QUOTE(zephyrus9999 @ Aug 29 2014, 02:28 AM)
For the record I aced my Further maths on statistics once, so dont start. Lean gains gets exponentially harder this we all know. Heck if we can get 2kg/month now we all be happy. The human body gains naturally an average of 2lb muscle a month with average to good routine nutrition etc. However, please take the effort to READ properly that when I was on my newbie stage of working out and bulking, I estimated 12lb lean gains out of ~19lb in 3 months. Doing full body compound movements that I have never done before indeed shock my body to accelerated growth. These times its easier to attain progressive overload, correct? 4lb is not uncommon for newb biology, perhaps you can put a blame on my genetics? Probably you will argue what was my methodology for tracking this 4?
I honestly admit that I solely based on commercial gym scales reports; two piece of report for consistency each measurement, once a week . I did not measure using tapes. I have a mirror and cam to track myself too? I dont need to prove myself btw
Apart from this, information overload is bad. We see many fitness articles here and there contradicting one another. If it works for me but not you then sucks to be you. Most importantly I keep them simple and do whats works BEST for me.
Here's what you've said before
QUOTE
@Armesh I once gained 9kg when beginner stage in 3 months, out of it ~6kg were muscles and was taking mass gainer. And i have fortnightly report to track the progress. its possible at early stages
We understood that it's probably "newbie gains" , however the second bold-ed phrase, that's just inaccurate tracking based on how you measure ur progress (body measurement machine thingy). how sure are you that the machine is accurate ? It may be calibrated wrongly ? Perhaps the pictures and stuff would work. So by stating what you've said along with the "out of it ~6kg were muscles and was taking mass gainer" may mislead newbies in thinking that as long as they consume mass gainers, they'll gain that easily ? When calorie calculating (maintenance calories, calories needed for bulking/cutting etc..) is the main important factor one should know as their fundamental basics , ever thought of that? Perhaps it's not the mass gainers but the amount of calories you eat after all.
I've been gaining progress ever since, all i did was read the stickies, calculate my calories, stay consistent and repeat. And without mass gainers

So to conclude this argument, if you have the extra money to spend on sugar shakes, then why not, afterall it's your money, your decision, your body, your goals.
This post has been edited by kshen: Aug 30 2014, 12:17 AM