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For sure bro. Simplicity for 99.9% of the population is deffinatly key (the .1% extra being competitve bodybuilders haha)
It's nice to have time to do things other than obsess about ones diet or exercise regimen.
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True, but you still need mass. You wont need to use AAS, and it wont take you nearly as long, and you can be much more slacked in your approach, but the same rules still apply. Being toned is just having a low bodyfat with some muscle mass. The rules are the same: big compound lifts, progressive overload, nutrition oriented to one`s goals.
I prefer body weight exercises. It's something I picked up while a U.S. Marine. Although, or course I do to a limited degree (curls, etc..) and have in the past incorporated weight training.
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At face value this true. However, where your calories come from, timing, etc, will have a huge effect on the body. If I started eating in a defecit, and sourced all my cals from beer and cheese, I would lose MASSIVE ammounts of lean mass, and not a whole lot of fat. However, if I took in the same # of cals, but through sweet potatoes, chicken breast, and walnuts, I would likely hold on to a lot of my mass.
Aside from that, different nutrients will have different effects on, among other things, hormone production. Many of these hormones will regulate your metabolism.
I was referring to a balanced diet.
Most people like to eat, and feel quite uncomfortable when they do not. Most people with an occupation simply don't have the time, etc.. to follow fad or other extreme diets. Nor is it necessarily healthy to do so. For most of human history it's been feast or famine.
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Peanut butter is a source of protein, but I don't think it's a good one. It is an excellent food, and I wouldn't encourage anyone to not eat it (well, maybe if you have a nut allergy

).However, as a strictly protein source, it's not the greatest. It's a calorie-dense food, without a high protein content. Good sources of protein would be whey, casein, eggs, meats, fish, cottage cheese, etc
Yeah, like I said everybody has a right to their opinion. Here's another one for your digestion.
http://bodybuilding.com/fun/other31.htm
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I await your reply,
Keenan
p.s. you are looking fairly big in your pic I`ll give you that

I'm not that big, except what's hangin.
My chest is about a 44, my waist about a 36.. I'm 6'0, and about 185 lbs. I'm proportional. And I'm 46 y.o.
Years ago when I was in the best shape of my life and could run, climb, etc.. like a gazelle I was quite slender. It was certainly less visually appealing than what you see today. A large part of this has been cutting back on the manual labor type jobs, consuming a balanced diet, and of course age. My workout routine normally consists of push ups, pull ups, ab work and running/walking. Nothing extreme anymore.