce glutathione. A lot of people take vitamin C supplements as a way to boost the immune system (I got to thinking about this subject because I reordered some supplements this morning), but glutathione is a powerful antioxidant that plays a massive role in our immune responses and it typically isn't in our multivitamins. Low levels of glutathione have been associated with things like type 2 diabetes, hepatitis, Parkinson's disease, and higher risks of cancer.Eat lots of protein at meals and you probably won't need snacks!
Absolutely, I ride a fat tire bicycle every day at least 5 miles. 13,000 + miles in 7 years. I carry mace and S&W shield 45 ACP.<>
As we age, we must pay attention to exercise. Try to find something you enjoy doing, and which involves exercise that increases heart rate to 90 or 100, for at least 20”.
I’ve done well cleaning my large yard & bicycling round town or nearby cities.
On long bicycle rides in small towns, N.O. & Houston; I’ve seen hundreds of discarded home exercise machines in curbside piles.
p.s. Do follow safety precautions. I carry pepper dog spray, cellphone, GLOCKS, etc. Always with a helmet & safety vest. For the rare nighttime rides, my bike is lit-up like a Mardi Gras float.
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Sarcopenia is Latin for "poverty of the flesh"Following on a recent discussion here about amino acids and getting enough dietary protein, three amino acids--glycine, cysteine, and glutamine--combine in the liver to produce glutathione. A lot of people take vitamin C supplements as a way to boost the immune system (I got to thinking about this subject because I reordered some supplements this morning), but glutathione is a powerful antioxidant that plays a massive role in our immune responses and it typically isn't in our multivitamins. Low levels of glutathione have been associated with things like type 2 diabetes, hepatitis, Parkinson's disease, and higher risks of cancer.
If you aren't getting adequate amounts of glycine, cysteine, and glutamine, your body can't produce glutathione.
Foods rich in glycine include beef, pork, poultry, salmon, peanuts, and some seeds.
For cysteine and glutamine, the list is similar but includes dairy and not the seeds/peanuts: beef, pork, poultry, milk, yogurt, ricotta cheese, and cottage cheese.
While I'm yammering on in vmax's topic...
The 9 amino acids that are considered as being essential in the diet--because the body can't synthesize them--are histidine, isoleucine, leucine, lysine, methionine, phenylalanine, threonine, tryptophan, and valine.
If you're a gym rat, you've also heard of "branched chain amino acids," BCAAs. These are leucine, isoleucine, and valine. The reason they're called "branched chain" simply has to do with the appearance of their molecular structure.
While all of the 9 essential amino acids are, well, essential, those three play a particular role in the building of muscle and helping to reduce the breakdown of muscle tissue.
Word of the day: sarcopenia. Sarcopenia is the term for muscle loss that occurs naturally with aging, and that also happens from immobility in younger folks. It's the degenerative and progressive loss of skeletal muscle mass, quality, and strength. In my rotation of gym T-shirts is a custom one that says, "Sarcopenia Sucks."
If you're getting a lot of meat and dairy in your diet, you're covered. But I also hedge my bets with supplements. I buy BCAAs in powder form; glutamine as well. In my water bottle I mix those four amino acids (in low concentration levels) with plain water and the occasional tiniest pinch of salt.
I'm too old for grueling workouts any longer, but that's the mixture I still sip while doing the pseudo-workouts I'm still capable of. Gettin' old is not for the faint of heart, and for me the most important thing is quality of life. I want to able to function as well as I can for as long as I can.
Sounds like you are losing fat and gaining muscle, nothing wrong with that.We've got almost 3 months left before the end of the year and I'm still working on my goals - but I've been really pumped about some strides I've made. I've shaved 2 minutes and 39 seconds off of my 1.5 mile run time in just one month, I've taken 10 seconds off of my 300 meter sprint time, my distance to run before feeling winded has quadrupled (which has directly lead to those improved run times!) and I've made significant strength gains - tho I'm nowhere near where I want to be there yet either.
My only issues have been losing weight - while I've made obvious gains in endurance and strength - my scale hasn't budged despite losing a bit off of the waist (not a full pant size YET, but they do fit a lot loser, and by Thanksgiving I'll be buying smaller pants / having some tailored to take in the waist) - I want to lose the weight to make it easier on my middle aged joints besides making my muscles and joints stronger (which they have been getting)
I've changed my diet in addition to all the extra exercise I've been doing - I'm not convinced that the difference in weight between fat and muscle is enough to make up for lack of weight loss while still losing an inch off my waist though. I'm nowhere near jacked, nor showing visible signs of muscle growth.
this right here^Sounds like you are losing fat and gaining muscle, nothing wrong with that.
Are you running and lifting weights?We've got almost 3 months left before the end of the year and I'm still working on my goals - but I've been really pumped about some strides I've made. I've shaved 2 minutes and 39 seconds off of my 1.5 mile run time in just one month, I've taken 10 seconds off of my 300 meter sprint time, my distance to run before feeling winded has quadrupled (which has directly lead to those improved run times!) and I've made significant strength gains - tho I'm nowhere near where I want to be there yet either.
My only issues have been losing weight - while I've made obvious gains in endurance and strength - my scale hasn't budged despite losing a bit off of the waist (not a full pant size YET, but they do fit a lot loser, and by Thanksgiving I'll be buying smaller pants / having some tailored to take in the waist) - I want to lose the weight to make it easier on my middle aged joints besides making my muscles and joints stronger (which they have been getting)
I've changed my diet in addition to all the extra exercise I've been doing - I'm not convinced that the difference in weight between fat and muscle is enough to make up for lack of weight loss while still losing an inch off my waist though. I'm nowhere near jacked, nor showing visible signs of muscle growth.
Update yesterday
Still working on that little belly fat but overall feeling great at 56
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Yep for 3 yearsTRT? Im asking because I am thinking of getting on it at 50.
Yep for 3 years
My natural T had dropped off at 50 to under 200 and I felt like shit
PM me and we can talk over the phone
I studied it for 6 months before going on.
I can help guide you through the do(s) ans don't
Alot of bro-science out there that's just wrong
It's not a magic pill at all.Im 43 now so its 7 years out for me. I still feel pretty good but I just notice people on it have way more defined muscles than I do and aren't working nearly as hard to get it as I do :-)