I've been IF my whole life, and I am fine and still the same weight I was in college, even after 3 pregnancies. I work out in the morning, have my first meal of the day around 12-1pm. |
Fasting is great when you are trying to figure out what food is causing you problems.
Light weights is good to strengthen your bones since menopause triggers a lot of issues and reduce your muscle mass. So, eat more proteins. It's like half your plate should be proteins and veg. A small portion of carbs unless you do a lot of running. |
Is Peloton classified as strength training? I thought it was just cardio... Why do you feel you need to eat at 6am? before doing Peloton? (your method of "strength training) |
Peloton has all types of fitness classes, including strength training. |
If a person is on a new program pushing limits then it’s better to eat after workout. Some people have goals such as building muscles or increasing speed/stamina. don’t assume everyone is working out for the looks. |
OP, you need to find what works for your body and schedule. As a PP said, the best approach is one that you can sustain.
Some people can lift without eating. Some people get shaky and weak if they haven't eaten. It sounds like it's a challenge for you, and a commitment to IF is superseding what your body is telling you. IMO it's better to eat and get through a good solid workout than to muddle through to cling to IF. |
I don't do IF or any type of exercise at 6:30 am. I do eat breakfast around 6 am, work a full day, eat lunch, work out before dinner, eat dinner pretty late, eat snacks, eat dessert, etc. My metabolism is still working in my early 50s I guess.
I haven't been gaining weight and I feel strong and fit but I keep reading I need to lift heavy (or else). I only have so much time and I really enjoy my 60 minute cardio workouts 5x per week. I do a lot of core work too and some of my cardio is 20 miles of climbing on the bike which seems to use large muscle groups. Am I just going to wither up if I'm not doing leg presses or benching 300 pounds? |