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A month in and I feel bad eatting an orange...

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  • A month in and I feel bad eatting an orange...

    So my real question is how do you know what weight class you should be shooting for? I've been training hard for a month now and have gone from about 175 to 165. I'm 5'10" and was in ok shape when I started boxing (meaning I started conditioning before I started going to the gym). My coach said I should shoot for 152 (welter) but I can't seem to slim under 164.

    Here's my typical diet:

    wake up have a banana or a pear

    wait 2-3 hours have celery/peanutbutter or a glass of tomato juice

    wait another 2-3 have 1-2 chicken drumstick/turkey or 1 pb&j sandwich

    drink a glass of water/tomato juice/cranberry juice in between

    dinner whatever i feel like, which usually consists of egg whites and more fruit , veggies and chicken, or rice veggies and eggs.

    I do 200-300 crunches 50-100 pushups a day and recently have only been running 2 miles every other day. I also work with 2lbs free weights for punching speed.

    Since I just started I have a hunch I'm just hitting a wall and either just need to keep working through it or simply increase my workout... but sometimes I worry cuz I don't know how to tell what weight class I should be in.

  • #2
    oh, also once a week I allow myself to eat something bad... like 1 cheese burger or a slice of pizza or a burrito

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    • #3
      First of all how old are you? If you are under 18 you shouldnlt be dieting like this. You are a kid, you need nutrients in all food groups. You need to eat foods like Salads, Chicken, Pizza, Greasy ass KFC. All that ****. There is no point in dieting you are not going to improve your conditioning by starving yourself like Kate Hudson. Lol you are going to be a bone rack by the end of this. Man it is funny seeing misinformed athletes doing this kind of ****.

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      • #4
        "you are not going to improve your conditioning by starving yourself like Kate Hudson."

        lol i'm 24 and what you're saying is exactly how i feel. I feel like an anorexic beauty pagent queen. So what are you saying? If you guys think I'm being too severe with my diet what do you think I can lighten up on.

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        • #5
          Dietting is part of boxing i guess. Making weight is difficult.

          Listen, if you train hard and diet all week. At the weekend you can treat yourself and it wont matter.

          Im taking off the pounds too at the moment, its tough and i'll admit, over the weekend i've been off the diet... eating chips..lasagne .. chocolate. But even so.. i train that hard, that come Thursday (when they weigh me to track my progress) i've proberbly lost a couple of Lbs.

          Every weekend, treat yourself to something. You'll be just fine, dont worry. By the way...a 5ft 10 Welterweight? Jesus...that is ****ing skinny. Tell your coach you can't make the weight without starving yourself and get yourself towards middle weight.

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          • #6
            152 at 5'10" is doable, and not necessarily unhealthy. I'm aiming for the high side of Middleweight at 5'9", but I'm giving myself until January to get there. (Down from 205 to 170, took about 6-8 months, been at this weight for about a year, now.) I like the way I hit and move at 170, I just have some more midsection fat I can burn if I stick to my guns.

            But enough about me.

            One More, you are definitely hitting the wall. When you starve yourself for a period of time, your body stops producing the enzymes that break down fat. You need to do some serious research about sports nutrition; what you are eating -- in particular, how little you are eating -- is not healthy for a competitive athlete.

            Today, I had:

            Breakfast (post-run): 1 can of tuna in olive oil, 1 slice toast, 2 cups black coffee
            Snack: beef jerky, 1/2 bag (30g protein)
            Snack: organic green tea with sugar (35 calories), 2 bananas, 1 bag snap peas
            Lunch: Pho with shrimp, heavy on the vegetables. I left about half the noodles.
            Snack: other half bag of beef jerky
            Post-work: chicken breast, 3 apricots, 1 lite beer (Miller Chill)

            I will most likely eat:

            Pre-boxing -- driving to the gym: small apple, handful of Tums (keeps me from puking during hard workouts)
            During boxing: 1/2 gallon water, probably a couple pieces of candy (Starbursts) if I start to bonk out
            Post-boxing, before bed: protein shake, chamomile tea

            Comment


            • #7
              Following that strict of diet with an deficit that large with defenitley slow down your metabolism causing you to burn less and less calories each week, causing a halt weight loss.Also Leptin a very important fat burning horomone is lowered during periods of starvation which is what your body would classify your diet as.Research Leptin and carbohydrate refeeds,refeeding with a high calorie meal or day in low gi carbohydrates will raise Leptin and metabolism causing you to lose weight faster.

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              • #8
                And depending on your schedule I would increase your roadwork to longer runs and more times a week.I find if u feel like its draining to much from your skills and conditioning training do your roadwork at night when all other training has been completed.

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by fraidycat View Post
                  152 at 5'10" is doable, and not necessarily unhealthy. I'm aiming for the high side of Middleweight at 5'9", but I'm giving myself until January to get there. (Down from 205 to 170, took about 6-8 months, been at this weight for about a year, now.) I like the way I hit and move at 170, I just have some more midsection fat I can burn if I stick to my guns.

                  But enough about me.

                  One More, you are definitely hitting the wall. When you starve yourself for a period of time, your body stops producing the enzymes that break down fat. You need to do some serious research about sports nutrition; what you are eating -- in particular, how little you are eating -- is not healthy for a competitive athlete.

                  Today, I had:

                  Breakfast (post-run): 1 can of tuna in olive oil, 1 slice toast, 2 cups black coffee
                  Snack: beef jerky, 1/2 bag (30g protein)
                  Snack: organic green tea with sugar (35 calories), 2 bananas, 1 bag snap peas
                  Lunch: Pho with shrimp, heavy on the vegetables. I left about half the noodles.
                  Snack: other half bag of beef jerky
                  Post-work: chicken breast, 3 apricots, 1 lite beer (Miller Chill)

                  I will most likely eat:

                  Pre-boxing -- driving to the gym: small apple, handful of Tums (keeps me from puking during hard workouts)
                  During boxing: 1/2 gallon water, probably a couple pieces of candy (Starbursts) if I start to bonk out
                  Post-boxing, before bed: protein shake, chamomile tea
                  omg, pho! I just moved up to oregon from cali (san jose) and I miss pho like no other...

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by One more View Post
                    omg, pho! I just moved up to oregon from cali (san jose) and I miss pho like no other...
                    The stuff you guys are telling me makes me feel a lot better about boxing in general. I think if I had to eat the way I had up in my head for a much longer period of time I may have gotten burned out quickly... I mean, of all the ppl I know I LOVE to eat the most out of all of them. And this diet thing, although a good test of will, has made me a little irritable (due to the fact that it's almost like fasting... and if any of you have ever fasted before you know you get irritable).

                    I'm going to loosen up on my meals (portion wise, not fatty or sodium wise) and increase my roadwork like floyd suggested. I didn't realise that I might be doing more harm than good cutting down on food so much. Thanks so much guys!

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