- Home
- Health & Fitness
- The MYTH of Gaining Muscle Without Fat!
The MYTH of Gaining Muscle Without Fat!
- By TellaTubby Ellis
- Published 04/1/2005
- Health & Fitness
-
Rating:




The MYTH of Gaining Muscle Without Fat!
Absolutely not.
That will be detrimental to gaining muscle. For best results, you either have to train and diet to gain muscle or lose fat. One or the other. If you are a true hardgainer, you cannot do both. If you try, you will not make any substantial progress either way. So, now is the time to gain weight. You will worry about losing fat later.
The fact is that there are no magic pills, powders, foods or exercises that will allow you to gain muscle and lose fat at the same time.
It all is determined by your genetics and metabolism. Some people can do it, some can't. If you are naturally thin and have a difficult time gaining weight of any kind, it would be silly of you to think that you will be able to gain muscle while trying to keep your body fat low.
Most skinny guys want to gain more muscle, but are afraid of gaining body fat. They see all the bodybuilder photos and read the stories about people gaining pounds of muscle while losing pounds of fat -- They want to do the same. When looking at these photos, you have to remember that most of these people do not have your body type. The majority of them are overweight and want to lose fat, not gain muscle.
'Well', you say, 'What about those people who transformed their bodies? They lost fat and gained muscle'. Yes, but almost all of these people were overweight, or had high levels of body fat. In other words, their metabolisms were, for the most part, slow. They simply dieted and trained for fat loss.
Weight training helped them to tone up and slightly increase their muscle mass by replacing some of the fat with muscle. However, you will never increase your body mass far above your original starting weight on that type of diet.
In other words, even though you gain some muscle, you will actually weight less!
For example, Big Joe weighs 189lbs with 18% body fat. This works out to be 34lbs of fat and 155lbs of muscle. He then goes on a fat loss diet and slowly diets down to a ripped 5% body fat at 168lbs, which is 8.4lbs of fat and 160lbs of muscle. He lost 26lbs of fat, and his weight only went down by 21lbs. So, looking that this we realize that he managed to also gain 5lbs of muscle. You can see that he has more muscle mass than when he started, and he looks totally ripped, but his weight decreased because his main goal was fat loss. He looks much better, and his measurements changed, but he only increased his total weight by five pounds.
If you are very thin, you cannot do this. Yes, your body fat will decrease, and this will also give you more muscle mass, but it will not increase your weight. You will just get much thinner. Big Joe was 'big' to begin with; we are not. To get the same results as Big Joe, you must first gain the weight, and then concentrate on losing the body fat later. Joe had the size; he just needed to trim down. We do not have the size to work with, so we have to force our bodies to grow beyond our body's comfort range. This is the hard part.
This is why if you want to grow beyond your current size, you have to diet for it specifically.
Remember, most of you have extremely fast metabolisms. Gaining weight will be extremely difficult.
---------------------------
The only way you will get bigger is to shock your body.
---------------------------
You must shock your body by:
1. Training with heavy weights, and
2. Eating a lot of calories.
The first shock is with weight training. You must focus on compound free- weight exercises, and lift heavy weights, which will stimulate the largest amount of muscle fibers. Your body responds to this stimulus by increasing your muscle mass.
The second way we must shock our body is by eating more calories than your body is used to. This is the most important factor in gaining mass. When you overload your system with plenty of protein and fats, your body has no other choice but to gain weight.

TellaTubby Ellis
Former "skinny guy" Anthony Ellis is the author of Gaining Mass! The most widely used weight gain program in the world. This unique program designed to help people gain weight and build muscle, is currently being used in over 90 countries and boasts the largest private weight gain forum on the Internet, with well over 13,000 members. Click here to view over 200 user testimonials: fastmusclegain.com
View all articles by TellaTubby Ellis
Spread The Word
Comments
Comment #1 (Posted by an unknown user)
Rating:








i read it and i realized that it's true. having fast metabolisms is the key problem and eating more colaries and protein is the solution to gain weight
Comment #2 (Posted by an unknown user)
Rating:








i know at least five people(friends) who were quite thin and gained a lot of muscle without gaining fat!!!....the six meal part is right but with a proper trainer and diet they gained a lot of muscle without gaining too much fat...2 of them are quite bignow(180/90cm85-90kgs) with six packs!!!....just stick to your program(training and diet)...it is a hard thing but if you want to reach the goal you have to keep at it for at least 6/7 months to see real results...trust me with a proper diet/program you can easily get a body makeover after 15/16 months!!those who say you can't let go after 4/5 months!!!
Comment #3 (Posted by an unknown user)
Rating:








I'm a hard gainer. Trained for years. Got toned but could never gain weight until I went on a high calorie diet. Concerned about losing the fat now.
Comment #4 (Posted by an unknown user)
Rating:








I'm not convinced that you need to gain fat in order to gain muscle. I'm a skinny guy (body mass index 20). I'm three months into a weights program and I've gained 6kg and a lot of strength, in which time my body fat percentage (as measured by calipers) has only increased from 8 to 8.5. Maybe I'm just lucky I'd rather gain muscle gradually without fat than quickly with fat. Yes, I agree with Ellis that eating lots is necessary. I usually eat six or more meals per day, but having said that I never stuff myself too full and I only eat when I'm hungry. Also, I've got to say that I don't like the term "shock your body". For the sake of not injuring yourself or making yourself sick, I think it's better to build up your eating and weight training gradually. Just my £0.02 :-)
Comment #5 (Posted by an unknown user)
Rating:








Im 17 years old, 165lbs at 6"1. I have been weight training and taking weight gainer Mammoth for the last month and half and though Im seeing improvements in weight gain. In nearly two months I jumped from 148 to 165lbs. But Im afraid most of the weight I gained so quickly is fat weight, because my stomachs become ALOT bigger than before. Not width but just popping out big and round kinda like a beer belly. This article hasn't really taught me much to help.
Comment #6 (Posted by josh may)
Rating:








Good article, I hear about the high calorie thing a lot
Comment #7 (Posted by an unknown user)
Rating:








yeah this is a difficult one Im 24, 6" and 180lb and have been training for 6 months now but have only followed a high calorie diet for the past 6 weeks. I didn't see any gains until I started this high protein AND high carb diet and in that time I have increased a half inch on my arms and chest. I know what you mean about fat gain concerns though because I feel a bit chubbier but I think its a case of puting up with that as a side effect during mass gain and then reaping the rewards when you lean out in 6 months or whatever. I expect sum people have no prob its just that stinkin dna stuff again!! sticking at it is the key I think it can take years not months but the years fly by anyway!!
