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Questions about how to lose muscle mass on my legs?

i also am out of proportion. i have played tennis and hockey since i was seven and skiied a lot. i have a small toned upper body and naturally very muscular legs particularly my thighs. as i am a female i dont want to bulk up my upper body to look more in proportion. i am determined to lose muscle on my thighs but dont want to get "flabby". i eat healthily already but from what i have read i think the best way is to lower my protein and carb intake, and to eat fruit, veg, tuna and salmon rather than pasta, chicken and beef and pork and probably eating less in general, and go on long distance runs. is this correct....? thanks.
 
Where did you read that? In a men's room at The School for Moron Personal Trainers That Can't Read So Good? I mean come on.


I just got dumber - thanks for posting. I better quit squatting 3x a week b/c I must not be recovering ...lol

Too true, man. I just talked with a former soldier in the marine corp who told me that he had always been "unable" to grow muscle no matter how much he lifted. Then 13 weeks of bootcamp in which he did 16 hours a day, seven days per week of non-stop running, hiking with 100 lb bag, pushups, situps, pullups, and other very hard stuff. Definitely not enough time to recover. During the bootcamp, sure, he didn't gain an ounce, but something definitely changed because after he stopped and went back to 3 days/week of lifting, he ballooned up to 190 lbs of solid muscle from 150. So giving your body too little rest may temporarily inhibit growth, but it also may be setting you up for way more growth than you expected.
 
Ive never heard anyone complain about having big legs.. Be happy that you do.. Just workout your upper body hard bro.. Much easier to gain upper body mass as opposed to lower body
 
So I realize I just resurrected a zombie thread (dead for 4 years), but I'll post this anyway. If you want to manipulate leg size I think the force/velocity curve holds your answer. The principle of the force/velocity curve is that heavy weights lifted at maximum velocity will be moved slower than light weights lifted at maximum velocity. Bench pressing 200 lbs at max speed may result in movement at half a mile per hour while bench pressing just the weight of a broom handle at max speed would result in movement closer to 15mph (or 60mph if you're Bruce Lee). Regardless of the weight being lifted, the muscle is still contracting its maximum potential velocity. Look up a picture of the force velocity curve to follow along with this idea. Exercises that exist on the upper left side of the curve will result in gains in muscle size and strength and decrease in speed while exercises that exist on the lower right side of the curve will result in decreases in muscle size and strength and increase in speed. Sprinters don't have big legs because they sprint. They have big legs because they accelerate. Their leg size is developed in the first 30 meters out of the starting blocks (not to mention the weight room). The reason is that acceleration is a much lower velocity/higher force phase of the run (upper left of the F/V curve). Soccer players spend 90% of their running time on the field either accelerating or decelerating and very little time at top speed. This is why soccer players are notorious for big legs. Baseball pitchers, on the other hand, have the skinniest arms compared to their teammates because they spend most of their time at the lower right end of the F/V curve. High velocity with only the weight of the baseball. To get small legs do exercises that involve very low force output at very high speeds; running down-hill, cycling in the lowest gear, martial arts, etc. Definitely don't neglect maximum effort in your muscles (like sitting on the couch for a week) but when you do exert yourself maximally, do it with nearly zero resistence so that your velocity will be high. Your body will adapt to that by reducing its muscle mass in order to make your limbs lighter and easier to move at those speeds.
 
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