Tag Archives: Bodybuilding

Jo Lindner Dies: ‘Joesthetics’ Bodybuilding Star On Social Media Was 30 – Yahoo Entertainment

  1. Jo Lindner Dies: ‘Joesthetics’ Bodybuilding Star On Social Media Was 30 Yahoo Entertainment
  2. Jo Lindner, German Bodybuilder & Instagram Sensation Has Died Aged 30 DMARGE
  3. How Did ‘Joesthetics’ Die? — Jo Lindner Cause of Death, Explained We Got This Covered
  4. “Bro Please”: Four Days Before Tragic Death, 30-Year-Old Bodybuilder Joesthetics Made an Urgent Request to Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson EssentiallySports
  5. Bodybuilding Youtuber ‘Joesthetics’ dies at 30 as gym partner pays moving tribute SPORTbible
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Jo Lindner Dies: ‘Joesthetics’ Bodybuilding Star On Social Media Was 30 – Deadline

  1. Jo Lindner Dies: ‘Joesthetics’ Bodybuilding Star On Social Media Was 30 Deadline
  2. Jo Lindner, German Bodybuilder & Instagram Sensation Has Died Aged 30 DMARGE
  3. How Did ‘Joesthetics’ Die? — Jo Lindner Cause of Death, Explained We Got This Covered
  4. Bodybuilding Youtuber ‘Joesthetics’ dies at 30 as gym partner pays moving tribute SPORTbible
  5. In an Emotional Note Fitness Icon Joesthetics’ Partner Reveals Reason Behind His Shocking Demise: “Days Ago…Pain His Neck” EssentiallySports
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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‘Reverse Dieting’ Is Not a Weight Loss Cheat Code

Photo: Lolostock (Shutterstock)

To hear the TikTok girlies tell it, there’s a hack that will let you EAT MORE FOOD! While NOT GAINING WEIGHT! And it’s great if you are SICK OF DIETING! Never mind that one can achieve all those goals by a simple trick called “not dieting anymore.” No, it needs a name and a strict protocol: reverse dieting.

The basic idea of reverse dieting is that you slowly add a few more calories to your diet every week. So s you normally maintain your weight on 2,000 calories per day, but you’ve been eating 1,500 calories to lose weight. You might then “reverse diet” by eating 1,600 calories a day next week, 1,700 calories a day the week after that, and so on. Eventually you’ll be back up to 2,000 calories, or maybe even more.

This is not a trend that originated on TikTok. The term seems to have come from bodybuilders, whose sport requires that they engage in extreme cycles of bulking (gaining weight to gain muscle mass) and cutting (losing as much fat as possible before stepping on a stage). While the process can create dazzling physiques, it also fucks with your metabolism and overall health.

Reverse dieting is one approach for transitioning from an extreme cut, to maintenance or bulking: Instead of just pigging out the day after your bodybuilding show, you might rather slowly increase the amount of food you eat as you find your maintenance calories again.

This idea spawned the current trend of influencers pitching reverse dieting as the cure for all your diet-related complaints. But it doesn’t work that way.

The science behind reverse dieting

Some of the claims you’ll hear from thin women flexing their abs on TikTok, and from the bodybuilders saying to just trust them, bro, are true. Among them:

  • Your metabolism adapts to dieting, so over time you have to eat less and less food to keep losing weight (this is a known thing).
  • After dieting a long time, you may be eating a miserably low number of calories.
  • Eating more food will allow your body to stop being so stingy with the calories, and can increase the number of calories your body burns.
  • After increasing your calories, someday you may be able to lose weight again while eating more food than when you were in the depths of your diet.

There are also a number of untruths and half-truths that come up. You may hear that increasing your calories too fast after a diet will make your body pack on fat, or that you can add 1,000 calories and still be losing weight, or something something hormones something cortisol. (Scroll long enough on fitness TikTok and somebody will explain that all your problems are due to cortisol. Take a drink.)

In any case, this is where “reverse dieting” comes in. Supposedly the cure to all of these ills is simply that you need to add 50 to 100 calories to your diet each week. The process is slow and requires patience, but stick to it and you too could look like this girl (imagine me moving my head to point at the before-and-after photos I’ve greenscreened behind me) on 2,400 calories instead of 1,200.

So what’s actually true about reverse dieting, and why is everybody so into it? Let’s take a closer look.

When it goes right, “reverse dieting” is just “not dieting” but with more rules

After reading all of those bullet points above, you might think, OK, so why not just stop dieting? You’ll get to eat more food, your body will burn more calories, and from there you can either diet again or—crazy idea here—just not diet anymore. Heck, you could give gaining weight a try.

And that is, in fact, the real answer. Just stop dieting. The world will not end. You can eat food again, and you will be fine. So why reverse diet?

As Eric Trexler, a nutrition and metabolism researcher, puts it here, the original reverse dieters’ goal was to smoothly transition from a calorie deficit, to maintenance, to their first bulk after a bodybuilding contest without gaining any more fat than they needed to. One problem with this approach is that after bodybuilders diet that hard, they need to regain fat. You can’t stay dangerously lean forever, and that’s true whether you’re a meathead or a TikTok girlie.

On social media, reverse dieting is often described as a way of continuing to diet while eating more calories. It’s true that if you’re in a 500 calorie deficit and you’re only adding 50 calories a week, you’ll continue to be in a deficit for a very long time—10 weeks, at that rate. Trexler notes that “this would serve only to delay even the most basic and immediate aspects of recovery, and make [the dieter’s] life unnecessarily difficult.”

Reverse dieting is not a cure for chronic dieting

There are two things going on here, I think. One is relatively harmless. Let’s say you’ve been on a diet and you’re ready to start gaining weight. Instead of eating an extra 1000 calories each day (to go from a 500 calorie deficit to a 500 calorie surplus), you can eat an extra few hundred this week, and add a few hundred more next week, and so on. You’ll be less surprised by changes in your weight (eating more food means there’s more food in your belly, so the scale might tick up a bit just from that) and it may be easier to figure out approximately how many calories you should eat going forward.

But that’s not how it’s being described on social media. Thin women are telling chronic dieters that they can eat more food while continuing to be very thin, if only they follow a strict reverse dieting protocol. But the strictness and the expectations can be damaging on their own.

For an extreme example, check out this video from a registered dietitian and eating disorder specialist. She describes a woman who was getting help for eating disorder recovery. The woman had such a low body weight, with associated health issues, that the dietitian says she “need[ed] to gain weight immediately.” But instead of following guidance from her care team that would have her gaining a pound a week, she secretly put herself on a reverse diet protocol. By adding just 50 calories each week to the too-low amount she was already eating, it took her three months to gain a whole pound of body mass—basically delaying her recovery by three months.

And here’s where I think we need to take a closer look at why reverse dieting posts are so popular in corners of social media that are focused on weight loss. While eating more sounds healthier—it’s a good start!—following a strict reverse diet is just another way of restricting.

Reverse dieting is sometimes just a way to restrict more

Let’s say, as in many of the examples on TikTok, that you are somebody currently eating 1,200 calories (officially a starvation diet) and no longer losing weight. Even if you are a small woman who never exercises—maybe because you don’t have the energy?—a healthy amount of daily calories will likely be 1,600 or more. So you’re supposed to eat 1,250 next week? And then 1,300 the week after that? At that rate, it would take eight weeks to get you up to the number that should be mere maintenance for you. Even if you don’t have an eating disorder, you’re creating the same problem for yourself as the ED patient in the dietitian’s case study.

What’s even more concerning to me is that 50 or even 100 calories is an extremely precise amount. If I’m aiming to eat 2,000 calories a day, maybe some days I’ll have 1,950 and some days I’ll have 2,100. Over time it balances out. But if you’re trying to hit exactly 1,850 and not 1,900 (because 1,900 is next week’s target) you’ll have to track your food meticulously. This is the kind of lifestyle where you’ll be weighing your toast before and after you spread the peanut butter, and you won’t want to eat at a restaurant, because how many calories are in each menu item? What if they’re heavy handed with the sauce?

In my scroll through #reversedieting TikTok, I found women saying that they had to miss out on family meals and deal with concern from their friends during their reverse diet. Clearly, they have not taken a step very far out of diet-land. For these folks, it actually seems like the “reverse” is essentially a way of extending their diet. You could be eating at maintenance for those eight weeks, but you’re restricting instead. And then what? Reverse dieting is often described as a way of increasing your calorie burn so you can diet again.

Even when the influencers show themselves gaining muscle and eating genuinely healthy numbers of calories (assuming that the numbers they cite are true), it’s still all couched in language around leanness and thinness, and features photos of their abs. Prioritizing leanness even while gaining muscle is some backwards-ass shit. It’s okay to not be able to see your abs while you are trying to make yourself bigger. As strongman JF Caron famously put it, “abs is not a thing of power. Is just a sign you don’t eat enough.”

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A Bodybuilding Coach Shared His 10 ‘Underrated’ Exercises

Bodybuilding Coach Shares ‘Underrated’ Exerciseseclipse_images – Getty Images

Bodybuilding coach Eugene Teo regularly shares advice on how to safely build strength and muscle while avoiding injury, and in a recent video on his channel he breaks down what he feels to be some of the most “underrated” exercises that you should try incorporating into your next workout. These include exercises that people don’t prioritize or simply don’t do at all, as well as some different variations on more common movements.

Underhand grip bench press

“Apart from feeling a little bit strange at first through the hands and the wrists, the real reason why we do this is to create a narrower elbow path,” explains Teo. “Anatomically, this might be a better position for your chest muscles to have better leverage over your arm… What this means is your chest muscles can get a better stretch and work more effectively.”

High cable row

Teo recommends this exercise specifically for the way it lines up your back muscles in comparison to a traditional cable row. “Most people think of either vertical or horizontal pulling, but I believe diagonal pulls are extremely underrated,” he says.

Copenhagen plank

Often used as an activation or rehab exercise, this targets the adductors, which are often an overlooked muscle group in lower-body workouts, but play an important supporting role in moves like the deadlift. Teo favors this plank variation as it can be done either as a static or dynamic exercise.

Leg press

“While most people probably are doing leg presses, I think they get pushed aside a lot for free weight exercises like barbell squats,” says Teo. “Leg presses are one of the most valuable ways to gain a lot of lower body strength and to push your legs to completely different limits than you can probably ever achieve with squats.”

Rope pulldown

Pulldowns are a fairly common exercise, but it’s the rope component here that Teo believes is a real game-changer. “It allows you to customize your grip and find more comfortable positions than a fixed bar may provide,” he says, “and allows you to create this outwards force as you pull down… this can help coordinate arm and upper back muscles to work together.”

Split squat

Again, the split squat is probably already a part of your leg day routine, but it’s more frequently used as an accessory exercise than as one of the “meat and potato” movements. But as Teo points out, there are unique benefits to the split squat, such as how it challenges your rotation at the hip, forcing you to to train for stablity and mobility as well as strength.

Hyperextension

“The hyperextension literally is just a stiff-legged deadlift that’s been rotated forwards 45 degrees or so,” says Teo. “This means it can be categorized with the same priority you might give a deadlift, and really hammer your posterior chain.”

Prone Y raise

“One extra challenge here is to not just do them on an incline or standing upright, but laying flat or as close to flat as possible. This will really challenge the upper back and shoulder muscles in their fully shortened position, which is notoriously very weak and undertrained,” says Teo, who recommends using lighter weights for this one.

Pushup

Sure, this is a staple bodyweight exercise, but Teo includes it in this list because he believes it has one unique benefit over other movements: it gives you more freedom at the shoulderblades to work the serratus anterior, which is crucial for shoulder function and mobility.

Dead hang

“This is a super simple and accessible way to introduce some loaded stretching for the shoulders and back muscles into your workouts,” says Teo. “You can work with different amounts of assistance or progression, and even add weight. You can use it for grip strength or flexibility training with the use of straps, and these are simply one of my absolute favorite ways to both start and finish a workout to get me feeling nice and loose.”

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