For anyone seriously starting a diet, fitness or bodybuilding regiment I highly suggest using one of the many 'nutrition calculators' online. A simple one is this Nutrition Calculator . These calculators are often only good at telling you by your age/weight/height what it will take to 'maintain' your current weight. To build muscle you need to take in more calories than you are burning because your body needs to have the energy and nutrients available to build new tissue that wasn't previously there. Its like trying to build an addition to your house but you run to of bricks, construction stops. When I run this calculator with my weight (150 LB) it tells me that I need about 2100 calories, 180 grams of protein, 230 grams of carbs and 40 grams of fat. I know from personal experience that this is not enough to satisfy my daily needs. In reality I get around 3000 calories , 250 grams of protein, 320 grams of carbs and about 70 grams of fat. A typical meal break down on a day I go to the gym will look like this:
Wake up - 6am
1st meal - 6:30am
90 carbs, 30 protein, 15 fat
2nd meal - 9:30 am
45 carbs, 35 protein, 12 fat
3rd meal - 12:30 pm
45 carbs, 35 protein, 12 fat
4th meal (pre workout meal) 3:30 pm
45 carbs, 35 protein, 5 fat
Gym - 4:30
5th meal (post workout meal) 6- 6:30pm
45 carbs, 50 protein, 4 fat
6th meal - 9 pm
30 carbs, 30 protein, 10 fat
7th meal - 10:30 pm
20 carbs, 35 protein, 8 fat
Sleep
This works for me but may not work for everyone. My current traning goals dont have me exceed 155 pounds because I dont want to get much 'larger' then I already am. For my height and frame I feel exceeding 155 pounds in total weight would start looking funny, even if it was mainly muscle. If I ate more I could potentially achieve 175 pounds but I have no desire to. That's my personal preference, I just don't want to look like johnny bravo. For clarity, the guy on the right I would consider to wide for his height...you start looking like a cartoon character. The guy on the left is what I shoot for, though i'm slightly thicker.


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