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Owned by Brannon

SIMPLE Weight Loss

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Weight loss shouldn't be complicated. Lose weight and keep it off with SIMPLE habits. Extreme dieting sucks, so don't.

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6 contributions to the skool CLASSIFIEDS
Stop Letting Injuries Derail Your Weight Loss πŸ‹οΈβ€β™‚οΈπŸ”₯
Why Small Injuries Keep Showing Up ⚠️ A lot of people trying to lose weight run into the same frustrating pattern. Your knee starts bothering you. Then it heals… and suddenly your shoulder flares up. Then your elbow starts talking to you. Then your lower back gets tight. It can feel like your body is constantly one step away from another injury. Most people assume this is just part of training or that it will fix itself over time. The reality is that recurring injuries are usually a systems problem, not just a random pain problem. If you want to stay consistent in the gym β€” which is critical for long-term weight loss and fitness transformation β€” you need to address the bigger picture. There are three pillars that solve this. 1️⃣ Reset the System πŸ”„ Sometimes the most productive move is not pushing harder. When multiple joints keep flaring up, your body may simply be carrying too much accumulated fatigue. A short reset allows your body to calm down and re-establish a healthy baseline. A proper reset helps: βœ… Reduce inflammation βœ… Let the nervous system recover βœ… Stop compensation patterns βœ… Improve movement quality This usually means 1–2 weeks of lower intensity training, not quitting entirely. During that time, pay attention to: β€’ Movement quality β€’ Where pain shows up β€’ Strength imbalances β€’ Mobility limitations Think of this phase as recalibrating the system, not losing progress. 2️⃣ Structure Your Training πŸ“Š One of the biggest mistakes people make in the gym is training hard without structure. Most people train the same way week after week: Same effort. Same intensity. Same exercises. Over time, that creates overuse and fatigue. Smart training rotates through phases like: πŸ”₯ Volume accumulation πŸ’ͺ Hypertrophy (muscle building) πŸ‹οΈ Strength development All three are important β€” the difference is the dosage and timing. A simple cycle looks like this: Train β†’ gradually increase intensity β†’ approach fatigue β†’ deload β†’ repeat. This allows your body to adapt and grow stronger instead of constantly breaking down.
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βš™οΈ Your Body Has 3 Gears (Most People Train in the Wrong One) πŸš—πŸ’¨
Most people approach training with a simple mindset: go harder or do more. But the human body doesn’t work like an on/off switch. It works more like a performance engine with multiple gears. πŸš— If you stay stuck in the wrong gear too long, you burn out the motor. The real key isn’t just pushing harder β€” it’s understanding when to shift. When you understand the three energy systems your body uses to produce movement and power, training becomes much more effective. You recover better, perform better, and get a much higher return on the effort you put in. πŸ“ˆ ⚑ First Gear: Phosphocreatine (Explosive Power) This is your explosive gear β€” maximum power for a very short amount of time. Think of things like a 100-meter sprint, a vertical jump, or a one-rep max lift. These efforts typically last about 10 seconds or less. This system produces a huge amount of power quickly, but it burns out fast. When people constantly try to train at this intensity without proper recovery, the nervous system takes a massive hit and performance eventually drops. πŸ”₯ Second Gear: Glycolytic (High Effort Work) This is your moderate duration, high-intensity gear. Think of something like a tough CrossFit workout, a hard 400-meter run, or pushing through a challenging set of higher-rep squats. These efforts usually last anywhere from about 30 seconds to a couple of minutes. This system produces a lot of energy but also creates significant fatigue. When people spend too much time here without proper balance, it becomes extremely draining. πŸ”‹ Third Gear: Oxidative (Endurance Engine) This is your endurance system β€” the gear that allows you to sustain effort over longer periods. Think steady cardio like jogging, biking, hiking, or longer aerobic training sessions. This system helps build your aerobic base, supports recovery between harder efforts, and improves overall work capacity. It’s also one of the most important systems for long-term health and sustainable fitness. When training is designed well, you’re not just smashing the gas pedal every day. You’re shifting gears strategically. You use explosive power when it makes sense, push intensity when appropriate, and build endurance where it supports everything else.
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πŸ”₯ Start With Calories β€” Not Macros πŸ—πŸ“Š
One of the most common points of confusion in nutrition is macros. People try to figure out protein, carbs, fats, meal portions, tracking apps, and food labels all at the same time. That’s a lot of moving pieces. πŸ˜΅β€πŸ’« But here’s the reality: before macros ever matter, calories matter first. Understanding this principle simplifies the entire process of building a sustainable nutrition system. Let’s break this down. Calories Are the First Principle βš–οΈ Whether you track them or not, everyone is living under the laws of thermodynamics. Energy in vs energy out determines whether your body stores or releases energy. Macros are simply one way of organizing calories. But if tracking macros feels overwhelming, you don’t need to start there. In fact, many people make much faster progress when they simply focus on total calories first. Every food has a calorie value. That alone gives you a powerful lever for controlling your nutrition without overcomplicating the system. Use Simple Food Rules Instead of Macro Math 🧠 Instead of trying to memorize macros for every food, you can create simple calorie-based rules. Examples might look like: β€’ Eat at least 500 calories of chicken per day β€’ Limit bread to 200 calories per day β€’ Make sure you eat a minimum total calorie target These kinds of rules create structure without forcing you to track every gram of protein, carb, and fat. Simple rules reduce cognitive load, which makes consistency much easier. Boring Can Actually Be Easier 🍽️ A lot of people worry that eating similar foods regularly is a bad thing. In reality, boring can be powerful. When you repeat meals: β€’ You reduce decision fatigue β€’ You simplify tracking β€’ You create predictable routines β€’ Your body adapts to a stable system You don’t need endless variety to succeed. In fact, many successful nutrition systems rely on repeating the same foods consistently. Consistency beats novelty every time. Nutrition does not need to be complicated. Start with calories.
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πŸ”₯ Carbs Don’t Make You Fat (Let’s Clear This Up)
One of the most common beliefs in weight loss is that carbs are the enemy. People hear things like β€œcarbs turn into sugar” and β€œsugar turns into fat,” so the conclusion becomes: avoid pasta, bread, and rice if you want to lose weight. But that belief misses the bigger picture. ⚑ First β€” fat gain is an energy issue, not a carb issue. From a physics standpoint, thermodynamics are king. If you consistently consume more total energy (calories) than your body uses, that excess energy gets stored β€” usually as fat. And here’s the key: carbs, fats, and protein can ALL be stored as fat when total energy intake exceeds energy expenditure. So blaming carbs alone is missing the real mechanism. πŸ₯¦ Second β€” β€œhealthy vs unhealthy carbs” is the wrong question. Instead of asking whether a carb is β€œgood” or β€œbad,” a better question is: πŸ‘‰ Does this food support my current goal? For example, if your goal is fat loss, foods with higher volume and more fiber often help because they keep you fuller for fewer calories. Fibrous foods slow digestion and help regulate hunger signals like ghrelin and leptin. That doesn’t make pasta β€œbad” β€” it just means some foods may help you stay in a calorie deficit more easily. 🎯 Third β€” nutrient density and satiety matter. Some carb sources contain more micronutrients, fiber, and water, which can support overall health, hormone function, and appetite control. That’s why foods like fruits, vegetables, potatoes, oats, and rice often show up in successful fat-loss diets. But again β€” this isn’t about demonizing foods. You don’t gain fat because you ate pasta. You gain fat because total energy intake stayed higher than energy expenditure over time. And understanding that distinction gives you far more freedom and control in your nutrition. πŸ’¬ Now I’m curious: What’s a nutrition belief you used to think was true that you later realized wasn’t? Drop it below β€” let’s talk about it πŸ‘‡
1 like β€’ 3d
@Shannon Boyer Haha that’s a perfect example of how those food trends can get a little wild. I’m really big on moderation and keeping things simple. Most of the time the issue isn’t the specific food itself β€” it’s the dose. Like the saying goes, the poison is in the dose. Almost anything can become a problem if the quantity gets out of control. Where things go sideways is when we start getting too dogmatic about nutrition β€” labeling foods as the enemy or thinking one thing is the sole cause of weight gain. Most people will do just fine if they focus on a few simple principles: balance, reasonable portions, and consistency over time. Keep it simple, avoid the extremes, and aim for the minimum effective dose that you can actually sustain long-term. Most of the time that’s more than enough to get great results.
1 like β€’ 2d
@Shannon Boyer πŸ™Œ πŸ’₯
The Skool Classifieds Easter Egg Hunt is on 🐣
Starting March 16, I’m hiding 8 Easter eggs in random spots inside the Skool Classifieds classroom and yes, there will be prizes. Each Easter egg will appear as a course page inside one of the ads in the classroom with a picture of an Easter egg and a prompt for you to respond to in the main community. Here’s how to enter each time you find one: When you find an Easter egg, do these 3 things: 1. DM me a screenshot of the Easter egg 2. Answer the prompt in a post in the main community and DM me the link to the post. 3. Comment on someone else’s post Do all 3, and you’ll be entered into the draw for that egg. What you could win: Each Easter egg gives you a chance to win a 30-minute clarity call with me. On that call, we can either: - audit your community or classroom, or - use the time for your questions Prize details: - 8 prizes total - 4 winners drawn on March 23 at 10:00 p.m. EST - 4 winners drawn on April 2 at 10:00 p.m. EST - Prize value: approximately $85 USD each A few important things: - You can enter once per Easter egg - You can enter for as many Easter eggs as you find (8 total entries) - You can win more than once, just not more than once in the same draw (maximum of 2 times) - All 3 steps must be completed before noon EST on the draw date - No purchase is necessary - Free and paid members are both welcome to participate Winners will be notified by DM and announced in the community. Because I am in Canada, you will have to answer a very basic skill-testing mathematical question in order to claim your prize (something like (4 x 8) + 9 - 4). This is meant to be fun, a little interactive, and a great excuse to explore the classroom, join the conversation, and connect with each other along the way. So starting March 16, keep your eyes open. You never know where an Easter egg might pop up. πŸ‘€ P.S. I chose the ads in the classroom that have Easter eggs in them by random draw. Full Terms and Conditions can be found here.
The Skool Classifieds Easter Egg Hunt is on 🐣
2 likes β€’ 3d
So fun! πŸ‘€
1-6 of 6
Brannon Capps
2
9points to level up
@brannon-capps
I lost 84 lbs in less than a year, without GLP-1's, TRT, etc... just SIMPLE habits. And now I want to be a beacon of hope for others!

Active 32m ago
Joined Mar 15, 2026
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