this post was submitted on 17 Jun 2023
13 points (100.0% liked)

Physical Education

55 readers
1 users here now

A place where comrades can

(1) discuss how best to optimize their physical health and develop “Iron Proletarian Discipline” in a healthy and holistic manner. Including but not limited to weight training, stretching, cardiovascular exercise, meditation, nutrition, sleep, and daily routines with an eye towards cultivating the best habits possible,

(2) share motivational and educational writings or videos; bonus points if the perspective is that of a Communist thinker such as Mao or Fidel Castro, and

(3) discuss the relationship between mental health and exercise.

Rule:

Approach every conversation in good faith.

founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS
 

Hi comrades

I want to start handling my nutrition and fitness better. I usually work out at home and can do pushups etc., I would say I'm quite underweight.

While I'm reading the guide by CriticalResist on Prolewiki, I decided to count my calories. I barely reach 1500 calories a day which at this point I'll go malnourished. I just feel full very quickly. I do not eat processed sugars and avoid sweets, and I'm basically vegan at this point.

I exercise too and can do push ups, squats etc with no problems whatsoever, though as expected I cannot build muscular mass, most likely because of my nutrition. I don't have the money to go to a gym so I want as much as possible to work out at home, I saw that calisthenics might be a good option? Though they seem unreliable for building muscle mass and strength. I want to put more weight but not fatty weight, which had happened to me in the past. I do eat healthy, but I eat way too less because I feel I just get full quickly. This might be due that in the past I was overweight and conditioned myself to not eat much, but now I'm basically starving myself.

How would I go about increasing my caloric intake while putting muscle mass (preferably at home)?

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I’m guessing what happened was that you severely cut your consumption in terms of volume and your stomach got used to that new standard. At least based on what you’re saying here.

Yep, most likely.

It’s possible to “retrain” your stomach to accept more food and not send the signal for fullness so soon, but the only way I know how is by forcing yourself to eat, and eventually you’ll adjust.

I see.

Additionally I should point out that foods high in salt, fat and sugar are sort of a cheat code for fullness; your brain loves them and so you don’t feel full after eating them, which is why some people still feel hungry after eating fast food. But I wouldn’t recommend dirty bulking, it’ll just make you put on fat and no muscle. But I’ve never tried dosing this myself, e.g. adding a teaspoon of sugar to my (air-fried) fries because I’m on the other end of the stomach spectrum, I’m always hungry lol. This would reduce the salt, sugar and oil to let’s say healthier levels and might still not send the signal for fullness.

You could also look at caloric drinks; it’s another cheat code. Our body doesn’t interpret fluids as having calories and you don’t get that feeling of fullness, but we’re back to the same problem where drinks add calories by adding sugar. I mean there’s protein drinks and everything but I’m not sure they would fix the problem of not satiating you.

Thank you for detailing this here more! I've already read the portion where you explain this in your guide. I've never got into fitness properly due to the whole reactionary content involving it, it's hard to find reliable information without it being sponsored by a food corporation or so. Thank you for your work comrade!

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

Thank you comrade, that was the whole reason I set out to writing this guide in the first place.