A Whole Body Approach To Fat Loss
What’s the Secret to losing bodyfat and
keeping it off ?
Ask 100 different fitness experts this
question, and you’ll probably get 80 or more different answers.
That’s one reason why fitness and fat loss
gets so darn confusing-everybody seems to have “the answer.”
You’ve got 101 different theories about how
to induce fat loss including super-slow training, heart rate training, circuit
training, Pilates, yoga principles, high-rep weight training, and aerobics.
When it comes to nutrition, there are even
more fad diets than exercise theories.
The Atkins Diet, The South Beach Diet, Eat 4 Your Blood Type, Low Fat,
Low Carb, Low Calorie, The Zone…even Dr. Phil has a diet book.
Well, I’m going to simplify things for you.
Work the whole body each session! No
tricky split routines, no bodypart training…just training the body the way it
was intended to function, as a whole.
Human movement, stabilization, balance and
strength are the results of a whole body approach to strength training.
Until recently, the fitness industry had
forgotten how to incorporate the entire body in exercise programming.
The human body has over 600 muscles, all
intended to work as one complete and complimentary system.
Traditional exercise programs have
neglected the majority of these muscles by training in a one-dimensional
environment.
This type of training handicaps the body
from performing the way it is designed to function.
Training in a fixed plane environment leads
to isolated results, muscle imbalance, and injury.
In contrast, the whole body approach to
resistance training prepares participants of any fitness level to achieve great
improvements in body composition and function better in daily life as
well.
The three-dimensional environment of
training movements, not individual muscles, enables the body to become
efficient in both static and dynamic environments. Participants achieve balanced, long lasting,
effective results.
This method is fun because it is a whole
body approach. The same movement
patterns that we used as children (pushing, pulling, twisting, lunging,
squatting, stepping and balance in multiple planes) are the core of your
approach to fat loss.
From beginners to the most advanced
exercise fanatic, this approach to fat loss and fitness will provide fun and
effective workouts and lasting results.
Full body training is an extremely
effective way to loose weight as involves dynamic, whole body movement that
increase caloric expenditure.
Training movements instead of individual
muscles can also help change body composition by increasing muscle mass,
increasing growth hormone output, raising metabolism, maximizing caloric
output, and ultimately decreasing body fat.
Now, regardless of how great your workout
is, food intake is the key factor that will either make you or brake you as far
as fat loss goes.
The only way that the human body drops body
fat is by being in what is called a calorie deficit. This brings us back to LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS.
Remember, I’ll say it one more time...this
law states that if you eat more calories in a day than you burn you will gain
fat, if you burn more calories in a day than you eat you will lose fat, and if
you eat the same amount of calories in a day as you burn you will remain
constant.
This is a law!!!! It is as true as the law of gravity and it is
how the body works. Knowing this, it is
simple.
If you want to lose fat you need to adjust
you daily calorie intake so that you are into a calorie deficit.
You need to get your calorie count low
enough to begin fat loss, but at the same time keeping it high enough to remain
healthy.
The second step to optimizing you food
intake is by spreading your food out evenly throughout the day.
Ideally, you want to be on a five meal per
day plan. By spreading your calories
evenly through five small meals your metabolism works its best for you.
When you constantly give your body food
with small meals your body does not feel the need to store fat.
On the contrary when eating large,
infrequent meals your body feels the need to store some food as fat for it is
unsure as to when it will be fed again.
Get on a scheduled meal plan that your body
will respond to. Five meals a day,
approximately three hours apart works great.
A
healthy start point for you protein, carbohydrate, and fat ratio’s is 25% of
you food coming from protein, 60% of your food coming from carbohydrate, and
15% of your food intake coming from fats.
Now, I’m going to give you an industry
secret. A lot of personal trainers out
there are gonna be upset with me for it is too valuable to give away, but I’m
going do it any way.
If you want to lose fat and you are unsure
of how many calories you are supposed to eat and are not in a position to hire
professional assistance, barring any medical conditions, a simple formula to
follow is this.
Take your body weight and add a zero on the
end. Use that as your general guideline,
split the number evenly among five meals per day and your body should be in a
calorie deficit. For example if you
weigh 180lbs., add a zero, your now at 1800 calories.
Divide that over five meals per day, your
eating 360 calories per meal. Keeping
each meal balanced approximately 60% carbs, 25% proteins, 15% fat, you are
eating in a healthy way to lose weight.
It works!!
Note, if you have any medical conditions always consult with your
physician first. How quickly will you see results?
Although results will vary with each
individual, full body training coupled with a proper nutrition program will
help you achieve greater results than most other programs in less time. The results can come quicker and be longer
lasting.
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