Fat
Loss for Intermediates: Stepping
up to the Next LevelIf
you've been training for at least three months and now you're ready to kick it
into high gear and start learning more about training and nutrition so you can
get better and faster results, then this article is for you. If
you're currently not working out at all and you'd like to know the best way to
get started, refer back to part one in this series: Fat loss for Beginners - 8
tips to get started. If
you've been training for years and consider yourself "advanced," then
the third installment in this series will be for you. But don't skip this
one - you might learn something new you missed along the way. THE
SECRET TO INCREASED FAT LOSS IS... Ok,
so you just got started on a program of walking or light cardio and some basic
lifting, maybe some dumbbell work - nothing fancy. You
feel better, you've lost a few pounds, you have more energy and you're confident
that you're getting healthier. But
you want more. You
want the results to come faster. You want to look in the mirror and really SEE
the difference. You want other people to see the difference too. You
want more than "a little tone." Maybe you want a nice hard chiseled
six-pack with a small waist, or maybe streamlined, muscular thighs. Arms like
Madonna perhaps? Shoulders like Carl "Apollo Creed" Weathers? A Brad
Pitt "Fight Club" body maybe? Nothing too crazy - not a miss fitness
Olympia body or the massive bulk of a Mr. Universe- but definitely
better than average. Well,
if you're prepared to STEP UP to the next level and pay the price necessary to
reach the next rung on the ladder, here's how you do it: The
answer is very, very simple. As you leave the novice stage behind, it's time to
start WORKING HARDER. That's it. Were
you expecting something more esoteric? Some secret Bulgarian periodization program
and thermogenic - anabolic supplement stack? Sorry, but the secret
is that there is no secret. A great body all boils down to outright effort and
hard work. Not
counting the genetic freaks who seem to have been born
with muscles and zero fat, there's one thing that all people with great bodies
have in common: they all work HARD, HARD, HARD, HARD, HARD! If
you want to ascend beyond the lowly beginner level you simply have to push yourself
harder. And that means DIS-COMFORT. When you're pushing yourself out of the comfort
zone, it hurts. Frankly, sometimes it sucks! But outside the comfort zone is where
you grow. Staying inside the comfort zone will only maintain you at best but usually
it sends you plummeting into a downward spiral. Most
people retreat into the confines of their comfort zone the second the effort gets
difficult. The comfort zone is a very dangerous place because if you slide back
into the comfort zone even once, then it starts becoming a habit. First,
it's stopping just a few minutes short on your cardio or coasting on level 5 when
you could be doing level 7. You stop at 8 reps, when you had 11 in you. Then you
start blowing off workouts completely. Pretty soon, you're sliding back in other
areas of your life; you slide back from making those sales calls; you slide back
from spending quality time with your family, you slide back from saving money
and watching your finances. You become.... A BACKSLIDER! You
can either be a backslider or you can be an ACHIEVER but you can't be both and
you can't "hang out" in between - it's one or the other. Although you
might think you're safe just "maintaining" in the comfort zone, unbeknownst
to you, you are always in motion in either a forward or a backward direction.
There's no such thing as standing still; ask any physicist - everything in the
universe is always in motion...vibrating... growing or dying. The
ACHIEVER is the person who is aware that to "stand still inside the comfort
zone" is akin to dying, so he or she is ALWAYS MOVING FORWARD. The only way
to move forward is with hard work and effort in the direction of a specific goal.
AVOID
THE TEMPTATION TO SPEND (WASTE) YOUR MONEY ON GIMMICKS...AND LEARN TO RECOGNIZE
A GIMMICK WHEN YOU SEE ONE Once
you begin getting a taste of what real hard training is like, it often becomes
tempting to succumb to the error of looking for the "easy way." An
electrode on your abs, a "fat-melting" cream, a pill, a drink mix, a
drug - anything and everything except sweat and hard work. But shortcuts
will always fail you in the long run. You
are setting yourself up for so much trouble if you give in to the lure of the
quick fix. You see, it's all about the Law of Sowing and Reaping. This great law
of life states that your rewards will come back to you in direct proportion to
what you put in. Everything has its price and that price must be paid in advance.
If
you were a farmer, how ridiculous would it be for you to skip the planting of
the seeds in the spring and then go out in the fields looking for a harvest in
the fall? How ridiculous would it be to stand in front of a wood burning stove
and say, Ok stove, give me some heat and then I'll put in some wood? But
isn't it the same thing when you take a pill or attach some electrodes to your
stomach, or smear some cream on your thighs and expect to lose the flab without
exercise or eating right? Even
if you've made the decision to avoid gimmicks, in today's marketplace, how do
you know what's a gimmick and what's legit? After all, these marketing
people are smart - they know how to play on your emotions and make gimmicks sound
scientific. Don't feel bad; judging by the e-mails I get every day, most other
people don't know the difference either. Nearly all of these e-mails include this
sentence: Does
"IT" work? Here's
how to tell if "IT" is a gimmick or not: If it makes getting in phenomenal
shape sound easy and effortless, then it's a gimmick. If it addresses the symptom
but not the cause - it's a gimmick. If your gut feeling says it sounds too good
to be true - it's a gimmick. If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck and quacks
like a duck... it's a duck! Do
yourself a favor and stop looking for a quick ride to the top. The elevator to
success is out of order - you're going to have to take the stairs. HOW
TO DOUBLE YOUR RATE OF FAT LOSS IN THE NEXT 7 DAYSHow
would you like to learn a way to DOUBLE YOUR FAT LOSS in the next seven days?
I know, I know - sounds like a gimmick, right? Well, it's not! It's really quite
simple. To burn more fat you have to burn more calories. Most beginners start
off with three days a week of cardio training. This amount of cardio is sufficient
for many people, especially beginners, because when your body isn’t accustomed
to exercise, then any increase in activity above no activity will always produce
results. However,
more often than not, the results begin to slow down a bit within a few months
of training (“hitting the plateau”). Then they scratch their heads and wonder
why it's not working anymore. This
is why: Because three days a week is a great starting point for beginners, but
it’s often insufficient for intermediates to keep the ball rolling, or for those
seeking maximum fat loss in the least amount of time (such as bodybuilders in
the pre-contest period). If you want twice as much fat loss and you want it twice
as fast, double your cardio – if only for a very short period of time to reach
a peak condition. Suppose
you burn 400 calories per workout for three workouts per week. That's a total
of 1200 calories per week burned. If you increased that to six days per week at
400 calories per workout, you would burn 2400 calories per week. YOU JUST DOUBLED
YOUR FAT LOSS! That was a real no-brainer, wasn't it? HOW
TO TRIPLE YOUR RATE OF FAT LOSS IN THE NEXT 7 DAYSWhile
we're on the subject of burning more calories, what would happen if, in addition
to increasing your cardio frequency from three to six days per week, you increased
the intensity so you’re burning 600 calories per workout? With six workouts at
600 calories per workout you're up to 3600 calories per week. HOLY
ABDOMINALS BATMAN, YOU JUST TRIPLED YOUR FAT LOSS! Yes
it's that simple and the solution was right there in front of you all along. If
you’re thinking that I forgot to factor in the post exercise calorie burn that
comes from brief, intense cardio workouts, consider this: Studies on Excess Post
Exercise Oxygen Consumption (EPOC), also known as the post-workout elevation in
metabolism, or “afterburn effect,” have shown that EPOC
INCREASES with both the intensity and duration of the exercise session.
Not only that, but if you do cardio daily, you’re getting this post-exercise metabolic
boost every day of the week, not just every other day. Why wouldn’t you want your
metabolism revved up to the max every day? By
the way, this kind of frequent, intense cardio is how I reach 3 - 4% body fat
for competitions: Six days per week of HARD cardio, 30-45 minutes per session.
For maintenance, I pull back to 3 days per week for only 20 minutes. ALWAYS
BE ON THE LOOKOUT FOR SOMETHING TO MOTIVATE AND INSPIRE YOU After
the initial novelty of starting a workout program wears off, one problem nearly
everyone runs into is lack of motivation. I can personally confirm this just by
the membership attrition (drop out) statistics in my health club. 50% of all people
who join a health club quit in the first three months. Here's how you can prevent
becoming a statistic: Always
be on the lookout for something to motivate and inspire you - anything! Go see
a movie, watch a video, read a book or article. Hire a coach or personal trainer.
Get a training partner. Think about your goals and write them out repeatedly.
Pick a role model of someone you want to look like. Attend a competition. Enter
a competition. Hang out with people who motivate you. Ditch the people who don't
support you (I'm not kidding - get out of unsupportive relationships like you’d
get out of a burning house!) The list of motivational methods is endless. Some
people insist that “motivation” doesn’t last. I always tell them they’re right!
Motivation doesn’t last – but neither does bathing and you do that every
day anyway, don’t you? Every day you must ask yourself "What can I
listen to, do, find, or watch to get inspired today." Then follow through.
I
recently watched a movie called Without Limits, which is the story of Steven Prefontaine,
the runner. Even though I'm a bodybuilder and not a runner, that movie got me
so motivated I ran to the gym a blasted out a leg workout like never before, smashing
through several PR's (personal records). I
also have the videos of the 1996 Atlanta Olympics narrated by Bud Greenspan. If
watching Michael Johnson win his races and accept his gold medals
doesn't motivate you, then nothing will. For
the bodybuilders, here's an old motivational stand-by. Watch
(or re-watch) Pumping Iron. One
of the absolute best ways to get motivated is to spend time in serious thought
about what you want to accomplish and then write it down, which leads us to the
next subject... SET
NEW (AND BIGGER) GOALSIf
you ever feel unmotivated and you want to get over it, just take a look at your
goal list. What? You don't carry a frequently updated, written goal list around
with you? Well, I guess we know why you're not motivated don't we? Goal
setting is not an event - it is an ongoing process. When you move up the ladder
to intermediate status, the modest goals of a beginner are a thing of the past.
"I am walking for 20 minutes three days every week" is a great
beginning, but now it's time to move out of the minor leagues. Goals
are the fuel in the fire of motivation. Goals get you out of bed early and into
the gym in the morning. Goals keep you on the treadmill for forty-five minutes
when you feel like stopping at thirty. In a set of ten reps, goals are what make
you push for that eleventh and twelfth rep. Goals
are so much more powerful than you can imagine. Read any book on the subconscious
mind, such as "Psycho Cybernetics" by Maxwell Maltz
or "The Power of Your Subconscious Mind" by Dr. Joseph Murphy
and you'll begin to understand why goals are so important. If you don't have goals...and
if you don't have a new set of them every few months, then you're not ready to
move up to the next level. And
one last thing - a goal is not a goal if it's not in writing - its
only a wish (as in wishy-washy) MOVE
UP TO A SPLIT ROUTINE A
full body routine performed three days per week is probably the best way for a
beginner to start weight training. However, this routine gets old fast. Within
months or even weeks, you will outgrow it and you'll need to add exercises. The
problem is, the more exercises you add, the longer your workouts will become.
If your workouts are too long, you reach a point of diminishing returns and over-training.
The solution is a split routine. A
split routine means that instead of doing all your exercises in one session, you
"SPLIT" your body in half and train one half on DAY ONE and the second half on DAY TWO. Adding
more exercises allows you to: - Work
each muscle more thoroughly and more deeply into the fibers
- Work
the entire muscle group; for example, front deltoid, side deltoid AND rear deltoid
- Concentrate
on each muscle more instead of spreading your attention out
- Apply
more energy and effort to each body part instead of holding back and conserving
energy for the last few muscles
Here's
a sample 2 day split: - Day
one: Chest, shoulders, triceps, Abdominals
- Day
two: Thighs, Back, Biceps, calves,
And
here's how it would fit into the week if you're training three days per week:
- Mon:
Chest, Shoulder, Triceps, Abs (cardio optional)
- Tues: Off (just cardio)
- Wed:
Thighs, Back, Biceps, calves (cardio optional)
- Thu:
Off (just cardio)
- Fri:
Chest, Shoulder, Triceps, Abs (cardio optional)
- Sat:
Off (just cardio)
- Sun:
Off: Total rest day
Repeat
cycle beginning with day two workout I
don't have space to write out a complete program with every exercise, but the
next section will give you a few ideas. Here's
one important tip when you’re designing your own split routines: CHANGE
YOUR EXERCISES, SET & REP SCHEMES, TEMPO AND REST INTERVALS FREQUENTLY!
This will help alleviate boredom and prevent your muscles from "adapting"
to the routine (Changing acute training variables every 4 to 12 weeks is called
the "muscle confusion" principle.) JOIN
A HEALTH CLUB OR INVEST IN SOME NEW EQUIPMENT FOR YOUR HOME GYM Does
your workout still consist of walking around the block, and/or doing the Billy
blanks Tae Bo video or the Richard Simmons Sweating to the Oldies video in your
living room in front of the TV? If
so, then don't worry, I'm not going to make fun of you - actually I want to congratulate
you for doing more than 95% of the lazy world population - you got started! However,
if you're reading this, you've expressed interest in moving up to the next level,
so it's time to put those 2nd grade workouts back on the shelf and move up to
something with a little more "punch" (pardon the pun). First,
I'm going to repeat my advice from part one of this series: Join a health club!
Since you'll be adding new exercises, a good health club will put an almost infinite
number of exercise choices at your fingertips. Many people are scared to join
a gym “until they get in shape." Now that’s really putting
the cart before the horse isn’t it? If you're in this category, let me put you
at ease: You'd
be amazed how supportive the environment is in a good health club. I've been in
the health club industry for 15 years and I've never heard a member or employee
of any club I've worked in make fun of a beginner or someone out of shape. (Personally,
I NEVER make fun of the beginners or intermediates.
I prefer to make fun of the blunders made by the "big-ego, know it all experts,"
but "gym blunders" will have to be the subject of another article.) I've
seen people who were very overweight in our club and the attitude of the staff
and members is usually one of, "Good for you! Is there any way I can help?"
If fact, you're more likely to get a derogatory comment from someone on the street
than you are in a health club. You owe it to yourself to put yourself in a positive,
supportive, caring environment and there's no better place than a health club. It
also helps to realize that everyone has to start somewhere, and everyone was "out
of shape" when they started. We're all in the same boat in the early learning
stages. If
you choose not to join a club, that's fine, but you'd be well advised to invest
in a few additional pieces of equipment beyond the bare basics. Let's
assume you own a bench and a set of dumbbells. The next additions to your home
gym should be a barbell set, a set of squat racks and a cable-pulley apparatus
with a high and a low pulley. By owning these pieces equipment, you've just opened
up a whole new world of exercise options for yourself such as: Barbell
squats, barbell lunges, barbell rows, barbell bench press, barbell shoulder press,
barbell curls, barbell tricep extensions, wide grip
lat pulldowns, close grip lat pulldowns,
low cable rows, triceps pushdowns and cable curls. By
the way, why so much talk about weights? Isn't fat loss mostly nutrition and cardio?
Yep, that's true. However, I'm emphasizing weight training here because it plays
a bigger role in fat loss than most people realize. If you're busy aerobicizing
and dieting without hitting the weights, you're much more likely to lose muscle
along with the fat. And when the muscle goes, your metabolism begins to go down
the tubes too. READ,
STUDY AND LEARNI
know you're just a budding "intermediate" now, but would you like to
know how to rapidly blast through the intermediate stage, into the advanced stage
and then ultimately go even beyond the advanced stage and become an expert? If
so, here's how: Read
one hour a day, five days a week, about training, nutrition, and personal achievement.
In three years you will be an expert. Suppose
you only read 30 minutes a day, but you do it every day as a discipline. That's
one book per week, 52 books per year, 520 books in ten
years. Think about the level of knowledge you'll achieve. I
personally read two or three hours a day, I have 1800 books in my library and
several hundred audio and video programs. I’ll miss an hour of sleep before I’ll
miss an hour of reading. People always ask me how I learned so much about bodybuilding
and nutrition. Now you know. Here
are some good places to start: Get
a good book about motivation and psychology. Here's one of the best: Maximum
Achievement by Brian Tracy: Also,
get a good cassette/CD program about motivation so you can listen in your car
and while you do your cardio. What? You listen to music? Thought
so. Most beginners do. Highly effective people and achievers always double
up and do two things at once whenever possible. Why not kill two birds with one
stone? Learn while you get lean! Here's a suggestion: No matter how cheesy the
infomercials seem, Anthony Robbins really does put out some good stuff. Check
out Personal Power or Get the Edge. Get
a good book about nutrition for fat loss. Check out my 340-page manual,
Burn the Fat, Feed the Muscle available at www.burnthefat.com) Finally,
get a good book about weight training. I recommend Ian King's Get Buffed
and anything by Charles Poliquin. Next
week, the conclusion to the Fat Loss Success Series: From
Beginner to Advanced. I'm going to reveal a few of my competition-level
training and nutrition secrets that I usually only share with my coaching program
protégés that pay me $995, so stay tuned. This
article originally appeared in Tom Venuto's Bodybuilding and Fitness Secrets E-mail
newsletter. If you enjoyed this article and would like to receive others like
it, you can subscribe FREE by clicking here: www.burnthefat.com About
the Author:
Tom Venuto is a lifetime natural bodybuilder, personal trainer, gym owner, freelance
writer, success coach and author of Burn
the Fat, Feed the Muscle: Fat
Burning Secrets of the World's Best Bodybuilders and Fitness Models.
Tom has written over 150 articles and has been featured in IRONMAN magazine, Natural
Bodybuilding, Muscular Development, Muscle-Zine, Exercise for Men and Men’s Exercise.
His inspiring and informative bodybuilding, fitness and weight loss articles are
featured regularly on literally dozens of websites worldwide. Learn
the Truth About Diets, Weight Loss Programs and Fat Burning
SupplementsTo
get the FACTS on exactly how, what & when to eat and how to train to achieve
maximum fat loss, without losing muscle or slowing down your metabolism...
AND to discover the shocking truth about the diet, weight loss and supplement
industries, Check out Tom’s e-book online here:
www.burnthefat.com
|