Renegade diet

Smokinator

New member
I have just heard about the renegade diet and intermitted starvation. Wanted to get your guys opinion on it. How does it work? Could someone give me a sample of a typical day on it.

I am looking to drop about 20lbs, so if you guys could help me out on this diet, I would appreciate the help.
 
I normally train in the late morning (about 9 or 11) or in the early afternoon (about 1) and play rugby 4 times a week from 5-7. So how would my fasting phase and carb phases work around this?
 
If you want to lose weight, why don't you just forgets about FAD diets and eat at a caloric deficit while ensuring macro/micro sufficiency. The timing of your meals won't affect weight loss.
 
My diet has been good and clean but ive been in a slump in terms of fat loss for the last 4 months. I heard this is a good option to jump start it again.
 
My diet has been good and clean but ive been in a slump in terms of fat loss for the last 4 months. I heard this is a good option to jump start it again.

You think the timing of your meals will have an effect on weight loss? Nope. Calories in vs Calories Out.

If you are in a slump:

How big a deficit gave you been on?
How long have you been dieting?
What are your macros?
Have you been doing re-feeds?
Have you taken a diet break?
 
You think the timing of your meals will have an effect on weight loss? Nope. Calories in vs Calories Out.

If you are in a slump:

How big a deficit gave you been on?
How long have you been dieting?
What are your macros?
Have you been doing re-feeds?
Have you taken a diet break?

dude i cant disagree more!!! timing of meals has alot to do with it!! i can already tell where you've been getting this trash info from too!!! yes, calories in vs calories out does play a factor but thats just scratching the surface.. please dont give out advice like that!!
 
dude i cant disagree more!!! timing of meals has alot to do with it!! i can already tell where you've been getting this trash info from too!!! yes, calories in vs calories out does play a factor but thats just scratching the surface.. please dont give out advice like that!!

Actually I can provide tons of research supporting what I have said. Meal timing does not effect metabolism. It is a myth.

And if you are not losing weight, you are not in a caloric deficit. It's the Law of Thermodynamics.
 
Actually I can provide tons of research supporting what I have said. Meal timing does not effect metabolism. It is a myth.

And if you are not losing weight, you are not in a caloric deficit. It's the Law of Thermodynamics.

this guy was a pain in the ass.. seriously he's gone.. cant get any more disrespectful giving out non-sense advice
 
I am more inclined to agree with 3J. The law of thermodynamics is all true, well and good but it doesn't tell you everything that's going on. It reasons that energy cannot be created or destroyed, and if something is getting larger then it must be taking more energy can it is consuming but that's the same as asking why is this room so full with people and then answering, the room is getting more filled with people because more people are entering than leaving but it tells you nothing about why more people are entering than leaving in the first place. Why is the excess calories going into fat rather than muscle or bone growth. There's a piece to the puzzle missing. I believe that to be the role hormones play. The same reason why children's appetite increase during puberty and them suddenly eating a lot more than normal but gaining muscle and bone density over gaining fat. I also believe the timing of meals will affect these hormones and that will definitely affect weight loss
 
I am more inclined to agree with 3J. The law of thermodynamics is all true, well and good but it doesn't tell you everything that's going on. It reasons that energy cannot be created or destroyed, and if something is getting larger then it must be taking more energy can it is consuming but that's the same as asking why is this room so full with people and then answering, the room is getting more filled with people because more people are entering than leaving but it tells you nothing about why more people are entering than leaving in the first place. Why is the excess calories going into fat rather than muscle or bone growth. There's a piece to the puzzle missing. I believe that to be the role hormones play. The same reason why children's appetite increase during puberty and them suddenly eating a lot more than normal but gaining muscle and bone density over gaining fat. I also believe the timing of meals will affect these hormones and that will definitely affect weight loss


this is excellent insight!! well said!
 
I've hear of the renegade diet. Makes sense when you read about it but when you really think about it can't work! There isn't much too back this thought up. Kind of like the paleo diet. Sounds good but can't be proven to work
 
I've hear of the renegade diet. Makes sense when you read about it but when you really think about it can't work! There isn't much too back this thought up. Kind of like the paleo diet. Sounds good but can't be proven to work

To be fair, in the field od dietetics, not many, if any true long term research studies have been conducted to prove any of the advice thsat expects gives to us are really going to make a difference in the long run. No one has done a study more than 15-20 ears long. Meaning, almost all expect advice is based on assumptions. There was a very recent study done on female health that i think was about 5-10 long where they compared women on fitness programs and good diets to those who could live as they wanted and the results and observations of that study where not very compelling at all. Even on the recomondations from the american heart association in 2007 stated that it"It is assumed that a person with a higher calorie expenditure is less likely to gsain weight over time than a person with a lower daily calorie expenditure but so far evidence for such is not particularly compelling. "
So i wouldnt be too quick to to dismiss the logic of other studies done with these new dietsor training programmes without seriously reading the research behind them. No body really knows what the long term effects of any programme may be.
 
I have a bunch if respect for everyone who follows diets to the tee and everyone who has brought up a new diet. At the end of the day everyone is different and responds to diets, training methods etc differently and whatever works for you might not work for others. You are right there isn't much out there to prove other diets right. And I completely respect that.
 
a direct quote from his ad
"
Feast every night at dinner. Some say don***8217;t eat after 6pm. Research after research shows that timing doesn***8217;t matter (how great is that for your social life?)"

So if timing dont matter why is he so intent on all of us skipping our day meals, as though its the day meals timing that is so wrong with our life? wht it boils down to is he saying skip breakfast and lunch. Then eat what ever you want later on. THATS HOW MOST OBESE PEOPLE EAT ANYWAY, !!! It made me go faceplam , as i been eating like that for the past two years as i gave up training and got hooked on painkillers ( had an injury :(). All that diet done was gave me a huge gut and skinny arms ( stopping exercise shouldnt make you go that fat, if you eat good diet)

The very best diet for the average man is still the 3 square meal ( portion controlled meals) and 1-2 snack. There is a reason why people who go prison end up looking better, It cause they get forced in to living a normal life. All theses crazy fads are just silly and distracting people from the truth. The truth is we all know how to eat already, its how we evolved over the last 1000 years its the 2-3 square meals and two snacks. (out forefathers (over the past 1000 yeasr) had brunch instead of breakfast and lunch, and then they ate an early dinner and small snack before bed but then you end up having two square meals and 2 snacks, but that works great too, if you just want a regular sized body or just starting to get fit).
 
I am more inclined to agree with 3J. The law of thermodynamics is all true, well and good but it doesn't tell you everything that's going on. It reasons that energy cannot be created or destroyed, and if something is getting larger then it must be taking more energy can it is consuming but that's the same as asking why is this room so full with people and then answering, the room is getting more filled with people because more people are entering than leaving but it tells you nothing about why more people are entering than leaving in the first place. Why is the excess calories going into fat rather than muscle or bone growth. There's a piece to the puzzle missing. I believe that to be the role hormones play. The same reason why children's appetite increase during puberty and them suddenly eating a lot more than normal but gaining muscle and bone density over gaining fat. I also believe the timing of meals will affect these hormones and that will definitely affect weight loss

The law of thermodynamics tells you enough of what's going on to the point that its sufficient for the masses and those that don't need to know the science behind it to apply it properly. You answered your own analogy, the reason the room is more crowded is because more people are entering than exiting. Everyone has a specific p-ratio (calorie partitioning ratio), rate of protein synthesis, etc. these factors are determined by genetics and the role diet plays on them is minimal. In other words no matter what your dieting philosophy or types of foods you eat, the amount of change it has on these factors is minute and sometimes not even quantifiable. You're p-ratio and rate of muscle protein synthesis are two of the bigger factors in determining where calories go to (muscle or fat) in a surplus and where they come from (muscle or fat) in a deficit. Muscle is also more metabolically active and expensive tissue and not vital to survival whereas fat is less metabolically active but necessary for survival and hormonal functions. If the body were to put 100% energy into muscle, it does so at the sacrifice of fat. The body is adept at realizing fat is more important than muscle for survival which is why you notice it's harder to cut fat the lower your body fat % is. Conversely if you're clinically obese, its easier to build muscle and burn fat bc the body knows you have more than a sufficient supply of fat for survival. The bodies main purpose is to protect and maintain homeostasis and when BB'ers try to maintain a 5'10" 235lbs at 7% BF it realizes that's not homeostasis. That's what we want as individuals not what the body "needs".

You're reasoning of why children's appetite increases and muscle and bone density go up at a rate faster than fat is putting the cart in front of the horse. Hormones do play a key role in that fact but its not due to diet, its due to hormones. You make it sound (whether intentional or not) that its the children's diet that affects these hormones enough to produce the result you mentioned, not that it's the hormones that affect the hunger level and rate of muscle and fat gain. Leptin levels are a key component to hunger, satiety, and energy intake and these levels rise with age. So as a child goes from infancy to adulthood his leptin levels rise with age increasing appetite and lowering satiety to the point where enough nutrients and calories are taken in to support the bodies biological processes. You are right food intake and meal timing will affect hormonal levels, but ONLY MINIMALLY and not to a clinically significant degree. A rough order of importance for fat loss would be:
1) Create an appropriate caloric deficit/set caloric intake appropriately
2) Set protein intake
3) Set dietary fat intake

Everything else can be adjusted and tailored to suit your needs, convenience, and whatnot. Meal timing does not raise your metabolism or "keep the furnace going" the TEF (thermic effect of food) is roughly ~10% no matter whether you eat 6 500-calorie meals or 3 1000-calorie meals. Nutrient timing is grossly overrated since the bodie's digestion and nutrient absorption is dictated by the ileal tract which can and will slow absorption and nutrient release based upping total volume of food intake. Eat a large meal with 80g protein and the body slows digestion to where you absorb almost everything and won't "piss out anymore than 30g of protein". Eat a small meal and the ileal tract ramps up digestion and those nutrients are absorbed quicker. You can get results from the warrior diet (1-2meals a day fasting the remaining time) or the typical 6-8 BB meals. This tells you that meal timing and frequency is not the #1 condition for muscle gain or fat loss. Thermodynamics is the most important aspect to it, to gain muscle or lose fat you must take in an excess or deficit in calories respectively. Meal timing should be a matter of convenience and life-style factors. If you enjoy eating many small meals a day by all means go for it. If due to scheduling and other factors you can only eat a few smaller meals a day than don't obsess over it, the results will not differ enough to matter.

The lower BF you get, talking single digits here, the more important other factors become but this only becomes important for ~5% of us or those wishing to step on stage since the rest of us will not realistically see sub 8% BF for a prolonged period of time. To sum it all up, worrying about hormones affected through diet, nutrient timing, meal frequency and timing, etc is akin to worrying about the things that will make ~5% of the difference. Ppl will obsess over this not realizing its effects are small and therefore will begin to neglect the more important aspects of total calorie intake and macro/micro nutrient sufficiency which will produce most of the result you seek.
 
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I have just heard about the renegade diet and intermitted starvation. Wanted to get your guys opinion on it. How does it work? Could someone give me a sample of a typical day on it.

I am looking to drop about 20lbs, so if you guys could help me out on this diet, I would appreciate the help.

Sorry for bumping, but did you have any long term success with intermitted starvation?
 
This is a GOOD read I like this Thread people voicing opinions no one bashing any one
why cant all the threads be like this
 
For the majority of the population, I think calories in / calories out is a good simplification for how to gain or lose weight. But we wouldn't be on a bodybuilding/steroid centric forum if we were just average people without a ton of regard for how we look or perform in the gym, would we?

The problem, in my opinion, is that while the first law of thermodynamics certainly dictates weight change, there are more complicated factors at play when it comes to body composition and performance. Macro nutrient ratios and timing are a big part of that. The other issue with looking at the situation in such a simplistic view is the time scale on which you are viewing. The body does not operate on a strict 24 hour schedule; at midnight it doesn't suddenly think "Oh! The day is over and I've had 2500 calories which is 500 less than I used today. Let me shed 1/7 of a pound of fat." The body operates on a continual basis and there are different energy demands at different points of the day. By changing your macro nutrient amounts and timing, I think it's possible to optimize how your body utilizes those nutrients and therefore create a more optimal body com**********

In summary, the first law of thermo / calories in vs calories out really only applies to overall weight change, not body com********** Just because you were at a 500 cal deficit every day does not mean you'll have lost a pound of fat at the end of the week, it means you've likely lost a pound of weight. I think the composition of that pound of weight change can be dictated by macro nutrient ratios and timing.
 
For the majority of the population, I think calories in / calories out is a good simplification for how to gain or lose weight. But we wouldn't be on a bodybuilding/steroid centric forum if we were just average people without a ton of regard for how we look or perform in the gym, would we?

The problem, in my opinion, is that while the first law of thermodynamics certainly dictates weight change, there are more complicated factors at play when it comes to body composition and performance. Macro nutrient ratios and timing are a big part of that. The other issue with looking at the situation in such a simplistic view is the time scale on which you are viewing. The body does not operate on a strict 24 hour schedule; at midnight it doesn't suddenly think "Oh! The day is over and I've had 2500 calories which is 500 less than I used today. Let me shed 1/7 of a pound of fat." The body operates on a continual basis and there are different energy demands at different points of the day. By changing your macro nutrient amounts and timing, I think it's possible to optimize how your body utilizes those nutrients and therefore create a more optimal body com**********

In summary, the first law of thermo / calories in vs calories out really only applies to overall weight change, not body com********** Just because you were at a 500 cal deficit every day does not mean you'll have lost a pound of fat at the end of the week, it means you've likely lost a pound of weight. I think the composition of that pound of weight change can be dictated by macro nutrient ratios and timing.

my man, you bumped a 2 year old thread
 
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