CODY · BODY COMPOSITION THE READING

Two scans, two months apart.
Here's exactly what they say.

You stepped on the same body-composition scale on 11 May and again recently. Put side by side, the two readings tell a clear story — and point to four things to change. No jargon. Just what happened, why, and what to do next.

1 · The two scans, merged

may 11 → recent · ~2 months
MetricScan 1 · May 11Scan 2 · RecentChange
Weight65.6 kg67.2 kg+1.6 kg
Fat mass20.4 kg21.7 kg+1.3 kg
Muscle mass41.5 kg41.7 kg+0.2 kg*
Body fat %31.0%32.3%+1.3%
BMI23.824.2+0.4

*The +0.2 kg muscle is within the scale's margin of error — treat it as flat, not real growth. These scales read body water, so the reliable signals are fat, waist, and the multi-week trend.

In plain terms: over two months you gained 1.6 kg — and about 80% of it was fat . Your muscle didn't measurably move. That's the whole picture in one line.

2 · What it means

composition · lean vs fat
MAY 11 · 65.6 kg lean 45.2 fat 20.4 RECENT · 67.2 kg lean 45.5 fat 21.7 fat grew · lean flat

The green blocks (muscle + everything that isn't fat) are almost identical. The coloured block on the right — fat — is the part that grew. You're carrying too little muscle and rising fat at the same time. The scale even names this profile directly: やせ肥満 — "skinny-fat."

There's a genuinely good side to this. Your fat-free mass gives an FFMI of ~16.4, where an untrained average man sits around 18–19. Being under-muscled means your biggest muscle-building gains are still ahead of you — a window that doesn't stay open forever. The goal now is to use it.

3 · The leak — read straight from your data

the root cause

You don't have to guess your diet — the two scans reveal it. Storing that fat and lean over ~2 months took a specific amount of extra energy:

Back-calculated from the scans
1.3 kg fat × ~7,700 + 0.3 kg lean × ~1,800 ≈ 10,500 kcal ÷ ~2 months = ~165 kcal / day
≈ 165 kcal/day over the line

That's the entire diagnosis in one number. You're not badly overeating — you're drifting only ~150–170 kcal a day above maintenance, untracked. Your maintenance is roughly 2,300/day, so you've been living around 2,450 without measuring it. That small, invisible surplus is exactly why you're slowly softening instead of building.

And the muscle staying flat despite training hard points at the method, not the effort: not enough protein, no steady progression, and not enough recovery. Fix the leak and the method and the same effort starts paying off.

4 · Why the muscle is stuck

the three real causes

Protein too low

the #1 lever

Skinny-fat almost always means under-eating protein. It's the single biggest thing standing between you and new muscle — and the easiest to fix.

No progressive overload

same weights ≠ growth

Muscle only grows if the demand keeps rising. If the weights and reps don't climb week to week, and sets stop well short of failure, there's no reason for the body to build.

Not enough recovery

built between sessions

Training nearly every day with no rest days means fatigue outruns recovery. Muscle is built during rest, not just in the gym — especially early on.

5 · The plan

recomp · build + burn at once

Because you're early in training, you can do something advanced lifters can't: lose fat and still build a little muscle at the same time (a "recomp"). Your target — 1,800 kcal — is a ~500 deficit off your ~2,300 maintenance: firm enough to strip fat at a good clip, with 140 g protein doing the job of protecting (and slowly building) muscle the whole way down.

LeverTargetWhy it matters
Calories 1,800 / day A ~500 deficit off your ~2,300 maintenance → ~0.45 kg fat/week (~0.67% of bodyweight — the research-optimal fat-loss pace). Firm, not a crash.
Protein 140 g / day Floor 130 g (~2.1 g/kg). The biggest lever you have. Hit it every day, not on average.
Training 4–5 days + 2 rest Swap "every day" for focused sessions plus real rest. Recovery is where beginners actually build.
Progression log every lift Add reps or weight each week. End sets 1–2 reps from failure. Follow your own logbook, not someone else's weights.
Judge by waist · photos · trend Not one scan. A working recomp looks like: weight flat or slightly down, waist down, lifts up.

6 · What to expect

honest timeline
Realistic outcome at 1,800 kcal
~0.45 kg fat / week off — muscle protected

At this deficit the scale moves faster, and fat is what leaves. The 140 g protein plus progressive lifting means you hold onto muscle instead of burning it — and as a beginner you can still add a little (~0.1–0.2 kg/month) even while cutting. You won't blow up in size. You'll get visibly leaner, tighter, and stronger — and your next scan should flip this one: fat down, muscle holding or up.

If you hold 1,800 kcal & 140 g protein — the next 3 months

A realistic projection from where you are now. Assumes you hit the numbers most days and progress your lifts. The scale bounces daily (water) — read the monthly trend, not any single morning.

MilestoneWeightBody fatWhat you'll see & feel
Now67.2 kg~32% Soft midsection, little definition — the starting line.
Month 1~64.8 kg~31% Waistband looser, less puffy/bloated, face a touch leaner. Lifts already climbing.
Month 2~63 kg~29% Clothes fit noticeably better, shoulders & arms firmer, first real definition showing.
Month 3~61 kg~26% Visibly leaner — muscle showing through, jaw sharper, every lift up. A different photo than today.

Across 3 months that's roughly −6 kg on the scale, ~5–6 kg of it fat, with muscle held or slightly up — body fat dropping from ~32% to ~26%. Not a transformation photo yet, but the exact turn from "skinny-fat" toward lean. Keep going past month 3 and it accelerates.

Bottom line. You're a beginner drifting ~165 kcal/day over maintenance on an untracked, low-protein, non-progressive routine — with a lot of muscle still to gain. Track your food, hit 140 g protein, progress your lifts, and actually rest. Do that and the effort you're already putting in finally starts to show.