Thursday, 27 September 2012

DID YOU KNOW?

Did you know??

Weight Training Vs Aerobics

Weight training stresses the muscles, making them expand in time but only up to a limit. Aerobics are meant purely for stamina and cardio vascular efficiency. Aerobics help in the uptake of oxyge
n into the body. If you want the maximum from your workouts, you have to combine both of them. It has been seen that weight training over a period burns more calories than aerobics.

Untrained Muscles do not Convert into Fat

Muscles generally undergo a different metabolic process vis-a-vis fat cells. If you stop working out your muscles and stop applying resistance to your muscles, they will simply adapt, i.e. they will shrink and come back to their original form but they will definitely not be converted into fat.

Women who Weight Train do not Become Bulky

This is pure hogwash. Women simply do not produce enough testosterone to build huge muscles nor can they lift heavy weights that will allow them to bulk up. They also have poor appetites in the sense that they cannot consume as much protein as needed to build bulky muscles. sO LADIES....dont stay away from those weights!

HOW TO LOSE WATER RETENTION WEIGHT


Water retention happens when fluid accumulates in body tissues rather than being flushed out. Weight gain from water retention may be a temporary effect of hot weather or of eating a salty meal, or it may be a chronic problem related to a medical condition or medication. Many women are familiar with feeling bloated as hormones fluctuate during the menstrual cycle. Menopause and taking birth control pills can also cause water retention. Luckily, losing excess water weight can be much easier and quicker than losing body fat.

Step 1

Eat a high potassium breakfast of oatmeal with banana, raisins and soy milk to start your day. Potassium regulates fluid balance and helps the kidneys to eliminate waste. Add a small cup of coffee for a diuretic boost.

Step 2

Add alternative spices like garlic, onion powder and thyme to your cooking for flavor, and eliminate processed and packaged foods. Plan to adhere to a low sodium diet by reviewing food labels and making sure that total sodium in your diet does not exceed 1500 mg per day.

Step 3

Drink a glass of water, put your sneakers on and go for a 30 minute speed walk or jog. Being active helps to mobilize fluid that has accumulated in certain body parts like hands and feet, while sweating will get some salt and water out through your skin.

Step 4

Drink another glass of water and relax in a cool, air conditioned room. If you retain water in your lower legs, sit with your feet elevated and let gravity drain the fluid away
.

Step 5

Prepare a sandwich using whole wheat bread, low-sodium turkey breast and low-fat cheese. This high protein, high potassium, low salt combination will help shed unwanted water weight and keep your fluid balance in check. Follow with a glass of water.


Wednesday, 26 September 2012

Ever wondered why you need Protein to lose weight?

When we talk about about burning calories, we tend to focus on exercise. But our bodies are constantly using energy throughout the day and night. Even when we’re sleeping, we’re still breathing and pumping blood. Our brains are dreaming. We’re still digesting food and finding places to store it. And not all foods are digested equally. 

The components of food—protein, carbohydrates, and fats —require different amounts of energy to digest and process, just as different types and intensities of exercise burn more or fewer calories. Scientists call this metabolic cost the thermic effect of food (TEF). Protein has a much higher TEF than carbs or fat. That is, simply eating more protein means your body is burning more calories during the process of digestion. In some cases, doubling your protein intake will bump up the number of calories you burn throughout the day. That’s one reason why protein, all by itself, helps you lose weight.

BEST HOME EXERCISES


You don't have to take out an expensive gym membership to be physically fit. You can easily lose weight and build muscle tone in the comfort of your own home. Many at-home exercises don't even require expensive equipment. With a well-crafted plan and a little perseverance, the pounds will come right off. Before beginning any workout regimen, consult your physician
.

Walking

If you can't get outside to take a brisk walk a few times a week, try walking around your house, suggests the website Fit Watch. Walk laps through the rooms of your home for 10 to 15 minutes once or twice a day. Add a strength component by carrying cans of food. Fit Watch also recommends walking up and down your steps several times a day. Step it up by carrying loads of laundry as you go. Not only will you be taking care of housework, but you'll be toning your legs. Just be careful that the load you are carrying doesn't obstruct your view of the steps.

WALL SQUAT
"Good Housekeeping" magazine suggests an at-home exercise called the "Wall Squat" to tone your gluteus muscles, quadriceps and hamstrings. To do the Wall Squat, stand with your back parallel to a wall and wedge a ball about the size of a soccer ball between your back and the wall. Keep your stomach tucked and your feet shoulder-width apart. With your toes facing forward, bend your knees as you count to five until your hamstrings are parallel to the floor. Hold the squat for a few seconds and then raise your body back up while counting to five.

Sit-Ups

By doing sit-ups in front of the television, you can watch your favorite TV show and firm your abdominal muscles at the same time. Lie on your back with your knees bent and your feet flat. Put your hands behind your head to support your neck and head as you lift your upper body. The goal is to touch your chin to your knees, but a half sit-up in which you raise your body halfway is also effective. Be careful that your hands only support your head. They don't push it. Your abdominal muscles should do the work. The Young Women's Health website advises exhaling as you rise up and inhaling as you lie back down.

Jumping Jacks

A fun exercise you can do at home is jumping jacks. Fit Watch recommends jumping jacks as a cardio exercise or a warm-up to other exercises. Start by standing straight with your feet together and your hands at your side. Next, jump and spread your legs as you raise your hands to clap above your head. Then quickly bring your legs back together and your hands down to your sides. Go at your own pace. Some people can do dozens of jumping jacks before they get tired, while others feel more comfortable doing five or 10 before resting.


Tuesday, 25 September 2012

SD2...The Induction Phase


  1. Eat either three regular-size meals a day or four or five smaller meals. Don’t skip meals or go more than six waking hours without eating.
  2. At each meal—including breakfast—eat at least 4 to 6 ounces of protein foods, including poultry, beef, lamb, pork, veal, fish and shellfish, eggs, cheese and a variety of vegetable proteins. Up to 8 ounces is fine if you’re a tall guy. There’s no need to trim the fat from meat or the skin from poultry, but do so if you prefer. Just add a splash of olive oil or a pat of butter to your vegetables to replace the fat.
  3. Enjoy butter, olive oil, high-oleic safflower oil, canola oil, and seed and nut oils and mayonnaise (made from olive, canola, or high-oleic safflower oils). Aim for 1 tablespoon of oil on a salad or other vegetables, or a pat of butter. Cook foods in just enough oil to ensure that they don’t burn. Or spritz the pan with a mist of olive oil.
  4. Eat no more than 20 grams a day of Net Carbs, 12 to 15 grams of them as foundation vegetables. This means you can eat approximately six loosely packed cups of salad and two cups of cooked vegetables per day. Remember, carb counts of various vegetables vary, so be sure to check them.
  5. Eat only the foods on the Acceptable Foods List 
  6. In a typical day, you can have up to 4 ounces of most cheese (but not cottage cheese or ricotta), 10 black or 20 green olives, half a Haas avocado (the kind with a blackish pebbly skin), an ounce of sour cream or 2–3 tablespoons of cream, and up to 3 tablespoons of lemon or lime juice. The carbs in these foods must be counted in your 20 grams of Net Carbs.
  7. Acceptable sweeteners include sucralose (Splenda), saccharine (Sweet’N Low), stevia (SweetLeaf or Truvia) or xylitol. Have no more than three packets a day, and count each one as 1 gram of carbs. This is because, while these sweeteners contain no carbs, they are packaged with fillers that do contain a little carbohydrate to keep them from clumping.
  8. To satisfy your sweet tooth, you can have sugar-free gelatin desserts and up to two Atkins shakes or bars coded for Induction (Phase 1).
  9. Each day, drink at least eight 8-ounce portions of approved beverages: water, club soda, herb teas, or moderation—caffeinated or decaffeinated coffee and tea. This will prevent dehydration and electrolyte imbalances. In this count, you may include two cups of broth (not low sodium), one in the morning and one in the afternoon.
  10. Take a daily iron-free multivitamin/multimineral combo and an omega-3 fatty-acid supplement.
  11. Learn to distinguish hunger from habit and adjust the quantity you eat to suit your appetite as it decreases. When you’re hungry, eat until you feel satisfied but not stuffed. If you’re not sure that you’re full, wait ten minutes, have a glass of water, and eat more only if you’re still unsatisfied. If you’re not hungry at mealtime, eat a small low-carb snack.
  12. Don’t starve yourself, and don’t skimp on fats.
  13. Don’t assume that any food is low in carbs. Read the labels on packaged whole foods to discover unacceptable ingredients; and check their carb counts (subtract grams of fiber from total grams). Also use a carbohydrate gram counter.
  14. When dining out, be on guard for hidden carbs. Gravy is usually made with flour or cornstarch, both no-nos. Sugar is often found in salad dressing and may even appear in coleslaw and other deli salads. Avoid any deep-fried or breaded food.

SO YOU WANT TO BURN MORE FAT???


The Basics of Fat Burning

Energy in, energy out. The body normally burns a mix of carbohydrate, as glucose, and fat for fuel. How much of either depends on your physical activity and if, or what you have eaten recently. When you use more energy than you take in from food and drink, the body burns stored fat and carbohydrates, and then even protein, to fuel your everyday activities even if you are not exercising
That̢۪s what happens when people starve of course; the body starts to eat itself. Depending on your family history -- your genetics -- and the way you eat and exercise to create this energy deficit, your body may decide to get conservative and drop your metabolic rate to try to hold onto body weight. Some of us seem to have inherited this tendency more than others, the origins of which may be in the early periods of human evolution where 'feast or famine' was more or less the norm.
Glucose, fat and protein. Even so, starvation always works eventually and the body starts to break down its own tissue for fuel. Stored carbohydrate called glycogen is quickly used up, then goes the fat stored under the skin and around the internal organs. Protein in muscle is then broken down to create glucose to keep the brain working and you conscious.
Fat and glucose are the body̢۪s two main energy sources. Fat you know well, glucose comes mainly from carbohydrate foods like rice and bread and potatoes and protein is supplied mainly by meat and beans and dairy products. The amino acid building blocks of protein foods can be converted to glucose in emergencies. Your body always burns a mix of fat and glucose except at very high intensities, and the ratio of the fat and glucose in 'the burn' varies with intensity and time of exercise.
Fat burning zone. You may have noticed that some bikes and treadmills at the gym have a setting that says â€Å“fat burning zone”, which implies a setting for intensity or speed. The reason for this is that the body burns a greater percentage of fat at a slow pace (or after about 90 minutes of exercise). The fat burning zone, a low intensity speed zone is mainly a gimmick, and here is the reason.
Even though you burn more fat going slowly, you still burn some fat at much faster speeds or intensity. It all boils down to how much energy you expend in totality. For example, if you compare exercising at a slow rate that burns 60 percent fat and 40 percent glucose and a higher intensity or duration that burns only 30 percent fat and 70 percent glucose, you may still burn more fat at the higher intensity.
A typical example. Exercise (1) is the slower 60/40 mix and exercise (2) is the faster, 30/70 mix of fat and glucose fuel.
  1. Walking on a treadmill for 30 minutes -- 180 calories used -- 108 calories of fat burned
  2. Running on a treadmill for 30 minutes -- 400 calories used -- 120 calories of fat burned
You can see from this example that the bottom line really is how much energy you expend -- and that is the ultimate fat burning measure. The theoretical fat burning zone is mostly a convenient myth.

Weight Training Does it Better -- Or Does It?

Muscle burns more fat. Weight training is increasingly recommended as a fat-busting tool because some experts say extra muscle burns more energy than body fat at rest, so if you develop more muscle and have a higher muscle to fat ratio than before, you must burn extra energy and more stored fat as a result. This is true and has been shown in metabolic studies. However, the differences are not that dramatic; perhaps less than a few tens of calories per day for each pound of muscle increased, for most people.
Does that mean you shouldn̢۪t worry about weight training? Certainly not, because weight training has many other benefits for health and performance, not the least of which is extra muscle. It̢۪s just that this advantage has been somewhat overstated and we need to get this fat burning thing right in order to develop the best weight loss and performance programs.
Getting the afterburn. Okay, so extra muscle does not provide that much advantage, but what about the afterburn? The 'afterburn', or the amount of energy you use after you stopexercising, has been promoted as an important slimming idea. If you can get afterburn, which is really another way of saying your metabolism increases for several hours or longer after a particular exercise, then that’s a bonus because you burn fat during the exercise and after you cease as well. Will the fun ever stop!
However, this idea has recently been reconsidered as well. An article in the Journal of Sports Science reported that despite some promising early studies of this effect, the idea has not proven to be as useful as first thought.
Exercise scientists call this afterburn effect EPOC, which stands for Excess Post-exercise Oxygen Consumption. The authors of that study say that the high intensities required -- greater than about 75 percent of maximum heart rate -- are probably beyond what most people wanting to lose weight can cope with in sustained exercise. So the afterburn advantage from lifting weights or running fast is there, but you need to be able to sustain that intensity, which means a lot of hard work. No secrets there, I'm sure.
We also need to consider how fuel is used preferentially according to how your body stores are maintained. After you do a vigorous or long workout, your blood and muscle glucose will be much lower than before you started. Low glucose stores signal the body to burn fat preferentially. So after hard exercise that uses a lot of glucose, the body switches to burning fat. That's why all energy expenditure is important, not just fat burning during exercise.
Strength training has so many great things going for it that I'm a big fan -- increased strength, more muscle and body shape, better balance and bone density and improved functionality across all facets of human movement. But let’s be honest, we all need aerobic or cardio training as well. It has its own set of important functional benefits including general fitness, elastic arteries, increased heart and lung function and lower blood pressure to name a few benefits.
Lifting weights can easily move us into the high intensity exercise zone above the 75 percent effort required to get some afterburn, but it's only for short bursts. This is not consistent, steady-state effort and does not generally burn as much energy as a good run on the treadmill, cycle or row machine at moderate pace. For example, here are the energy expenditure calculations for weights versus cardio for one hour of exercise from the NAT Nutritional Analysis Tools web site. I've based this on a 150 pound person (just under 70 kilograms).
  1. Running at 8 minutes a mile pace (5 min/km) -- burn 852 calories (kilocalories)
  2. Weight lifting, vigorous, free weights or machines -- burn 409 calories (kilocalories)
I’ve tried to line these activities up for effort so that the comparison is worthwhile. Whenever I check these numbers it astounds me because I run and I lift weights, and sometimes I feel much fresher after a run than going for it in the gym with sub-10 RM (repetition maximum) and three sets of ten exercises. Nevertheless, the numbers always come out the same with any reputable energy calculator. Sustained aerobics always spends about twice the energy of weight training in a comparable comparison. You can see from this why cardio sessions are important for fat loss.

Should I Exercise Before Breakfast to Burn More Fat?

The answer is 'not necessarily', because even though you will burn more fat on an empty stomach, ultimately this will probably make little difference because your energy intake and expenditure and metabolism balances out, more or less, over the 24-hour period. What really matters is your total energy intake and expenditure, that is, how much you eat and how much you exercise and move in general.
However, stay tuned on this because until this is examined further scientifically, how much meal timing manipulation could help with fat loss is not certain. One thing that seems clear is that people who eat breakfast maintain weight better and lose fat quicker, so don’t skip breakfast.

The Best Strategy for Fat Loss

So where are we at with our fat burning project? Here is a summary.
Increase muscle with weight training. Extra muscle helps to burn more energy at rest, even if only a little. This is called the resting metabolic rate of muscle or RMR. Extra muscle will also burn more fat in active phase, the active metabolic rate if you like, or the AMR, so having more muscle will definitely help burn more energy and fat.
Lift heavier weights. What I suggest is that the weights workout should be vigorous, with the number of repetitions kept at the low to medium end of the scale between 8 and 12 RM. To remind you, the RM is the repetition maximum, which means the most weight you can lift for this number of reps before fatigue. The 8-12 is within a range that should provide strength and bigger muscle growth, which is called hypertrophy.
If you go higher than this, say 15 to 20 repetitions to a set, or more, you are getting into the range where you would probably be better off doing cardio because the return on effort, the energy burn, is better spent jogging, cycling, stepping or rowing. At that number of repetitions you won’t build much muscle either, so very high-repetition training with weights has minimum value in my view.
Do aerobic exercise. Considering how much energy you would use in an hour of either type of exercise, weights or cardio, you must do some consistent aerobic or cardio work to burn fat.
Try high-intensity cardio. High-intensity exercise, even if only in short bursts, may rev up the metabolism and get that fat mobilized in the post-exercise period. Do some high intensity as well, but don’t overdo it, because burning the fat is a long-term project and you don’t want to get ‘burned out’. A group exercise program such as a solid cycle spin class might match this requirement. In fact, I highly recommend group cycle spin classes where you are encouraged to go fast, yet with the option to slow down if you need to.

Weights and Cardio Circuit Training Programs

Combining weights and cardio in a circuit interval session is also an excellent approach to fat burning. The weights circuits are based on the idea of mixing high and low-intensity weights and cardio in a circuit. This idea is not new, but what I've designed uses basic equipment and is easy to follow.


Monday, 24 September 2012

WHY DO YOU LOOK SLIMMER IN THE MORNING??


Not only do you look slimmer in the morning, but you actually weigh less, too. While you sleep, your body processes the food and drinks from the day before. They are broken down and eliminated through respiration, perspiration or urination. According to Dr. Margaret Polaneczky, 80 percent of weight loss during sleep is from water, and this does not include urine or feces.

Taller in the Morning

You are also taller first thing in the morning, which contributes to your svelte look after waking. Pressure from walking upright all day compresses the spine, forcing water from the discs in between the vertebrae to diffuse. Sleep allows the water to be taken back into the spine without all the pressure of standing.

Salt Intake

Consuming too much salt is a factor in weight gain and water retention. If you spend your day eating salty foods, by nightfall you may look puffy and bloated. Sleep gives the body an opportunity to balance itself causing much of the water retained to be processed and eliminated. Comparing your appearance after a day of loading up on salt with your refreshed morning look exaggerates the slimming effect.

Sleep Yourself Thin

The amount of weight you lose at night is related to the amount of time you spend in short wave sleep. Long periods of short wave sleep are triggered by increased exercise and activity during the day. Also, losing weight actually helps you lose even more weight in your sleep because your sleeping metabolic rate increases as your BMI decreases. So being in good shape and having a hard workout the day before amplifies morning slimming.

Sensible Weight Loss

The combination of weighing less and being taller will make your appearance slimmer in the morning. While this can be encouraging, you will likely gain weight and be shorter by the evening. To keep that slim look longer take a sensible approach to weight loss by eating regular, well-portioned, healthy meals, as well as getting adequate amounts of physical activity and plenty of sleep.


HOW MUCH CAN WEIGHT FLUCTUATE FROM MORNING TILL NIGHT


Water Retention

The water in your body fluctuates from morning to night. The amount of water held depends on your activities and the things you eat and drink. Participating in strenuous activities encourages water loss through sweat, resulting in weight loss. Consuming high-sodium foods and drinks, as well as excessive carbohydrate intake, result in increased water retention and weight gain.

Other Factors

Because your weight is in part determined by the things you put in your body, you may experience weight gain through the day as a result of heavy eating. Constipation can cause you to weigh more, while other ailments, such as the flu, can result in weight loss. Hormone fluctuations, particularly in women, also play a role in daily water retention and weight gain.

Losing Weight Sensibly

Lose weight and keep it off though healthy eating and an active lifestyle. Eat a diet full of fresh fruits and vegetables, whole grains and lean protein. Drink plenty of water and set realistic goals. Taking these simple steps put you on the path of a sustainable weekly weight loss of about 1 to 2 lbs.