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Holy cow... what a butt kicker! I thought I'd give it a shot since I

didn't have much time, there is allot I have to get done tonight. I

don't think I'm going to get any housework done tonight, I'm

exhausted! My arms feel the most tired though, haven't figured that

out yet. How exciting to get such a good work out in such a short

period of time, on a stationary bike yet! I'm pumped!!!

I got my body fat tested today as well. 30% Ick... Scary thing

though, the last time I got it tested in March I was at 33.5% but I

was also over 20 pounds heavier. My lean body mass went from 126 to

116, and my body fat weight went from 63 to 50 pounds, so according

to that I lost 10 pounds of muscle too. I wasn't weight training

much at all over those months, just a little here and there. I'm not

only doubting the accuracy of the scale, but also the body fat

reader. ARGH! Oh well, I guess I'll have to give up obsessing over

both. But then what will I have to make me insane??

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> Holy cow... what a butt kicker! I thought I'd give it a shot since

I

> didn't have much time, there is allot I have to get done tonight.

I

> don't think I'm going to get any housework done tonight, I'm

> exhausted! My arms feel the most tired though, haven't figured

that

> out yet. How exciting to get such a good work out in such a short

> period of time, on a stationary bike yet! I'm pumped!!!

>

> I got my body fat tested today as well. 30% Ick... Scary thing

> though, the last time I got it tested in March I was at 33.5% but I

> was also over 20 pounds heavier. My lean body mass went from 126

to

> 116, and my body fat weight went from 63 to 50 pounds, so according

> to that I lost 10 pounds of muscle too. I wasn't weight training

> much at all over those months, just a little here and there. I'm

not

> only doubting the accuracy of the scale, but also the body fat

> reader. ARGH! Oh well, I guess I'll have to give up obsessing

over

> both. But then what will I have to make me insane??

>

>

,

Great job with the HIIT! If you do it right, that's exactly how you

should feel after a workout! Tired, muscles feel like jell-o, etc.

But, if you keep up with it on a regular basis, your muscles start

getting used to that kind of training, and you'll have a lot more

energy and endurance to get through everyday things.

Don't let yourself get down about the body fat reading. There's a

LOT of room for error in every reading that's done, so like

everything else, a body fat measurement is a tool that helps us reach

our goals. You're working hard and sticking to your meal plan, so

don't let yourself get discouraged or slip off course. You can do

it! :)

-M

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Hey, my question would be, are your doing that 90 min all at once? To spare

muscle it would be better to split it up into two 45 min sessions. If you are

currently doing 90 min a day and then drop to 20 min a day, what do you think

will happen to your weight loss? If you decide to do less, you may want to do

it gradually, and yes, watch the scale why you do it.

CAli

Re: HIIT

> Holy cow... what a butt kicker! I thought I'd give it a shot since

I

> didn't have much time, there is allot I have to get done tonight.

I

> don't think I'm going to get any housework done tonight, I'm

> exhausted! My arms feel the most tired though, haven't figured

that

> out yet. How exciting to get such a good work out in such a short

> period of time, on a stationary bike yet! I'm pumped!!!

>

> I got my body fat tested today as well. 30% Ick... Scary thing

> though, the last time I got it tested in March I was at 33.5% but I

> was also over 20 pounds heavier. My lean body mass went from 126

to

> 116, and my body fat weight went from 63 to 50 pounds, so according

> to that I lost 10 pounds of muscle too. I wasn't weight training

> much at all over those months, just a little here and there. I'm

not

> only doubting the accuracy of the scale, but also the body fat

> reader. ARGH! Oh well, I guess I'll have to give up obsessing

over

> both. But then what will I have to make me insane??

>

>

,

Great job with the HIIT! If you do it right, that's exactly how you

should feel after a workout! Tired, muscles feel like jell-o, etc.

But, if you keep up with it on a regular basis, your muscles start

getting used to that kind of training, and you'll have a lot more

energy and endurance to get through everyday things.

Don't let yourself get down about the body fat reading. There's a

LOT of room for error in every reading that's done, so like

everything else, a body fat measurement is a tool that helps us reach

our goals. You're working hard and sticking to your meal plan, so

don't let yourself get discouraged or slip off course. You can do

it! :)

-M

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wrote:

so according

to that I lost 10 pounds of muscle too.

Probably not, although if you were not weight training, maybe some. Don't forget

that " lean weight " includes skin, bones, blood, tendons, cartilage, basically

anything that isn't fat. If you lost weight and don't have a ton of sagging

skin, you can bet that some of that was skin. Body composition can also be

affected by how hydrated you are. Muscle holds more water that fat, which is one

of the things electrical impedance tests depend on, so if you were dehydrated at

all, or even less hydrated than the first time you were tested, that can cause

some variance.

The overall number went in the right direction! Good job!

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Thanks Beth! I don't have any saggy skin, so I like that

explanation. You are right though, the number went down, that's all

that matters. :)

> Probably not, although if you were not weight training, maybe some.

Don't forget that " lean weight " includes skin, bones, blood, tendons,

cartilage, basically anything that isn't fat. If you lost weight and

don't have a ton of sagging skin, you can bet that some of that was

skin. Body composition can also be affected by how hydrated you are.

Muscle holds more water that fat, which is one of the things

electrical impedance tests depend on, so if you were dehydrated at

all, or even less hydrated than the first time you were tested, that

can cause some variance.

>

> The overall number went in the right direction! Good job!

>

>

>

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I do a version of HIIT with my videos at home and I love it. It's 1

minute " spring " and then 2 minutes of level 5 or so. Great workout!

Colleen

> Holy cow... what a butt kicker! I thought I'd give it a shot since

I

> didn't have much time, there is allot I have to get done tonight.

I

> don't think I'm going to get any housework done tonight, I'm

> exhausted! My arms feel the most tired though, haven't figured

that

> out yet. How exciting to get such a good work out in such a short

> period of time, on a stationary bike yet! I'm pumped!!!

>

> I got my body fat tested today as well. 30% Ick... Scary thing

> though, the last time I got it tested in March I was at 33.5% but I

> was also over 20 pounds heavier. My lean body mass went from 126

to

> 116, and my body fat weight went from 63 to 50 pounds, so according

> to that I lost 10 pounds of muscle too. I wasn't weight training

> much at all over those months, just a little here and there. I'm

not

> only doubting the accuracy of the scale, but also the body fat

> reader. ARGH! Oh well, I guess I'll have to give up obsessing

over

> both. But then what will I have to make me insane??

>

>

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  • 1 month later...

> > does anyone do this for their cardio??? I am interested to know

how

> > it is.

> > jen

Petra,

do you do the HIIT for only 4 mins every 3 days like says to?

or do you do the 20 min with some of the HIIT? Did you get my email???

Jen

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I don't think that either the 20 min sol or HIIT is better, they are

just a little different. If you are doing your first BFL challenge,

I am a firm believer in going by the book and only by the book,

because the program works just as it is written. But after that,

your body adapts to whatever you give it, and to keep it guessing,

you should constantly be changing your workouts. I currently do 3

cardio sessions a week, one is based on the 20 min solution, one is

HIIT and one is just straight high moderate.

As for the calories burned during cardio, keep in mind that the

purpose of doing interval cardio is that it keeps your metabolims

burning higher all day after doing it. So the number on the machine

may be lower than it would be after 20 minutes of cardio at a steady

high pace, but you keep burning more after you are done.

The HIIT intervals get increasingly harder as each minute goes by!!

It is really easy to do an all-out sprint when you are fresh, but

when you have done 10 minutes of these intervals, you will find that

your sprint is much slower and you are working much harder. Believe

me, you hit a 10!!

When I do HIIT I do 5 minutes moderate warm up, do 10-15 minutes of

intervals, then finish up with about 10 minutes moderate again. Then

I get off the machine, curse 's name and swear to never

do cardio again.

HTH,

Lynda

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