Many advanced bodybuilders will never step upon a competition stage. They’ll train for years, attain high levels of muscle mass, vascularity, and symmetry, and never don a pair of trunks. They’ll master every pose, but only in the privacy of their bathroom mirror. They will apply great discipline to all aspects of training, diet, and supplementation, but they will never reek of Pro-Tan. They are bodybuilders, but they will never compete in a bodybuilding show.
For this group of athletes (which encompasses about 99% of us), the need for an off-season “bulking” phase and a pre-contest “cutting” phase, and all the details and concerns that come with these phases, are not necessary. This group might train to look good 365 days a year, never letting body fat get too high (over 15%) or too low (below 8%).
These “365-ers” face a major challenge. They must find a caloric number, which is perfect for maintaining their muscle mass (and allow them to gain more muscle) without making body fat levels rise. In other words, how do they keep their existing muscle, and gain new muscle, while avoiding fat loss? A few factors to consider…
The baseline number
Write down everything you eat in one day. Add up the calories. This is your new baseline. The next day, repeat this count. Continue this for a week. Chart out your daily caloric intake. If your muscle mass and body fat stand precisely where you’d like them to be, then voila, you have the magic number. If you find you’d like to add more muscle to your frame, consider adding 200 to 500 clean calories to this daily total. A pound of muscle contains 3500 calories, so 500 additional calories per day, over the course of seven days, will provide your body with the nutrients to add one pound of muscle. However, if other factors aren’t in place (training, sleep, aminos in the bloodstream), then a portion of this one-pound weight gain will be in the form of fat.
Variations, treats, and cheats
You will want to maintain your sanity, and there will be days when you do miss meals, go out to dinner, and enjoy cheat food. There is nothing wrong with it – enjoying tasty foods are a wonderful part of life. Just be sure to compensate for the additional calories with either additional cardio, or a future caloric deficit to even out the numbers. Remember – assuming you’re at the optimal calorie number – the goal is to eat this many calories daily.
Long term planning
If your goal is to look exactly how you do today, in ten year, then keep everything on course and don’t change a thing. However, if you’d like to remain in great shape, but gain muscle over time, you will want to plan longer-term goals, and record your activity and progress to ensure you’re doing what it takes to reach those goals. Lift more, eat more, and sleep more – it’s an easy fix. Just make sure you’re doing these three things at small enough increments to allow you to remain in your great current shape as you improve.