The human body is like an automobile; given the right fuel (food and nutrients) along with proper care, handling and recovery it has the ability to perform like a finely tuned race car. With abuse, disuse and improper nutrition it can very well find itself prematurely on route to the junkyard.
The components of the machine will vary greatly from individual to individual. You must experiment and fine tune to determine what works best for you.
A while back I wrote the article Train Right for your Body Type which brought a lot of much needed attention to the fact that women need to work out differently based on their body type. Well, the same can definitely be said for pre and post workout nutrition.
While food is both fuel and recovery, the ectomorph (“Cardio Queen”), endomorph (“Hearty Girl”), and mesomorph (“Natural Athlete”) will all have varying needs in addition to the type of training (exercise) they are doing.
Use the following as general guidelines not a carved in granite blueprint to develop a pre and post workout nutritional strategy that works best for you, your goals, what you are training for and your current state of health and fitness.
All three body types can be overweight or underweight; this article will focus on the general tendencies of each type. If you fall outside these generalizations or have significant health challenges modifications will need to be made.
- The Endomorph: higher fat, moderate protein, lower carbohydrates
- The Mesomorph: balanced, moderate protein, fat and carbohydrates
- The Ectomorph: higher carb, moderate protein, lower fat
Body Type Guidelines
- % of Body Fat: the higher your percentage of body fat the lower tolerance you have for carbohydrates. You need to transition to a lower body fat over time with proper exercise and nutrition. Your post workout meal should be primarily to stabilize your blood sugar. A leaner person can tolerate carbohydrates far better and should have more post workout.
- Gender: as a general rule men have more lean mass (muscle) and can generally eat more carbs. There are exceptions to this rule–highly muscled females/deconditioned poorly muscled males.
- What Are You Training For (WAYTF): What you are training for and what your training age (experience) will definitely play into the equation. Intensity is relative to the time domain. Long slow distance is not a change of intensity but a state of homeostasis.
- Type of Training: different fuel for different types of training. Are you primarily doing a CNS Stimulant workout (strength training) or Cellular Breakdown (metabolic conditioning) or a bit of both? Plan your nutrition and strategize accordingly.
- Sensitivities: we vary greatly, experiment, feel what works, you will need to learn by trial and error what works best for your genetics.
- Timing of meals: for strength training you should be able to eat up to 15 -30 min prior to your workout without any ill effects. For metabolic conditioning some can train fasted or within 2 hours allowing time for digestion.
Realizing there are many factors that play into this let’s take a look at some Pre and Post workout meal and snack ideas. . .
Pre Workout Nutrition
Fasted: if it works for you, do it. It doesn’t for me (I am a meso/endo) maintaining my weight. Some people (primarily endos and those overweight) do well in a fasted state for metabolic conditioning or long slow distance. I don’t recommend it for strength training.
30 min to 2 hours prior: up to 30 min for strength training, 60 min to 2 hours for metabolic conditioning. A meal consisting of protein, fat and carbohydrates in macronutrients (proportions) suitable to your body type/goals.
Example: 2-3 hard boiled eggs, piece of fruit; chicken/fish/fowl, veggies, sweet potato/other root or tuber
Post Workout Nutrition
Gain/maintain weight/small amount to lose: 40% protein, 60% carbs, low in fat. Why low in fat? Fat slows the absorption process; post wod is an exception–you want those nutrients sucked up rapidly.
Examples: Nature’s “protein shake” and my favorite — 1-2 cups raw milk and a sweet potato or banana. I prefer to have a liquid/easily digestible protein and a source of carbs immediately following my training, and a whole food meal a couple of hours later.
High % of body fat/insulin resistant or metabolically challenged: higher protein/mod fat/low carb; goal is to stabilize blood sugar and continue to burn stored body fat
Examples: homemade kefir is an excellent choice post workout; coconut milk smoothie with a few berries; hard boiled eggs w/ veggies.
2 hours post workout: meal of protein/carb/fat relative to the proportions appropriate for your body type/goals.
Examples:
Ectos/Mesos: Meat/fish/fowl, starch (sweet potato, white potato, yucca or other roots/tubers), vegetables and healthy fats in proportions suitable to body type/goals.
Endos: Meat/fish/fowl, vegetables and healthy fat in proportions suitable to body type/goals.
These are merely general guidelines for pre/post workout nutrition. It is imperative to experiment and find what works for you. And remember these pre/post wod meals are crossing the t’s and dotting the i’s on an already solid nutrition plan–they aren’t the focus of a solid nutrition plan.
smart home
It’s hard to find knowledgeable people regarding but you sound like you know what you’re talking about! Thanks for sharing this with others
Josh @ Juice It Upp
Hey Paula, I am just a bit confused because you said “(I am a meso/endo)” but the endo looks a bit like a heavier-set woman. Your abs look quite the opposite of that.
I do think that our bodies are like cars, they each operate different and you can’t treat them all the same. I read a study earlier that shows that bodies also should be eating differently based on their blood-type, as some foods are heavy in certain substances that are good for certain blood types. I think that a good rule of thumb is whatever makes you feel better throughout the day after you eat it is probably good for you.
Fitness Editor Paula Jager, CSCS Owner of Crossfit Jaguar
@Josh That picture was taken during a competition for which I had “leaned out” to about 12% body fat thus the abs. I do not maintain that year round. When I am at a heavier weight/higher bf % it is easier to see the combination.
Josh
Oh I see. Well, that makes sense now 🙂
Luci
I’d love it is someone answered Sasha’s (comment # 2) question as I’m in the EXACT same boat. Been on full GAPS 2 years and only started gluten-free grains (well only quinoa & buckwheat for now). I’m super thin, BUT since baby # 2 was born (11 mos now) have a big tummy, which looks ridiculous since the rest of me is still so thin (like I’m early pregnant again, but I’m not!). I need to eat a lot as I am eating for two, nursing etc. though I don’t even have a lot of time to eat as much as I should, so HOW do I get rid of the tummy? Not sure if it is bloating (sometimes feels hard) or just super stretched out muscles from pregnancy that need to be reined in or what?! I’d do a cleanse but it is not recommended for a nursing mother. Help!
Danielle
Luci, if you have a big tummy you might have an abdominal separation know as Diastisis Rect. The Tupler Technique is a way to bring the muscles back together that have separated during pregnancy. I am currently doing it and wish I would have done it shortly after my baby was born.
Ana
Same here… grain free diet, nursing 18 month old, I only have 1 finger width between my abdominal muscles, but my belly sticks out like 6 months preg on my petite frame. Sometimes I do think it’s bloating but I don’t know… I’m torn about exercising because I feel really fatigued all the time.
Annabel Lees-barnes via Facebook
Sophie Tommie Knight this may be of interest to you
Sharon Edelen Caanen via Facebook
Sandy Rosas Guerra Jackie Vela
Alyssa Gorospe via Facebook
Uh…waistlines are inherently a part of our female makeup…as a matter of fact, there is a waistline/hip ratio that has been intuitively used by males to detect a womans health and fertility for AGES. So yes, these body types are quite accurate.
Ruhi Deabreu via Facebook
Wisdom LivinTruth EL
Vlad Padina via Facebook
Proposed by a PSYCHOlogist, who considered the stereotypes of jolly fat person and high-strung skinny person. No real scientific backing.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatotype_and_constitutional_psychology
Paula
Maybe not a lot of “scientific backing” but clear and obvious truths if you look around at people. Very striking parallels to the Ayurvedic genomics also.
Danelle Downer via Facebook
Hey where is the roundmorph? lol
Row Bot via Facebook
Ha! I eat right woo Vana Keesler