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Adolescent Calorie Intake on the Zone
Last Post 30 Nov 2007 10:01 PM by Jeffrey. 3 Replies.
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Craig
 New Member Posts:1

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| 29 Nov 2007 05:30 PM |
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Hello, I've been studying diet for a long time now, working the sound foundation of the zone the whole time. Through my research, I've found almost nothing relating to how much food I should eat daily as a growing, active teenager. I'm not worried about weight loss (I'm <7% body fat as is); I'm in fact trying to gain weight in the form of muscle. How should I modify the traditional zone diet to Calorie-wise to suit my specific needs? |
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Yvette
 Senior Member Posts:5055

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| 30 Nov 2007 06:12 AM |
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Hello craig: As an active teenager you might want to try the body fat calculator under the Zone Toold tab on this page. It will ask you for your measurements and will give you the results of blocks you should be consuming a day. Before puberty, meals would be considered for kids (8 to 10 blocks a day), past puberty it counts as an adult. So definately check with the body fat calculator. :-) |
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| www.ZoneLiving.com / www.DrSears.com |
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Sue Posts:14659

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| 30 Nov 2007 09:42 AM |
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Hi,
To add to Rizzo's advice, I've read that for the block calculation, a growing teen should use a higher activity level than their actual level, in order to provide the additional protein necessary for growing. Another way to accomplish the same thing would be to use you actual activity level and add a couple blocks to the result. In addition, due to your low body fat %, you should double (or, if your activity level is very high, triple) the amount of monounsaturated fat blocks you eat in each meal and snack. If you double the fat a 4 block meal of 4P, 4C, 4F would become 4P, 4C, 8F. Triple fat for a 4 block meal would be 4P, 4C, 12F. A one block snack doubled is 1P,1C, 2F, a 2 block snack doubled is 2P, 2C, 4F, and so on.
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Sue Knorr
Lost 100 lbs 18 yrs ago, off BP meds, thanks to the Zone diet and Zone fish oil.
Consultant of Zone Labs
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Jeffrey
 Basic Member Posts:241

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| 30 Nov 2007 10:01 PM |
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Craig, if you are trying to gain ~1 lb of lean muscle mass per month, you would add an extra block to whatever number you come up with after Rizzo's and Sue's advice.
We all learn in the Zone, so you pick the best the level you can and then study the results. You can always adjust you blocks based on your results.
also, don't think in terms of calories. think in terms of hormonal response and protein to support your lean body mass, activity level and muscle growth requirements. |
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