weight is immaterial and irrelevent. Body mass composition is important. Two people each weight 200 lbs. One is an Edmonton Eskimo, the other is a devout follower of the Church of the Holy Fatass. One is fit, the other is not. They weigh the same.Hot Lips said:k Paracowboy,
I will agree to disagree with you on that one...for reasons other than how you look or performance ability...but let's not pick fly shit out of pepper here ;D
HL
Now that's what I am talking about but BMC encorporates weight and that's wherein the flyshit lies...paracowboy said:weight is immaterial and irrelevent. Body mass composition is important. Two people each weight 200 lbs. One is an Edmonton Eskimo, the other is a devout follower of the Church of the Holy Fatass. One is fit, the other is not. They weigh the same.
Weight is immaterial, and the bizzarre obsession with it is what leads to stupid fad diets, chemical abuse, and eating disorders.
don't. Don't worry. Your body will find the muscle/fat composition ratio it needs to perform. Anything else is just ego-gratification. You can add/lose muscle/fat once you've completed your training. For now, just focus on learning and graduating. Nothing else. Once you're in BN, you can think about putting on muscle, or losing fat.Tyrone_88 said:am really worried about shrinking back down to my skinny self.
there's a debate on that point, and some troops who have first-hand experience were involved. It's in the training forum, I believe. Run it through SEARCH, and you should find it.I'm willing to bet they won't let me bring my protein with me
healthy food, and tasty for the most part.so I'm just wondering what kind of food they feed you there
not on the food, but on the time available to eat it.and whether or not theres a limit on the food.
strength is not necessarily linked to size. I know a li'l tiny slip of a girl who squats waaaayyyy more than I. She's a figure skater. I'm over 220lbs.Zertz said:Paracowboy, true that about weight not being super important, but its easier than me posting all my lifts if you know what I'm saying. I'm quite exceptionally weak in terms of strength, I have high muscular endurance (pushups/situps) but poor strength objectively (I'm weak compared to my peers).
So, if I were to have this body composition at 30 lbs heavier I would be stronger objectively thereby of course making a better soldier (carry more easier, muscular strength is linked to steadied hands, etcetera).
One of my worst qualities in terms of soldiering is of course my lack of physical strength, so to increase my performance I must increase muscle mass and weight is one of the indicators of that. I could post my lifts if anyone wanted to give me some advice.
paracowboy said:strength is not necessarily linked to size. I know a li'l tiny slip of a girl who squats waaaayyyy more than I. She's a figure skater. I'm over 220lbs.