Guest guest Posted October 15, 2004 Report Share Posted October 15, 2004 Hi all! I hardly ever post but thought I'd chime in here. I've been mainly following LL for the past 3 months or so. I'm pretty analytical so I love all the charts and programs and tracking that is available through the LL website once you become a member. Some of the tools include the 'Nutrition Analyzer' that tracks not only calories but also fat, protein & carbs based on grams *and* percentages (so you know with each meal what percentage you ate of each - especially helpful if trying to follow a 40% carb 40% protein and 20-30% fat eating plan, for example). There's also a tool called 'Workout Professor' and I don't think there's anything else like it anywhere. You can pick from dozens of exercise routines, even BFL routines. You enter in your max weight for 1 rep (there's a calculator for figuring that), then the WP figures out the weight and repitition you should perform for every exercise. After a workout, you go back and enter in what you actually did (weight and reps) and it will advance you to the next workout with it's recommended weight and reps for each exercise for the next workout. There's also a 'Calorie Calculator' where you plug in your info and weight goal and it will calculate how many weeks it will take you to get to your goal and how many calories you should be eating each week, and each day of each week (with the zig-zagging method someone else mentioned). It will tell you if you're per week weight loss goal is too high for the number of minutes per week you're willing to perform. It will not let you go below a certain calorie level, rather it will 'force' you to increase your exercise minutes not reduce calories in order to reach the weight loss goals you desire. There's a tool called 'Lean Account' which is a week by week 'bank' where you log minutes of resistance training, other activity, and your daily calories (which it pulls from other tools where you already would log in this information daily.) The lean account keeps a running 'balance' of your calories and your weight loss and exercise minutes. It's nice if you start a week on a Sunday (if that's the day you'll be eating your free meals for instance) because you'll be able to see the calories that are left at the end of the week that are available to you that day for your free day. And, yes, free meals should be caluclated. Now, it's not recommended that you use all these tools daily forever, just in the beginning and then consistently for maybe 5 days a week until you reach your goals... Based on your use of these tools, you're given a percentage grade everyday of how you're doing with everything which is a nice quick, visual way of knowing if you need to work harder in certain areas. People get together to form team challenges that you can join and you all compete for an agreed upon goal. The 'prize' could be money or whatever that everyone pitches in. You 'compete' for a weight loss goal, or a high daily grade, etc. There are tons of recorded interviews, downloads, etc., etc. Too many to list here. There's an email forum. There's teleconferences set up with the coaches on specific topics. The book itself is absolutely amazing. *Incredibly* detailed in every way. I think 99% of the people who join LL are former BFL'rs who just weren't getting the results they wanted. Some people, like myself, need more accountibility and more detailed tracking methods to be sure I get the results I want. Another difference I just thought of, LL recommends 1-2 free 'meals' per week, not an entire free day. If nothing else I'd highly recommend the book. It is SO informative! HTH, Christie M. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 15, 2004 Report Share Posted October 15, 2004 You can also track percentages and grams, activity, etc... through: www.fitday.com Just an FYI! Thanks, > Hi all! I hardly ever post but thought I'd chime in here. I've been mainly > following LL for the past 3 months or so. I'm pretty analytical so I love > all the charts and programs and tracking that is available through the LL > website once you become a member. > > Some of the tools include the 'Nutrition Analyzer' that tracks not only > calories but also fat, protein & carbs based on grams *and* percentages (so > you know with each meal what percentage you ate of each - especially helpful > if trying to follow a 40% carb 40% protein and 20-30% fat eating plan, for > example). > > There's also a tool called 'Workout Professor' and I don't think there's > anything else like it anywhere. You can pick from dozens of exercise > routines, even BFL routines. You enter in your max weight for 1 rep (there's > a calculator for figuring that), then the WP figures out the weight and > repitition you should perform for every exercise. After a workout, you go > back and enter in what you actually did (weight and reps) and it will > advance you to the next workout with it's recommended weight and reps for > each exercise for the next workout. > > There's also a 'Calorie Calculator' where you plug in your info and weight > goal and it will calculate how many weeks it will take you to get to your > goal and how many calories you should be eating each week, and each day of > each week (with the zig-zagging method someone else mentioned). It will tell > you if you're per week weight loss goal is too high for the number of > minutes per week you're willing to perform. It will not let you go below a > certain calorie level, rather it will 'force' you to increase your exercise > minutes not reduce calories in order to reach the weight loss goals you > desire. > > There's a tool called 'Lean Account' which is a week by week 'bank' where > you log minutes of resistance training, other activity, and your daily > calories (which it pulls from other tools where you already would log in > this information daily.) The lean account keeps a running 'balance' of your > calories and your weight loss and exercise minutes. It's nice if you start a > week on a Sunday (if that's the day you'll be eating your free meals for > instance) because you'll be able to see the calories that are left at the > end of the week that are available to you that day for your free day. And, > yes, free meals should be caluclated. Now, it's not recommended that you use > all these tools daily forever, just in the beginning and then consistently > for maybe 5 days a week until you reach your goals... > > Based on your use of these tools, you're given a percentage grade everyday > of how you're doing with everything which is a nice quick, visual way of > knowing if you need to work harder in certain areas. > > People get together to form team challenges that you can join and you all > compete for an agreed upon goal. The 'prize' could be money or whatever that > everyone pitches in. You 'compete' for a weight loss goal, or a high daily > grade, etc. > > There are tons of recorded interviews, downloads, etc., etc. Too many to > list here. There's an email forum. There's teleconferences set up with the > coaches on specific topics. The book itself is absolutely amazing. > *Incredibly* detailed in every way. I think 99% of the people who join LL > are former BFL'rs who just weren't getting the results they wanted. Some > people, like myself, need more accountibility and more detailed tracking > methods to be sure I get the results I want. > > Another difference I just thought of, LL recommends 1-2 free 'meals' per > week, not an entire free day. If nothing else I'd highly recommend the book. > It is SO informative! > > HTH, > Christie M. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 15, 2004 Report Share Posted October 15, 2004 I track those things on my PDA. There are several pretty cheap ($12-$20) programs for Palm and Pocket PC operating systems for logging food and exercise, including some that are BFL specific. It's a lot more portable and doesn't require Internet access. I have a question for for and Christie--Would you say that most of the women using the LL club are still trying to lose weight/fat (and had trouble doing it on their own with BFL for whatever reason) or are there a number of them who were already at or close to goal weight when they joined and just trying to really get lean, build muscle, and improve their definition? Basically, is LL a hardcore program for leaning out? I'm asking because I'm interested in LL, but to be honest, I'm already VERY organized, self-motivated, well-read, and generally good at micromanaging my training and diet on my own. As I mentioned, I already zig-zag my calories, track my intake (in calories, grams and percentages), plan my meals, know exactly how much of a deficit I need to run in order to hit my goals, and train hella hard (including Hussman's extra cardio tweaks and pilates/ballet/bootcamp vids several times a week in addition to the BFL standard workouts). I'm already within 3-5 lbs of goal weight and in the 17.5%-19% body fat range after 18 weeks on self-managed BFL. (16.19% according to the skinfolds taken at the gym this week, but I think that's a bit optimistic though flattering.) The Workout Professor seems like a nifty tool, but the nutrition tools don't seem to provide anything that I'm not already doing for myself. I'm shooting for some serious fitness model muscle and definition, and I'm pretty sure I can get to it on my own eventually by just continuing to train hard (upper body especially) and then cutting. I don't need a babysitter to hold my hand; I need a drill sergeant to challenge me and push me HARD. Would you recommend LL to someone in my situation? Maggie On Fri, 15 Oct 2004 17:38:39 -0000, <michelle@...> wrote: > > You can also track percentages and grams, activity, etc... through: > > www.fitday.com > > Just an FYI! > > Thanks, > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 15, 2004 Report Share Posted October 15, 2004 I thought I would add my 2 cents, I am also a LL member and I love it. I can still do all my BFL things that I love, but I would have never have seen my abs had I not started tracking everything and counting my calories! It is really an awesome club! ~Stacey Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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