So what's the big secret?

On this forum everyone says you can't put on muscle and shed fat at the same time, you need 5-6 meals a day, and you need 1g of protein for every lb you weigh. Now while I believe and follow these rules, I know plenty of people that don't know anything about this stuff that just lift at the gym 3-4 days a week and they're losing fat and making decent muscle gains. And I know they definitely don't have a real diet, or any type of system for calories. So how can some people do it this way, and others cant?
 
Most people can do it up to a certain point. The first year or two of training, as long as you train hard enough, you will most likely gain muscle and lose fat. The 3rd and 4th year, again as long as you train hard enough, you will most likely gain muscle and maintain bodyfat.

It will vary from person to person, the above is generally what happens.

Personally I gained muscle and lost or maintained BF for the first 5 years of training. After that, if I wanted to keep my BF lower, I had to keep my nutrition more and more in check.

Most all of the clients I have had over the years who wanted to gain muscle size did not have to worry much about nutrition in the first 1.5 - 2 years. (as long as they ate enough) After that we would have to dial things in more and more. In a way it is nice that things tend to work that way. It is much easier for people to get used to consistently training, then start changing nutrition habits. It can be overwhelming to do both at the same time.

The above is true for people who want to gain muscle mass. (that group tends not to have much of a BF issue) Those who are most interested in losing BF will generally have the best results learning good nutrition first, then working into a better and more consistent workout program.

(again, nothing is set in stone, I am merely stating the most common situations)

Like anything though, everything changes as you progress through your training career. The more gains you make, the more dialed in your training and nutrition needs to be. Very few people can avoid this.

What worked in the past most likely will not work in the future. The things you do to make good progress now will not work nearly as well in 2 or 3 years. Training (and nutrition) evolves over time. You just have to pay attention to how things are going.
 
You can do both at the same time, but after a while can't gain a significant amount of muscle and lose a significant amount of fat at the same time. Though its totally possible to gain lots of muscle and lower overall body fat %
 
On this forum everyone says you can't put on muscle and shed fat at the same time, you need 5-6 meals a day, and you need 1g of protein for every lb you weigh. ..... So how can some people do it this way, and others cant?
Not everyone says so. Look up burn the fat, feed the muscle in the search box above
 
On this forum everyone says you can't put on muscle and shed fat at the same time, you need 5-6 meals a day, and you need 1g of protein for every lb you weigh. Now while I believe and follow these rules, I know plenty of people that don't know anything about this stuff that just lift at the gym 3-4 days a week and they're losing fat and making decent muscle gains. And I know they definitely don't have a real diet, or any type of system for calories.

So how can some people do it this way, and others cant?

The answer is - " there is no big secret ".:)

You can make nutrition and training as simple or a complicated as you want it to be.

Some people just can't help making things too complicated for themselves IMO - sweating and obsessing over the minutiae of countless training protocols and nutritional strategies - when just sticking to some very basic principles is all it really takes IMO.

When you get right down to it, the principles behind adding some muscle and or shedding fat are really pretty simple.....this isn't rocket science after all.:yelrotflmao:
 
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