How much protein per day for 16 year old (protein powder)

Anonymous
Try this site

www.feastgood.co
Anonymous
www.feastgood.com

Oops
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Op, I post this more for other parents who might be reading. When my football/weight lifting young teen wanted protein powder, he didn't even know what it was. Just saw others using it. He would have scooped anything and put it in his milk. Scary. I knew about Instant Breakfast since it had been around forever. Figured it would be safer than some non regulated supplement protein powder.


This. I would meet with a nutritionist. Protein powders are unregulated and not the first thing your teen should consider. More natural sources is best


I have a 19 years old and a 17 years old, and they both gained about 30 lbs of lean muscle over this past spring & summer.  The 19 years old is 5'11 and currently at 178 lbs while the 17 years old is 5'10 and currently at 170lbs.  I took them to a special nutritionist and she came up with how much protein and calories they could consume for the day.  I then took them to a physician to make sure that it would be ok for them to consume that much calories/protein intake.  This is what they did to bulk up 30 lbs of lean muscles:

For breakfast:-
5 serving of Steel cut oatmeal on Almond milk with blueberries, strawberries, banana and blackberries
- six eggs with zucchini, spinach and bell peppers,
- two whole oranges, one whole avocado with some honey

For mid morning snack:
- one whole avocado serving on whole grain bread with some honey
five serving of pistachio and cashews,

For lunch:
- A big bowl of Salad with cherry tomatoes, serving with 1.5 lbs of chicken breast and quinoa,
- a bowl of onion soup,- five serving of strawberries, mango, blueberries,

For mid afternoon lunch:
- One whole avocado on whole grain bread,
- a glass of almond milk,
- five serving of almonds and peanuts,

For dinner:
- 2 lbs of either steamed rockfish salmon, lobsters, crawfish, or tuna serving on brown rice,
- 1 lbs of steamed broccoli and cauliflower,- a bowl of tomato or Lentil soup,

They also workout at Equinox twice a day,  two hours in the morning in the gym and two hours in the afternoon, swimming. 

Kids should not be taking protein powder.  These things are not regulated by the FDA and will have long term health issues, IMHO.


Why? This seems like an unsustainable amount of food to be preparing, not including feeding yourself, spouse, other kids. Plus 4 hrs of exercising? Is this just for the aesthetics of being bigger/more muscular?


Fortunately, I am already retired in my late 30's after my FinTech startup was acquired by another company and I cashed out all my shares, enough not to work another day in my life.  My husband, however, is still working.  It would not have been possible if I was working full time.  It usually takes me about 90 minutes each day to prepare the food.  And yes, the boys exercise four hours everyday at Equinox during the summer.  They do two hours at Equinox during the school year.  My husband was a professional soccer player in Europe when he was young and he knows about the side effects of taking protein powder supplements, and that our kids are not allowed to take them. 

Your kid can bulk up and gain weight with just healthy eating.  Lots of chicken, fish, shrimp, lobsters, veggies such as broccoli, cauliflower, asparagus, spinach, kale, and fruits such as avocados, bananas, blueberries, black berries, strawberries, oranges.  Add lentils, chickpeas, tofu, quinoa, and brown rice and your kids will gain a lot of muscles in no time. 



I can't imagine building my life around making my sons bodies look a certain way, particularly given that one is an adult. Are these kids also working a full time summer job? Socializing? Learning how to do things like cook their own meals? Attending or getting ready to attend college? Fetishizing their bodies in this way is so disturbing.


Oh FFS this is NOT about “how their bodies look” this is about building muscle for sports performance. And it doesn’t take that much time and effort and money to eat big like this.


And yet you described how their bodies changed, and not any changes in their sports performance. You didn't even mention whether they play sports.

You wrote that your kids are spending 4 hours, divided into two visits, at the gym each day. I don't see how that fits with a full time job.

I also don't think a mom should be selecting or preparing 5 meals a day for their ADULT child.


I am the PP. I don't tell my kids what to eat and what not to eat. Both kids got to hang out with a mid-tier professional soccer team in Europe during Christmas last year and they saw first hand what those guys eat and workout to get themselves in shape. When my kids came back to the US, they were determined to do the same, to be healthy.

About going to the gym for four hours everyday. The 19 years old just finished his internship with Apple. He was working remotely so he got plenty of free time to go to the gym for four hours everyday. He is playing soccer for a D2 university. The 17 years old is a rising HS senior and he is getting himself stronger to try for the soccer team in the fall. How is it not possible? The kids are not working full time.



So you sold your company for bazillions of dollars. Your sons work out four hours per day and hang out with professional soccer players. They eat multiple pounds of fish per day. And your 19 year old has an internship with Apple.

Got it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Op, I post this more for other parents who might be reading. When my football/weight lifting young teen wanted protein powder, he didn't even know what it was. Just saw others using it. He would have scooped anything and put it in his milk. Scary. I knew about Instant Breakfast since it had been around forever. Figured it would be safer than some non regulated supplement protein powder.


This. I would meet with a nutritionist. Protein powders are unregulated and not the first thing your teen should consider. More natural sources is best


I have a 19 years old and a 17 years old, and they both gained about 30 lbs of lean muscle over this past spring & summer.  The 19 years old is 5'11 and currently at 178 lbs while the 17 years old is 5'10 and currently at 170lbs.  I took them to a special nutritionist and she came up with how much protein and calories they could consume for the day.  I then took them to a physician to make sure that it would be ok for them to consume that much calories/protein intake.  This is what they did to bulk up 30 lbs of lean muscles:

For breakfast:-
5 serving of Steel cut oatmeal on Almond milk with blueberries, strawberries, banana and blackberries
- six eggs with zucchini, spinach and bell peppers,


- two whole oranges, one whole avocado with some honey

For mid morning snack:
- one whole avocado serving on whole grain bread with some honey
five serving of pistachio and cashews,

For lunch:
- A big bowl of Salad with cherry tomatoes, serving with 1.5 lbs of chicken breast and quinoa,
- a bowl of onion soup,- five serving of strawberries, mango, blueberries,

For mid afternoon lunch:
- One whole avocado on whole grain bread,
- a glass of almond milk,
- five serving of almonds and peanuts,

For dinner:
- 2 lbs of either steamed rockfish salmon, lobsters, crawfish, or tuna serving on brown rice,
- 1 lbs of steamed broccoli and cauliflower,- a bowl of tomato or Lentil soup,

They also workout at Equinox twice a day,  two hours in the morning in the gym and two hours in the afternoon, swimming. 

Kids should not be taking protein powder.  These things are not regulated by the FDA and will have long term health issues, IMHO.


Why? This seems like an unsustainable amount of food to be preparing, not including feeding yourself, spouse, other kids. Plus 4 hrs of exercising? Is this just for the aesthetics of being bigger/more muscular?


Fortunately, I am already retired in my late 30's after my FinTech startup was acquired by another company and I cashed out all my shares, enough not to work another day in my life.  My husband, however, is still working.  It would not have been possible if I was working full time.  It usually takes me about 90 minutes each day to prepare the food.  And yes, the boys exercise four hours everyday at Equinox during the summer.  They do two hours at Equinox during the school year.  My husband was a professional soccer player in Europe when he was young and he knows about the side effects of taking protein powder supplements, and that our kids are not allowed to take them. 

Your kid can bulk up and gain weight with just healthy eating.  Lots of chicken, fish, shrimp, lobsters, veggies such as broccoli, cauliflower, asparagus, spinach, kale, and fruits such as avocados, bananas, blueberries, black berries, strawberries, oranges.  Add lentils, chickpeas, tofu, quinoa, and brown rice and your kids will gain a lot of muscles in no time. 



I can't imagine building my life around making my sons bodies look a certain way, particularly given that one is an adult. Are these kids also working a full time summer job? Socializing? Learning how to do things like cook their own meals? Attending or getting ready to attend college? Fetishizing their bodies in this way is so disturbing.


Oh FFS this is NOT about “how their bodies look” this is about building muscle for sports performance. And it doesn’t take that much time and effort and money to eat big like this.


And yet you described how their bodies changed, and not any changes in their sports performance. You didn't even mention whether they play sports.

You wrote that your kids are spending 4 hours, divided into two visits, at the gym each day. I don't see how that fits with a full time job.

I also don't think a mom should be selecting or preparing 5 meals a day for their ADULT child.


I am the PP. I don't tell my kids what to eat and what not to eat. Both kids got to hang out with a mid-tier professional soccer team in Europe during Christmas last year and they saw first hand what those guys eat and workout to get themselves in shape. When my kids came back to the US, they were determined to do the same, to be healthy.

About going to the gym for four hours everyday. The 19 years old just finished his internship with Apple. He was working remotely so he got plenty of free time to go to the gym for four hours everyday. He is playing soccer for a D2 university. The 17 years old is a rising HS senior and he is getting himself stronger to try for the soccer team in the fall. How is it not possible? The kids are not working full time.



That’s a whole bunch of training and nutrition for playing on a lowly D2 team. Lol
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Op, I post this more for other parents who might be reading. When my football/weight lifting young teen wanted protein powder, he didn't even know what it was. Just saw others using it. He would have scooped anything and put it in his milk. Scary. I knew about Instant Breakfast since it had been around forever. Figured it would be safer than some non regulated supplement protein powder.


This. I would meet with a nutritionist. Protein powders are unregulated and not the first thing your teen should consider. More natural sources is best


I have a 19 years old and a 17 years old, and they both gained about 30 lbs of lean muscle over this past spring & summer.  The 19 years old is 5'11 and currently at 178 lbs while the 17 years old is 5'10 and currently at 170lbs.  I took them to a special nutritionist and she came up with how much protein and calories they could consume for the day.  I then took them to a physician to make sure that it would be ok for them to consume that much calories/protein intake.  This is what they did to bulk up 30 lbs of lean muscles:

For breakfast:-
5 serving of Steel cut oatmeal on Almond milk with blueberries, strawberries, banana and blackberries
- six eggs with zucchini, spinach and bell peppers,
- two whole oranges, one whole avocado with some honey

For mid morning snack:
- one whole avocado serving on whole grain bread with some honey
five serving of pistachio and cashews,

For lunch:
- A big bowl of Salad with cherry tomatoes, serving with 1.5 lbs of chicken breast and quinoa,
- a bowl of onion soup,- five serving of strawberries, mango, blueberries,

For mid afternoon lunch:
- One whole avocado on whole grain bread,
- a glass of almond milk,
- five serving of almonds and peanuts,

For dinner:
- 2 lbs of either steamed rockfish salmon, lobsters, crawfish, or tuna serving on brown rice,
- 1 lbs of steamed broccoli and cauliflower,- a bowl of tomato or Lentil soup,

They also workout at Equinox twice a day,  two hours in the morning in the gym and two hours in the afternoon, swimming. 

Kids should not be taking protein powder.  These things are not regulated by the FDA and will have long term health issues, IMHO.


Why? This seems like an unsustainable amount of food to be preparing, not including feeding yourself, spouse, other kids. Plus 4 hrs of exercising? Is this just for the aesthetics of being bigger/more muscular?


Fortunately, I am already retired in my late 30's after my FinTech startup was acquired by another company and I cashed out all my shares, enough not to work another day in my life.  My husband, however, is still working.  It would not have been possible if I was working full time.  It usually takes me about 90 minutes each day to prepare the food.  And yes, the boys exercise four hours everyday at Equinox during the summer.  They do two hours at Equinox during the school year.  My husband was a professional soccer player in Europe when he was young and he knows about the side effects of taking protein powder supplements, and that our kids are not allowed to take them. 

Your kid can bulk up and gain weight with just healthy eating.  Lots of chicken, fish, shrimp, lobsters, veggies such as broccoli, cauliflower, asparagus, spinach, kale, and fruits such as avocados, bananas, blueberries, black berries, strawberries, oranges.  Add lentils, chickpeas, tofu, quinoa, and brown rice and your kids will gain a lot of muscles in no time. 



I can't imagine building my life around making my sons bodies look a certain way, particularly given that one is an adult. Are these kids also working a full time summer job? Socializing? Learning how to do things like cook their own meals? Attending or getting ready to attend college? Fetishizing their bodies in this way is so disturbing.


I can’t imagine the gall to tell someone they are a terrible parent and person for taking the time to meet with a nutritionist and prepare meals to correspond with their children’s nutritional needs.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Op, I post this more for other parents who might be reading. When my football/weight lifting young teen wanted protein powder, he didn't even know what it was. Just saw others using it. He would have scooped anything and put it in his milk. Scary. I knew about Instant Breakfast since it had been around forever. Figured it would be safer than some non regulated supplement protein powder.


This. I would meet with a nutritionist. Protein powders are unregulated and not the first thing your teen should consider. More natural sources is best


I have a 19 years old and a 17 years old, and they both gained about 30 lbs of lean muscle over this past spring & summer.  The 19 years old is 5'11 and currently at 178 lbs while the 17 years old is 5'10 and currently at 170lbs.  I took them to a special nutritionist and she came up with how much protein and calories they could consume for the day.  I then took them to a physician to make sure that it would be ok for them to consume that much calories/protein intake.  This is what they did to bulk up 30 lbs of lean muscles:

For breakfast:-
5 serving of Steel cut oatmeal on Almond milk with blueberries, strawberries, banana and blackberries
- six eggs with zucchini, spinach and bell peppers,
- two whole oranges, one whole avocado with some honey

For mid morning snack:
- one whole avocado serving on whole grain bread with some honey
five serving of pistachio and cashews,

For lunch:
- A big bowl of Salad with cherry tomatoes, serving with 1.5 lbs of chicken breast and quinoa,
- a bowl of onion soup,- five serving of strawberries, mango, blueberries,

For mid afternoon lunch:
- One whole avocado on whole grain bread,
- a glass of almond milk,
- five serving of almonds and peanuts,

For dinner:
- 2 lbs of either steamed rockfish salmon, lobsters, crawfish, or tuna serving on brown rice,
- 1 lbs of steamed broccoli and cauliflower,- a bowl of tomato or Lentil soup,

They also workout at Equinox twice a day,  two hours in the morning in the gym and two hours in the afternoon, swimming. 

Kids should not be taking protein powder.  These things are not regulated by the FDA and will have long term health issues, IMHO.


Why? This seems like an unsustainable amount of food to be preparing, not including feeding yourself, spouse, other kids. Plus 4 hrs of exercising? Is this just for the aesthetics of being bigger/more muscular?


Fortunately, I am already retired in my late 30's after my FinTech startup was acquired by another company and I cashed out all my shares, enough not to work another day in my life.  My husband, however, is still working.  It would not have been possible if I was working full time.  It usually takes me about 90 minutes each day to prepare the food.  And yes, the boys exercise four hours everyday at Equinox during the summer.  They do two hours at Equinox during the school year.  My husband was a professional soccer player in Europe when he was young and he knows about the side effects of taking protein powder supplements, and that our kids are not allowed to take them. 

Your kid can bulk up and gain weight with just healthy eating.  Lots of chicken, fish, shrimp, lobsters, veggies such as broccoli, cauliflower, asparagus, spinach, kale, and fruits such as avocados, bananas, blueberries, black berries, strawberries, oranges.  Add lentils, chickpeas, tofu, quinoa, and brown rice and your kids will gain a lot of muscles in no time. 



I can't imagine building my life around making my sons bodies look a certain way, particularly given that one is an adult. Are these kids also working a full time summer job? Socializing? Learning how to do things like cook their own meals? Attending or getting ready to attend college? Fetishizing their bodies in this way is so disturbing.


Oh FFS this is NOT about “how their bodies look” this is about building muscle for sports performance. And it doesn’t take that much time and effort and money to eat big like this.


And yet you described how their bodies changed, and not any changes in their sports performance. You didn't even mention whether they play sports.

You wrote that your kids are spending 4 hours, divided into two visits, at the gym each day. I don't see how that fits with a full time job.

I also don't think a mom should be selecting or preparing 5 meals a day for their ADULT child.


I am the PP. I don't tell my kids what to eat and what not to eat. Both kids got to hang out with a mid-tier professional soccer team in Europe during Christmas last year and they saw first hand what those guys eat and workout to get themselves in shape. When my kids came back to the US, they were determined to do the same, to be healthy.

About going to the gym for four hours everyday. The 19 years old just finished his internship with Apple. He was working remotely so he got plenty of free time to go to the gym for four hours everyday. He is playing soccer for a D2 university. The 17 years old is a rising HS senior and he is getting himself stronger to try for the soccer team in the fall. How is it not possible? The kids are not working full time.



So you sold your company for bazillions of dollars. Your sons work out four hours per day and hang out with professional soccer players. They eat multiple pounds of fish per day. And your 19 year old has an internship with Apple.

Got it.


In preparation for high school soccer try-outs, though!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Op, I post this more for other parents who might be reading. When my football/weight lifting young teen wanted protein powder, he didn't even know what it was. Just saw others using it. He would have scooped anything and put it in his milk. Scary. I knew about Instant Breakfast since it had been around forever. Figured it would be safer than some non regulated supplement protein powder.


This. I would meet with a nutritionist. Protein powders are unregulated and not the first thing your teen should consider. More natural sources is best


I have a 19 years old and a 17 years old, and they both gained about 30 lbs of lean muscle over this past spring & summer.  The 19 years old is 5'11 and currently at 178 lbs while the 17 years old is 5'10 and currently at 170lbs.  I took them to a special nutritionist and she came up with how much protein and calories they could consume for the day.  I then took them to a physician to make sure that it would be ok for them to consume that much calories/protein intake.  This is what they did to bulk up 30 lbs of lean muscles:

For breakfast:-
5 serving of Steel cut oatmeal on Almond milk with blueberries, strawberries, banana and blackberries
- six eggs with zucchini, spinach and bell peppers,
- two whole oranges, one whole avocado with some honey

For mid morning snack:
- one whole avocado serving on whole grain bread with some honey
five serving of pistachio and cashews,

For lunch:
- A big bowl of Salad with cherry tomatoes, serving with 1.5 lbs of chicken breast and quinoa,
- a bowl of onion soup,- five serving of strawberries, mango, blueberries,

For mid afternoon lunch:
- One whole avocado on whole grain bread,
- a glass of almond milk,
- five serving of almonds and peanuts,

For dinner:
- 2 lbs of either steamed rockfish salmon, lobsters, crawfish, or tuna serving on brown rice,
- 1 lbs of steamed broccoli and cauliflower,- a bowl of tomato or Lentil soup,

They also workout at Equinox twice a day,  two hours in the morning in the gym and two hours in the afternoon, swimming. 

Kids should not be taking protein powder.  These things are not regulated by the FDA and will have long term health issues, IMHO.


Why? This seems like an unsustainable amount of food to be preparing, not including feeding yourself, spouse, other kids. Plus 4 hrs of exercising? Is this just for the aesthetics of being bigger/more muscular?


Fortunately, I am already retired in my late 30's after my FinTech startup was acquired by another company and I cashed out all my shares, enough not to work another day in my life.  My husband, however, is still working.  It would not have been possible if I was working full time.  It usually takes me about 90 minutes each day to prepare the food.  And yes, the boys exercise four hours everyday at Equinox during the summer.  They do two hours at Equinox during the school year.  My husband was a professional soccer player in Europe when he was young and he knows about the side effects of taking protein powder supplements, and that our kids are not allowed to take them. 

Your kid can bulk up and gain weight with just healthy eating.  Lots of chicken, fish, shrimp, lobsters, veggies such as broccoli, cauliflower, asparagus, spinach, kale, and fruits such as avocados, bananas, blueberries, black berries, strawberries, oranges.  Add lentils, chickpeas, tofu, quinoa, and brown rice and your kids will gain a lot of muscles in no time. 



I can't imagine building my life around making my sons bodies look a certain way, particularly given that one is an adult. Are these kids also working a full time summer job? Socializing? Learning how to do things like cook their own meals? Attending or getting ready to attend college? Fetishizing their bodies in this way is so disturbing.


Oh FFS this is NOT about “how their bodies look” this is about building muscle for sports performance. And it doesn’t take that much time and effort and money to eat big like this.


And yet you described how their bodies changed, and not any changes in their sports performance. You didn't even mention whether they play sports.

You wrote that your kids are spending 4 hours, divided into two visits, at the gym each day. I don't see how that fits with a full time job.

I also don't think a mom should be selecting or preparing 5 meals a day for their ADULT child.


I am the PP. I don't tell my kids what to eat and what not to eat. Both kids got to hang out with a mid-tier professional soccer team in Europe during Christmas last year and they saw first hand what those guys eat and workout to get themselves in shape. When my kids came back to the US, they were determined to do the same, to be healthy.

About going to the gym for four hours everyday. The 19 years old just finished his internship with Apple. He was working remotely so he got plenty of free time to go to the gym for four hours everyday. He is playing soccer for a D2 university. The 17 years old is a rising HS senior and he is getting himself stronger to try for the soccer team in the fall. How is it not possible? The kids are not working full time.



So you sold your company for bazillions of dollars. Your sons work out four hours per day and hang out with professional soccer players. They eat multiple pounds of fish per day. And your 19 year old has an internship with Apple.

Got it.


In preparation for high school soccer try-outs, though!


(shrug) beats spending four hours a day playing xbox or smoking weed.

The odds of a male high school soccer player being on a college soccer roster are about 12:1. The one beat 11 other guys to make a college roster is the one who spent four hours a day working out and getting better.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Op, I post this more for other parents who might be reading. When my football/weight lifting young teen wanted protein powder, he didn't even know what it was. Just saw others using it. He would have scooped anything and put it in his milk. Scary. I knew about Instant Breakfast since it had been around forever. Figured it would be safer than some non regulated supplement protein powder.


This. I would meet with a nutritionist. Protein powders are unregulated and not the first thing your teen should consider. More natural sources is best


I have a 19 years old and a 17 years old, and they both gained about 30 lbs of lean muscle over this past spring & summer.  The 19 years old is 5'11 and currently at 178 lbs while the 17 years old is 5'10 and currently at 170lbs.  I took them to a special nutritionist and she came up with how much protein and calories they could consume for the day.  I then took them to a physician to make sure that it would be ok for them to consume that much calories/protein intake.  This is what they did to bulk up 30 lbs of lean muscles:

For breakfast:-
5 serving of Steel cut oatmeal on Almond milk with blueberries, strawberries, banana and blackberries
- six eggs with zucchini, spinach and bell peppers,
- two whole oranges, one whole avocado with some honey

For mid morning snack:
- one whole avocado serving on whole grain bread with some honey
five serving of pistachio and cashews,

For lunch:
- A big bowl of Salad with cherry tomatoes, serving with 1.5 lbs of chicken breast and quinoa,
- a bowl of onion soup,- five serving of strawberries, mango, blueberries,

For mid afternoon lunch:
- One whole avocado on whole grain bread,
- a glass of almond milk,
- five serving of almonds and peanuts,

For dinner:
- 2 lbs of either steamed rockfish salmon, lobsters, crawfish, or tuna serving on brown rice,
- 1 lbs of steamed broccoli and cauliflower,- a bowl of tomato or Lentil soup,

They also workout at Equinox twice a day,  two hours in the morning in the gym and two hours in the afternoon, swimming. 

Kids should not be taking protein powder.  These things are not regulated by the FDA and will have long term health issues, IMHO.


Why? This seems like an unsustainable amount of food to be preparing, not including feeding yourself, spouse, other kids. Plus 4 hrs of exercising? Is this just for the aesthetics of being bigger/more muscular?


Fortunately, I am already retired in my late 30's after my FinTech startup was acquired by another company and I cashed out all my shares, enough not to work another day in my life.  My husband, however, is still working.  It would not have been possible if I was working full time.  It usually takes me about 90 minutes each day to prepare the food.  And yes, the boys exercise four hours everyday at Equinox during the summer.  They do two hours at Equinox during the school year.  My husband was a professional soccer player in Europe when he was young and he knows about the side effects of taking protein powder supplements, and that our kids are not allowed to take them. 

Your kid can bulk up and gain weight with just healthy eating.  Lots of chicken, fish, shrimp, lobsters, veggies such as broccoli, cauliflower, asparagus, spinach, kale, and fruits such as avocados, bananas, blueberries, black berries, strawberries, oranges.  Add lentils, chickpeas, tofu, quinoa, and brown rice and your kids will gain a lot of muscles in no time. 



I can't imagine building my life around making my sons bodies look a certain way, particularly given that one is an adult. Are these kids also working a full time summer job? Socializing? Learning how to do things like cook their own meals? Attending or getting ready to attend college? Fetishizing their bodies in this way is so disturbing.


Oh FFS this is NOT about “how their bodies look” this is about building muscle for sports performance. And it doesn’t take that much time and effort and money to eat big like this.


And yet you described how their bodies changed, and not any changes in their sports performance. You didn't even mention whether they play sports.

You wrote that your kids are spending 4 hours, divided into two visits, at the gym each day. I don't see how that fits with a full time job.

I also don't think a mom should be selecting or preparing 5 meals a day for their ADULT child.


I am the PP. I don't tell my kids what to eat and what not to eat. Both kids got to hang out with a mid-tier professional soccer team in Europe during Christmas last year and they saw first hand what those guys eat and workout to get themselves in shape. When my kids came back to the US, they were determined to do the same, to be healthy.

About going to the gym for four hours everyday. The 19 years old just finished his internship with Apple. He was working remotely so he got plenty of free time to go to the gym for four hours everyday. He is playing soccer for a D2 university. The 17 years old is a rising HS senior and he is getting himself stronger to try for the soccer team in the fall. How is it not possible? The kids are not working full time.



So you sold your company for bazillions of dollars. Your sons work out four hours per day and hang out with professional soccer players. They eat multiple pounds of fish per day. And your 19 year old has an internship with Apple.

Got it.


In preparation for high school soccer try-outs, though!


(shrug) beats spending four hours a day playing xbox or smoking weed.

The odds of a male high school soccer player being on a college soccer roster are about 12:1. The one beat 11 other guys to make a college roster is the one who spent four hours a day working out and getting better.



Not if they still skinny little dweebs after all this
Anonymous
Feeding your kids 4 pounds of fish a day is easy! Just sell your tech company. #lifehack
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Op, I post this more for other parents who might be reading. When my football/weight lifting young teen wanted protein powder, he didn't even know what it was. Just saw others using it. He would have scooped anything and put it in his milk. Scary. I knew about Instant Breakfast since it had been around forever. Figured it would be safer than some non regulated supplement protein powder.


This. I would meet with a nutritionist. Protein powders are unregulated and not the first thing your teen should consider. More natural sources is best


I have a 19 years old and a 17 years old, and they both gained about 30 lbs of lean muscle over this past spring & summer.  The 19 years old is 5'11 and currently at 178 lbs while the 17 years old is 5'10 and currently at 170lbs.  I took them to a special nutritionist and she came up with how much protein and calories they could consume for the day.  I then took them to a physician to make sure that it would be ok for them to consume that much calories/protein intake.  This is what they did to bulk up 30 lbs of lean muscles:

For breakfast:-
5 serving of Steel cut oatmeal on Almond milk with blueberries, strawberries, banana and blackberries
- six eggs with zucchini, spinach and bell peppers,
- two whole oranges, one whole avocado with some honey

For mid morning snack:
- one whole avocado serving on whole grain bread with some honey
five serving of pistachio and cashews,

For lunch:
- A big bowl of Salad with cherry tomatoes, serving with 1.5 lbs of chicken breast and quinoa,
- a bowl of onion soup,- five serving of strawberries, mango, blueberries,

For mid afternoon lunch:
- One whole avocado on whole grain bread,
- a glass of almond milk,
- five serving of almonds and peanuts,

For dinner:
- 2 lbs of either steamed rockfish salmon, lobsters, crawfish, or tuna serving on brown rice,
- 1 lbs of steamed broccoli and cauliflower,- a bowl of tomato or Lentil soup,

They also workout at Equinox twice a day,  two hours in the morning in the gym and two hours in the afternoon, swimming. 

Kids should not be taking protein powder.  These things are not regulated by the FDA and will have long term health issues, IMHO.


Why? This seems like an unsustainable amount of food to be preparing, not including feeding yourself, spouse, other kids. Plus 4 hrs of exercising? Is this just for the aesthetics of being bigger/more muscular?


Fortunately, I am already retired in my late 30's after my FinTech startup was acquired by another company and I cashed out all my shares, enough not to work another day in my life.  My husband, however, is still working.  It would not have been possible if I was working full time.  It usually takes me about 90 minutes each day to prepare the food.  And yes, the boys exercise four hours everyday at Equinox during the summer.  They do two hours at Equinox during the school year.  My husband was a professional soccer player in Europe when he was young and he knows about the side effects of taking protein powder supplements, and that our kids are not allowed to take them. 

Your kid can bulk up and gain weight with just healthy eating.  Lots of chicken, fish, shrimp, lobsters, veggies such as broccoli, cauliflower, asparagus, spinach, kale, and fruits such as avocados, bananas, blueberries, black berries, strawberries, oranges.  Add lentils, chickpeas, tofu, quinoa, and brown rice and your kids will gain a lot of muscles in no time. 



I can't imagine building my life around making my sons bodies look a certain way, particularly given that one is an adult. Are these kids also working a full time summer job? Socializing? Learning how to do things like cook their own meals? Attending or getting ready to attend college? Fetishizing their bodies in this way is so disturbing.


Oh FFS this is NOT about “how their bodies look” this is about building muscle for sports performance. And it doesn’t take that much time and effort and money to eat big like this.


And yet you described how their bodies changed, and not any changes in their sports performance. You didn't even mention whether they play sports.

You wrote that your kids are spending 4 hours, divided into two visits, at the gym each day. I don't see how that fits with a full time job.

I also don't think a mom should be selecting or preparing 5 meals a day for their ADULT child.


I am the PP. I don't tell my kids what to eat and what not to eat. Both kids got to hang out with a mid-tier professional soccer team in Europe during Christmas last year and they saw first hand what those guys eat and workout to get themselves in shape. When my kids came back to the US, they were determined to do the same, to be healthy.

About going to the gym for four hours everyday. The 19 years old just finished his internship with Apple. He was working remotely so he got plenty of free time to go to the gym for four hours everyday. He is playing soccer for a D2 university. The 17 years old is a rising HS senior and he is getting himself stronger to try for the soccer team in the fall. How is it not possible? The kids are not working full time.



So you sold your company for bazillions of dollars. Your sons work out four hours per day and hang out with professional soccer players. They eat multiple pounds of fish per day. And your 19 year old has an internship with Apple.

Got it.


In preparation for high school soccer try-outs, though!


(shrug) beats spending four hours a day playing xbox or smoking weed.

The odds of a male high school soccer player being on a college soccer roster are about 12:1. The one beat 11 other guys to make a college roster is the one who spent four hours a day working out and getting better.



+1
You can only control what you can.  At least, those boys will develop a healthy habit and hard working individuals for the rest of their lives, in whatever things they pursue. 
Anonymous
Kids are always on their screens. Why don't the kids research it online while they are staring at a screen anyways, to see how much protein is reasonable. Alot of people drink the protein shakes cause it's easy to prepare. No actual cooking skills are necessary. It's quick. And protein actually give them sustained energy throughout the day, not just for building muscles. But, the protein keeps them food without having to spend all the extra money for actual food. One glass of protein shake can be your meal at lunch.

I know someone who drinks a glass of protein shake every day at lunch for a month. But, he says he started to get constipated so I told him to up his fiber and drink it every other day. You don't want blockage.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Op, I post this more for other parents who might be reading. When my football/weight lifting young teen wanted protein powder, he didn't even know what it was. Just saw others using it. He would have scooped anything and put it in his milk. Scary. I knew about Instant Breakfast since it had been around forever. Figured it would be safer than some non regulated supplement protein powder.


This. I would meet with a nutritionist. Protein powders are unregulated and not the first thing your teen should consider. More natural sources is best


I have a 19 years old and a 17 years old, and they both gained about 30 lbs of lean muscle over this past spring & summer.  The 19 years old is 5'11 and currently at 178 lbs while the 17 years old is 5'10 and currently at 170lbs.  I took them to a special nutritionist and she came up with how much protein and calories they could consume for the day.  I then took them to a physician to make sure that it would be ok for them to consume that much calories/protein intake.  This is what they did to bulk up 30 lbs of lean muscles:

For breakfast:-
5 serving of Steel cut oatmeal on Almond milk with blueberries, strawberries, banana and blackberries
- six eggs with zucchini, spinach and bell peppers,
- two whole oranges, one whole avocado with some honey

For mid morning snack:
- one whole avocado serving on whole grain bread with some honey
five serving of pistachio and cashews,

For lunch:
- A big bowl of Salad with cherry tomatoes, serving with 1.5 lbs of chicken breast and quinoa,
- a bowl of onion soup,- five serving of strawberries, mango, blueberries,

For mid afternoon lunch:
- One whole avocado on whole grain bread,
- a glass of almond milk,
- five serving of almonds and peanuts,

For dinner:
- 2 lbs of either steamed rockfish salmon, lobsters, crawfish, or tuna serving on brown rice,
- 1 lbs of steamed broccoli and cauliflower,- a bowl of tomato or Lentil soup,

They also workout at Equinox twice a day,  two hours in the morning in the gym and two hours in the afternoon, swimming. 

Kids should not be taking protein powder.  These things are not regulated by the FDA and will have long term health issues, IMHO.


This is insane. Do you have a life outside of preparing food for your man boys?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Op, I post this more for other parents who might be reading. When my football/weight lifting young teen wanted protein powder, he didn't even know what it was. Just saw others using it. He would have scooped anything and put it in his milk. Scary. I knew about Instant Breakfast since it had been around forever. Figured it would be safer than some non regulated supplement protein powder.


This. I would meet with a nutritionist. Protein powders are unregulated and not the first thing your teen should consider. More natural sources is best


I have a 19 years old and a 17 years old, and they both gained about 30 lbs of lean muscle over this past spring & summer.  The 19 years old is 5'11 and currently at 178 lbs while the 17 years old is 5'10 and currently at 170lbs.  I took them to a special nutritionist and she came up with how much protein and calories they could consume for the day.  I then took them to a physician to make sure that it would be ok for them to consume that much calories/protein intake.  This is what they did to bulk up 30 lbs of lean muscles:

For breakfast:-
5 serving of Steel cut oatmeal on Almond milk with blueberries, strawberries, banana and blackberries
- six eggs with zucchini, spinach and bell peppers,
- two whole oranges, one whole avocado with some honey

For mid morning snack:
- one whole avocado serving on whole grain bread with some honey
five serving of pistachio and cashews,

For lunch:
- A big bowl of Salad with cherry tomatoes, serving with 1.5 lbs of chicken breast and quinoa,
- a bowl of onion soup,- five serving of strawberries, mango, blueberries,

For mid afternoon lunch:
- One whole avocado on whole grain bread,
- a glass of almond milk,
- five serving of almonds and peanuts,

For dinner:
- 2 lbs of either steamed rockfish salmon, lobsters, crawfish, or tuna serving on brown rice,
- 1 lbs of steamed broccoli and cauliflower,- a bowl of tomato or Lentil soup,

They also workout at Equinox twice a day,  two hours in the morning in the gym and two hours in the afternoon, swimming. 

Kids should not be taking protein powder.  These things are not regulated by the FDA and will have long term health issues, IMHO.


This is insane. Do you have a life outside of preparing food for your man boys?


Nope. Sold a tech company for a bunch of money. Pp's job is now feeding their kids.

Totally do-able, right?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Op, I post this more for other parents who might be reading. When my football/weight lifting young teen wanted protein powder, he didn't even know what it was. Just saw others using it. He would have scooped anything and put it in his milk. Scary. I knew about Instant Breakfast since it had been around forever. Figured it would be safer than some non regulated supplement protein powder.


Thanks. My lean/strong teen boy wants to add some muscle for sports and to look better.

I like the idea of Instant Breakfast as an option.

Also, I appreciate the comments of the other PP. Definitely concerned about body image issues in my son as well as my DD.
Anonymous
I think your protein calculations seem correct. Typically, they recommend 0.6 grams for every pound you weigh. Also your body can only handle 15-30 grams of protein per meal. There is no added benefits to more than 40 grams at any serving.

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