TheCrownedOne
Registered User
Here’s something I’ve been wondering about for a while now. This is directed to Bobo and the guys who know the most:
Is it possible to build muscle and increase strength while consuming only your daily maintenance calories (or less)? Here’s the scenario: You take in the proper amount of protein, carbs, and fat each day indicative of muscle building (abundant protein) while staying at maintenance calories. You work out three times a week for general strength with some hypertrophy providing a condition your body must adapt to by building more muscle. So you’re sending your body a signal to build muscle, but at the same time you’re not consuming a superfluous amount of energy that would suit anabolism. Faced with this situation how does your body adapt? Certainly it wouldn’t break down available muscle to build muscle as that’s self-defeating. So if it needs this energy and has an abundance available in subcutaneous fat stores, what’s preventing it from tapping into that store to build the muscle you’re demanding it to?
Is it possible to build muscle and increase strength while consuming only your daily maintenance calories (or less)? Here’s the scenario: You take in the proper amount of protein, carbs, and fat each day indicative of muscle building (abundant protein) while staying at maintenance calories. You work out three times a week for general strength with some hypertrophy providing a condition your body must adapt to by building more muscle. So you’re sending your body a signal to build muscle, but at the same time you’re not consuming a superfluous amount of energy that would suit anabolism. Faced with this situation how does your body adapt? Certainly it wouldn’t break down available muscle to build muscle as that’s self-defeating. So if it needs this energy and has an abundance available in subcutaneous fat stores, what’s preventing it from tapping into that store to build the muscle you’re demanding it to?