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to a friend How To Maximize Fat Loss With
Little Or NO Exercise! By Jesse Cannone CFT, CPRS, SPN Weight
loss is a billion-dollar industry because everyone is looking for the
quick fix when it comes to losing weight. The problem is losing weight
takes time, unless of course you go on The Atkins Diet and lose a lot of
muscle and water! Everyone wants to burn body fat yet few people
understand how the human body uses fat for fuel! Stored
body fat is the last thing your body will use as fuel. The whole reason
we store extra calories (that can come from anything) is to have a back
up or reserve. The only way body
fat can be effectively used as fuel Is If blood sugar is stable, and the
body is using more fuel than is being supplied!
This is what keeps most people from burning fat. I
often have people tell
me " I
run all the time",
or " I hardly eat anything, but I'm still not losing fat." The
reason is because they have unstable blood sugar, and/or they exercise
at the same level of intensity all the time (usually a moderate level).
Remember that the two most important factors when it comes to burning
fat are stable blood sugar and lack of hard physical
activity. Let's
look at these two factors more closely. Blood sugar levels are directly
affected by meal frequency and food choices. Eating small, balanced
meals/snacks every 2-3 hours is one way to help stabilize blood sugar.
Small frequent feedings (provided they contain only enough calories
necessary for the level of activity at that time) force your body to
adapt or get used to having food, which will keep blood sugar
fairly stable. This makes it less likely for your meals to be stored as
fat. What
you eat also plays a big part in blood sugar. For example, juice
increases blood sugar quickly forcing it to skyrocket as opposed to
vegetables, which burn at a much slower rate. Avoid foods containing
large amounts of sugar such as soda, juice, candy, ice cream, table
sugar, and other refined foods. Focus on whole grains,
vegetables/fruits, lean proteins, and un-saturated fats (for more info
on nutrition see my Healthy
Eating Guidelines Packet). Unstable
blood sugar is something that can do serious damage to your body in
addition to increasing body fat levels, such as hormonal discrepancies
and Type II Diabetes. Most people are totally unaware as to what blood
sugar is or what it does in your body. Activity
level is the other major factor, which prevents a lot of people from
making any progress! Most people are misinformed and still think they
need to sweat to burn fat.
This is totally not the case! I have had great success with clients
losing fat with out even going to the gym! Again, all that is necessary
is that blood sugar is stable and that the individual is burning more
calories than they are supplying. So what
does that mean? Eat small, balanced meals or snacks every 2.3 hours,
increase muscle tissue with progressive strength training, and stay
active (for more info on progressive strength trainings see my article
entitled Success with
Strength Training)! An
easy way to stay on track is to ask your self before every meal or snack
"what will I be doing for the next few hours?" If you are
going to be at work and not that active then your body doesn't need a
lot of calories. Don't forget that any extra calories (whether from
vegetables or pizza) that don't
get used will be stored as fat! MATCH
YOUR EATING TO YOUR ACTIVITY
LEVEL! Another major problem is the common misconception that your metabolism slows down as you age. This has been proven to be incorrect with hundreds of studies! Your metabolism slows down due to a loss of muscle tissue, and that is a direct result of a lack of strenuous physical activity. That is why it is so important to due some form of strength training. I
also recommend performing 2-3 high intensity cardiovascular workouts per
week on non-consecutive days. These workouts should be an 11 on a scale
of 1-10 (level of effort or intensity)! These hard cardiovascular
workouts are great for increasing metabolism for 4-12
hours or more! Both strength training and hard cardiovascular workouts
deplete glycogen (stored muscular energy). A
large portion of your meals following that workout will be used to
replenish the glycogen (muscular energy) that was used to fuel that
workout. This also means you are a lot less likely to store any excess
calories as fat! Plus, if you eat well following that workout, your body
will start to metabolize fat for fuel. I
have used this basic information to change people's lives! By making
just a few small changes I've had people burn on average 1-2
pounds of fat per week! Just imagine what that means over
the course of a few weeks or months! The human
body is only capable of
metabolizing 2-3 pounds
of fat per week with a miracle. So
a more realistic goal would be
2-6 pounds in a month. Not exactly what people want, but it's better
than not making any progress at all! This information is what stands
between most people and their goals. This is just a brief overview of the importance of stable blood sugar and how meal frequency affects it. For more information on how I can help you burn fat fast visit my website www.burn-fat-fast.com or e-mail me |