If you consume enough unused calories each day, yes.
Healthy weight loss is considered 1-2 pounds per week. This is the loss of real fat, not water and muscle mass, which is what "10 pounds in 10 days" is. If you lose ten pounds in ten days, you will gain it all back in about three days. Weight loss is about burning more calories than are taken in. It's simple math. No magic, no tricks. Go to www.nutrition.gov
yes, just remember that if you lose fat, but gain muscle, you can actually gain weight because muscle weighs more than fat. But people that have more muscle also have faster metabolisms, which allows you to burn off more calories, therefore decreasing the amount of fat that the body stores, allowing you to shed those unwanted pounds of fat.
This does represent significant weight gain. It is important to cut back on any substances which may be promoting this rapid weight gain.
Easily. It also depends on what you are calculating: permanent weight gain or flexible weight gain. You can gain/lose 5 to 10 pounds a day simply through the influx of food/liquid you eat on a daily basis. You can gain 5 pounds in a few minutes if you were willing to make yourself sick. You can certainly do it in 3 days (permanent weight gain) simply by poor nutrition choices.
10 Kilograms or 10 Pounds?
From research and personal experience, I have learned that it is not possible to gain 10 pounds in one week.
Impossible for permanent growth, it is however possible to gain 20 to 30 pounds of muscle in a month. However if you ate a lot of high calorie dense foods and water you could probably gain 3-5 pounds of fat in a day, although I recommend it. Leave me a message to learn how to get bigger faster and stronger
no way!!!i am 10 and i weigh 100 pounds u are luckey
The volume of body fat that weighs 10 pounds is approximately 2.1 gallons (8 liters) since fat has a density of about 0.9 g/ml.
go it at a fast restaurant everyday like burger king or McDonald's eat a triple whopper every day until you gain 10 pounds
In mathematics, a gain of 10 pounds can be represented as an increase in a variable, typically denoted as ( x ). If the initial weight is ( x ), then the new weight after a gain of 10 pounds would be ( x + 10 ). This concept can be applied in various contexts, such as tracking weight changes or analyzing data in statistics. The gain reflects a positive change in the quantity being measured.
water weight