Weight LossEverything Works, but Everything Doesn't Work All the Time!
There you go again—walking in a straight line for hours on that
treadmill, dancing on and off that step in your “power” aerobics class.
How about the person riding that bike while talking on the cell phone? I
can’t leave out those people pumping away with endless amounts of
repetitions with those ever so popular pink dumbbells.
There you go again—walking in a straight line for hours on that
treadmill, dancing on and off that step in your “power” aerobics class.
How about the person riding that bike while talking on the cell phone? I
can’t leave out those people pumping away with endless amounts of
repetitions with those ever so popular pink dumbbells.
Why is it that
you see the same people with the same bodies year after year? It’s
because people have been doing the same old thing for far too long and
nothing works forever! How many more crunches and aerobic classes do you
have to do to finally get some results? If you run one mile three days a week, I can guarantee that by the
next week that one mile will feel easier. Well, according to the SAID
principle, it should. Within the next week or two, you should be able to
increase your mileage. You’re now progressing nicely because those two
miles are feeling like your old one mile. Why not go for four miles the
next week or how about five miles? You will eventually get to the point
where ten miles or even 15 miles won’t be a difficult accomplishment. If we look at the above scenarios using coffee and alcohol, there are
only two choices—run further or increase the intensity of the run and
shorten the distance. This actually proves that long distance/low
intensity, steady state cardio isn’t a smart modality for fat loss. Why?
Because you must do more work to get the same effect! You want your body to mimic a Cadillac when engaging in a fat loss
program. You want a car (body) with a big engine (a lot of muscle)! The
goal should be to use as much fuel as possible, but that fuel should be
coming from glycogen, not fat. Too much long distance, long duration
types of activities will make your engine (muscle) smaller, thus
creating less of a calorie burning machine at rest. By increasing the
intensity and shortening the duration, you’ll use glycogen as your
primary fuel source, and you’ll use fat for energy while recovering
from your training session. By increasing the intensity, you’ll also be
able to maintain lean muscle (engine), which will increase your resting
metabolic rate or the amount of calories you can use while doing
nothing. Could this be the reason we see fat, long distance runners?
What about fat spinning/aerobics instructors? Could this be the reason
so many people hit plateaus and quit their exercise programs come
February or March? You’re exactly right. It did work—for them! This is exactly my point.
Just because it works for one person doesn’t mean it will work for
everyone. The same goes for the Adkins diet, the South Beach diet, the
fat flush diet, the peanut butter diet, the cookie diet, vegetarian
diets, vegan diets, Jenny Craig, or Weight Watchers. These diets all
work for some and more often than not fail for others. We’re all unique
and each person’s diet, cardio regimen, and weight training protocols
are truly unique to each individual. It’s a mistake to blindly follow in
the footsteps of whatever is popular on television, in the magazines in
your grocery checkout line, or what the bodybuilder at your local gym
told you. You’ll most likely just be setting yourself up for failure. Free Links Directory |