Anima
Don Juan
Although I'm off schedule now (and not working out due to family illness; I'm fifteen and go with my dad), I workout for an hour every weekday, and rest during the weekends, excluding the labor I might do during my rest days. Since you can process 30g of protein an hour, I take three or four 30g scoops and mix them with milk in my Blender Bottle. Then I spread that over three or four hours (one hour per 30g). Recently, however, I realized that I could easily fit 300g of protein over ten hours of my schedule. So I tried for three days last week (i.e. 90g over first, second, and fourth block, with an estimated 10g during third block lunch on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday). Even with no exercise, my arms bulked up. So I'm thinking about incorporating this into my WIP pre- and post-workout routine. Here's what I have so far:
90g on days I don't workout
300g on days I do
Creatine right before workout
I basically have what I'm doing outside of the gym set in stone, but I basically want to ask if it's safe to take in 300g of protein via shake over ten hours. In addition, I just read on BB that I need about 6-13% BFP to have things like a v-line, six-pack, etc. I'm thinking that 9% is about right for me, but I'm not sure what I'm at now (I think around 14-15%). I already know that HIIT is my best bet, since I'm most likely already very low. I just don't know how I'd find an electric monitor to use (I don't really feel like manual measurements would be as accurate).
90g on days I don't workout
300g on days I do
Creatine right before workout
I basically have what I'm doing outside of the gym set in stone, but I basically want to ask if it's safe to take in 300g of protein via shake over ten hours. In addition, I just read on BB that I need about 6-13% BFP to have things like a v-line, six-pack, etc. I'm thinking that 9% is about right for me, but I'm not sure what I'm at now (I think around 14-15%). I already know that HIIT is my best bet, since I'm most likely already very low. I just don't know how I'd find an electric monitor to use (I don't really feel like manual measurements would be as accurate).