The Nutritional Macros Assessment is a free, evidence-based tool that estimates your daily calories and macronutrients (protein, carbohydrates, and fats) based on your body stats, activity level, and goals.
You’ll fill out a short form with basic information—such as age, weight, training frequency, and goal (fat loss, muscle gain, maintenance, or competition prep)—and I’ll run your data through established nutritional equations and coaching heuristics to give you a personalized macro estimate.
This is not a crash diet, a meal plan, or a promise of fast results. It’s a starting framework you can use to:
Lose weight without tanking performance
Gain muscle without unnecessary fat gain
Maintain bodyweight while training hard
Dial things in for competition prep
I’m a BioLayne-certified nutrition coach, and this assessment reflects the same principles I use with paying clients: realistic inputs, conservative estimates, and adjustments based on real-world response—not food rules or internet dogma.
Estimated daily calories
Protein, carb, and fat targets
Context for how to use the numbers
Guidance on adjusting based on progress
This is:
✔ A practical estimate grounded in physiology
✔ Flexible and adaptable to your training
✔ Useful for beginners and experienced athletes
This is not:
✘ A medical diagnosis
✘ A meal plan
✘ A promise of “optimal” perfection
If you want a rational place to start—without being sold supplements, detoxes, or nonsense—this tool is for you.
Train stronger without wrecking your jiu-jitsu.
Most strength programs aren’t designed for grapplers. They build muscle or numbers in the gym—but don’t always translate to better performance on the mat.
This guide is built specifically for Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.
The BJJ Strength Training Guide lays out a clear, evidence-based approach to getting stronger without interfering with skill development, recovery, or mat time. No gimmicks, no sport cosplay—just principles that actually carry over.
How strength actually transfers to BJJ (and where it doesn’t)
Exercise selection that respects joint health and grappling demands
Programming principles for hobbyists and competitors
How to balance lifting with hard training weeks
Common strength-training mistakes BJJ athletes make—and how to avoid them
This isn’t a list of trendy exercises or a one-size-fits-all program. It’s a framework you can adapt as your training volume, goals, and competition schedule change.
BJJ athletes who want to get stronger without feeling slower or stiffer
Coaches looking for a rational strength-training foundation for grapplers
Anyone tired of guessing—or copying bodybuilding programs that don’t fit the sport
People looking for shortcuts, hacks, or secret exercises
Anyone who wants a generic “do these 5 lifts forever” routine
Athletes unwilling to think about why they’re training a certain way
If you want strength training that supports your jiu-jitsu instead of competing with it, this guide will give you the structure—and the reasoning—to train with confidence.