EPISODE · May 23, 2026 · 3H 15M
Ultra Running Weight Loss 100lb, 50lbs, 20lbs, 10lbs with AI
from Running Miles With Heart Disease CHD · host Josh Sain
A 100-lb weight loss goal is achievable, but the safest and most sustainable approach is long-term: usually 12–24 months depending on your starting weight, training history, recovery, and nutrition consistency.A good setup combines:walking for calorie expenditure and recoveryrunning for fitness and endurancestrength training to preserve musclemoderate calorie deficitsleep and recoveryAim for:1–2 lbs/week on averageThat typically requires:~500–1,000 calorie daily deficit from food + activity combinedFaster loss often increases:injury riskmuscle lossburnoutrebound weight gainGoal: build consistency and avoid injury.5–7 days/weekStart: 30–45 min/dayBuild toward: 8,000–12,000 steps/day3 days/week:Run/walk intervals initially if neededExample:Progress gradually toward:3 days/week full body:squatslungesdeadliftspushupsrowsoverhead pressplanksFocus:2–3 sets8–12 repsprogressive overload10 min/dayhips, calves, ankles, thoracic spineBuild toward:150–300 min/week moderate cardioor combination of running + brisk walkingEventually:15–25 miles/week if toleratedmostly easy paceAvoid increasing:mileagepacelong runall at once.Critical for muscle retention.Target:0.7–1.0 g protein per lb of goal body weightGood sources:chickenfishGreek yogurteggstofuprotein shakesA moderate deficit works best.Typical approach:Calculate maintenance caloriesSubtract 500–750/day initiallyAvoid crash dieting.Prioritize:lean proteinvegetablesfruitpotatoes/rice/oatshealthy fatshigh-fiber foodsLimit:liquid caloriesultra-processed snacksbinge/restrict cyclesEspecially important if running regularly.Lifting helps:preserve metabolismmaintain muscleimprove running economyreduce loose-skin appearanceimprove long-term maintenanceCompound lifts are most effective:squat patternshinge patternspushingpullingcarriesSleep: 7.5–9 hours1–2 easier days weeklyDeload every 6–8 weeks if training hardProgress is rarely linear.running too hard too ofteneating too littleskipping strength trainingweighing daily and panickingtrying to “earn” food through exerciseincreasing mileage too quicklyThe most effective combination for large weight loss is usually:daily walkingmoderate calorie deficitstrength traininggradual running progressionconsistency over intensityIf you want, I can also build:a beginner-to-ultra-running weight loss roadmapa detailed weekly gym/running schedulea calorie/macronutrient targeta home-gym-only versiona plan tailored to your current weight, height, and fitness levelCore targetsWeight loss paceWeekly training structurePhase 1: Foundation (Weeks 1–8)WalkingRunningStrength trainingMobilityPhase 2: Fat-loss acceleration (Months 3–8)Weekly exampleDayTrainingMonStrength + walkTueEasy runWedStrength + incline walkThuIntervals or tempo runFriStrength + recovery walkSatLong walk or long easy runSunEasy walk/restCardio goalsRunning progressionNutrition frameworkProteinCaloriesFood qualityHydrationStrength training matters more than most people thinkRecovery targetsRealistic timelineTimeExpected Loss3 months12–25 lbs6 months25–45 lbs12 months50–90 lbs18–24 months100 lbsCommon mistakesBest strategy for long-term [email protected]://teamrunrun.com/coach/josh-sain-raleigh-running-coach/
What this episode covers
A 100-lb weight loss goal is achievable, but the safest and most sustainable approach is long-term: usually 12–24 months depending on your starting weight, training history, recovery, and nutrition consistency.A good setup combines:walking for calorie expenditure and recoveryrunning for fitness and endurancestrength training to preserve musclemoderate calorie deficitsleep and recoveryAim for:1–2 lbs/week on averageThat typically requires:~500–1,000 calorie daily deficit from food + activity combinedFaster loss often increases:injury riskmuscle lossburnoutrebound weight gainGoal: build consistency and avoid injury.5–7 days/weekStart: 30–45 min/dayBuild toward: 8,000–12,000 steps/day3 days/week:Run/walk intervals initially if neededExample:Progress gradually toward:3 days/week full body:squatslungesdeadliftspushupsrowsoverhead pressplanksFocus:2–3 sets8–12 repsprogressive overload10 min/dayhips, calves, ankles, thoracic spineBuild toward:150–300 min/week moderate cardioor combination of running + brisk walkingEventually:15–25 miles/week if toleratedmostly easy paceAvoid increasing:mileagepacelong runall at once.Critical for muscle retention.Target:0.7–1.0 g protein per lb of goal body weightGood sources:chickenfishGreek yogurteggstofuprotein shakesA moderate deficit works best.Typical approach:Calculate maintenance caloriesSubtract 500–750/day initiallyAvoid crash dieting.Prioritize:lean proteinvegetablesfruitpotatoes/rice/oatshealthy fatshigh-fiber foodsLimit:liquid caloriesultra-processed snacksbinge/restrict cyclesEspecially important if running regularly.Lifting helps:preserve metabolismmaintain muscleimprove running economyreduce loose-skin appearanceimprove long-term maintenanceCompound lifts are most effective:squat patternshinge patternspushingpullingcarriesSleep: 7.5–9 hours1–2 easier days weeklyDeload every 6–8 weeks if training hardProgress is rarely linear.running too hard too ofteneating too littleskipping strength trainingweighing daily and panickingtrying to “earn” food through exerciseincreasing mileage too quicklyThe most effective combination for large weight loss is usually:daily walkingmoderate calorie deficitstrength traininggradual running progressionconsistency over intensityIf you want, I can also build:a beginner-to-ultra-running weight loss roadmapa detailed weekly gym/running schedulea calorie/macronutrient targeta home-gym-only versiona plan tailored to your current weight, height, and fitness levelCore targetsWeight loss paceWeekly training structurePhase 1: Foundation (Weeks 1–8)WalkingRunningStrength trainingMobilityPhase 2: Fat-loss acceleration (Months 3–8)Weekly exampleDayTrainingMonStrength + walkTueEasy runWedStrength + incline walkThuIntervals or tempo runFriStrength + recovery walkSatLong walk or long easy runSunEasy walk/restCardio goalsRunning progressionNutrition frameworkProteinCaloriesFood qualityHydrationStrength training matters more than most people thinkRecovery targetsRealistic timelineTimeExpected Loss3 months12–25 lbs6 months25–45 lbs12 months50–90 lbs18–24 months100 lbsCommon mistakesBest strategy for long-term [email protected]://teamrunrun.com/coach/josh-sain-raleigh-running-coach/
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Ultra Running Weight Loss 100lb, 50lbs, 20lbs, 10lbs with AI
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