samedi 20 août 2016

9 Ways To Burn Fat Fast

Implement these 9 fat-burning tips that use exercise and diet and watch the body fat melt like the butter you're no longer using
The human body is a remarkably adaptable machine. Even if years and years of neglect have allowed pound after pound of fat to fill out your frame, you can rid yourself of that lard at a much faster rate than you brought it on board. In that sense, time is your side!
Take these nine easy-to-implement tips to heart, and progress will come in a hurry!

1. Stay Off The Scale

That you can gain muscle and lose fat is one of the reasons I stress to people not to follow the scale. Body composition and how you look in the mirror matters more than what the scale says.
You could train hard and eat right and build five pounds of muscle and lose five pounds of fat, and what will the scale say? That you still weigh the same.
Frustrating, even though you've made good progress. Use the scale as a guide, but how you look in the mirror, how you feel, and how your clothes fit are much better indicators of your progress.

2. Reduce Your Calories Gradually

If you're looking to lose fat, don't make huge calorie cuts. This will kick your body into starvation mode, reducing your metabolism and making it more difficult to burn off the fat.
To prevent this metabolic slowdown and allow your body to burn fat at an optimal rate, make smaller calorie reductions every week or two.

3. Vary Your Caloric Intake

This is another way to outsmart your body and continue to lose body fat without lowering your metabolism.
By varying your caloric intake every few days instead of eating the exact same amount of calories every day, keep the starvation mechanism in check and continue to burn fat.
Says Jim Stoppani, Ph.D:
"Although in today's society food tends to be accessible and abundant, our bodies are designed to store as much energy as possible to prepare for times of scarcity. One way the body does this is by adjusting its metabolic rate based on calorie intake.
If you stick with the same calories every single day while dieting, your body will adjust by lowering metabolic rate to prevent you from burning off too much body fat. It's all about hormones.
When leptin levels are high, your metabolic rate stays high; when leptin levels drop, so does your metabolic rate.
When calories are low and steady, leptin levels fall and so does metabolic rate. Eating higher calories on some days and lower calories on others helps to keep leptin levels up."

4. Train With Weights

Resistance training helps with fat loss in a number of ways. Weight training itself burns calories. Studies also show that, unlike aerobic exercise, weight training increases the calories you burn at rest for up to 39 hours after your workout.
Plus, the more muscle your body has, the more calories you burn each day.
Even if your goal is solely to lose body fat, you need to train with weights. This will help prevent any of the weight you lose from being muscle.
Were that to happen, your metabolism would slow, stalling your fat-loss efforts and turning you into a skinny-fat person.
Yes, even someone with anorexia can have a high body fat percentage.

5. Do High-Intensity Intervals (HIIT)

This means alternating a brief period of high-intensity exercise with brief rest periods.
The result: better results in less time.
One of my favorite interval methods is jumping rope. You may need to practice a bit on this one. After a brief warmup, I'll jump rope as fast as I can for 10-20 seconds, followed by a half a minute at a slower cadence.
Always warm up before intervals, by the way. If you're not in the best shape, start with cardio of low or moderate intensity. You might also want to check with your doctor.

6. Eat More Fat

Consuming enough of the good fats will help you lose fat, build muscle, and recover faster from your workouts. Healthy fats also have myriad health benefits, including being good for your heart.
So which fats are "good" fats? The polyunsaturated ones (especially omega-3s), such as those from fish and nuts, and the monounsaturated kind, such as those from peanut butter, olive oil, egg yolks, and fish oil.

7. Cut Carbs

The attention focused on low-carb diets has divided many people into "pro" and "anti" low-carb camps. Whichever side you're on, the bottom line is that reducing your carb intake—especially sugar and starches—when trying to lose fat will help.
Those carbs you do consume should come from sources such as oatmeal and vegetables.
The timing of your carb intake also affects fat-burning. "I recommend tapering down carbohydrates by 3 p.m.," saysTeam Bodybuilding.com member Ashley Johns, also known by the BodySpace handle Hottie-I-Am. "Consume most of your carbs in the morning and around your workouts."

8. Increase Your Protein

Increasing protein intake will increase your metabolism and help to maintain your muscle mass, all of which helps with fat-burning. In fact, your body burns more calories when you eat protein than when you digest either fats or carbs.
This may explain why the fat-burning effects of eating more protein were confirmed in a study published in the American Journal of Physiology. One group was fed a high-protein diet (just over 1 gram per pound of body weight per day) while the second group consumed an amount closer to the lower recommendation of the RDA (recommended dietary allowance). The group eating the higher-protein diet burned the most fat.
Yes, you read that right, Grasshopper: Many dieters actually gained muscle mass without working out, simply by eating a high-protein diet.

9. Eat 6 Smaller Meals Per Day, Not 2-3 Feasts

This will ensure that you supply your body with the nutrients necessary to build muscle and burn fat.
Bonus: Your resting metabolic rate increases. It will also prevent your body from kicking into "starvation" mode, which can happen when too much time elapses between meals.
If this happens, your body will start burning muscle for energy and increasing your body-fat stores, as well as slowing down your metabolism. This is the exact opposite of what you want to happen.
Don't be the kind of person who complains about your situation but never does anything to improve it. Don't become "happy" with the status quo of being miserable. Now use this knowledge to take action!

3 Ways To Progress Without Lifting Heavier

Think the only way to boost your results is by putting more plates on the bar? Plenty of revered lifting programs disagree. Here are 3 simple ways to keep progressing without going heavier!
Ever see folks at the gym who always do the same exercises with the same amount of weight for the same number of reps—and their body never changes? That person gets made fun of a lot online, but in their defense, it's an easy state to slip into. Maybe you've tried a heavier weight, and each time you do, your joints don't like it, or your form breaks down, or you struggle mightily to get just a few reps. Hey, it happens!
I'm not going to tell you that you have to lift heavier to "be tough" or anything silly like that. Too many promising lifters have been broken by arbitrarily chasing big numbers! The answer isn't to just keep doing the same thing forever, though. The concept of progressive overload hasn't been defeated yet; if you want to grow, you need to keep challenging yourself!
Luckily, you have options beyond adding plates and hoping your spotter is on their toes. So let's take a closer look at three other ways you can include this critical principle in your training.

1. Increase The Number Of Reps

Believe it or not, "Thou shalt do 3 sets of 10 reps" wasn't among the original commandments. If that 10th rep felt smooth as silk, it's perfectly reasonable to keep going! Within a few weeks, you may easily be able to press that same weight for 13-14 reps. While the load hasn't changed, you're pushing yourself harder by increasing the number of reps you complete—and that's progressive overload.
Of course, the standard rep range for hypertrophy is 6-12, so doing 13, 14, or 15 reps no longer puts you in the maximalmuscle-building rep range, but that doesn't mean it's useless or that you're only building endurance. Kris Gethin's personal biceps workout, for instance, is nothing but sets of 15. Many lifters swear by 20-rep sets of squats for both strength and size gains. And as a way to spice things up on occasion, they're great (in an awful kind of way). Still, I don't think adding reps indefinitely is the way to go.
Here's my approach. Follow a high-rep program for a change of pace, or once you can easily do sets of 12 for two consecutive workouts, add about 5 percent more weight for upper-body movements and 10 percent for lower-body moves, rather than further increasing the number of reps you can do. That'll ensure you stay within the muscle-building rep range and can now focus again on increasing your reps.

2. Increase The Volume By Adding Sets

Another way to implement progressive overload is to increase the number of sets you do of an exercise. You can find plenty of great programs that take that same idea and stretch it out even further. Just three examples are Vince Gironda's classic 8 sets of 8 workouts, the 10 sets of 10 approach of German volume training, or Hany Rambod's FST-7, which often features 7 sets of 10-12 reps.
Volume, remember, is a marker for hypertrophy as well as elevating testosterone and growth-hormone levels.[1-4] Of course, there is probably a point of diminishing returns when it comes to adding sets, but that point definitely isn't at 3 sets.

3. Decrease Your Rest Periods

If you've got a stopwatch in your gym bag or always insist on lifting where you can see a clock, this one's for you.
If you typically rest a strict 90 seconds between sets, but reduce it to 70 or 60, your body is "less recovered" than it might normally be: lactate, hydrogen ions, and pH levels aren't normalized to the degree they would have been with the longer rest interval. This mechanism also forces your body to make incremental adaptations.
All these modes can be used to help you continue making gains in the gym, but I don't recommend blending them all at the same time. Focus on one until you hit a plateau, then switch to another. Whatever you do, the gym is no place to get comfortable!
References
  1. Kraemer, W. J., Marchitelli, L., Gordon, S. E., Harman, E., Dziados, J. E., Mello, R., ... & Fleck, S. J. (1990). Hormonal and growth factor responses to heavy resistance exercise protocols. Journal of Applied Physiology, 69(4), 1442-1450.
  2. Krieger, J. W. (2010). Single vs. multiple sets of resistance exercise for muscle hypertrophy: a meta-analysis. The Journal of Strength & Conditioning Research, 24(4), 1150-1159.
  3. Wolfe, B. L., Lemura, L. M., & Cole, P. J. (2004). Quantitative analysis of single-vs. multiple-set programs in resistance training. The Journal of Strength & Conditioning Research, 18(1), 35-47.
  4. Craig, B. W., & Kang, H. Y. (1994). Growth Hormone Release Following Single Versus Multiple Sets of Back Squats: Total Work Versus Power. The Journal of Strength & Conditioning Research, 8(4), 270-275.