Robert,
What are some "rules of thumb" in diet/macro planning that I might use? I'm hoping this may be helpful to others who are similar to me.
I'm in my third week of NLP, and have started tracking my macros to get a sense of what my current split is and total calories. I will keep tracking macros/calories and adjust based on lift progress and recovery. But I want to avoid increasing my waist circumference if possible. I am at 39" waist and 218lbs at 6'0", so about 22% bodyfat (age 32). I have an office job, so lifting is my only activity. Prior to this I was doing kettlebells; prior to that I was completely sedentary since college. So I am not in the skinny/underweight category, but also not in the overweight category. I suppose this sets me up nicely to gain strength if I can get the nutrition right.
My daily average from last week (starting 1/2, representing the "normal routine" after the holidays):
Calories: 2,640
Carbs: 324g (1,296cal, 49%), with 26g fiber and 80g sugar
Fat: 98g (882cal, 33%)
Protein: 120g (480cal, 18%)
My understanding of the general guidelines for someone who is not underweight and under-muscled (my LBM according to the inverse of my body fat percentage is 170lbs), but also not overweight:
1) Prioritize protein. In my case, an increase of 50-100g per day.
2) Keep fat below 100g. Reduce in 100cal (~10g) increments if waist size is increasing (in my case, 40" is my "red line"). At the recent total calorie levels, this is 33% - is that high? When selecting foods, is a simple rule of thumb perhaps to avoid it if >20% of the calories come from fat? My thinking is this would direct one toward lean meats and low-fat carbs (e.g. avoiding the "carb-fat" junk foods).
3) Aim for 40g fiber. This also governs the carb choices, as you can't get 40g fiber from 300g of sugar-source carbs!
4) Whole-food carbs for fuel and recovery. So no real calorie minimum or maximum, just focusing on quality (veggies, whole grains, rice, potatoes) and volume sufficient for performance and recovery.
What is the role of sugar in all this? Minimize as much as possible? Differentiate between fructose/HFCS (= bad) and table sugar (mix of fructose/glucose)? In other words, the 324g of carbs I listed above, 80g of which was sugar: what effect does the 80g sugar have on waist size? Should I add to the list: reduce (eliminate?) the "sugar share" of carbs in favor of whole sources? Or put another way: at what percentage of calories does sugar cause problems? There is a lot of conflicting/confusing advise out there on sugar, not sure what to make of it, and I haven't seen it addressed separately from "carbs" in general in this forum recently.
Thank you - I appreciate your insight and expertise!
Post-script:
5) Keep sugar to <20% of carb calories. No real difference between table sugar (sucrose, 50% fructose/50% glucose) and high-fructose corn syrup (55% fructose, 45% glucose). Time intake around workouts.