Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your question is confusing. Only you know what amount of weight you can handle on anybguevne exercise. You won’t get bulky. It’s HARD to build muscle. People who think they are bulky need to lose fat. That is what creates that puffy/bulky appearance. Muscle is dense and compact, you look SMALLER with more muscle.
Have you not heard of hypertrophy? Not everyone gets smaller with more muscle; those of us with “bulk” don’t necessarily need to lose fat. People comment on my shoulders often, and that’s not where I store my body fat.
Point being: bodies are different. They respond differently to various stimuli and, yes, there are women who pretty easily put on (visible, larger) muscle.
NP. You have to program exercises and eat in surplus for hypertrophy. If you’re one of the incredibly rare women to whom this doesn’t apply, hire a professional coach.
So? It’s still possible. My point was that not women who lift get smaller with lifting. I sure don’t, and it’s not because I’m fat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your question is confusing. Only you know what amount of weight you can handle on anybguevne exercise. You won’t get bulky. It’s HARD to build muscle. People who think they are bulky need to lose fat. That is what creates that puffy/bulky appearance. Muscle is dense and compact, you look SMALLER with more muscle.
Have you not heard of hypertrophy? Not everyone gets smaller with more muscle; those of us with “bulk” don’t necessarily need to lose fat. People comment on my shoulders often, and that’s not where I store my body fat.
Point being: bodies are different. They respond differently to various stimuli and, yes, there are women who pretty easily put on (visible, larger) muscle.
NP. You have to program exercises and eat in surplus for hypertrophy. If you’re one of the incredibly rare women to whom this doesn’t apply, hire a professional coach.
So? It’s still possible. My point was that not women who lift get smaller with lifting. I sure don’t, and it’s not because I’m fat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your question is confusing. Only you know what amount of weight you can handle on anybguevne exercise. You won’t get bulky. It’s HARD to build muscle. People who think they are bulky need to lose fat. That is what creates that puffy/bulky appearance. Muscle is dense and compact, you look SMALLER with more muscle.
Have you not heard of hypertrophy? Not everyone gets smaller with more muscle; those of us with “bulk” don’t necessarily need to lose fat. People comment on my shoulders often, and that’s not where I store my body fat.
Point being: bodies are different. They respond differently to various stimuli and, yes, there are women who pretty easily put on (visible, larger) muscle.
NP. You have to program exercises and eat in surplus for hypertrophy. If you’re one of the incredibly rare women to whom this doesn’t apply, hire a professional coach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your question is confusing. Only you know what amount of weight you can handle on anybguevne exercise. You won’t get bulky. It’s HARD to build muscle. People who think they are bulky need to lose fat. That is what creates that puffy/bulky appearance. Muscle is dense and compact, you look SMALLER with more muscle.
Have you not heard of hypertrophy? Not everyone gets smaller with more muscle; those of us with “bulk” don’t necessarily need to lose fat. People comment on my shoulders often, and that’s not where I store my body fat.
Point being: bodies are different. They respond differently to various stimuli and, yes, there are women who pretty easily put on (visible, larger) muscle.
Anonymous wrote:Your question is confusing. Only you know what amount of weight you can handle on anybguevne exercise. You won’t get bulky. It’s HARD to build muscle. People who think they are bulky need to lose fat. That is what creates that puffy/bulky appearance. Muscle is dense and compact, you look SMALLER with more muscle.
Anonymous wrote:I am one of those women who puts on muscle pretty easily, more easily than most people think women can. At my thinnest, I was running daily (sometimes twice/day) and doing yoga 2-3 times per week. The yoga was not particularly intense, but it was enough to keep my strength at a basic level.
reddit/xxfitness has a LOT of weight-lifters on it, so you'll get push back if you post this question (which I don't think is unwarranted: women who fear bulking up are pretty tiresome).
Anonymous wrote:Bulk would come from diet. If you’re lifting weights, even big, heavy weights four days a week, but you’re in caloric deficit, you won’t bulk. Weights are best for changing the shape and look of your body. Cardio is good for overall health.