BULKING GUIDE CAYLEPT CONTENTS WELCOME 3 BULKING ABSOLUTES 4 DIRTY VS LEAN BULKING 5 BULKING TLDR 6 CALORIE EXPENDITURE 7 TDEE 8-9 HORMONES 10 BODY FAT PERCENTAGES 11 BODY RECOMPOSITION 12 "SKINNY FAT" 13 MACRONUTRIENTS 14 PROTEIN 15 THE MOST IMPORTANT PAGE 16 TRACKING CALORIES 17 FOOD CHOICES 18 RATE OF GAIN 19 OUTSIDE INFLUENCES 20 MINI-CUTS 21 STOPPED GAINING? 22 CARDIO 23 SCALE GOALS 24 WEIGHING YOURSELF 25 PROGRESS PICTURES 26 WHEN TO STOP BULKING 27 TIME TO CUT? 28 TRAINING CONSIDERATIONS 29 SUPPLEMENTS 30 TRAINING AND FOOD 31 END NOTES 32 HAPPY SCALE AND MYFITNESSPAL 33-61 WELCOME First of all, thank you for purchasing this guide and choosing to directly support me. I hope that through this, I can help you understand all you need to know to run a successful gaining phase. Ideally running one of my programmes in conjunction with this or the fat loss guide will give the most complete picture of everything around training and diet. I believe understanding the fundamentals of gaining muscle and knowing how to apply them to yourself as an individual is dramatically more useful than just a cookie cutter meal plan. Yes you could probably eat chicken and rice a few times a day and move in the direction you want to be, but how long can you keep that up for? On that note, I won't be telling you exactly what to eat or specifically how many calories to eat within this guide, as not only is that outside my scope of practice as a PT but it's also not helpful long term. Instead the goal is to teach you how to figure these things out and apply them to yourself. No more confusion. BULKING ABSOLUTES If you want to be gaining weight consistently over time you must be in a calorie surplus. This means to be eating more calories than you currently need to stay the same weight. Think like this, your body doesn't really want to change, it enjoys something called homeostasis: It wants to stay the same. Due to this, building muscle is a fairly difficult process and why we have to eat more food. If you wanted to fuel a bigger car, you'd have to put more fuel in right? "Maingaining" has become a popular phrase recently, but I believe the true definition of this has been skewed. It really means to gain weight slowly without putting on too much fat this has always just been known as "lean bulking". Recently, maingaining has taken the definition of "gain muscle without ever gaining fat. If you hope to be the most muscular version of yourself as soon as possible, this simply does not happen. Yes you might gain a bit of muscle, but it will stop. This is the reason why every single bodybuilder to ever exist engages in gaining phases and cutting phases. DIRTY VS LEAN BULKING When it comes to bulking, you'll typically hear of two camps lean bulking and dirty bulking. The accepted definiton of lean bulking is to gain weight slowly over time to reduce the amount of fat you put on during the process. This is what you should do. Dirty bulking is eating in extreme excess of maintenance with little care for the quality of the food you eat. Therefore you have little control over the amount of weight you gain and the rate at which you gain it. This typically results in getting too fat, too quickly. The thing that differentiates which one you're in, is the size of your surplus. To lean bulk you want a smaller surplus than the dirty bulk. A smaller surplus means you gain weight slower, but as the amount of muscle you can put on is limited, putting on too much weight too quickly just suggests lots of fat is being added. Keep that surplus smaller, stay leaner for longer, and your gaining phase can run for longer - meaning you'll build more muscle. BULKING TLDR For those uninterested in the entire reasoning behind everything, here's the shortened and simple version of how to run a successful gaining phase. Use a calculator to estimate calorie requirements, eat the estimation for a decent period of time and measure changes, adjust calories accordingly until scale weight is ticking up by around 1-2% of your total bodyweight per month. Set protein to 0.8-1.2g per Lb of lean body mass. Keep an eye on progress pictures and gym performance along the way, you want to keep an eye on how much fat you're putting on, if it's too much too quickly - reduce calorie surplus size. More progress in the gym? More muscle. If weight gain stalls (and it will) it's time to increase food, very simply if you are not gaining weight over time your solution is more calories. Bulk for as long as physically possible until you are no longer comfortable with your bodyfat percentage, then you can diet and reveal the new muscle you have built. Remember: the longer you can be in a gaining phase for, the more muscle you're going to build. This is why minimising fat gain is vital because the leaner you were to begin with, the longer you can gain before you've got too much fat to continue. CALORIE EXPENDITURE To gain weight you need to eat more calories than you expend, this is called being in a calorie surplus. If you are not gaining weight over time it means you are not consistently eating above your maintenance calories, which is otherwise known as your TDEE - if you eat your TDEE every day you'd stay the same weight. Your Total Daily Energy (Calories) Expenditure is called your TDEE and when graphed out it looks like this. tdee For simplicity purposes your TDEE is your "metabolism", it's how many calories you burn in a day through all sources of calorie expenditure. BMR: (Basal Metabolic Rate) This is the amount of calories you would burn in a day at complete rest in a bed with no movement. Surprisingly, this accounts for the majority of your daily calories. People often mistake this for the number they need to eat above to gain weight. NEAT: (Non Exercise Activity Thermogenesis) These are the calories that you burn through movement that is not dedicated exercise. For example, walking around during the day or fidgeting at your desk. If you're an active person who moves around a lot, this can be a big reason why despite your efforts, you're not gaining weight. If you're a person who works on a building site all day you probably need more calories than a person sitting in an office even if your other stats are equal. TDEE TEF: (Thermic Effect of Food) This is the amount of calories your body expends breaking down and utilising the foods you eat each day. Yes, even your calorie intake requires calories to utilise. This means that if you're bulking, you're burning more calories digesting that food, and is yet another reason food can go so high during a gaining phase. If you're eating lots of protein in efforts to gain new muscle (as you should) you're also burning a decent chunk of the calories from this protien just to use it. EAT: (Exercise Activity Thermogenesis) Finally we have the smallest part of the puzzle, the amount of calories in a day that you burn through dedicated exercise. People are often shocked by how small of a part EAT is of their calorie burn. If you do 45 minutes of cardio a day that sounds like a lot, but if you think of it as less than 1/24th of your day spent doing something, you see how it's less significant. But again, if you're active, for example playing sports, you'll still need to account for these calories. If you're more active, you'll need more calories to make up for that during your gaining phase as this activity will reduce the size of your surplus. Or in some cases take you out of the surplus causing you to not gain weight. HORMONES Hormones play a role in how many calories you expend on a daily basis just by existing, and as such are factored into the BMR part of your TDEE. Some conditions people may have could cause them to expend more calories than is predicted for someone of their height and weight. This doesn't mean they can't gain weight, it just means eating more calories than predicted would be required. If you think something is up, don't self diagnose, see a doctor because treatment is often available. So to put it simply, at the top of the pyramid for controlling bodyweight is always calories. Calories in vs calories out (CICO). Your hormones effect your calorie output, so if there's an abnormality, your calorie output may be higher but it's still a rule that CICO is how controlling bodyweight works. BODYFAT PERCENTAGES Bodyfat percentage is always a really hot topic, basically the lower your bodyfat percentage the leaner you are. On social media this is always viewed as a flex and as such everyone always wants to know their own. But here's the thing, judging BF% is pretty difficult and there aren't many ways of doing it accurately. Bioelectrical Impedance Machines are inaccurate, Dexa scans are inaccurate, bodpods are inaccurate. The most accurate way to work out your BF% is to chop you up once you've stopped living. Beyond kicking the bucket and finding yourself on a hard slab, the most accurate and attainable way is likely going to be callipers, but even these require a lot of skill to use. You can also use your eyes to take a guess, but even then, due to different people holding fat in different places, it will be inaccurate. Here's what matters with BF% and bulking - you want to start from as lean as possible, because no matter how lean your bulk aims to be, you will always put on some amount of fat, and because muscle takes a long time to build, that means we need to be in a surplus for a long time (think months not weeks). Therefore the limiting factor to the duration of your gaining phase will be the amount of bodyfat you have. So start leaner to give yourself more room for growth. BODY RECOMPOSITION In some circumstances your attempts at bulking may be halted, not because you're not gaining muscle, but because the number on the scale is going down. Congratulations, because if you're gaining muscle while also losing fat you're encountering something called body recomposition. It's rare and sought after, and it won't last forever. It typically happens in people newer to the gym who didn't have lots of muscle to begin with. Savour it while you can because eventually, once the scale starts to stall and stay the same, that'll be when you have to increase your calories again to create a new surplus to have the scale ticking up. The reason this sometimes happens is because as a result of the extra calories you tried to initially give yourself, you actually ended up expending more as a result, think about it. More food = more energy, if you have more energy you're likely going to move around more, or you're going to train harder - both of these expend more calories. If the amount of calories you expend as a result of the calorie increase is more than the calories you increased by, then the scales could start going down despite the increase. If you're then also keeping protein high and progressing in the gym, there's your recipe for muscle growth. See how all this happening at the same time would be pretty rare? "SKINNY FAT" Being skinny fat means to have a decent amount of bodyfat while not having very much muscle. The solution may seem to be gaining more muscle, but as we've already established, if you enter a gaining phase you're going to gain more fat, so if you already have a decent amount of body fat to begin with, you're going to have very little choice but to diet again. This is the circle that a lot of young lifters get trapped within. The solution is usually start with a quick, aggresissive diet and remove some of that fat. This may end with you being skinny, but you'll be leaner. Meaning you can gain for longer, and you'll never find yourself in this scenario again. The number one thing most people need to do when it comes to building muscle is spend a really decent chunk of time in that surplus in pursuit of new muscle. I'm talking six months minimum. Hence why starting lean and not getting too fat throughout is imporant. MACRONUTRIENTS All food contains calories, and all calories are then broken down into carbohydrates, proteins and fats. For every one gram of protein or carbohydrates you eat, you consume 4 calories. For every one gram of fat you eat, you consume 9 calories. Knowing these numbers is how we work out the calories in our food. If a meal has 800 calories total, 50 grams of protein, 50 grams of carbs, and 44 grams of fat, we can then do the math with the above calorie values to see that 50 grams of protein and carbs = 200 calories (each) and 44 grams of fat = 400 calories. Knowing this, we want to be smart with how we set up our bulk, we can choose higher fat foods to get more calories in easier due to them containing more than twice the calories per gram. If you're trying to gain weight you should probably switch to fattier cuts of meat, use real oil rather than zero calorie sprays, and use the time you're in a surplus to eat the "nice" stuff. Just don't go overboard. Remember, eat in a small surplus, and eat high quality foods as often as possible, always ensuring protein is hit. For health purposes you may not want your fat intake to go too high, where that marker is however is person specific, but usually when food is increased during a surplus we'll see a carb increase as that's easiest macro to consume and carbs translate better to the gym. Plus, it makes hitting calories simple, knowing that 1 gram of carbs is 4 calories means that if you simply eat an extra 25g of carbs per day you'll add 100 cals per day. PROTEIN Protein is arguably your most important macronutrient. The general recommendation for setting up a protein goal would be 0.8-1.2 grams per pound of lean body mass. We use lean body mass rather than total bodyweight because if someone has a lot of fat, this is tissue that doesn't need protein to support, whereas lean mass (muscle) does. If you use total bodyweight rather than lean body mass you often make your protein requirement lots higher. To work out your lean body mass, you estimate your body fat percentage, work out that percentage as a number of your total body weight and take it away. When you take total bodyweight and deduct estimated fat weight, you get lean body mass. Multiply that number by 0.8-1.2 and you get a protein goal. But again, if you're already lean like you should be prior to a gaining phase, Lean body mass won't be too different from total bodyweight. Click here for a calculator for an estimate on lean body mass THE MOST IMPORTANT PAGE This is the one you've probably wanted to get to. You now know that calories need to be controlled to gain weight, but how do you work out how many calories you need? Step 1: Use a calculator to get an estimate. Step 2: Accurately consume estimated calories over a decent period of time (around 3 weeks) Step 3: Measure the changes. By weighing yourself, keeping an eye on how you look in the mirror you'll see the scale start to trend up. Aim for around 1-2% of your bodyweight gained per month. If you gain much more than that, it's likely lots of it is fat. Step 4: Adjust based on the result. If your bodyweight has not increased, very simply you weren't in a calorie surplus. Add 200300 cals and then repeat steps 2-4 again until weight is slowly trending up. Step 5: Repeat for the length of your gaining phase, only increasing calories if you really need to, you'll know because your weight stopped going up over time. That's when it's time for another 200-300 calorie bump In all honesty you should really only ever need to use a calorie calculator once just for initial estimates. Beyond that, through trial and error, your calorie intake becomes specific to you. TRACKING CALORIES This is potentially an unpopular opinion, but I truly believe to give yourself the absolute best chance of the best results, you should be counting your calories. Too often I'm told "I'm eating so much but I'm not gaining any weight, what do I do?" then when I ask how many calories the person is consuming, they can't give me an answer because they weren't tracking. What we do know is that if they're not gaining weight, they're not in a surplus, so they need to eat more food. This is why I believe tracking is important, what gets measured can be managed. This doesn't mean you absolutely have to track to see results because that isn't true. But if you want to take all of the guess work out and be able to make the best educated decisions based on your own results, tracking gets you there. You can't make accurate decisions on data that you don't have. Personally I use MyFitnessPal to track calories and will include a guide on this later in the guide. FOOD CHOICES So we know you need to be in a surplus and we also know we're trying to not get too fat too quickly. Does this mean we can eat literally whatever we want within the calorie allotment we do have? To some extent yes, to some extent no. There's more to your body than weight, yes calories control your weight, but that isn't the full story of your health. If all of your food choices are always unhealthy junk food it's likely that at some point your health will reflect that. The poison is in the dosage as it were. If you're in a surplus it means your calories are higher, so yes you absolutely can have more off plan meals or higher calorie meals than you would if you were dieting or at maintenance - because your calories allow for it. I would try to offset the occasional junk food with higher quality foods for the majority of the time. So long as your food is primarily healthy nutritious foods, you'll be just fine, then occasionally go for the "unhealthier" stuff. RATE OF GAIN Trying to control your weight gain is difficult, we want to gain enough weight to maximise muscle growth, but not so much weight that you put on too much fat. So where's the middle ground? Typically it's around 1-2% of your total bodyweight gained per month. This means that if you weigh 200lbs you might look to add 2-4lbs per month. Any more than 1-2% added on the scale and it's likely just more fat. Now you're probably thinking "I'm only 150lbs that's like 1.5lbs a month or 0.3lbs per week, that's nothing , that's so slow", and you're right, it is. However if you gained 1.5lbs of muscle a month for a year? You'd gain 18lbs of muscle that year and that would be an incredible result. If you repeated that for 2-3 years you could have 60lbs of extra muscle. That's enough to make you look like a completely different person, and more muscle than most will put on in their training career perhaps. So now you see the bigger picture. We're trying to gain muscle. It takes time. It's boring and repetitive but this process is what weeds out the people that really really want it, from just recreational lifters. The best bodybuilders are the ones who don't compete every year, they're the ones who commit to multi-year-long gaining phases to ensure they've got enough muscle. Now before I said 1-2% didn't I? The ones who can gain 2% will be the ones who don't get fat easily. If you find yourself gaining 1% of your bodyweight per month but visually not changing very much in the mirror, you're not really gaining much fat. You can probably increase your calories and go for 2%. It's all a case of responding to what's happening in the mirror and what's happening on the scale via altering calorie intake. If you're gaining too quickly, reduce calories slightly. OUTSIDE INFLUENCES Sometimes life makes it difficult to stick to the plan. We're trying to not get too fat, but because you're able to eat more calories you find yourself going out to eat and drink more. When you're dieting you perhaps find yourself saying no, but now you're gaining you say yes more frequently, you have a few drinks. One thing leads to another and all of a sudden you've eaten 3000 calories worth of kebab. It happens, but you've got to try to be sensible despite calories being high. Try to moderate your higher calorie days so they don't interfere with the process too much Another example might be family or a partner making it difficult to stick to the plan, usually partners enjoy eating together but if you happen to be a man reading this who has to eat 4000 calories to gain weight and your partner eats 2000 calories a day, your dinners might look a bit different, sometimes this is fine, sometimes it causes stress. It's important to be communicative so everyone understands. Same thing if you're not in control of your food intake for whatever reason. Your body doesn't care you don't choose your foods. So you'll have to find ways to get the calories in regardless. Communication is key. MINI-CUTS Mini-cuts are a lovely tool to extend the duration of your gaining phase. You want to be gaining for as long as possible, more gaining = more muscle, but you're starting to gain a little bit too much fat during the process. This is where mini cuts come in. The good thing about fat, compared to muscle is that the process is a whole lot faster. You can lose a big chunk of fat within a short time frame, but you can't gain a big chunk of muscle in a short time frame. So once you start to get to the point where you genuinely have too much fat, you can drop your calories and enter a mini cut. This is a period of time where you attempt to lose a lot of fat within a few weeks or months. During this time you'll usually enter a large deficit because the idea is get in and get out. Get yourself in a position where you can gain for more months to come following the mini-cut. So from where your calories currently are you'll drop them somewhat drastically, but luckily you've spent months gaining by now so even when you cut them down, you'll still be dieting on decent calories. But as with before, in response to the calorie change you'll need keep an eye on the scale and if it isn't moving how you need it to, you make adjustments. You can typically lose around 1% of your bodyweight per week when in a deficit. Maybe even more when being aggressive. So keep an eye on things and make good choices. STOPPED GAINING? Okay so you're a few months in and you've stopped gaining weight, now what? Well it's pretty simple. You increase calories. The reason this happens in the first place is because, as you get heavier your body is expending more calories by being larger (a bigger car uses more fuel to travel the same distance as a smaller car would). At some point you'll get heavy enough that what previously was a calorie surplus is now actually just your new calorie maintenance. This means it's time to bump calories to re-enter a surplus. This will usually happen every few months and further reinforces why you use the data in front of you to make smart decisions. If you can see on the scale that your weight has started to stall, you'll know what you need to do next. Expect this to become fairly difficult at some point, a lot of people have to eat more food than they first realised to gain weight and it won't be easy. But if you hope to get the most out of it you'll simply have to find a way of getting the calories in. CARDIO Cardio is usually used as a tool to expend more calories and increase the size of your calorie deficit to lose weight faster while dieting. As such you may think that you won't do any cardio while gaining. But you'd be mistaken. Remember your bodyweight isn't the only factor when it comes to your health. As you get heavier your heart has to work harder to support that heavier frame. Cardio keeps your heart healthy, so don't skip your cardio. You just may not need to do as much as someone that's dieting, and you may need to eat back the calories you expend to ensure you stay in your surplus. Another benefit to doing cardio within your gaining phase is making sure that the reason your sets end in the gym isn't because of your gas tank. You don't want to finish a set because you're out of breath, you want it to finish because the muscle you're trying to target can't produce force. But as you get heavier you're going to gas out faster. Cardio can help prevent this from becoming a limiting factor as you get heavier. SCALE GOALS Often when people set out to change their bodyweight they set a scale goal, but I don't recommend it. With bulking especially this usually results in people getting fat. Person "X" says they want to bulk to 200lbs, when person "x" is already quite fat 6 months in at 180lbs, but because 6 months ago they said they wanted to hit 200lbs they carry on anyway. Continually putting on more fat that they'll need to remove. So instead, have a rate of gain goal, have an amount of weight you want to add each month. Keep an eye on how you look in clothes, in progress pictures, and in the mirror. If you find yourself getting too fat, it's probably time to finish the gaining phase regardless of what the number on the scale happens to say. Something I do think is incredibly important to stress is you will have to deal with putting on some fat. There is a difference between having more fat and BEING fat. Sometimes people hold back their muscle building capabilities because anytime they put on small amounts of fat they stop gaining and diet again. This results in an endless loop of never bulking long enough to build new muscle and never being happy once they do cut because the muscle isn't there. Be okay with losing your abs for a while. Get big and strong. WEIGHING YOURSELF When it comes to weighing-in, I recommend weighing-in more frequently. The more you weigh yourself, the more data you have. If you only weigh yourself once per week, you'll be making decisions based upon single numbers that are highly influenced by factors other than the amount of fat or muscle you have. Throughout your week, the number on the scale is likely to fluctuate all over the place based on a million reasons. Whether it be the amount of carbs you ate, the amount of salt you ate, when you last went to the toilet or what time you had your last meal yesterday. To counter this, we weigh-in more frequently. These frequent fluctuations allow us to take a moving average weight. Your average weight is what you want to watch as it moves forwards. Personally I use an app called Happy Scale and it will automatically work out your average weight for you based upon what you enter. I have a guide for this further down. PROGRESS PICTURES Alongside your scale weight I would make sure that you're frequently taking progress pictures. Doing this you'll be able to see if you're gaining fat or not. Muscle growth is so slow you may not notice it very much week to week, but if the number on the scale is trending upwards, and you're not visibly getting any fatter, and this is happening for weeks/months, these are the lovely signs that you're building muscle. Take your progress pictures first thing after waking up, make sure that you've been to the toilet and haven't eaten yet to take the most accurate photos. You may also want to take some posed photos too while flexing, because often, and especially as naturals ,the lighting in our homes without a pump and while relaxed isn't going to make us look very muscular. So flexing for your progress pictures makes a lot of sense. Over months you'll be able to compare these progress pictures to each other to see your changes. WHEN TO STOP BULKING Okay so you know how to bulk and how to control everything you need to be throughout the process. But how do you know its time to stop? Well as mentioned before, it's once you're truly too fat or are no longer comfortable with how you look. By the end of your bulk you'll probably have been gaining for months, several calorie bumps in, you're probably sick of food, but you also should've also got a lot stronger in the gym. Once you've gotten to the end of your bulk it may be time to consider whether you're going to maintain where you are, or if you're going to cut. Usually following a bulk most will cut to reveal the new muscle they have built though their hard work. TIME TO CUT? So bulk is over and now you're going to pull off the fat you gained during your bulk. Well the good news is that just like this guide I have another one on my website specifically about taking you through a fat loss phase. But here I will give some general tips. You can lose faster than you gain, but you want to make sure that unlike a mini-cut, you don't cut calories too drastically too soon, because when you eventually plateau you'll have nowhere further to go. Try to keep strong in the gym, if your logbook starts regressing as you lose weight, then you're at risk of losing muscle. Train as hard as you absolutely can. Prioritise protein, unlike in a bulk you're at risk of losing muscle during a cut, therefore protein is arguably more important as eating more of it gives you a better chance of retaining the muscle you worked so hard for. TRAINING CONSIDERATIONS The good thing about having all these extra calories is it gives you your best chance to build as much muscle as you possibly can. You'll be stronger, you'll recover quicker, you'll be able to handle more vs being in a calorie deficit. So when bulking, this is where you want to really train as hard as you possibly can. Every set in the gym is a chance to stimulate new muscle, when you get towards the end of each set, remind yourself that these difficult reps combined with the extra food are how you build muscle. Give them your all. Due to having better recovery in a surplus you might find it a good idea to utilise intensifiers such as partials, forced reps, drop sets etc. I would use these primarily on the final set of your final exercise for a given muscle in a given session. Your normal sets will always be the most important while you progress them, but the intensifiers can be a fun way to accrue more hard work while you're able to recover from it. I wouldn't advise doing as many intensifiers during a calorie deficit for the opposite reason. SUPPLEMENTS Supplements are truly pretty simple. First and foremost is always going to be your food. The food is what is helping to build new muscle. Supplements just help a little bit. Protein powder is effectively powdered food to help you hit your protein macro, as such it's arguably the most useful. Creatine can help you get a few extra reps during your sets and as such that can help you build more muscle. Pre-workout can be helpful to give you more energy to perform better, and performing better is once again going to result in more muscle. Realistically that's about it for the supplements that matter most. Anything else is up to you if you have the budget to spend. TRAINING AND FOOD When it comes to protein you want to consume protein every few hours to spike muscle protein synthesis often throughout the day. So when it is time to train it makes sense to eat a meal with a protein serving and also some carbs around an hour prior to training, the protein covers the MPS spike and the carbs will be digested ready for use by the time you train. When it comes to after the workout, you'll do the same thing, another higher protein meal with some carbs. Protein because it's likely been a few hours since your last protein feeding and as such its time to spike MPS again and the carbs because you need to replenish glycogen after you used it during your training. Because you have extra calories spare you may even look into intra workout nutrition. This is usually some sort of carb powder or EAA - carbs to provide quick energy during the session and EAA's to help bridge the gap between the MPS spikes. But again these are less important than the other supplements and would only really recommend if you have the budget spare. END NOTES You made it to the end of the bulking guide. Thank you for staying with me and I hope this covered everything you need to run a successful gaining phase. I truly believe that between this guide, the fat loss guide and a programme, that you're as close to being able to coach yourself to your goals as you can be without actually just getting a coach. I would love it if in the coming months after purchasing these guides you guys share your results via Instagram (@caylept) I'd love to see what you're capable of. Once again, thank you for supporting me by purchasing this and any other guide. Below this page you'll find a guide for MyFitnessPal and Happy Scale so that you can utilise both of those to their best ability during your journey. If you brought a programme you also already these guides in there. HOW TO USE MY FITNESS PAL COACHED BY CAYLE HOW TO USE MYFITNESSPAL This guide will get you to grips with using MyFitnessPal to track your daily calorie intake. By the end of this guide should be able to use the app confidently to help you reach your goals, be able to track your foods, and create lisitngs for foods, meals and recipes. Don't be scared! There are lots of pages in this guide but the app is easy to use and you'll be a MyFitnessPal pro in no time. The goal of this guide is to answer any MyFitnessPal related questions you may have, and you can refer back to this later if you forget how to do something DOWNLOAD THE APP Download the 'MyFitnessPal' app from your respective app store to your phone. ACCOUNT AND SETUP Open the app and select how you would like to create an account, I suggest using your email. The app will ask you questions about you, your goals, and your lifestyle. The answer to this will determine how many calories per day the app will set you to achieve this goal. Most people want to lose as much as possible, as quickly as possible, and will select 2 pounds per week - giving them a super low and unsustainable calorie target. Sustainable long term weight loss should be around 1% of your bodyweight per week. Don't worry about this as I will be setting your calorie target for you. Select 0.5 or 1lb. Your account will now be created and your calorie target set. Again, don't worry about the number the app gives to you. EXERCISE CALORIES As you track your food and move throughout the day your 'Remaining' calories will change. Here, although I have tracked 1,371 calories of food. I have done 92 calories worth of steps, and MyFitnessPal says that in order to reach my calorie 'goal' of 1,500, calories, I need to 'eat back' those 92 calories. I want you to ignore all of the numbers except for 'Food'. I will set your calorie target already taking your daily activity level into account. GOING UNDER OR OVER ON CALORIES You should try your best to hit the calorie target I have set for you every day (remember to ignore what the app sets for you). But some days, the food you are eating or have tracked in advance may leave you under or over on your calories. This is okay, it's all about the bigger picture and one day shouldn't make a difference to your overall progress. Tracking all your food at the begining of the day, or the day before can help as you can be prepared in advance if you need to eat more calories to reach your target, or make sure you stick to what you have tracked if you are on target or slightly over. TRACKING FOOD To track food, select the meal of the day you are tracking, or snacks if thats what you are eating. HISTORY When you go to track a food item, the app will show you this page which includes your history. You can filter this by most recent or most frequent. Which makes adding your most eaten foods or tracking leftovers from last nights dinner even easier. On a new day the app will ask you if you want to track yesterday's breakfast as well, as most people eat the same every day. BARCODE SCANNER Select the barcode scanner next to the search bar and position the barcode of your item in within the icon on the screen. The app will show you the matching listing. You can also manually enter the barcode number if the barcode won't scan Make sure the listing matches the nutrition information on the packet. If the listing is incorrect, you can search for a product that matches the label, or you can create your own food and input the in formation from the nutrition label (I'll show you how to do this later) Make note of how the nutrition on the packet is calculated - cooked or as sold. I recommend tracking all food as uncooked as it is more accurate, but make sure the listing you then use is for the uncooked item. If you are unsure what to do or what listing is accurate have a search of multiple sources on google and choose what is most accurate or ask me for guidance. Generic foods such as plain rice, pasta and raw vegetables are going to be the same no matter where they are from - 75g of raw fusilli is going to have the same nutrition as 75g of raw penne. If you find an accurate uncooked listing for pasta for example, you can use this going forward rather than scanning the barcode from each packet. This is the listing I use for raw pasta, regardless of where I buy it from or what shape pasta it is. As long as you are consistent and use the same listing each time, exactly which listing you use shouldn't matter - as long as you can accurately track and report your calories. Which again is easier to do when using raw and uncooked food. Change the serving size to 1g, weigh out your food on a digital kitchen scale and change the number of servings to how many grams you are eating. SEARCHING FOR A FOOD If you know what you want to track but don't have the barcode handy, or have thrown away the outer packaging on a multipack, searching for the product can help you find what youre looking for. Type what you're looking for into the search bar, including brand name, product and flavour, to find matching listings. Choose the one which matches the nutrition on the packaging and the serving size you are consuming. Don't forget to adjust the serving or number of grams if you need to. CREATING A FOOD If the barcode won't scan, typing in the number doesn't work and you can't find the correct lisitng through search, you can create a listing for the item yourself using the nutrition information on the packaging. To do this select the 'More' icon at the bottom of the screen and then select 'My Meals, Recipes & Foods'. Then go to the 'Foods' tab. CREATING A FOOD Select 'Create a Food' at the bottom of the screen. Input the brand name, description (product name), the serving size, and how many servings the container or item has. For example, Heinz, Baked Beans, 415g can or 1 can and 2 servings. Then input the nutrition from the packaging. Input all fields given on the packaging to help other app users. DAILY SUMMARIES To view a daily summary of your nutrition, tap on the 'Calories Remaining' bar at the top of the page. You can then tap between the tabs to view a breakdown of your calories across each meal, how much of each nutrient you've consumed, and your macronutient profile . CREATING A MEAL In 'My Meals, Recipes & Foods' you will also find the 'Meals' tab. This enables you to combine foods you commonly eat together. This can make tracking things like your everyday breakfast or daily protein shake easier as they can appear as one item in your food diary rather than several. Select 'Add Food' and add foods to the meal from your history, search or barcode. The meal will then be stored in the 'Meals' tab. CREATING A RECIPE In 'My Meals, Recipes & Foods' you will also find the 'Recipes' tab. This enables you to import recipes from the internet or create your own. This is good for batch cooking or when you are making a meal such as lasagne, with several servings. Select 'Create a Recipe' and choose to import or enter manually. Name the recipe and indicate how many servings it will have, you can also edit this later. CREATING A RECIPE Add each ingredient for the recipe or change the ones added when importing recipes to the specific items you are using. You can then see the nutrition for each serving and save or log the recipe. If you dont know how much you want to eat, you can weigh the total weight of your cooked recipe and input this weight in grams as the number of servings. Then when you track the recipe, weigh your portion and input this as the number of servings in your diary HOW TO USE HAPPY SCALE COACHED BY CAYLE HOW TO USE HAPPY SCALE This guide will show you how to use the app Happy Scale to track your bodyweight change over time using moving averages. Unfortunately this app is only available on iOS but the app 'Libra' for Android has very similar features. HOW TO USE HAPPY SCALE Here is the front page of the Happy Scale app where you can view all of your data. HOW TO USE HAPPY SCALE To add your weight for today, tap the '+' at the bottom of the screen. You can then log your weight. To change the units of measurement, tap the 'settings' tab, and then 'Calculation methods' HOW TO USE HAPPY SCALE To view all of your weigh ins, tap the 'Logbook' tab, and you will see this view. HOW TO USE HAPPY SCALE To set yourself goals within the app, tap 'Settings' and then 'Weight Goals'. Customise these as you like, however I don't recommend committing to a certain amount per week HOW TO USE HAPPY SCALE You can keep track of your moving average and the resr of your data in the 'Summary' tab THE END THANK YOU ALL AND GOOD LUCK!