Anyone advocating a low carbohydrate diet while a person is training with lots of cardio is going to

them up unless the person is doing Keto.
If you're only weight training 3 times a week for about 30 minutes, but running every day for 30-40 minutes or more then your diet should be about 50/35/15 Carb/Pro/Fat (calorie percentage wise).
I follow this thread because it's nice to see people getting active, but there seems to be a great deal of information still out there ESPECIALLY in regard to the whole "Carbs are bad for weight loss and muscle gain" thing. It's an outright lie that's been perpetuated by a bunch of low-rate talk show programs, and it's more than likely making people unhealthier.Atkins diet works because it targets people who are sedentary, and it has a carb % that's WAY higher than someone doing Keto (which is what it's based off of).
Here's a few things I learned on my little journey:
-Foods don't make you fat/lose weight. It's calories. Period. Carbs. Protein, Fat; they're all simple bundles of Kcals per gram(granted, they each do different things in the body, but at their base they're just calories). Fat=9 cals a gram, Protein and Carbs are 4 cals a gram. Thus, a fatty food is more calorie dense than an equivalent meal with the other two. HOWEVER, carbohydrates can be packed into tighter spaces, so foods with them can be DECEPTIVELY calorie dense. Just look at simple table sugar.
-DO NOT AVOID SATURATED FAT. This is one of the dumbest

ing things I've heard. While it's true that making too much of your fat saturated can be detrimental, saturated fat is REQUIRED for proper hormone function. If you cut out your saturated fat, you're going to start feeling like shit really quickly. Trust me, I tried it before.
-Avoiding salt if your active is a TERRIBLE idea. If you sweat, you're losing two VERY important electrolytes; Sodium and Potassium. If you eat a lot of meat and Dairy(and bananas!) you'll be ok on potassium, but a lot of people try to avoid sodium in food. If you run 4 miles and are dripping sweat, you could use a little salty snack later. Avoid too much salt and you'll develop an electrolyte imbalance. Again, not pleasant, and I know first hand.
-It really doesn't matter if you eat 3 meals or six. I know everyone claims smaller meals are the best way, but it differs from person to person. If I eat 6 meals a day, it's like falling asleep only to be kicked awake again. I get bloated. Don't eat this way because you feel you have to. JUST MAKE SURE YOU ARE MEETING YOUR CALORIE GOALS.
-Proper post-lifting nutrition is VITAL. Eat a meal about an hour or so after you lift, even if you take a shake.
-Don't buy a ton of supplements because the labels make you a bunch of promises. I rep for a supp company, and even I'll tell you that supp. companies lie through their

ing teeth half the time. There are some good ones out there, but even they only care about their bottom line. It makes me sad to see people buying shit and putting it into their bodies without even knowing what it does.
-HIIT is an EXCELLENT way to burn fat and build endurance and has been proven time and time again. you can do a 40 minute run in 15 minutes with HIIT and burn more calories. start low. Do a few weeks at 4 minutes (jog slowly 30 seconds, run flat-out for 30 repeat until you do 4 reps of jog/sprint) and move up a minute or so each week if you can until you can get 15 or 20. you'll be able to run miles regularly with little problems. Just watch for shin splints (I get them still. My calf muscles are WAY stronger than my tibia).
-DO NOT GIVE UP THE FOOD YOU LOVE. this should be about feeling good, and giving up foods you love and worrying incessantly about counting calories WILL make you miserable and cause you to possibly develop an Eating disorder (*raises hand*). Just don't eat them ALL the time. I eat Chinese buffet twice a week and am still cutting nicely.
-If you want chocolate, get bars that have a cocoa concentration of no less than 75%. chocolate actually has excellent bodybuilding properties.
-For

s sake, DON'T JUST DO CHEST AND BICEPS. It's hilarious that these are the most impressive looking muscles, but they are also the most useless in everyday life. Your shoulders, back, and legs are the MOST VITAL parts. I'm not saying don't do chest/arms, but if you're doing it 5 times a week you're doing it WRONG. and please, PLEASE...if you have only 2 squat racks at your gym...DON'T

ING DO BICEP CURLS IN THEM.
- do lower back exercises as well, or you'll regret it.
-When doing those biceps, DON'T SWING YOUR BACK WHEN CURLING. You're wasting your time, and looking for an injury that way.
That's all for now, maybe more later. If anyone is wondering about me, I used to be 240lbs with over 24%Body fat. I was huge, I was week, and it was causing heart problems. I crash dieted to 180lbs in a few months, developed an eating disorder, and was still at about 20% bodyfat. I started to get into lifting and such, and I'm now at 217lbs and 12% bodyfat (about 18 months lateR). I'm now training myself to get a perfect PT score for the military, so I'm making some adjustments myself. They don't care that my bench went from 185 to 330 in about a year, they just want me to run 2 miles in less than 10 minutes. I'm not going to lie, I'm a decent runner, but it's hard.
GOOD LUCK EVERYBODY, AND DON'T BE AFRAID TO EAT. To be a monster, you have to eat like a monster.