demon said:
I did Ab Ripper X yesterday and felt I did noticeably better at it than I usually do. Probably around 75%. Does anyone else have trouble doing some of the exercises without anchoring their feet under something, though? Like during the wide-leg situps?
And is it just me or is that Audra chick criminally hot?
Audra is what gets me through Ab Ripper X

. Adam too, but only because he looks like Predator :lol
So I'm pretty good with using Livestrong.com to track my calories (and it also tracks protein intake throughout the course of the day). Some things I've picked up in my reading tonight...
1. A really nice general guideline to shoot for is 30% protein, 40% carbs, and 30% fat, as far as your overall caloric intake goes. I'm hovering really close to 30% for today, but my dinner was at some Vietnamese restaurant that isn't listed on Livestrong.com, so all I know is that I had a ton of sliced pork, aka lots of protein
2. Studies show that adults need 0.8g of protein per kg of body weight. Athletes (or people wanting to get fit) can go for 1.2-1.6g protein/kg of body weight. To convert your weight to kg, take your weight in lbs and divide by 2.2. For me, that's 186 / 2.2 = 84.5kg. Then take your weight in kg and multiply by 1.2 (for your recommended minimum protein intake) or 1.6 (for your max). I should be getting 101-135g of protein, which I am
3. While trying to meet your protein intake goals, make sure they're spaced somewhat evenly throughout the day. In other words, don't eat protein-deficient foods the whole day, and then have a huge steak for dinner to compensate.
4. I'm not sure how many of us here in this thread are trying to do massive bulking vs. lose body fat, but if you've met your protein intake goals for the day, and you've spaced them out pretty evenly, you shouldn't have to go for a protein shake before bed. Unless you worked out 2 hours before bed (in which case you'd have a recovery drink immediately after), try to abstain from a protein shake unless it'll help you meet your protein goals. While the protein helps a little with recovery in your sleep, where do you think the carbs go while you laid in bed for 7-9 hours?
5. Protein shake before bed or not, your body is deprived of protein, carbs, etc. when you wake up. Make sure to eat a balanced whole breakfast to jump start your metabolism and take your body out of starvation mode
Hopefully this will be helpful to some of us here, maybe some of these points are enlightening to somebody. P90X has turned me into a health freak, can you tell? :lol and please don't ask me for the links/sources unless it's necessary, I already closed out the tabs from the Beachbody.com forums over half an hour ago :lol