Oh my god
this question drives me nuts, so now is my time to rant about it. First, if you’ve been following along, you
know I hate the terms “bulk” and “cut”, as they are greatly misused by the
training populace. People tend to say “bulk”
when they really mean “eat more” and by cut they mean “eat less”, not at all
giving consideration to how TRAINING needs to change during periods of bulk or
cut in order to actually have nutrition match training demands. But that aside, this question is even more
aggravating because it’s absolutely inane.
Should you bulk or cut? How the
hell should I know what you should do.
Here’s a quick test. Do you want
to get bigger? Then bulk. Do you want to get smaller? The cut.
There! I just solved it! Print that out and carry it with you and that
way, before annoying any strangers on the internet, you can have the answer for
you right then and there.
Bring this one with you too
“But how do
I know WHEN to bulk or cut?” Are you
serious? You bulk when you want to be
bigger than you currently are, and you cut when you want to be smaller than you
currently are. That’s it. That’s all there is to it. “But isn’t there a formula I can use?” A formula to know when you want to do
things? Are you nuts?! No, there’s no formula! It’s a thing YOU choose because it’s what YOU
want to do.
Jesus man,
do you think Paul Anderson or Pat Casey or Doug Hepburn asked when it was time
to bulk? Hell no! These guys decided on a goal: to get as
strong as possible, and in turn, they decided on a method: to get as big as possible. That’s how you figure it out! You have goals, and then you take the course
of action needed to get to those goals.
Paul, Pat and Doug ate herculean amounts of food and gained massive
amounts of weight. Did they get
fat? Hell yeah they got fat. Did they care? Hell no they didn’t care, because they had a
goal: to get as strong as possible. And
they achieved those goals. And hey, if
you care about getting fat, you know what you can do? You can cut when you get too fat.
“But I heard
from some guy with a LOT of letters after their name that there is an IDEAL
bodyfat% to be at before cutting or bulking!”
Hey guess what? Now we’re talking
about goals, because that statement is made under the understanding one wants
to minimize fat gain and maximize muscle gain.
NOW we’re getting somewhere, because if THAT is your goal, THEN you have
to employ a specific method compared to simply if you want to get big or
small. But DOUBLE guess what? You’re amateurish attempts to ascertain your
bodyfat would be comical if they weren’t aggravating.
No,
seriously, let me get this straight: a guy whose accreditation is having a
youtube channel told you that you need to be a certain bodyfat to bulk or cut,
and you decided you were going to determine your bodyfat % by posting shirtless
photos of yourself online for a quorum of strangers to evaluate? Once again, your insanity knows no
bounds. Do you think internet people
have calibrated eyeballs? Even better,
do you think they have X-ray vision? How
the hell are they going to see the visceral fat that’s contained between your
organs do know your actual bodyfat%? Oh,
they’re just supposed to base it off of other photos of people with bodyfat %s
listed next to their photos? Well for
one, can’t you already do that yourself?
Why do you need someone else to do it?
But secondly, what the hell is the credibility of those photos? Oh, these are people that super duper pinky
swear that their numbers are accurate…right.
Sounds good to me! Use those
numbers to calculate your future!
To clarify, this is an actual accepted theory, meaning your idea is even more stupid than this
Wait wait,
no, I got it: the NAVY method. It’s
accurate within 4-6%! Hell, I made that
number up, because the sheer notion of measuring your bodyfat with a tape
measurer is also silly. And let’s be
real honest: pretty much every method is going to have a range of errors in
it. I got measured at 8.4% on a BODPOD
once, and the internet assured me that was impossible because I didn’t LOOK
like 8.4% bodyfat…once again, based off the photos of people they had seen at
8% bodyfat. Because again, we’re all so
very stupid.
Quit letting
other people determine your goals!
Everyone is in such a rush to quantify and calculate everything in a
search to obviate themselves from actually having to THINK. You’re not smart because you use a lot of
numbers, especially when you consider that everything is done with a calculator
and a spreadsheet and you’ve completely removed your brain from the
equation. You exercise intelligence when
you engage in the action of FREE THINKING, and this means taking the time to
critically think about what your goals are and how you want to get there. Letting everyone ELSE tell you that your goal
is to optimize everything and never stray too far outside the realm of
acceptable bounds is how you end up exactly like everyone else: mediocre. The true giants out there, metaphorical and
otherwise, kept chasing their goals until they met them, and sometimes it meant
doing things that other people didn’t like or weren’t comfortable doing. It sometimes meant not looking their best
100% of the time. It sometimes meant
having a set of numbers that the internet would scoff at. But it also sometimes meant being the literal
best at what they did, because they set a goal and went after it irrespective
of the literature and groupthink.
Hey, you know what: you go do you
Should you
bulk or should you cut? You should do
whatever it takes to reach your goals.
Oh god, the Navy method.
ReplyDeleteAccording to the Navy I'm 31% bodyfat. All because of a 39.5" waist and a 15" neck. So accurate, even the bloody corpsman was perplexed.
The upside is I am now actively working on getting my waistline down. Probably a good thing given my height.
For sure. A 39.5" waist is pretty big. It would almost automatically fail an Air Force fitness test, speaking of other military branches.
DeleteIt is a disqualifier for all branches. Luckilt it's one that can be fixed easily.
DeleteMy chest is 37", but that isn't factored in with the military. Still, it's been a few good months now of actively cleaning up my diet and I feel so much healthier. Stopped cramming down energy drinks a few months ago, after the 9 day hurdle it got easier and I no longer want to even have one. Stopped eating candy bars. At the point where I think I just eat too much food, or tend to. I will have until June 2020 to sort this out before having to try the entire MEPS process again (because that's super fun)