Thứ Sáu, 26 tháng 8, 2016

8 Pro Tips To Help You Shape Up For Summer

Need a game plan to achieve that hot summer bod? Two expert athletes share their best tips to help you trim away the fat—and the excuses—from your body and your life!
The urge to lose a little fat can strike anyone at any time of year, but there's something about summer that makes the feeling just a bit more urgent. An event or trip shows up on the calendar, and all of a sudden, you're searching Google for that "one weird trick" that might make the difference between #abs or #tears showing up under your post.
We know how it goes! That's why we've asked Dymatize athletes Mike Hildebrandt and Alicia Ziegler to share which small changes make the most difference for them as they get ready to cut down. Nothing weird here! Just apply a couple of these techniques to your already solid nutrition and training plan, and give yourself a tiny leg up in the battle against bulk.

1. Recalibrate Your Calorie Tracking

Food logs and nutrition trackers are all the rage these days, but they don't work well unless your inputs are accurate. Far too often, people measure carefully for the first couple of weeks—or days—and then trust themselves to eyeball portions from then on. That may work during the winter, but if you have big goals this summer? No way.
"Everything that goes into your body needs to be tracked and accounted for if you want to lose that excess body fat this summer," says Hildebrandt. "Even if you feel OK about your tracking, take a week or so to track absolutely everything, making sure you account for all the food and beverages you consume."
It's not that we don't trust you. But nobody's perfect—and the little imperfections add up. If you're off by even a little, this could amount to 50-100 calories per serving, depending on the food. Do this a couple of times per day, and it can significantly affect your progress.
"This doesn't mean you need to eat boring, however," Hildebrandt notes. "Just eat honest." And remember, you're not married to the macros you first entered into your tracker. You can easily make adjustments in your MyFitnessPal account or whatever tracking method you happen to be using.

2. Start Your Day With A Sweat

When he's slimming down, Hildebrandt likes to start each day with 20 minutes of cardiovascular training at a moderate intensity. "Wake up, consume at least 5 grams of leucine or BCAAs, then get on that cardio machine and do 20 minutes—it's that simple," he says.
He notes that while doing so, you should keep your heart rate around 65-78 percent of your maximum heart rate, but no higher. "This pace should have you working at an intensity level where you can get out a short sentence, but aren't able to carry on a long conversation," he explains.

3. Don't Lose Gym Time To The Screen

This should go without saying, but given how many of us look at our phones without even realizing we're doing it, it bears repeating.
Drop and do 10 burpees whenever you catch yourself peeking at your phone.
"When in the gym, you shouldn't be ruminating over a playlist or distracting yourself by fiddling with your phone, checking emails, or replying to texts," Ziegler explains. "Maximize your efforts by making every minute count. Instead of checking the screen, do push-ups, burpees, jump rope, frog jumps, bench hops, knee-highs, mountain climbers, jumping jacks, or shadow boxing."
Want to make yourself painfully aware of your phone habit? Easy: Do 10 burpees every time you catch yourself looking at the screen in the gym—no exceptions. Tell your friends to keep you honest. Soon enough, you'll catch on.

4. Finish Your Lifting With HIIT

Leaving the gym with a relatively dry gym towel? We've got the solution.
Save the last 20 minutes of your workout for some high-intensity interval training (HIIT). If you have to cut back a little on the volume of your resistance work to make it fit, well, that's OK some of the time. Just make sure you at least get your big lifts in, and then throw yourself into the burn.
"Especially after strength training, HIIT can really help you capitalize on fat loss by tapping into stored body fat faster," Hildebrandt says. He recommends doing six 30-second sprints with 90 seconds of rest between those sets before hitting the showers. "Your HIIT cardio should be done in less than 20 minutes, including the warm-up and cool-down," he advises.

5. Feed Yourself And Your Gut-Bugs More Fiber

Fiber is a must for healthy digestion, but the transition to high-fiber foods may not yield the sexiest you right off the bat. The sooner you get through the initial uncomfortable phase, the sooner you can focus on achieving your summer physique.
"You might feel bloated and a bit gassy at first," admits Ziegler. "But in a week or two, your body will adapt, and you'll experience the appetite-suppressing benefits that these foods have."
Long after summer is done, eating a high-fiber diet may also help lower your cholesterol levels, improve your blood glucose control, and perhaps even lessen your chances of developing type-2 diabetes over the long term.
Also worth noting: Fiber is the food of choice of your healthy gut bacteria. Specifically, they prefer what is known as "prebiotic fiber." This can be found in foods like oats, asparagus, bananas, onions and leeks, and chicory. You can also boost the prebiotic content of starches like potatoes and rice simply by letting them cool before eating.

6. Get Serious About Carb Timing

If you want to get lean in a hurry, kick your trashy breakfast to the curb and start timing your carb intake around your training.
"Center your starchy carbohydrate intake as much as you can around your workouts," says Hildebrandt. "If you can get as much as 80 percent of your carbs before and after working out, great! When you really want to shred, it pays to start controlling the timing of your nutrients."
Carbohydrates eaten right before your workout session will be utilized quickly as a fuel source to support the workout. Those eaten after the session will be taken up rapidly to replenish muscle glycogen stores and prepare you for your next session.

7. Stop Being Lazy Outside The Gym

So you've hit the gym and finished a good workout. You're likely feeling pretty good about yourself. But don't let that have you thinking you get the rest of the day off!
Your workout doesn't have to be confined to the gym. Go outside and move your body!
"Just because your workout is finished doesn't mean you can become a couch potato for the rest of the day," explains Hildebrandt. "I recommend taking at least 10,000 steps per day outside of your workout to maximize the overall calorie burn."
I hear you: "But it's leg day!" Tough, kid. Park at the far end of the lot and start walking.

8. Remind Yourself Often Not To Reward Yourself Often

There's a certain trap that often comes with behavior change. For simplicity's sake, you could call it, "Yay! I finally remembered to drink water today, so I get double dessert!"
That's not going to work anymore. "Start setting weekly goals, and don't reward your accomplishment with food," recommends Ziegler. "Whether it's getting to bed earlier and logging sufficient sleep, or being able to do some extra sprints on the treadmill, set that goal and stick to it simply because it's the right thing to do."
She recommends writing a goal on your bathroom mirror, taping it to your fridge or car's dashboard, or making a screen shot of it and saving it as your screensaver so you are reminded of it daily.
"Once you accomplish that goal, reward yourself...with a new goal," she says. "By building confidence this way, you'll feel empowered to strive for more, and you won't set yourself back by eating junk food to reward that hard-earned goal."
The real reward, she promises, will come later, when you have a body that looks and feels great.
Resource: bodybuilding.com

I Cut Like A Bodybuilder And Lived To Tell The Tale

At age 40, Cassie caught the bug and decided to make an ambitious choice to model for a friend. With three weeks to prep, would she shine in front of the camera, or crash and burn beforehand?
The January after I turned 39, I resolved to get as fit as possible by my 40th birthday. Anyone who has ever seen that number approaching can relate to the urge, I'm sure. I thought perhaps looking good might soften the blow of the big four-o. And sure enough, it did.
What I did wasn't rocket science. I started eating mostly protein, eliminated processed carbs, and began doing HIIT workouts up to six days a week. Eight months later, I had the results I was looking for; I dropped 20 pounds of fat and built some lovely muscles. In fact, on my 40th birthday, I weighed the same amount I did as a senior in high school. Being able to say that felt good.
So...end of story, right? Hardly. Like many before me, once I had opened the Pandora's box of fitness, I quickly found myself embarking on a new adventure I couldn't have dreamed of. It was spurred by an offhand question from a mere acquaintance, and it gave me a lesson in willpower unlike any I've ever experienced. Here's my story.
After my eight-month-long transformation, I was proud of myself. With a 5-year-old, a (rather stressful) full-time career, and at "middle age," I had dropped a few pant sizes and was sporting some shapely biceps. Friends who hadn't seen me in a while were amazed. "Wow, you're crazy fit now!" they'd say.
Yeah, i looked pretty good...in clothes...for a 40-year-old-mom. But for a fitness model? Umm, not so much.
Honestly, I was feeling pretty cocky. And then one day, a friend of a friend casually asked me a question. "Hey, I'm working on a fitness-photo portfolio. Would you consider modeling for me?"
And all the air went out of the cocky balloon.
Yeah, I looked pretty good...in clothes...for a 40-year-old-mom. But for a fitness model? Umm, not so much.
But I was flattered, and for some crazy reason—maybe because I was flattered—I said yes. And then the panic set in.
The shoot was scheduled for three weeks out. In a sweat, I contacted the co-owner of Armbrust Pro Gym, Brian Leben, whom I'd met once, and begged for his help.
Now, let's be clear, Armbrust isn't just any gym; it's one of the best gyms in the world for training bodybuilders. Up to this point, I'd only been there a couple of times to work legs in their legendary leg room. But now, well, shit was about to get real. I didn't even realize just how real.

Becoming A Bodybuilder

I met with Leben and explained my plight. He agreed to put me through three weeks of a bodybuilder-style cut, and to give me the nutritional guidelines to match. I'm not going to share the specifics, because I don't want you to be tempted to do the same thing, so let's just say that the approach was aggressive because the time frame was short.
We began with a full-body scan to determine my starting body composition. Not bad for an old chick: 15.3 percent body fat. I felt pretty good about it, but also realized that it's hard to affect change on a number that's (relatively) low. But I had already committed to doing the shoot, and I love a good human experiment. My new coach was still game, and we decided to train together every possible day until the photo shoot. And I promised to follow his instructions to the letter.
We began with a full-body scan to determine my starting body composition. Not bad for an old chick: 15.3 percent body fat.
My inner dialog during the first few days went something like this:
[Looks at the list of foods.]
There are only like five things on here. And they all have to be prepped and cooked. I'm going to starve.
Two gallons of water a day? That sounds doable. Oh...crap. That's more than 30 glasses of water a day. I'm going to drown.
[In weight room on first leg day.]
I'll be OK in here. I'm pretty damned fit. [Five minutes pass]. Oh sweet jeebus, I'm not ok, NOT ok.
Just don't puke. Nobody likes a puker. OMFG, did I just throw up little bit? No, I think that was just a piece of my left lung.
These weights are psychotically effing heavy. Lifting them until failure suuuckks. Oh for the love of all things good and evil, this has got to end soon. I wonder if one of these ripped giant guys will carry me to my car?
[Nearly every day of the experiment]
Good morning, fasted cardio—you evil bitch! Seriously, I have to pee again? And I'm starving, even though I'm eating freaking constantly.
I never thought I'd hate steak. Fuck you, steak. And you too, oatmeal. You're miserable. Sweet potatoes? Not so sweet anymore. Yeah, fuck you, too.

There Is No Escape From Photo Prep

One sore-bodied week into the training, I went on a two-night mini family vacation. It's hard as hell to eat at the level of clean I was eating even at home, and I knew it would be even harder to do it correctly on the road.
As I limped into the car with a cooler full of cold sweet potatoes, mushy, unsweetened oatmeal, and a 5-gallon jug of water, I thought sadly, "Who am I? I used to eat Cheetos and Red Vines on road trips."
But as I slammed the car hatch on that stupid cooler, I smiled. I didn't miss the out-of-shape junk-food-loving old me. I was digging the strong woman with mountains of willpower I'd discovered. I realized that the new me was a badass in an entirely different way. It felt like a better way, even if my internal dialog didn't always recognize it.
I'll just say that, even when you're a badass, cold oatmeal out of a plastic baggie is disgusting. There's no way around it.
I found a gym immediately upon arrival at the hotel and got right to it. I don't imagine that I looked super cool during my workout there; I was still more or less a weight-room novice. But I stayed for two hours, trying out every machine and lifting heavy things until my whole body burned.
On the second night of the vacation, my family and I went to a five-star restaurant, and I allowed myself a few bites of chocolate cake and a glass of red wine, after my meal of salad with no dressing and salmon with no butter or oil. Even though it was a planned transgression (and a tiny one), I woke up the next morning with searing guilt that I had broken my "training." I vowed not to do it again. I headed home with even greater resolve to rock this experiment.

MAYBE I CAN DO THIS!

Back home and back in the weight room with Leben, I quickly realized that my road trip workouts weren't actually that hard after all. I was reminded of what the term "burnout" means and how achieving this state is definitely not pleasant. When I started to slow down or get lazy, Leben would firmly say "hard work" and set me straight. That phrase and I developed a love/hate relationship. Mostly hate.
One day at the beginning of the third week, i left the gym and had a moment of revelation. I felt amazing! It was like i could fly. My mind was clear and focused, and my body looked better than it ever had.
At one point, when I was at a low—there were a few of these, by the way—Leben said I was showing "improved form and muscularity." It felt like a sympathy compliment. But I took it, and I came back the next day to do it again.
It gave me a glimpse into why people do this. But how they do it continued to elude me. Seriously, over the course of the three weeks, I can't tell you how many times I wondered or said, "How in the hell do these bodybuilders do this?"
Experienced bodybuilders in shred mode come to the gym and work their bodies at a punishing level, and then they further challenge themselves with incredibly strict diets at home. They do it every day for months or years on end, just to add another pound or two of muscle or "bring up" a body part.
If we could harness this level of willpower and drive, we'd be able to achieve world peace, solve the energy crisis, and end global hunger. Through this process, I developed a tremendous respect for this lifestyle. Bodybuilding is hard! Not like a little hard—like, superhuman hard.
And yet, for a short time, I did it. And I survived. Even more than that, one day at the beginning of the third week, I left the gym and had a moment of revelation. I felt amazing! It was like I could fly. My mind was clear and focused, and my body looked better than it ever had.
That feeling lasted for two days. And then we cut my water.

In Front Of The Lens...Finally!

It's amazing how taking one little ingredient out of your life can change everything. Water is one of those ingredients.
But thirsty or not, since the shoot was in a few days, it was time to make me less "puffy." We tapered down to a gallon per day. Not so tough. Then a half gallon. The day before the shoot, no water at all. We also added in supplements to "dry me out" even more. And boy did I feel shitty, more or less like a lightheaded rag doll.
During this time, we had my body composition remeasured. I was petrified that there wouldn't be any change. That would have crushed me! But gloriously, there was change—big change! My body fat was down to 13.3 percent, far lower than it had ever been. My lean mass had increased significantly, and my body weight had decreased by 8 pounds. I skipped out of the gym (or my best dehydrated approximation of skipping). I was so happy.
Finally, the day of the shoot arrived! I was more than ready to complete the experiment. It had been about as long and tough as any three weeks of my life. That morning, I was allowed to have pancakes with syrup, two pieces of bacon, and a cup of orange juice for breakfast.
Best meal of my life. No question.
I'd gotten a spray tan and wax the day before, so my skin was ready for my close up. Plus, an hour prior to the shoot, I covered my entire body in Preparation H (I'd read online that it would help tighten the skin around my muscles), so I was glistening from head to toe.
So, smelling like an old person, and feeling slightly high off the OJ, I made my way to the shoot. And rather than feeling shy or vulnerable, I found it was so much fun! I was completely empowered by the fact that I had nothing to hide. I spent two hours with my photographer friend capturing shots of the best body I've ever had. I'll have those images when I'm 95 and wrinkly.
And still lifting. Because as it turns out, I'm hooked.
Pass me the sweet potatoes. It's leg day tomorrow.
Resource: bodybuilding.com

4 Fat-Loss Habits You Need This Year

Tired of the stale New Year's goal-setting advice? Stop focusing on the end goal, and devote your attention to building these behaviors that make fitness resolutions into reality!
By now, I'm sure you've heard all the advice about smart goal-setting a hundred times. And while I agree that there's a case for making goals that are measureable, attainable, and on a timeline, there's a fundamental problem with most of our goals: They're entirely based on outcome.
This is the year I'm finally going to reach my goals! Low body fat, visible abs, and a flawless physique—it's all going to be mine in 2016.
Sound familiar? At the outset, you already know what you want. Now all you have to do is go get it. Although these types of goals look shiny and bright this time of year, it's no industry secret that the vast majority of fitness resolutioners don't achieve them.
So what's the other solution? I'm not going to tell you that can't achieve fitness goals or that you shouldn't have an "after photo" in your mind. However, how you execute your goals probably needs an update.
Make 2016 the year you ditch the resolution. Don't focus on losing body fat or chiseling out a set of abs. Instead, commit to consistently performing the daily actions that will get you closer to those goals.
Put another way, don't make the outcome your goal. Make your goal these habits instead!

Fat-Loss Action 1: Eat More Fruits And Vegetables Every Day

If you have a few (or a lot of) extra pounds to lose, one of the best goals you can set for yourself is to eat more fruits and vegetables throughout the day. Fruits and veggies are filling, high-fiber, oh-so-good-for-you foods. They're packed with vitamins and minerals, but don't carry huge amount of calories.
By increasing your fruit and veggie intake, you're basically making less room in your stomach for anything that won't help you achieve your fat-loss goals. You're also doing your overall health a huge favor.

Fat-Loss Aciton 2: Strength Train Three Times A Week

I'm not telling you to go crazy and spend every open minute you have in the gym. Instead, make it a habit to lift weights three days per week.
At this frequency, you'll still give your body the stimulus to lose fat, while maintaining or increasing your muscle mass. More muscle mass means your body will have to work harder to keep those muscles functioning and healthy, which means you'll burn more total calories!
My preferred strength-training template for fat-loss training is three total-body strength-training workouts per week on nonconsecutive days. If you're looking for a place to start, try the three-day routine I laid out in my article "Get Lean by Getting Strong."

Fat-Loss Action 3: Move Your Body On Off Days

On days you don't strength train, get in extra movement. This can be practically anything from hopping on your favorite cardio machine for 30 minutes, to going for a brisk walk, to doing something more fun like hiking, mountain biking, or any other activity you enjoy.
Mix and match, but focus primarily on activities you enjoy. If you're doing things you like, you're much more likely to move frequently, consistently.
On days you don't strength train, get in extra movement.

Fat-Loss Action 4: Eat More Protein

It's a world of carbs out there. I'm not going to tell you they're "bad." Far from it. But if fat loss is the goal, it's a no-brainer to include a good source of protein with every meal and snack you consume. Your body needs protein in order to build and maintain muscle. Plus, protein is highly satiating and is essential for the health of your skin, hair, and nails.
Try not to rely on only one type of protein. Mix it up. You can eat fish and seafood, meat and poultry, eggs, dairy, beans and legumes, nuts and seeds, and other protein-rich plant sources. But get it!
So repeat after me: Protein and vegetables. Protein and vegetables.

Put These On The Calendar

There's nothing revelatory here. These are all solid, time-proven techniques. So what's going to make them work when other stuff hasn't? You're going to plug them into your calendar, like they're important meetings you wouldn't dream of skipping.
For example, every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday (or whatever days work best for you) write down "Strength Training." Set aside the time you'll do it, and have your routine picked out and available, so you know exactly where it is. No guessing allowed.
On other days, jot down "hike" or whatever other activity you're going to do. Like the training sessions, reserve a specific time, and stick to it. Every day, write notes or otherwise somehow remind yourself to "eat fruits and veggies" and "eat protein." If you want, you can even plan out your meals beforehand. It seems like overkill if you're not accustomed to it, but it works.
Every day, write notes or otherwise somehow remind yourself to "eat fruits and veggies" and "eat protein."
At the end of each day, check off what you accomplished. Then, you can look at the next day and know exactly what you need to do. These notes are a terrific way to stay on track because they provide identifiable actions to take on a daily basis.
Take this seriously for several months, and you'll create habits that will help you lose body fat and build a leaner, stronger body for years down the road.
Resource: bodybuilding.com

Is Fasted Cardio The Best For Burning Fat?

Looking to lose the pounds? Find out if knocking out your cardio on an empty stomach is the best way to go.
I'm often asked whether mornings of fasted cardio are the best way to burn fat. My answer is yes ... and no. When it comes to the physiology and biochemistry of the human body, nothing is simple. Throw exercise on top of normal daily functions, and things become even more complicated. So what do the experts say?
Some research does actually show that when you do cardio fasted in the morning, you burn up to 20 percent more fat. A recent study from the UK published in the "British Journal of Nutrition" found that when subjects were fasted during morning cardio they burned 20 percent more fat than when they had a meal beforehand. Several earlier studies show similar results.
Fasted cardio in the morning is effective because as you sleep and fast overnight your body conserves its precious carb stores and leans toward mobilizing fat for fuel. The story doesn't end here, however. Your body also breaks down amino acids into glucose overnight, so fasted morning cardio mobilizes more fat and potentially more amino acids for fuel, which isn't ideal if building muscle is your primary goal. This isn't a huge problem as long as you consume a fast-digesting protein like whey, along with some slow-digesting casein, after your cardio.

The HIIT On Cardio

Despite the evidence above, we can't unequivocally say that fasted cardio is best for burning fat. Many studies on fasted or fed cardio focus solely on how many calories are burned during exercise. This is problematic because the real benefits of exercise, particularly high-intensity cardio and lifting, come after training. High-intensity training burns more calories and fat after a workout than low-intensity cardio. With high-intensity interval training (HIIT), you burn calories for the rest of the day, even when you're not doing anything.
With high-intensity interval training (HIIT), you burn calories for the rest of the day, even when you're not doing anything.
Studies show that HIIT workouts—which take far less than half the time of slow-and-steady cardio workouts—lead to as much as twice the total fat lost. Even though the slow-and-steady cardio programs burned more total calories and fat during the actual workout, the HIIT programs somehow led to greater total fat loss. This is because the HIIT workouts burned more calories and fat the rest of the day, which adds up to more calories and fat than you can burn during a single workout.
So, if you're like most people, your best bet is to not worry about doing cardio fasted first thing in the morning. If doing cardio first thing in the morning is best for your schedule, then go for it, but try to at least have a pre-workout protein shake. If your goal is building max muscle, then I highly recommend you have a protein shake and some carbs, such as fruit, before the workout. If you're trying to limit carb intake, then you might want to avoid the carbs until after the workout is over. But again, it all depends on your diet.

The Stoppani Solution

That being said, I personally do a bit of fasted cardio and recommend it for certain people at specific times. I found that fasted cardio can work well for men with body fat in the low single digits (5-6 percent) and females with body fat in the low teens (13-14 percent), especially if they have specific problem areas like the lower back or thighs.
Over the years, I found that once people drop the majority of their total body fat, fasted cardio seems to work well on resistant or stubborn areas. Although there's no direct data to reference, it might be that when a person only has a small amount of fat lingering in hard-to-attack areas, exercising in a fasted state could spark those resistant fat cells to release stored fat so it can be burned for fuel.
I found that fasted cardio can work well for men with body fat in the low single digits (5-6 percent) and females with body fat in the low teens (13-14 percent), especially if they have specific problem areas like the lower back or thighs.
However, if you're a male with roughly 8 percent body fat or more, or a female with 16 percent or more, fasted cardio probably won't make a massive dent in your fat-loss efforts. Instead, go high intensity with some form of HIIT and watch the fat melt.

References

  1. Gonzalez, J. T., et al. Breakfast and exercise contingently affect postprandial metabolism and energy balance in physically active males. Br J Nutr. 23:1-12, 2013.
  2. Deighton, K., et al. Appetite, energy intake and resting metabolic responses to 60 min treadmill running performed in a fasted versus a postprandial state. Appetite. 2012 Jun;58(3):946-54.
  3. Hansen, K., et al.. The effects of exercise on the storage and oxidation of dietary fat. Sports Med 35: 363-373, 2005.
Resource: bodybuilding.com

Thứ Năm, 25 tháng 8, 2016

Nocturnal Noshing: 6 Snacks You Can Eat Before Bed

Your metabolism never takes a break, even while you sleep. Give it the energy it craves with easy-to-make snacks that fuel muscle growth!
Inexperienced dieters commonly believe anything consumed in the hours right before bed goes directly to body fat stores. Sounds like a nightmare for your physique! The real nightmare is that they end up going to bed hungry, wake up with minimal energy, and wonder why they feel like crap despite being disciplined.
Wake up! Your metabolism never fully shuts down, even overnight. Eating too many calories or bad foods before bed adds fat to your frame, but not all nocturnal noshing begets extra body fat.
The trick is to be smart before sleep time. If you snack late, make room for the extra calories earlier in the day to obey your target calorie limit. Choose foods which fuel muscles, keep hunger levels low, and promote stable blood glucose levels … so your brain doesn't wake up your body.
These six snacks provide quality nutrition that supports fat loss and muscle building, helping you forge the body of your dreams:

1. Cottage Cheese With Natural Peanut Butter

Considered a classic night-time nosh by many health enthusiasts, cottage cheese with natural peanut butter is a snacking no-brainer.
Cottage cheese is ideal before bed because it includes lots of casein protein, which releases slowly into the body. This ensures a steady supply of amino acids through the night.
Adding natural peanut butter to this snack increases digestion time, enhancing the snack's ability to control hunger.
Keep the peanut butter to a tablespoon or less to avoid heavy calories!

2. Salmon

Salmon is a perfect pre-bed food source because it's high in protein content and contains healthy omega fats. Many people fall short in omega fat content. This goes a long way to supporting your overall health!
Add salmon with salad to add bulk and fiber for the perfect low-carb option before turning in.

3. Greek Yogurt With Flaxseeds

Like cottage cheese, Greek yogurt is high in protein and packs a calcium punch. Boost the healthy fat content of this low-fat snack with some flaxseeds.
Together, these deliver a steady dose of fiber, protein and omega fats!

4. Low-Fat Cheese With Raw Veggies

If you crave cheese, this is your pre-bed meal. Regular cheese is high in saturated fat, so opt for a reduced-fat variety with a healthy dose of protein.
Cheese is carb-free, making the fat/protein combination just what you're looking for! Include raw green veggies (cucumbers, celery or broccoli) for some negligible calories.

5. Canned Tuna With Olive Oil

Tuna is a great option for people wanting minimal prep work. Canned tuna packed in water is fat free, so it's important to add healthy fats to boost the staying power overnight.
Drizzle one tablespoon of olive oil over the tuna and serve with a bed of spinach for an iron-packed snack that prepares you for the day to come.

6. A Casein Protein Shake With Coconut Oil

If solid food isn't your forte before bed, consider a casein protein shake. We discussed the benefits casein provides in cottage cheese earlier. But you can also get it in protein powder!
Most casein shakes are low in fat. To overcome this, add fats by stirring in a tablespoon of coconut oil, which provides heart-healthy medium-chain triglycerides.
This snack contains approximately 200 calories and helps repair muscle overnight.
Resource: bodybuilding.com

10 Best Ways To Lose Weight Faster

Has your fat loss stalled? Burn more calories and lose more weight by trying one of these 10 techniques!
I'm sure everyone has that one friend who is so genetically blessed that he can blink an eye and magically drop to sub-10-percent body fat. Everyone else has to dial in their diet and tweak their training.
Sometimes, despite your best efforts, fat doesn't evacuate from your body as quickly as you'd like. The first instinct might be to dramatically increase calorie deficit and caloric expenditure, but that can bring about detrimental long-term effects on your body.
Instead, try weaving in one or more of these techniques to tell that final layer of fat to take a hike. Not all techniques are meant to work for everyone, but finding one that works for you should help you see the changes and progress you desire.

1. Utilize Intermittent Fasting

Many folks, particularly men, have seen great success with intermittent fasting. Intermittent fasting allows only a small feeding window—typically, eight hours— before and after which you don't eat anything. The idea is that the practice would force your body to subsist on body fat storage for fuel during the fasting window, improve insulin sensitivity, and allow you to eat more diverse foods during your feeding window.
I make sure to eat my last meal of the day at 6:30 pm. Then i wake up in the morning and do my cardio in a semi-fasted state, after thirteen and a half hours have taken place.
BPI co-founder, James Grage, reveals this to be one of his top strategies when he's preparing for a show. "I make sure to eat my last meal of the day at 6:30 pm. Then I wake up in the morning and do my cardio in a semi-fasted state, after thirteen and a half hours have taken place. Only after that do I eat my breakfast—the first meal I'll have consumed since the night before."
You may not want to do this all the time since its long-term effects on hormones, especially in women, are somewhat dubious at this point. However, for a period of one or two weeks, it can speed things along.

2. Carb Cycle

Carb cycling means you'll eat your target carbs on training days and approximately 50 percent of your normal carb intake on non-training or light cardio days.
This strategy helps blunt fat storage on resting days and also restores muscle glycogen in a supercompensated fashion. It also combats the metabolic crash associated with conventional low-calorie diets and keeps a strong satiety signal throughout the body.

3. Do Dropsets

Dropsets can also be an effective way to turn up your metabolic furnace. To perform a dropset, you simply perform an exercise at a heavy weight until failure, then immediately drop the weight and bang out more reps until failure.
Continue this pattern until your muscles scream in agony. When incorporated correctly, dropsets will tear into your muscle glycogen, which will then create a greater post-exercise metabolic response from the intensity and will need to restore your body's sapped glycogen.
Just be wary that too many dropsets can make Timmy a dull boy, too. This is especially true if you don't get enough carbs throughout the day; use this technique wisely.

4. Make Your Meal Plan Mindless

You need to ditch your habits of weighing your food to the gram at your desk and crunching numbers throughout the day. The less you stress about eating, the better are your chances to stick with your eating plan and avoid making decisions that could set you back. After all, it just takes one giant binge to completely erase a week's worth of effort, so make every bite count.
Just take one day of the week—say, Sunday—and spend all day in the kitchen, preparing and portioning out all your food among towers of Tupperware. While your friends and family may snort at the sight, you know a week's worth of muscle-fueling, fat-bashing food will be within arm's reach.

5. Supplement With L-Carnitine

L-carnitine might just be one of the hottest fat loss supplements around. I don't recommend you put all your eggs in this fat-loss basket, but supplementing with carnitine if you practice vegetarianism, veganism, or otherwise have a low dietary carnitine intake from meats might help you with fat loss.
When paired with exercise, carnitine supplementation can boost activity of the beta-oxidation pathway when paired with exercise. Basically, you could be increasing the body's fat-burning potential.
James likes to pair 1.5 grams of carnitine with a capsule of the fat burner, B4, which helps further stimulate fat loss while increasing energy levels and focus.

6. Perform Compound Supersets

Many people default to a full-body workout program to include intense compound exercises and make workouts more efficient. Why not add compound supersets?
By pairing two major exercises back-to-back like this—the squat and bench press, for example—you end up recruiting many more muscle fibers over a shorter period of time. You'll not only burn more calories during your workout, but you'll continue to burn more once it's over.

7. Master The Energy Balance Equation

Fat loss responds best to the most reductive nature of this calorie balance equation: Calories consumed must be less than calories burned. In order to hit that deficit, James Grage uses cardio to achieve proper balance in his routine.
"My steady-state cardio in the morning is the first layer of the foundation, and I'll do anywhere from 25-35 minutes on the elliptical, five days a week," he explains. It doesn't stop there.
James doubles up his workout with a resistance training session later and squeezes in 90 seconds of high intensity cardio between his sets. He prefers the jump rope; he can carry it around from exercise to exercise. If he does 18-20 sets in a session, this adds up to an additional 30 minutes of cardio training. Cardio does not need to be performed continuously on a machine for it to be "cardio."

8. Get Your Omegas In Order

Using fish oil supplements isn't unique to weight loss. Studies have shown the benefits of omega fatty acid supplementation regardless of your physique goal. A good omega 3/6/9 blend containing CLA is part of James Grage's not-so-secret arsenal, as part of his daily supplement stack. He pairs 1000 mg of CLA with the omegas for maximum results.
"CLA is not only helpful for reducing body fat," he explains, "but omega fats are also crucial for enhancing your overall health."
Remember, even though fat loss may be your primary short-term goal, health optimization should never take a back seat.

9. Dial-In Form

As you move closer and closer toward your ideal body fat count, your energy levels may start to waver from the accumulated energy deficit. You might not be able to sustain as much volume in the gym as you're used to since you're not eating as much and your muscle glycogen is never fully saturated. Overall, you've just seen better days.
This isn't permission to allow some slack. Rather than cheating every rep, concentrate harder on perfecting your form. By focusing on each muscle contraction and isolating the working muscle group, you can maximize the training benefits you get from each working set. This makes a lower volume workout that much more effective.

10. Skip A Day

While you definitely don't want to get into the habit of regularly skipping workout sessions, you might benefit greatly great from taking a full rest day. Listen to your body. If it's bludgeoning you over the head with various aches and discomfort, let your body rest, for crying out loud.
Listen to your body. If it's bludgeoning you over the head with various aches and discomfort, let your body rest, for crying out loud.
No matter if you're trying to get lean or strong, an adequate rest is an integral part of the process for results.
If your gym session isn't going to be productive because you're not feeling great, you'll only do more harm than good by unnecessarily pushing yourself. Rest up and go harder the next day!
Resource: bodybuilding.com

5 Exercises For Amazing Abs

Target your abs from different angles, master the challenge of instability, and build a strong core with this 5-move workout!


Crunches are great, but for a well-rounded workout, you need to target your abs from different angles. My routine will target your entire range of abdominal muscles with a set of exercises designed to help you flatten your stomach or keep that six-pack!
This workout isn't intended to help you build block abs; instead, I've built it to help you keep them lean and strong for athletic activities. I've used a higher rep scheme with relatively short rest periods to do just that. Get ready to sweat and carve your way to a stellar stomach!

1. Exercise-Ball Tuck

How to: Place your feet on a Swiss ball, putting your hands out in front of you with your palms on the ground so that you're in a push-up position. Pull your knees in and then back out, using your abs to move your body.
Ab-Mazing Benefits: The benefits of this exercise are threefold. Not only does it target your core, but the balance and effort required improve overall muscle strength and concentration. I like tucks specifically because having half of your body off the ground and on a moveable object creates an added challenge.

2. Exercise-Ball Crunch

How to: This isn't your grandma's crunch! I want you to put your hands together and try to touch the ceiling. Focus on feeling that stretch at the top.
Ab-Mazing Benefits: Being supported by a movable ball really activates your core and throws off your stability more than a typical crunch does. Instability adds another training challenge!

3. Exercise-Ball Plank

How to: Place your forearms on an exercise ball with your legs extended straight behind you in a plank position. Be careful not to let your core sag or your hips rise up too high.
Ab-Mazing Benefits: Looking for an added challenge? To increase the difficulty on these, use a single leg, or add some movement to your static plank by rolling the ball out and then back in.

4. Alternating V-Up

How to: Placing your arms behind you for support, sit on a mat and bring your knees to tabletop position. As you bring your chest up, bring your knees in, alternating between bringing them to the left and right side.
Ab-Mazing Benefits: I love these because, again, they really throw off your balance. Switch from side to side, moving your legs as a pair to the left and then the right. Make sure that your core is balanced and that you're not resting at any time during the move.

5. Alternating Toe Touch

How to: Lying flat on your back, bring one leg up and reach for your toes with your arms, lifting your shoulder blades off the mat. Alternate between your left and right legs.
Ab-Mazing Benefits: Make sure you're not resting on every single rep. You want to keep the tension in your core the entire time!
Ab Workout
1
Exercise Ball Pull-In
3 sets, reps 20 (30-60 sec rest)
2
Exercise Ball Crunch
3 sets, reps 20 (30-60 seconds rest)
3
Plank
3 sets, reps 20 (performing on ball 30-60 seconds rest)
4
Toe Touchers
Resource: bodybuilding.com