SeymourCuts
New member
The fact that I and most people have been able to increase or at the very least retain strength on weight-loss diets that involve low-carb cycling while alternatively not being able to do so on other types of diets without external anabolic aid is enough evidence to me of their place for people wishing to better their bodies aesthetically.
There was a recent study showing that dieting unaccompanied by exercise shows tendancies towards fat burning from in and around internal organs rather than subcutaneous fat stores. Exercise is necessary too for that reason as well as just the issue of muscle tone and retention. Look at what's-his-face from Subway. He's a muscle-less beanpole. My uncle who was somewhat muscular looking many, many moons ago before becoming obese, gained a similar look through months of Atkins dieting. And Kate Moss when it comes to women. They are essentially nothing more than skin and bones and a minimal amount of muscle that happens to be quite soft. I don't know of anyone who thinks these particular looks are all that attractive. Widespread employment of a combination of exercise and (proper) diet and possibly stress-relief techniques such as meditation is key to getting at the issue of obesity and it's aesthetic as well as health-related problems such as heart disease and diabetes.
Carbs play an important role in sacroplasmic muscle tissue over the short and long term, and subsequently sarcomeric muscle tissue over the long term, that's why I disapprove of long term "no-carb" dieting.
There was a recent study showing that dieting unaccompanied by exercise shows tendancies towards fat burning from in and around internal organs rather than subcutaneous fat stores. Exercise is necessary too for that reason as well as just the issue of muscle tone and retention. Look at what's-his-face from Subway. He's a muscle-less beanpole. My uncle who was somewhat muscular looking many, many moons ago before becoming obese, gained a similar look through months of Atkins dieting. And Kate Moss when it comes to women. They are essentially nothing more than skin and bones and a minimal amount of muscle that happens to be quite soft. I don't know of anyone who thinks these particular looks are all that attractive. Widespread employment of a combination of exercise and (proper) diet and possibly stress-relief techniques such as meditation is key to getting at the issue of obesity and it's aesthetic as well as health-related problems such as heart disease and diabetes.
Carbs play an important role in sacroplasmic muscle tissue over the short and long term, and subsequently sarcomeric muscle tissue over the long term, that's why I disapprove of long term "no-carb" dieting.