nikkideamus
New member
@brokenjoker For most dudes 1500 calories a day is not sustainable - By the time you've eaten the protein you need, and the nutritious food sources you need to meet nutrient intakes, you're often very close to or above this number. at 160lbs and as a beginner, yeah, this can be pretty hard and 1500cal isnt unheard of for a smaller man to cut on. In your case, you might need a bit of cardio.
I can lose quite a bit of weight on 0 cardio - but I'm 225lbs, my maintenance calories are over 3000, so this fundamentally changes the game for me. I can drop 500 calories from my diet and create a deficit by simply not forcing myself to eat meal 4.
Who you are, your work capacity, and what your goals are have a complicated relationship with how much cardio you should or should not be doing.
To be clear though, you probably should be doing *some* cardio for your health all year, regardless of your weight changes. The answer lies somewhere in the middle - do a good 20 minute brisk walk every day, at the very least.
"(I know this is primarily wrong since the rule of thumb is that cardio should be half of the time you spend weight training)." This advice is a half-truth, its probably fine for most people, but if you ever want to compete in bodybuilding, you will definitely go well over this.
I can lose quite a bit of weight on 0 cardio - but I'm 225lbs, my maintenance calories are over 3000, so this fundamentally changes the game for me. I can drop 500 calories from my diet and create a deficit by simply not forcing myself to eat meal 4.
Who you are, your work capacity, and what your goals are have a complicated relationship with how much cardio you should or should not be doing.
To be clear though, you probably should be doing *some* cardio for your health all year, regardless of your weight changes. The answer lies somewhere in the middle - do a good 20 minute brisk walk every day, at the very least.
"(I know this is primarily wrong since the rule of thumb is that cardio should be half of the time you spend weight training)." This advice is a half-truth, its probably fine for most people, but if you ever want to compete in bodybuilding, you will definitely go well over this.