I have an amazing blog interview for you - if I do say so myself. I pride myself in asking the hard questions - not ones designed to prop up federations or sell supplements, I have no interest in that. I just want honest answers to the questions I want to know about. So here they are;
Part 1;
· First Competition Season vs Second
· Weight Gain Post Comp ..... Fuelled by Clean Eating ...shock/horror/gasp
· A New Direction
· The Dangers of Social Media
Candice -
IFBB Nationals/Amateur Olympia - 3rd Place Figure Novice Tall
We know you just competed at the
IFBB Competition in Qld two weeks ago – and you placed 3rd which is fantastic – but let’s start
at the start. I happen to know you had another competition season that didn’t
end optimally. Tell us all about that.
My last prep was actually
quite good, it was the aftermath that was the issue! My first prep (might be
what you are referring to) was awful. I had a 'coach' who was a famous fitness
model and is/was quite well known and had a cookie cutter food and exercise
plan (unbeknownst to me, it was the exact same one she gave ALL of her
competitors regardless of body composition etc). Needless to say, I wasn't lean
enough. I did win that comp (fitness model INBA NT) however I think that was in
large due to my stage presence. I jumped straight into another prep under a
wonderful coach and got the conditioning I was after, but didn't place that
time.
The aftermath from that was a
17kg weight gain. Yep, 17kg. I ate, and ate and ate some more for good measure.
With all of that in mind, why on
earth did you decide to compete again?
Long story short - because I
adore this sport. I really, really do. I love pushing myself, I love the
dedication and commitment but most of all I love the people that this sport
attracts. I love being surrounded by driven, strong, passionate people and this
sport is full of them! I've often felt that I didn't fit in anywhere, but I've
definitely found my niche now.
Your first season was 2013 and
you have only just competed again now in late 2015 – why the long wait?
Well...I've always wanted to be a
figure girl. I needed to put on size, especially in my arms as they are
overpowered by my lower body. Also, I wanted to make sure that when I
started prepping I wasn't doing it purely to 'lose weight' and get lean. I
wanted to make sure first that I got my eating under control and addressed the
'whys' of the eating instead of throwing myself into prep hoping that being
forced to eat a certain way would fix all of that for me (because IT WON’T!). I
started to get that sorted in about August 2014 with the help of some wonderful
people and then felt ready to start prepping in about April 2015.
Candice - Tropix INBA - No
Placing
Before we move on, let's
talk more about post comp. Acknowledging just how tough these questions are;
How is it possible to go from
comp-lean to 17kg over that weight?
Candice - Post Comp
So what protocols did you try to
follow? Why did/didn't they work?
I didn't really - I mean I tried
to 'eat clean' as much as possible but I didn't pay attention to quantities at
all. Just goes to show there can be too much of a good thing...too much food is
still too much food whether it is chocolate or chicken and veg!
When I got to my turning point moment I started on a recomposer program which I loved, but also still felt that it was too restrictive for an off season for me. For those that don't have experience with recomp it is a software program that is used by coaches. You basically eat the same foods every day for a week; progress is then measured via weight, skin folds and strength gains during training, and then food is adjusted accordingly. It’s a fabulous way to track progress, but I didn't want to feel like I was prepping during my off season...maybe I just wasn't ready? Who knows? I do love the idea of the program though.
After this I started researching
IIFYM (gasp!!) and after many discussions with Kirsten and lots and lots of
reading and podcasts I decided to give it a crack...and it worked! For those
who don't know IIFYM is a method of food tracking/dieting whereby you set
yourself targets for protein, carbs and fats and you must hit these every day,
eating foods of your choice and keeping track of it in an app such as my
fitness pal. I managed to increase my food up to about 2300 calories (which was
important for me at this time as I was almost feeling ready to start prepping
again) and lose a few kilos in the process. It gave me control back over my food,
but also allowed me enough flexibility to eat out when I wanted to (which I
really love).
So are you trying to tell us that
'Clean Eating' still had you putting on excess weight?? Gasp…horror.
Yes...
And did you try IIFYM in it's raw
form - that is, eating whatever, whenever as long as it fitted your macros?
Yeah I did. I don't generally eat
junk food anyway, but when I did I made sure it fit the numbers required for
the day.
What was the result of following
it that way?
Over the course of a few months I
got my calories up to about 2300 and managed to drop 4kg meaning I started my
prep at 70kg. Getting calories up was really important to me - I could have
lost more weight but decided that it was more important to get my calories up
as high as possible whilst maintaining weight before prep started.
Did you ever try IIFYM with
modifications or changes to the method?
Once I started prep I used this
method for the first few months. We quickly realised that I needed to spread my
calories more evenly throughout the day and pay more attention to the types of
foods I was eating. I did get a little bit carried away with the whole 'eat
whatever you like as long as it fits' mentality and ate a lot of foods I
wouldn't normally eat just because I could!
How did you feel about yourself
through the weight gain?
Awful. Horrible. Embarrassed. I
don't think I looked 'overweight' but I was incredibly unhappy and
uncomfortable. I didn't look like someone that trained.
What did you think of the
competition world while this was going on?
I still loved it. I became very
interested in the different athletes and their 'methods' and had started doing
a lot of reading of blogs and listening to podcasts about nutrition, training
styles etc. I couldn't help but feel a little jealous of those that seemed to
be able to maintain a rocking' bod with seemingly little effort year round.
This is where social media got a bit dangerous for me...Easy to forget that
people aren't always honest!
What was the turning point if
there was one?
I was in hospital for an
operation and had to do the dreaded weigh in - something I had avoided for a
long time! And the scales hit 74kg...Not too long after that was the WFF
Universe Titles where I was immersed in the world again after such a long break
and I knew it was time to get my shit together.
And let's touch on social media -
you and I talked quite often about the girls that put up posts of
"shredding" while eating 2000 cals plus a day. Hell, some even ate
that and did no cardio and still claimed to shred down. What's your thoughts on
those posts?
Ahhh. I'm not sure. I don't like
to think that people blatantly lie about things. I'm sure they do, but I will
give them benefit of the doubt. I just know that what they were claiming was
working miracles for them definitely was not working for me, which made me a
little mad...How come I wasn't shredded on 2000 a day, let alone the no cardio
part!? Haha. It's all relative, and it’s hard to be rational and reasonable
during prep sometimes.
You touched on social media being
a little dangerous for you. Tell us more.
Incredibly. There was even a
point throughout my prep that I was banned from it for two weeks. Two whole
weeks! But, I spent way too much time looking at my competition, comparing
photos, looking at their food and training...ridiculous stuff!! I was
constantly doubting myself, comparing myself and talking myself out of
competing purely because of a few well posed photos and posts.
What would you suggest for others
who get their training, advice, self-esteem and everything else from Facebook?
Don't get me wrong I think it is
a wonderful tool when used in the right way. It gives us so much access to
health and fitness information and 'gurus' that even our freaky little sport
has become more mainstream, but I think information on there needs to be taken
with a grain of salt. Absorb the information, research the theories yourself
and don't get stuck on the 'right' and 'wrong' ways to lose weight or train or
grow muscle. There isn't a right and wrong. There isn't a quick fix or a magic
fat burning pill or powder. Those abs on the girl advertising all of the above
are probably there because she has just competed and is still hungry and has a
wicked spray tan and/or is in exceptional gym bathroom lighting. For most of
us, all that will work is CONSISTENCY, hard work, consistency, consistency and
a little more consistency.
Part II is coming soon - more
questions - more honesty.....




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