Tuesday, 29 January 2013

Deck of cards workout

If you fancy a change from your regular training, and fancy something that's gonna smash not only your cardio, but every muscle in your body too, in less than 30 min, why not try deck of cards?

Alls you need is.... A deck of cards!

It works like this:
Hearts - burpees
Diamonds - leg raises
Spades - press ups
Clubs- jump squats
Joker - next card double
Cards 2-10 - that number of reps
Face cards - 11 reps
Ace - 13 reps

Shuffle the pack and off you go!
By the end of the workout you will have done 100 of each exercise!

God help you if you pull a joker & the next card is the ace of hearts!

Good luck

John


Sunday, 27 January 2013

White: Fedor vs. Brock Lesnar almost happened last year. Source: mmajunkie.com

UFC President Dana White on Saturday said the promotion was close to getting a deal done for a heavyweight megafight between Fedor Emelianenko and Brock Lesnar, a fight that fell apart following the death of Emelianenko's father.

The fight, White said, would have been targeted for Cowboys Stadium in Dallas.
The news comes as a bit of a surprise given the UFC's rocky history with trying to negotiate a deal with the legendary Russian heavyweight. The UFC couldn't come to terms with him several years ago, and he then signed with Strikeforce. But with that promotion, he lost three straight fights before rebounding with three wins and retiring in 2012.

"We were in deep talks with him," White said following the post-fight news conference for UFC on FOX 6 in Chicago. "We were that close to signing him recently. Right before his dad died. We were right there. When I was talking about doing the big Dallas Texas stadium show? It was going to be Brock Lesnar vs. (Fedor).

"Remember when I met with him and said it didn't go well? It actually went well. It went well, and Brock wanted to fight Fedor. Then (Fedor's) dad died, and he was done."

USCformby.com

Conplete UFC on FOX 6 Results

Jan 26, 2013 11:00 PM EST

Main Card (Live on FOX, 8:00 PM ET)
-Demetrious Johnson defeated John Dodson by Unanimous Decision (48-47, 49-46, 48-47)

-Glover Teixeira defeated Quinton Jackson by Unanimous Decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)

-Anthony Pettis defeated Donald Cerrone by TKO (body kick, strikes, 1st Round, 2:35)

-Ricardo Lamas defeated Erik Koch by TKO (Strikes, 2nd Round, 2:32)

Preliminary Card (Live on FX)
-TJ Grant defeated Matt Wiman by TKO (Strikes, round 1)

-Clay Guida defeated Hatsu Hioki by Split Decision (29-28, 30-27, 28-29)

-Ryan Bader defeated Vladimir Matyushenko by Submission (Guillotine, 1st Round, 0:50)

-Shawn Jordan defeated Mike Russow by TKO (Strikes, Round 2, 3:48)

-Pascal Krauss defeated Mike Stumpf by Unanimous Decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)

-David Mitchell defeated Simeon Thorensen by Unanimous Decidion (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)

USCformby.com

USC Ultimate Recover

USC Ultimate Recover is an advanced multi stage time release protein & carbohydrate blend made up of fast, medium and slow digesting proteins providing maximum absorption for up to 8 hours.

This results in sustained amino acid levels which aid tissue repair, increase protein synthesis and maximizes lean muscle growth.

USC Ultimate Recover Protein is an ultra premium blend of:

• De-lactosed pure whey protein concentrate

• Pure whey protein isolate

• Miscellar Casein

• Milk Protein Concentrate

• Egg Albumen

• Soya Protein Isolate

These Proteins all offer unique rates of absorption and this supreme combination has been designed so that your muscles will receive the right protein they need when they need it. There are also a mix of simple and complex carbohydrates to refuel your muscles to aid in rapid recovery from intense training.
USC Ultimate Recover has also been fortified with BCAA’S making it the perfect choice for muscle size, strength and fat loss and due
to it’s time release formula can be consumed any time of the day, but for optimum results use post workout.


Suggested Use:
Mix 1x 50g scoop with 300ml Water or Skimmed Milk

£40.00 for 2.25kg

Available from USCformby.com

Monday, 21 January 2013

Juice Bomb

Juice Bomb - Legally Compliant - DMMA Free

The ingredients of Juice Bomb have been carefully blended to provide a high intensity boost of power, strength and concentration! This product will give you unrivalled drive and energy to achieve your goals in every training session.

Warning: Do not use this product if: you are taking any prescription medication, you have high (or low) blood pressure, you are pregnant, you are diabetic, you have had or are susceptible to a stroke, if you have heart, liver, kidney or thyroid disease. Always consult a doctor before using this product if you are unsure about its affects. Keep out of reach of children.

Do not:

- exceed recommended dose.

- use in conjunction with alcohol.

- use for more than 4 out of 7 days.

- take in conjunction with other products containing caffeine, inc. tea, coffee or soft drinks.

The ingredients of Juice Bomb have been carefully blended to provide a high intensity boost of power, strength and concentration! This product will give you unrivalled drive and energy to achieve your goals in every training session. Our newly reformulated pre-workout drink no longer contains the recently banned substance DMMA (Geranium Stem Extract) but it has lost none of it's awesome kick and great taste.

Weight:
250g

Serving Size:
5g - 15g

£25 for 250g tub

Available from USCformby.com

Sunday, 20 January 2013

USC Fat Burners

USC Fat Burner Capsules are a combination of the strongest, most effective weight-loss and energy ingredients available on the market today.

Fat Burner Capsules dramatically improve the rate in which body fat is burnt as well as providing a huge increase in explosive energy levels. They provide remarkable results in combination with a healthy, balanced diet.

Fat Burner Supplements:

Support Weight Loss

Support Training

Give Explosive Energy Levels

Serving Size: 2 capsules

USC FAT BURNER ACTIVE INGREDIENTS:

Bitter Orange 200mg

Caffeine Anhydrous 145mg

Green Tea 40% Extract 10mg

Guarana 10mg

N-Acetyl-L-Carnitine 3mg

£20 for 60 caps

Available from USCformby.com

USC Diet Whey protein

USC Diet Whey Plus is the best whey protein available on the market today. It has been specially designed with hard training athetes in mind, that need to be as lean, fit and strong as possible. Its great for both men and women, and serious or casual trainers.

The flavours taste great & the shakes fill you up without you feeling bloated. Diet Whey is rapidly absorbed, making the protein available for muscle building more quickly, and allowing the amino acids to be taken up by the muscles more quickly.

In addition, whey assists in opening the blood flow during exercise. The flow of nutrients to the muscles is increased, allowing a faster rate of muscle repair.

This unique blend provides high levels of all Amino Acid fractions including L-Glutamine and BCAA's.

Per serving (39g)

Kcal 148

Protein 30.8g

Carbohydrates 3.9g

Fat 1.1g

USC Diet Whey Plus. High protein, low carbs, low fat. ContainsCLA, L-Carnitine, green tea & acai berry

£20 for 907g tub

Available in Strawberry, chocolate or vanilla.


Belfort TKOs Bisping in 2nd, denies him title shot Source: The Underground Jan 19, 2013

The two circled each other for 45 seconds before Belfort finally threw a front kick. But Bisping countered with an inside leg kick against the southpaw. Belfort went high with his next kick, but couldn't find a home. Belfort faked a leaping kick, but Bisping answered it with a jab as he was backing away.
Midway through, Belfort tried to get inside to look for a home for his left hand, and it appeared the feeling-out process was over as the two started to throw with less caution. Belfort landed a pair of good left kicks to the body, but Bisping came on top of them with counters. But as the clock ran down, Belfort landed a kick up high that seemed to have Bisping stunned for a moment, and he took advantage with some punches inside that had Bisping retreating as the horn sounded.
Belfort looked to land with a 1-2 combination early in the second. But a little more than a minute in, with Bisping's hands near his chest, Belfort threw the same left high kick he threw in the first round and it landed flush, his shin drilling Bisping near his right eye. Bisping went down, and Belfort pounced to land several shots on the ground with Dan Miragliotta looking in.


Saturday, 19 January 2013

Combat Soap


Combat Soap is made from high qualilty natural ingredinets with proven activity against ringworm, staph infection, impetigo, and herpes.

Each bar is hand made, formulated and registered by a qualified pharmacist.

Ingredients:
Manuka Honey, Melaleuca Alternifolia, Hamamelis Virginiana, Aqua, Propylene Glycol, Sodium Stearate Glycerin, Sucrose, Sodium Cocoate, Sodium Xylene Sulfonate, Stearic Acid, Tetrasodium EDTA
Tetrasodium Etidronate, Titanium Dioxide.

If you train in BJJ, MMA, wrestling or grappling then this soap is a must.

Now available from USCformby.com


Wednesday, 16 January 2013

Natural selection in sports

Often in training people try to copy the most successful athletes training routines. This is because they believe that the reason the athlete is so successful, is down to the particular routine. In the skill aspect of sports, this is often the case. In strength & conditioning, not so much.
Generally athletes at the top of their game, perform way too much exercise for the average person to tolerate. Former Mr Universe, Mike Mentzer, often used to compare exercise tolerance to suntanning.
Just as there are opposite ends of the spectrum with regards to tanning (some people can only stand intense sunlight for a few minutes before burning, others can stay in it for hours with no problem), the same is true for exercise.
Some people can do very few workouts, before they become exhausted and overtrain, while others can train 2 or 3 times daily and still have enough energy to progress.
Now which type of person is more likely to become successful at their chosen sport?
Obviously the person who is able to train more often has the better chance of becoming successful, as their body can tolerate more volume and still progress. Now is it the training routine that has made them more succesful? Of course not! If their routine was designed more so they had adequate recovery, it is likely they would progress even faster.
Also, which person do you think is more likely to stick at the sport or exercise programme?
The one that gets tired and over trains very quickly, or the one that can train all day and still make progress?

This is natural selection in sports.

Saturday, 12 January 2013

Training for explosive fitness


Training. This is the fun part. As long as you think fun should make you dizzy and feel sick!
I don’t recommend steady state, moderate effort aerobics. Nobody wants to look like a marathon runner.
I recommend high intensity interval training (HIIT).
There are literally hundreds of exercises that lend themselves to this style of training, but to keep thing simple, I am only going to mention two; sprinting & burpees.
These are the two exercises I used for cardio and fat loss in the pictures in this book. That’s all you need. No expensive gym membership, no personal trainer, no fancy equipment.

-SPRINTING-

Let me start with sprinting. I perform my sprints two ways, either on flat ground or on a hill. The hill version is simple;
Pick a hill, incline, or sand dune that takes 15-45 seconds to sprint up. After a brief warm up, run up the hill as fast as you can, and when you get to the top turn around and walk back down. When you get to the bottom, go again. Repeat about 10 times.
This type of training is very intense, but will give rapid results, and will leave your metabolism revving really fast for hours or maybe days!
The second way i perform sprints is on a 100 metre track. Again, after a brief warm up, sprint the 100 metre track as fast as possible. I prefer to start my watch at the beginning of the first sprint, then rest at the finish until the clock reaches 1:00, at which point I sprint back. I try to keep this up for 20 minutes, sprinting on each minute the full 100 metres.

-BURPEES-
Burpees. Everyone hates burpees. A burpee is simple- do a press up, then jump.
Easy? Definitely not.
Try and do 50 – 100 burpees as fast as possible. It is horribly difficult, and will strip fat off you like you won’t believe.
Another way to perform them is to do as many as possible for 20 seconds, and then rest for 10 seconds. Repeat that 8 times, and you have a brutal 4 minute workout. We call this Tabata burpees.

Just remember, train hard, diet right, and get plenty of rest, and the results will come.

John

Friday, 11 January 2013

The USC Diet part 2

SAMPLE DIET

As soon as u wake-
Meal 1)
USC diet whey plus protein shake

30min later-
Meal 2)
2 weetabix & skim milk
Or
1 oatso simple & skim milk
Or
2 poached/scrambled egg on 1 piece brown toast

2.5-3hrs later
Meal 3)
Tuna in brine, extra light mayo, salad, pitta
Or
Chicken breast salad & light dressing
Or
Lean beef burger with low fat cheese & brown bun

2.5-3hrs later
Meal 4)
USC diet whey plus protein shake
1 piece fruit

2.5-3hrs later
Meal 5)
Extra lean 2 pieces bacon & 1 egg sandwich on brown roll, cooked in a non stick pan with fry light
Or
Chicken, vegetables and 1scoop cous cous
Or
Chicken, vegetables and 1/2 packet of uncle bens brown rice

2.5-3hrs later
Meal 6)
Any of the above meals

2.5-3hrs later
Meal 7)
USC diet whey plus protein shake

1 pint of water with each meal

1 meal each week(on same day) eat whatever u like!
Mix and match any of the above meals- just remember, portion control is essential. Each meal should be between 200-350 cal, mainly protein.
NEVER SKIP A MEAL.
If you are too full, cut the carbohydrates in half at the later meals and eliminate fruit
Women should start the diet without the fruit at meal 4, and only eat half the carbohydrates at all the other meals.


That is basically it. Very simple, easy to adjust, easy to stick to.
If you want to try the diet and have any questions, you can contact me at uscformby@gmail.com

Good luck

John


Wednesday, 9 January 2013

The USC Diet part 1

Diet is the part that everyone hates about losing weight. I believe a diet is useless if you can’t stick to it because it’s too strict. It is very important you try to make your food as tasty as possible, using seasoning, herbs & spices. Fat free low sugar sauces are also allowed.
When losing body fat, I try to think of food as fuel. I believe it helps me to stick to the first few, most difficult days.
The diet is simple; high protein, medium carbohydrate, low fat. Protein must be consumed 6 times daily.
Carbohydrates must be consumed before and after training and tapered off towards bed.
Fat shouldn’t be purposely consumed, but will be contained in the food you are eating.
Caffeine is helpful on this type of diet. I think of caffeine as ‘false energy’. When reduced calories can make you lethargic, caffeine helps.
It is essential that you drink plenty of water. Water is essential is all of the metabolic functions your body performs each day.

Protein; Examples of allowed protein foods are as follows- Chicken, lean beef, eggs, turkey, lean lamb, whey supplements, tuna, white fish, oily fish, lean bacon.

Carbohydrates; Examples of allowed carbohydrate foods are-Brown rice, cous cous, porridge oats, sugar free cereals, anything wholegrain. Fruit is limited to one or two pieces a day. Green vegetables are unlimited on the diet.

Fat; Enough fat will be in the protein you consume daily.

Supplements; I use diet whey protein. Any low fat, low carbohydrate whey protein is allowed. USC has a product, DIET WHEY PLUS. Fat burners & caffeine tablets or drinks are helpful, as are multivitamins. USC does a range of products available at USCformby.com

Meals should be spaced 2.5 – 3 hours apart, and they should be between 200 – 350 calories each time, containing at least 20-30 grams of protein.

Good luck
John

Tuesday, 8 January 2013

Intensity

Intensity of effort during exercise is what stimulates your body for a fast response. If your exercise routine is not producing the desired results, one of the reasons may be you're not trying hard enough. Please do not confuse trying hard with putting the hours in. Sitting on a stationary bike for two hours 'spinning your wheels' is NOT going to get you fit.
If you did tabata style intervals on the bike (20 seconds full pelt, 10 seconds rest, 8 times. See video below) for a total of less than 4 minutes, I promise you that you would be fitter by the next workout.
You need to get out of your comfort zone to force your body to adapt. Your body is a product of evolution, it will only change if it has to. If your exercise routine is well within your capabilities, then why would your body respond, spending thousands of calories in the metabolic process to make you stronger, fitter & faster?
IT WON'T!
Push your body to its limit, with brief, intense exercise, then rest, recover & it will respond.
You can train long, or you can train hard, you can't do both. If you try, you will end up pacing yourself, which will lessen your results.
Next time you feel like going for an hour long jog to get fit, try the 100 burpee challenge.
It's simply 100 burpees (press up and jump) as fast as possible. You will see why your body must respond.

Let me know what you think.

John



Sunday, 6 January 2013

BODY FAT: HARD FACTS ABOUT SOFT TISSUE by M. Doug McGuff, M.D.





(Please note I did not write this article, I just like some of the points in it and how it explains why we need to speed up our metabolisms through exercise and not just think how many calories we have burned each session. Please also note the authour is talking about steady state, traditional style exercise like jogging, not the high intensity interval training (HIIT) we perform at USC)


Fat is an amazing tissue. It has ensured survival of our species through two ice ages and never ending drought and famine. A mere pound of fat stores an astounding 3,500 Calories for delayed use at any time in the future. As dormant tissue, there is almost no metabolic cost for keeping it on the body. As a members of the human species we all owe our existence to fat. Even more amazing than fat's capabilities are the number of misconceptions surrounding this specialized body tissue.

Probably the biggest misconception regarding fat is the idea that it is unhealthy. Actually, fat is probably the main reason we are even here in the first place. Throughout human history, the ready availability of food was the exception rather than the rule. Our ability to eat when food was available and to store excess caloric energy for future use allowed us to survive when food was not available. Fat storage is the sign of good health, it signals that metabolic resources are abundant and the organism is healthy. An extreme overabundance of bodyfat places stresses on the body and can be unhealthy. However, the degree of leanness (or lack of bodyfat) that is currently in vogue is probably just as unhealthy for up to 80% of the population. Unhealthy levels of bodyfat have been increasing every decade. It seems that an adaptation that has allowed us to survive through history is now killing us in modern times.

Ask almost anyone why modern man is becoming more obese and you will get a similar answer from just about everyone. Most people believe that the labor-saving technologies of modern life have made us more sedentary, and we are much less physically active than our predecessors. Since physical activity burns calories, and we are less physically active than we once were, we are unable to burn off the calories like we used to. This argument seems logical, but the argument is incorrect for 2 basic reasons. First, physical activity burns much less calories than we have been lead to believe (we will discuss this in detail later in this chapter). Suffice to say that to survive we must be able to use our energy efficiently lest we starve to death in the process of hunting and gathering food. Secondly, our ancestors were not as physically active as we think they were. The work of anthropologists who observe primitive peoples in various regions of the globe show that a primitive hunter/gatherer lifestyle is much less physically active than that of modern man. In Australia, aborigines alternate between the modern world and traditional aboriginal life. While in their more primitive mode, these aborigines are noted to be much less active. So, despite popular opinions to the contrary, it does not appear that increased activity is the solution to modern obesity.

The real problem with modern obesity is food abundance. If I were to give you a jumbo industrial role of toilet paper and allowed you to hold it while I unraveled it, we wound end up with a very long strand of toilet paper. If I tore off the last square of toilet paper and gave you the entire rest of the strand, we could use your long strand of toilet paper to represent the length of human history where starvation was a real day to day threat. The single square in my hand would represent the length of human history where starvation was not much of a threat. Not since the end of the Great Depression and World War II has starvation not been a real possibility. We have about 150,000 generations where efficient fat storage was essential for survival, and 3-4 generations where efficient fat storage can lead to obesity. The problem is not that we are inactive, the problem is that calories are so readily available to be consumed. An hour of jogging will burn only about 150 calories above your basal metabolic rate, but it only takes about 30 seconds to eat 150 calories of cookies. We judge the value of our meals on the size of the portions we are given. When we go out to eat, we want to leave full. Studies show that there are about 1,000 Calories between being satisfied and feeling full. Even more frightening is that there are between 2,000 and 3,000 calories between feeling full and feeling stuffed. If you go out to an all-you-can-eat food bar and leave feeling stuffed, you may have consumed as many as 4,000 unneeded calories. When this happens we typically go out for a jog the next day to "burn off those calories". But to burn off that many calories would require you to jog continously for 27 hours. The problem is not that we don't burn enough calories, it's that we put too many calories down our neck.

Leptin: the genetics of fat storage

As anyone with a bodyfat problem knows, there seems to be a strong setpoint for how much body fat a particular individual has. This setpoint is controlled by a gene called the ob gene that produces a protein calledLeptin. Leptin is a strong suppressor of appetitie and food intake. As your bodyfat rises, more leptin is produced and your appetite declines so that your bodyfat stabilizes. If your body fat falls, your leptin production declines and your appetite is disinhibited. It seems that we inherit a bodyfat setpoint that is most effecient for our environment and the environment of our ancestors.

Why exercise doesn't burn many calories

Go to the health club and climb on a stair stepper or treadmill. Program the machine by plugging in your weight, select your speed or program and begin your workout. As you plod along on the apparatus you are driven along by the ever-increasing number on the screen that indicates the number of calories that you have burned. Eventually you go long enough to burn 300 calories and you are left with a feeling of accomplishment. Now, as you wipe the sweat from your brow and catch your breath, let me ask you a question. Why did the machine ask you to program in your weight? If you answered to calculate how many calories you burn you are right. What you most likely failed to consider is the main reason it needs your weight is to calculate your basal metabolic rate. The average male will maintain his weight on about 3200 calories a day. That is about 140 calories an hour at rest. So the 300 calories burned are not calories burned above your basal metabolic rate, they are calories burned includingyour basal metabolic rate. So for your time on the treadmill, you burned about 160 calories above your baseline. If you eat just 3 cookies, you have completely undone about an hour's worth of work. Think about it...if we were so metabolically inefficient as to burn 300 calories at the rate the exercise equipment says you do, would we ever have survived as a species. The calories burned hunting and gathering would have caused us to die of starvation before we could ever have found anything to eat. At that rate of calorie burn, we would barely have enough metabolic economy to survive a trip to the grocery store. Most people have accepted blindly the information displayed on exercise equipment and as such have turned exercise into a form of guilt absolution. Have dessert (600 calories of pie) and feel guilty? Just go to the health club and work on the stepper until 600 calories tick by on the screen. Other than the fact that this simply seems pathetic, it also just doesn't work.

Let us assume that you have the determination and time to do such a workout 7 days a week. If we take the 300 calories burned and subtract out your basal metabolic rate of 140 calories, we are left with 160 calories burned. There are 3,500 calories in a pound of fat. If your appetite is not spurned by the exercise (as it commonly is) and you keep a stable calorie intake, it would take you 21.875 days to burn off a pound of fat with the extra activity. This is assuming that no other variables are present. Unfortunately there is a big variable that almost no-one accounts for...muscle loss. In order to exercise long enough to reach the 300 calorie mark on the stepper or treadmill, you have to perform low intensity steady state activity. Steady state activity does not place much demand on the muscles, that is why it can be carried out for so long. Rather than demanding use of a large percentage of your muscle fibers, you are actually using a small percentage of your weakest, slow-twitch fibers over and over. When you perform this type of exercise your body can adapt by actually losing muscle. Since you use such a small percentage of your muscle mass to do the work, additional muscle is perceived as dead weight, useless and burdensome. If a person persisted in 7 day a week steady state training the could easily lose about 5 pounds of muscle tissue. Muscle tissue is the most metabolically expensive tissue we have; it takes between 50 and 100 calories a day just to keep a pound of muscle alive. Lets assume the lower number of 50 calories a day. If you lose 5 pounds of muscle over time as you perform your calorie burning exercise that will result in a loss of 250 calories per day that would be used to keep that muscle alive. The 160 calories you burned would probably now be more like 100 burned because with practice, your running or climbing economy improves and requires less effort (most of the perceived conditioning in steady state activity is actually the exercise getting easier not because of improved cardiovascular condition, but because of improved economy of motion. This is why if you take a runner and have him perform another steady state activity such as cycling he will be gasping for air. Indeed, runners who train on treadmills in the Winter notice a large decrease in perceived condition when they hit the road in the Spring). So now if we do the math we will find that you burned about 100 calories above your baseline per day, but we must subtract out 250 calories due to muscle loss. For all your effort you are now 150 calories in the wrong direction. Furthermore, the stress hormones that result from such overtraining also stimulate fat storage. Anyone who has attempted such a program of weight loss can confirm...you will end up feeling washed out, moody, and (worst of all) fatter. The truth is this: you cannot use physical activity to negate excess caloric intake.

Muscle: the real key to burning calories

Remember when you were a teenager and could eat everything in sight and not get fat? Somewhere in your 30's things changed. Now it seems like just looking at food can make you fat. What happened?

The main difference for most people is that they have less muscle in adulthood than they had in their late teens and early twenties. As we age there is a natural tendency to lose muscle and we also are less vigorous in our physical activity, which results in further muscle loss. This loss of muscle tissue results in a decreasing metabolic rate. Lose 5 pounds of muscle and your calories burned per 24 hours decreases by about 250 calories. While this may not sound like much, it adds up. If you continue to eat like you did when you were younger, you will gain a pound of fat in about 14 days. Over a 20 week period you will gain 10 pounds.

The key to getting rid of accumulated body fat is to get back your youthful metabolism by getting back your muscle. You have probably heard people say that "muscle has memory". Well, this is one popular saying that is actually true. With a proper exercise stimulus that dormant muscle can be reclaimed. When you get back the muscle that requires 250 calories a day to keep alive, what used to be an insidious weight-gain problem will become an insidious weight-loss technique. As you become stronger you will have a natural tendency to partake of more vigorous activities. This situation will allow you to lose weight with less attention paid to calorie counting and food selection. The more reasonable your diet can be, the greater your chance to stick with it. As you ride this spiral of success, you may be able to eat more like you did as a teenager. Putting just 5 pounds of calorie burning muscle on your body can really turn things around for you.

Proper exercise and discriminant weight loss

SuperSlow inventor Ken Hutchins was the first person to ever explain the idea of discriminant weight loss to me. He told me to picture the human body as a corporation that is run by a board of directors. He told me to assume that a body operating on a calorie deficit is like a corporation running at a budget deficit. Each of the body tissues could represent a different department within that corporation. He then presented two scenarios. In the first scenario there is a budget deficit and no department has any unusual demands. In this scenario layoffs can occur in all departments. So your body lays off some fat, some muscle, some bone and connective tissue, as well as nervous tissue . Your corporation (or body) becomes a smaller version of its former self. In the second scenario, there is a large demand placed on the muscle department. In this scenario, no layoffs can occur in the muscle department. Indeed, more muscle has to be hired on. This results in a larger layoff in the fat department. We cannot produce cutbacks in the bone or connective tissue department because we need their support because muscle is not helpful unless it is attached to strong bone by strong connective tissue. This means more fat has to be let go. We cannot lay off any nervous tissue, because our new muscle is useless unless it is innervated by new nervous tissue. This means more fat has to be let go. Under this scenario, all weight loss is shunted toward fat loss. In this scenario, your corporation (body) takes on a dramatic shape change. You have added a modest amount of shape-improving muscle and jettisoned a large amount of shape-ruining fat.

Don't put that in your mouth

It should now be evident to you that the easiest way to create the calorie deficit you need to lose bodyfat is to simply avoid putting the extra calories in your mouth in the first place. Even a very modest calorie reduction of 150 calories will result in significant fat loss over time. In the long run, the self-discipline required is much easier to produce than the effort of running on a treadmill for an hour every day (which is a losing proposition anyway). A calorie intake deficit of 500 calories a day is still fairly easy to achieve, and if you have added some muscle to your body the shape change you can produce in 6-12 weeks can be amazing. Initially, you may have to be very compulsive about counting calories, but within a few weeks you will probably learn to manage simply by controlling the portion size of the foods you eat.

Superhydration

Ellington Darden, PhD (Author and former Research Director for Nautilus Sports/Medical Industries) came up with this concept. The food calories that you count are actually Kilocalories or Calories. A Calorie is the amount of heat energy required to raise the temperature of a liter of water by one degree celsius. The calories that you count are actually just units of heat-energy.

Dr. Darden developed a program of drinking large volumes of ice-cold water throughout the day. The ice water that goes into your system has to be warmed to body temperature. Thus a liter of water at 1 degree celsius that ultimate leaves your body at 37 degrees celsius and thus requires 36 calories of heat energy. If you manage to consume 5 liters of water per day this results in roughly 180 extra calories burned.
According to Dr. Darden, superhydration helps fat loss in another way. If you are well hydrated most of your body's waste products can be eliminated through the kidneys. When you are underhydrated much of this burden is assumed by the liver. One of the liver's main functions is the processing of stored bodyfat for use as energy. If your liver is occupied processing waste products it is less efficient at mobilizing bodyfat. Superhydration not only burns calories, it allows your liver to be more efficient at mobilizing fat off of your body.

Plenty of Sleep

Dr. Darden also discovered that plenty of sleep was essential to fat loss. In his research he noted that subjects who were sleep deprived did not lose fat as easily as those who were well rested. It seems that calorie restriction is fairly stressful to the body and any further stressors can result in a protective slowing of the metabolism. My own theory is that a calorie restriction sends a biological signal of starvation and decreased sleep sends a signal that the organism is having to stay up to search for food, or it has to be vigilant because its environment is unsafe. These are probably powerful biological signals that cause a protective slowing of the metabolism.

Simple Dietary Guidelines and Recommended Diets

There are literally thousands of diet books out there. Many of these books make extraordinary claims or involve complex regimines that cannot be carried out long term. By far the best diet books written are those by Ellington Darden, PhD. His books are no-nonsense and have precise regimines that are easy to follow. Most importantly, his diets easily adapt into lifelong eating habits that will keep you lean. Some of Dr. Darden's best books include Soft Steps to a Hard Body, Living Longer Stronger, andA Flat Stomach A.S.A.P. Protein Power by Dr's. Michael and Mary Dan Eades is well written and makes a compelling argument for control of carbohydrate intake. Many of my clients have found that producing a calorie deficit on this program is easier for them than many other diets. The bottom line is that you will need to devise a system of reducing calorie intake that seems to work for you.

My own dietary guidelines for people are actually quite simple. It involves looking at your hand. You have five fingers that represent five meals to eat in a day (3 meals and 2 snacks). The serving size of any food you choose should be either the size of your palm or able to fit in the palm of your hand. Meals can have 4 servings from any categorie of food. Snacks have 2 servings. Your five fingers also represent the 5 liters of water you should drink over the course of the day. If you follow these guidelines you will limit your portion sizes so that you should be able to produce weight loss without excessive attention to detail. If you want a more detailed way of portioning your intake, I also suggest the "Food Mover" sold by Richard Simmons on his informercial (although I do not recommend his aerobics-based exercise program that comes with it).

The Bottom Line

The bottom line for fat loss is as follows: 1) Build some calorie burning muscle through proper exercise. 2) Create a modest calorie deficit through dietary restraint. 3) Superhydration. 4) Get some extra sleep. 5) Avoid overactivity or steady-state activities that are popularly thought to "burn calories". If you have the discipline, these simple steps will prove successful beyond your expectations.







Friday, 4 January 2013

USC hill sprint session

Tomorrow morning at 10am the USC athletes are meeting at lifeboat road car park for an intense mix of sand dune sprints and burpees.
The way we perform these sessions is to really sprint up the hill, as fast as you can, then do your 10 burpees, and walk back down for recovery. The recovery walk is important so you can really put 100% into the burpees & sprints.
See you tomorrow at 10.
John

Thursday, 3 January 2013

First class of 2013

First class of 2013 in the bag, all regulars and no new faces.
The athletes tonight did the very difficult deck of cards workout, followed by 4 rounds of tabata!
Everyone worked very hard and it was obvious most had been keeping up their training over the festivities.
See you on Saturday morning at 10am, at lifeboat road Carpark.

John

2013... Lets make it the best year

Happy new year!

USC is having its first class of the year tonight at 8pm, at the temporary home of Pinetops Gym, as Atlas is undergoing some work.

USC has structured its class slightly differently tonight, to help beginners battle through the first few workouts with out feeling like its too much. Intermediate & advanced people can still push themselves as hard as they ever have.

See you at 8pm.....

John