I don't know how much you're trying to gain or what your activity level is. When I first made my push past 200, I ate like that every day for the first bit until I had results then I tailored my caloric intake to be based around my activity level. I wouldn't drastically reduce calories on off days though. See how your body responds. I lifted yesterday and am squatting tomorrow so I'm keeping my calories up.
Simplest thing to do,i do it is just to drop post meal and mybe drop some or add to pre meal,my post is around 500cals so i just drop that and limit fruit and adjust other meals depending on work being done that/those days.
bla55 said:I would not, under any circumstances, drop a post workout meal... that's when most of the nutrients will come from in regards to adding to your lean body mass and therefore build muscles. Not to mention it's when your body is the least likely to add any fat.
He means not to have a post workout meal on non workout days
bla55 said:Ok, confused on someone is going to have a "post workout meal" on a "non workout day".
Well this thread certainly leaves multiple doors open for disagreements given various schools of thought being applied to a general question but here is my take:
If you are intentionally adding calories pre-workout or are using a pre-workout supp loaded with calories, only drop those on non-training days.
Leave your general food intake alone. Recovery days cause the growth your work stimulated and you need to feed that growth.
Randomly downing some carbs on an off day over and above doesn't make sense though, you aren't fueling a training session above your normal intake.
Stay consistent and eat as much as you can everyday...its the commitment to the caloric number over time that yields the results.... I usually have a daily "goal weight" , and will not go to bed until I step on the scale and it says the right number, it alows you to be consistnet by having daily feedback on your diet.
Weighing daily isn't the best idea .
I've been known to weigh myself hourly...lol