Body Recomposition or Body Decomposition?

note the subcutaneous fat under the skin and visceral fat surrounding the organs of the larger image
All too often, clients obsess over body weight, weighing themselves daily on overpriced, deceptively marketed, home scales. While weight loss may be a good measure of assessment for obese individuals, goals change as one reaches a healthy weight. Body composition, a comparison of ones lean to fat mass, is a better reflection of health. While an obese individual’s goal is to lose as much mass as possible, this loss of mass is also at the expense of lean tissues, such as muscle and bone. Once a desired weight, or Body Mass Index, is achieved, its important to reevaluate goals, programming, and diet, shifting the focus to building lean mass, and continuing to burn unwanted body fat. What may have worked to drop a significant amount of pounds, is not going to work for cutting fat and building muscle. Muscle is developed through appropriate doses of resistance training, followed by a proper balance of macronutrients and sleep. Muscle is metabolically active tissue. It requires a lot of calories to develop and a lot to sustain. This increased energy demand to sustain your newly developed muscle mass, taps into fat stores, and devotes consumed calories toward the creation and sustenance of your metabolically active tissues, thereby stripping you of excess body fat. This is a delicate balance, however. Too many calories, and your body will store the excess as fat; to few calories, and your body will shed muscle, conserving calories for vital organ function, thereby decreasing your metabolism. (see Resting Metabolic Rate) To determine your resting metabolic rate, use this formula, or consult with a local dietician to help establish an eating plan that maximizes lean mass development, increases your metabolism, and burns fat! Seek out a fitness professional in your area, and have your body fat measured. Read these steps The Hierarchy of Fatloss, outlined by famed fat loss guru Alwyn Cosgrove, on the most effective activities for developing muscle and burning fat. Hint: Its not cardio!!!!!!!!!!
Dan Daly, CSCSTags: BMI, BMR, Body Composition, body fat, body fat percentage, Fat Loss, RMR, weight loss









I totally agree, Dan. I often find myself telling people that each number is just a part of the whole story. no one number can determine your level of fitness. This information and an annual visit to your primary care physician are highly recommended. The combined information will help a person and their trainer make the correct assessment and develop the right program.
so true, had a blood test done the other day and the doc said all fine, except you are obese…since you are 6’2″ and 235lbs. Then he looked at me and said: oh never mind. Lift your weights, watch the food and add cardio if you really need it