docpepper
Member
This is a fat-loss/cut log, not an AAS cycle log. I've seen others post their diet logs here too, so I figured it'd be okay. Happy to move thread elsewhere otherwise.
Stats:
- Age: 28
- Height: 5'6
- Weight: 216lbs
- BF: Never measured, but >30%
Compounds:
- Retatrutide: 7.5mg/week (just came up from 5mg)
- TRT: 140mg/week Cyp (40mg EOD)
I've always struggled with my weight. Been fat most of my life, but have gotten into good shape (by ordinary standards) a handful of times, and have gained most of it back every time.
I'm actually very talented at dieting and sticking to a diet. It's the slow-creep of maintenance that is always the biggest challenge for me. The lack of a target, letting off the gas pedal. I begin to slowly drift up and find myself up 20lbs months later.
Last year I hit 254lbs at 5'6, which was my all-time high from when I was like 19 or 20. Disgusted with myself, I started dieting and exercising aggressively. Found Sema and Reta along the way, which make things much easier. I'd say the biggest thing about these GLP-1s is that I'm confident that I can finally nail maintenance. Losing the weight was never the big challenge, but now that I have much more confidence in GLP-1s helping me with maintenance auto-regulation, I'm so much more optimistic about AFTER the cut is over.
Here is a chart of my weight since October 2024:


Lost relatively steadily until the summer. Light calorie counting (not weighing food and obsessing over my log) and smart food choices. Eased up on going out with friends and tried to limit eating out with the (now ex) GF.
But things started slowing down in the summer, so I decided I have to go all-in or else I'll just lose 0.5lb/week slowly over time, which is way too slow at my bodyweight.
I found Lyle McDonald's Rapid Fat Loss book, and his PSMF idea really appealed to me. I love the idea of a strict diet, where the boundaries and rules are very clear.
The diet is quite simple:
- ~1200 calories per day (my TDEE is ~2600, at least that's the low-end of various estimates, I like assuming low end in a cut)
- 150g protein per day. (Lyle's recommendation is 1g/lb LBM, so I rounded up my estimated ~130-140 LBM to 150 to be safe)
I mostly eat 96% lean ground beef, chicken breast, shrimp, whey protein shakes, and protein bars. I'll throw a can of tomatoes and peppers in my ground beef to have a sort of PSMF chili, use 50g/12oz of light mayo with the chicken breast + hot sauce to make a chicken salad (deli chicken salad not like greens). Things of that nature. Trying to make palatable meals by adding as few calories as possible. Backfill protein as needed with whey shakes. At first, this was 3/day, now it's 0-1.
I started this diet on August 15, which was two weeks out from a vacation. The vacation had nothing to do with the weight loss motivation, but it was perfect timing, as I could do a bit of a lazy version of the PSMF for two weeks, and figure out more sustainable recipes when I return. From August 15-30 I ate 10oz of chicken breast, 3 whey shakes, and an Oikos Triple Zero yogurt.
This was ~1,000 calories.
On vacation I wasn't neurotic about anything nor did I track. But with the Reta, I wasn't able to finish most meals and was only having 1-3 alcoholic drinks per day. So maybe maintenance or above, doesn't really matter.
Upon returning, I spent some time building a few easy go-to recipes so I can eat real food instead of getting like 40% of my calories from whey.
Still hitting my protein goals, but hitting closer to 1200-1300 calories per day most days. Slowly refining the recipes to carve out bits of calories piece by piece without significantly affecting the taste of the food, just trying to optimize a bit, but if I stay at this ~1250 calorie pace, that's fine too.
I have one slip-up so far, where I ate 2500 calories in a day. My dog woke me up barking in the middle of the night, bring him outside and stupidly had an ice cream bar and a slice of pizza while hanging outside with him. Not a big deal, it happens here and there.
Two months ago I started training "bodybuilder style" for the first time in my life and I've never had more fun in the gym. All of my ~7 years of on/off training has always been strength/powerlifting focused. When I first start lifting I concluded barbell-focused strength training was the perfect method and never really bothered to mess with much else.
But when I got back into training last year, I was getting bored of doing the same barbell lifts over and over again, and it sucked to have to build back up to my old maxes. Randomly saw some clips of old school bodybuilders training on YouTube Shorts and thought it looked so fun so I decided to give it a shot.
Prior to starting this bodybuilding-style training, I was doing a basic full-body program, 3x/week. Wasn't training nearly as hard as I am now, saw decent progress.
I've really fallen in love with this style of training, it feels so fresh. The mind/muscle connection, higher rep ranges, finding ways to make the same weight harder (partials, rest/pause), training purely for hypertrophy, and I'm finally getting a pump, which is kinda rare in the 4-6 rep range. I finally understand that Arnold clip.
I also learned what actually training to failure feels like. The only time I truly trained to failure in the past was trying 1RMs. Many of my working sets I thought I had 1-2 RIR, but I probably had more like 3-4. I love that using machines and cables you can safely push to absolute failure, not really possible with barbells.
Started with a basic bro-split: Chest/Back/Legs/Shoulders/Arms
Quickly felt that the shoulder day, despite side delts being my new favorite muscle to train, was kinda redundant. Barbell OHP was the only truly taxing movement, the rest was side/rear delt work that could be distributed onto another day. Same with the arm day.
So I consolidated it into a PPL cadence: Chest-Bis/Back-Tris/Legs, but not strictly bro-split or PPL.
Here's what I'm running right now:
- 3x Incline Hammer Press (8-12)
- 3x Pec Deck (12-15)
- 3x Cable Chest Press (8-12)
- 3x Cable Curls (8-12)
- 3x Seated Side Lat Raise Machine (varied rep ranges)
- 2x Concentration Curls (8-12)
- 2x Cable Lat Raise
- 3x Close-Grip Lat Pulldown (8-12)
- 3x Chest-Supported T-Bar Row (6-8)
- 3x Tricep Pushdown (8-12)
- 3x Rear Delt Flies (8-12)
- 3x Tricep French Press (12-15)
- 2x Side Delt Machine
- 2x Facepulls (8-12)
- 3x Barbell High Bar Squat (8-12)
- 3x Hamstring Curls (8-12)
- 3x Leg Extensions (8-12)
- 2x Calf Raise (12-15)
- 2x Side Delt
Notes:
- End each session with 15-25min of steady state stairmaster
- I train to failure on 2/3 of working sets for the compound movements, and 90% of sets for the isolations.
- Recovery has been good so far. I know this skews higher volume given my dramatic cut, so I'll cut volume a bit if recovery starts taking a hit.
- Still making strength/rep gains. Being just two months into this style of training, I know a lot of that is adaption/learning the new movements, but so far, so good.
- Very noticeable gains. Nothing spectacular, but feel like my weight distribution is shifting away from my stomach and towards my chest/shoulders/back. Feeling much harder, upper body looks more built, etc. Gains are far better than I was seeing on my lazy full-body program from earlier in the year. I know much of this is muscle-memory/newbie-gains reset, but its nice to see.
Questions/Thoughts:
- Most people on PPL-style programs have A/B days. Is it worth implementing this early on? I can see the pros, but could slow down progress, as I'm still adding weight or reps to the big movements, might be better to wait until the progress curve flattens?
- I'd like to add a third back movement to my back day, but I'm so taxed after taking Lat PD and T-Bar Rows to failure that I fear it may be junk volume. I did find out that my gym has a Lat Pullover machine that I'd love to try, perhaps I can add some of that as a finisher? What are your guys thoughts on this? I was also considering moving the T-Bar Rows first, as they're the hardest, but on the same front, I feel like the Lat Pulldowns do the most work to get that wide lat look I like, so I'd like to be freshest on the movement that gives me the best aesthetic returns.
Goals:
- I want to be lean, first goal is 15% BF, then 12% BF and assess from there. That's not lean for you guys, but it is for me.
- I don't have any aspirations to get hulking big. My physique north star is Zyzz (typical, I know). I know that's very difficult to achieve, but that's just an idea of the absolute ideal, rather than the actual goal.
- I love the look of big side delts (don't we all), I would love to get them at least somewhat visually distinct. That's why I sprinkle some delt volume in every session.
Here's a chart of my weights (each point is a weigh-in) from throughout the cut:

Kinda sucks to only be down like 5lbs in 5 weeks, but I'm just trusting the process. I'm weighing out my food, logging every bit of oil in the pan, any sauce, etc. I'm training hard, doing my cardio. I've seen this enough times that it doesn't bother me much, but it'll be nice to start seeing an accelerated rate of change.
I'd welcome any thoughts/ideas you guys have. Did I leave anything out?
I'll try to make my logs interesting enough, although no crazy cycles or gains to speak of. Just burning my bitch tits and gut.
Stats:
- Age: 28
- Height: 5'6
- Weight: 216lbs
- BF: Never measured, but >30%
Compounds:
- Retatrutide: 7.5mg/week (just came up from 5mg)
- TRT: 140mg/week Cyp (40mg EOD)
I've always struggled with my weight. Been fat most of my life, but have gotten into good shape (by ordinary standards) a handful of times, and have gained most of it back every time.
I'm actually very talented at dieting and sticking to a diet. It's the slow-creep of maintenance that is always the biggest challenge for me. The lack of a target, letting off the gas pedal. I begin to slowly drift up and find myself up 20lbs months later.
Last year I hit 254lbs at 5'6, which was my all-time high from when I was like 19 or 20. Disgusted with myself, I started dieting and exercising aggressively. Found Sema and Reta along the way, which make things much easier. I'd say the biggest thing about these GLP-1s is that I'm confident that I can finally nail maintenance. Losing the weight was never the big challenge, but now that I have much more confidence in GLP-1s helping me with maintenance auto-regulation, I'm so much more optimistic about AFTER the cut is over.
Here is a chart of my weight since October 2024:


Lost relatively steadily until the summer. Light calorie counting (not weighing food and obsessing over my log) and smart food choices. Eased up on going out with friends and tried to limit eating out with the (now ex) GF.
But things started slowing down in the summer, so I decided I have to go all-in or else I'll just lose 0.5lb/week slowly over time, which is way too slow at my bodyweight.
The Plan
I found Lyle McDonald's Rapid Fat Loss book, and his PSMF idea really appealed to me. I love the idea of a strict diet, where the boundaries and rules are very clear.
The diet is quite simple:
- ~1200 calories per day (my TDEE is ~2600, at least that's the low-end of various estimates, I like assuming low end in a cut)
- 150g protein per day. (Lyle's recommendation is 1g/lb LBM, so I rounded up my estimated ~130-140 LBM to 150 to be safe)
I mostly eat 96% lean ground beef, chicken breast, shrimp, whey protein shakes, and protein bars. I'll throw a can of tomatoes and peppers in my ground beef to have a sort of PSMF chili, use 50g/12oz of light mayo with the chicken breast + hot sauce to make a chicken salad (deli chicken salad not like greens). Things of that nature. Trying to make palatable meals by adding as few calories as possible. Backfill protein as needed with whey shakes. At first, this was 3/day, now it's 0-1.
I started this diet on August 15, which was two weeks out from a vacation. The vacation had nothing to do with the weight loss motivation, but it was perfect timing, as I could do a bit of a lazy version of the PSMF for two weeks, and figure out more sustainable recipes when I return. From August 15-30 I ate 10oz of chicken breast, 3 whey shakes, and an Oikos Triple Zero yogurt.
This was ~1,000 calories.
On vacation I wasn't neurotic about anything nor did I track. But with the Reta, I wasn't able to finish most meals and was only having 1-3 alcoholic drinks per day. So maybe maintenance or above, doesn't really matter.
Upon returning, I spent some time building a few easy go-to recipes so I can eat real food instead of getting like 40% of my calories from whey.
Still hitting my protein goals, but hitting closer to 1200-1300 calories per day most days. Slowly refining the recipes to carve out bits of calories piece by piece without significantly affecting the taste of the food, just trying to optimize a bit, but if I stay at this ~1250 calorie pace, that's fine too.
I have one slip-up so far, where I ate 2500 calories in a day. My dog woke me up barking in the middle of the night, bring him outside and stupidly had an ice cream bar and a slice of pizza while hanging outside with him. Not a big deal, it happens here and there.
Training
Two months ago I started training "bodybuilder style" for the first time in my life and I've never had more fun in the gym. All of my ~7 years of on/off training has always been strength/powerlifting focused. When I first start lifting I concluded barbell-focused strength training was the perfect method and never really bothered to mess with much else.
But when I got back into training last year, I was getting bored of doing the same barbell lifts over and over again, and it sucked to have to build back up to my old maxes. Randomly saw some clips of old school bodybuilders training on YouTube Shorts and thought it looked so fun so I decided to give it a shot.
Prior to starting this bodybuilding-style training, I was doing a basic full-body program, 3x/week. Wasn't training nearly as hard as I am now, saw decent progress.
I've really fallen in love with this style of training, it feels so fresh. The mind/muscle connection, higher rep ranges, finding ways to make the same weight harder (partials, rest/pause), training purely for hypertrophy, and I'm finally getting a pump, which is kinda rare in the 4-6 rep range. I finally understand that Arnold clip.
I also learned what actually training to failure feels like. The only time I truly trained to failure in the past was trying 1RMs. Many of my working sets I thought I had 1-2 RIR, but I probably had more like 3-4. I love that using machines and cables you can safely push to absolute failure, not really possible with barbells.
Started with a basic bro-split: Chest/Back/Legs/Shoulders/Arms
Quickly felt that the shoulder day, despite side delts being my new favorite muscle to train, was kinda redundant. Barbell OHP was the only truly taxing movement, the rest was side/rear delt work that could be distributed onto another day. Same with the arm day.
So I consolidated it into a PPL cadence: Chest-Bis/Back-Tris/Legs, but not strictly bro-split or PPL.
Here's what I'm running right now:
Chest
- 3x Incline Hammer Press (8-12)
- 3x Pec Deck (12-15)
- 3x Cable Chest Press (8-12)
- 3x Cable Curls (8-12)
- 3x Seated Side Lat Raise Machine (varied rep ranges)
- 2x Concentration Curls (8-12)
- 2x Cable Lat Raise
Back
- 3x Close-Grip Lat Pulldown (8-12)
- 3x Chest-Supported T-Bar Row (6-8)
- 3x Tricep Pushdown (8-12)
- 3x Rear Delt Flies (8-12)
- 3x Tricep French Press (12-15)
- 2x Side Delt Machine
- 2x Facepulls (8-12)
Legs
- 3x Barbell High Bar Squat (8-12)
- 3x Hamstring Curls (8-12)
- 3x Leg Extensions (8-12)
- 2x Calf Raise (12-15)
- 2x Side Delt
Notes:
- End each session with 15-25min of steady state stairmaster
- I train to failure on 2/3 of working sets for the compound movements, and 90% of sets for the isolations.
- Recovery has been good so far. I know this skews higher volume given my dramatic cut, so I'll cut volume a bit if recovery starts taking a hit.
- Still making strength/rep gains. Being just two months into this style of training, I know a lot of that is adaption/learning the new movements, but so far, so good.
- Very noticeable gains. Nothing spectacular, but feel like my weight distribution is shifting away from my stomach and towards my chest/shoulders/back. Feeling much harder, upper body looks more built, etc. Gains are far better than I was seeing on my lazy full-body program from earlier in the year. I know much of this is muscle-memory/newbie-gains reset, but its nice to see.
Questions/Thoughts:
- Most people on PPL-style programs have A/B days. Is it worth implementing this early on? I can see the pros, but could slow down progress, as I'm still adding weight or reps to the big movements, might be better to wait until the progress curve flattens?
- I'd like to add a third back movement to my back day, but I'm so taxed after taking Lat PD and T-Bar Rows to failure that I fear it may be junk volume. I did find out that my gym has a Lat Pullover machine that I'd love to try, perhaps I can add some of that as a finisher? What are your guys thoughts on this? I was also considering moving the T-Bar Rows first, as they're the hardest, but on the same front, I feel like the Lat Pulldowns do the most work to get that wide lat look I like, so I'd like to be freshest on the movement that gives me the best aesthetic returns.
Goals:
- I want to be lean, first goal is 15% BF, then 12% BF and assess from there. That's not lean for you guys, but it is for me.
- I don't have any aspirations to get hulking big. My physique north star is Zyzz (typical, I know). I know that's very difficult to achieve, but that's just an idea of the absolute ideal, rather than the actual goal.
- I love the look of big side delts (don't we all), I would love to get them at least somewhat visually distinct. That's why I sprinkle some delt volume in every session.
Weight since the start of the cut
Here's a chart of my weights (each point is a weigh-in) from throughout the cut:

Kinda sucks to only be down like 5lbs in 5 weeks, but I'm just trusting the process. I'm weighing out my food, logging every bit of oil in the pan, any sauce, etc. I'm training hard, doing my cardio. I've seen this enough times that it doesn't bother me much, but it'll be nice to start seeing an accelerated rate of change.
Feedback
I'd welcome any thoughts/ideas you guys have. Did I leave anything out?
Updates to come
I'll try to make my logs interesting enough, although no crazy cycles or gains to speak of. Just burning my bitch tits and gut.


