Good read on the measurements Tom. Part of your plateau, truthfully, could be some body recomposition happening... i.e. more muscle, less fat. Yes, I always say that it is impossible to have concurrently, but not true to the newbie lifter. I know you are not a newb, but a newb doesn't have to be someone just starting out. It can be someone just getting back into it. So that is a positive.
It the plateau continues much longer, we will see what we can shake up.
OK, now I'm getting confused -- help me out here.
Here's what I
thought I understood:
Repairing existing muscle and growing new muscle are two different things. Your body, even in a caloric deficit, providing it's not too severe, will use some of the calories ingested to repair existing muscle. In the process, it repairs it so it's stronger than when it started, so it can meet the challenge that caused it to break down.
In a caloric deficit, however, your body will not recruit those much needed calories to build
new muscle tissue. Instead, it will recruit the energy it needs first from fat cells, and then from lean body mass (unless, of course, you've put yourself into a starvation mode).
OK, I started lifting again last November. Granted, I wasn't doing the right thing -- it was all stuff on machines, and focused on specific muscles, but I was doing weight training a minimum of twice a week. I started the program you designed about 3 or 4 weeks ago.
So here's what I really don't understand. Where is my body getting the calories to "recompose" my body structure? Why and how do I violate all the rules you've been talking about?
Man, I wish I understood this thing better. The whole concept of metabolism, fat loss, muscle growth, etc., is still like a mysterious black box to me.
I hope you can enlighten my poor, confused soul!