Showing posts with label Fat Loss. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fat Loss. Show all posts

Thursday, August 16, 2007

How Do Bodybuilders And Fitness Models Get So Lean?


With Tom Venuto, NSCA-CPT, CSCS
www.BurnTheFat.com

QUESTION: "Tom, on your website www.BurnTheFat.com you wrote: 'Who better to model than bodybuilders and fitness competitors? No athletes in the world get as lean as quickly as bodybuilders and fitness competitors. The transformations they undergo in 12 weeks prior to competition would boggle your mind! Only ultra-endurance athletes come close in terms of low body fat levels, but endurance athletes like triathaletes and marathoners often get lean at the expense of chewing up all their muscle. Some of them are nothing but skin and bone.’"

"There seems to be a contradiction unless I'm missing something. Why do bodybuilders and fitness competitors have to go through a 12 week 'transformation' prior to every event instead of staying 'lean and mean' all the time? If they practice the secrets exposed in your book, they should be staying in shape all the time instead of having to work at losing fat prior to every competitive event, correct?"

ANSWER: There's a logical explanation for why bodybuilders and other physique athletes (fitness and figure competitors), don’t remain completely ripped all year round, and it’s the very reason they are able to get so ripped on the day of a contest…

You can’t hold a peak forever or it’s not a "peak", right? What is the definition of a peak? It’s a high point surrounded by two lower points isn’t it?

Therefore, any shape you can stay in all year round is NOT your “peak” condition.

The intelligent approach to nutrition and training (which almost all bodybuilders and fitness/figure competitors use), is to train and diet in a seasonal or cyclical fashion and build up to a peak, then ease off to a maintenance or growth phase.

I am NOT talking about bulking up and getting fat and out of shape every year, then dieting it all off every year. What I’m talking about is going from good shape to great (peak) shape, then easing back off to good shape.... but never getting "out of shape." Makes a lot of sense, doesn’t it?

Here’s an example: I have no intentions whatsoever of walking around 365 days a year at 4% body fat like I appear in the photo on my website. Off-season, when I'm not competing, my body fat is usually between 8 – 10%. Mind you, that’s very lean and still single digit body fat.

I don't stray too far from competition shape, but I don't maintain contest shape all the time. It takes me 12-14 weeks or so to gradually drop from 9.5% to 3.5%-4.0% body fat to "peak" for competition with NO loss of lean body mass...using the same techniques I reveal in my e-book.

It would be almost impossible to maintain 4% body fat, and even if I could, why would I want to? For the few weeks prior to competition I’m so depleted, ripped, and even “drawn” in the face, that complete strangers walk up and offer to feed me.

Okay, so I’m just kidding about that, but let’s just say being “being ripped to shreds” isn’t a desirable condition to maintain because it takes such a monumental effort to stay there. It’s probably not even healthy to try forcing yourself to hold extreme low body fat. Unless you’re a natural “ectomorph” (skinny, fast metabolism body type), your body will fight you. Not only that, anabolic hormones may drop and sometimes your immune system is affected as well. It’s just not “normal” to walk around all the time with literally no subcutaneous body fat.

Instead of attempting to hold the peak, I cycle back into a less demanding off-season program and avoid creeping beyond 9.9% body fat. Some years I’ve stayed leaner - like 6-7%, (which takes effort), especially when I knew I would be photographed, but I don’t let my body fat go over 10%.

This practice isn’t just restricted to bodybuilders. Athletes in all sports use periodization to build themselves up to their best shape for competition. Is a pro football player in the same condition in March-April as he is in August-September? Not a chance. Many show up fat and out of shape (relatively speaking) for training camp, others just need fine tuning, but none are in peak form... that’s why they have training camp!!!

There’s another reason you wouldn’t want to maintain a “ripped to shreds” physique all year round – you’d have to be dieting (calorie restricted) all the time. And this is one of the reasons that 95% of people can’t lose weight and keep it off --they are CHRONIC dieters... always on some type of diet. Know anyone like that?

You can’t stay on restricted low calories indefinitely. Sooner or later your metabolism slows down and you plateau as your body adapts to the chronically lowered food intake. But if you diet for fat loss and push incredibly hard for 3 months, then ease off for a while and eat a little more (healthy food, not "pigging out"), your metabolic rate is re-stimulated. In a few weeks or months, you can return to another fat loss phase and reach an even lower body fat level, until you finally reach the point that’s your happy maintenance level for life – a level that is healthy and realistic – as well as visually appealing.

Bodybuilders have discovered a methodology for losing fat that’s so effective, it puts them in complete control of their body composition. They’ve mastered this area of their lives and will never have to worry about it again. If they ever “slip” and fall off the wagon like all humans do at times … no problem! They know how to get back into shape fast.

Bodybuilders have the tools and knowledge to hold a low body fat all year round (such as 9% for men, or about 15% for women), and then at a whim, to reach a temporary “peak” of extremely low body fat for the purpose of competition. Maybe most important of all, they have the power and control to slowly ease back from peak shape into maintenance, and not balloon up and yo-yo like most conventional dieters!

What if you had the power to stay lean all year round, and then get super lean when summer rolled around, or when you took your vacation to the Caribbean, or when your wedding date was coming up? Wouldn’t you like to be in control of your body like that? Isn’t that the same thing that bodybuilders and fitness/figure competitors do, only on a more practical, real-world level?

So even if you have no competitive aspirations whatsoever, don’t you agree that there’s something of value everyone could learn from physique athletes? Don’t model yourself after the huge crowd of losers who gobble diet pills, buy exercise gimmicks and suffer through starvation diets like automatons, only to gain back everything they lost! Instead, learn from the leanest athletes on Earth - natural bodybuilders and fitness competitors…

These physique athletes get as ripped as they want to be, exactly when they want to, simply by manipulating their diets in a cyclical fashion between pre-contest "cutting" programs and off season "maintenance" or "muscle growth" programs. Even if you have no desire to ever compete, try this seasonal “peaking” approach yourself and you’ll see that it can work as well for you as it does for elite bodybuilders.

If you’re interested in learning even more secrets of bodybuilders and fitness models, visit the Burn The Fat website at: www.BurnTheFat.com


About the Author:

Tom Venuto is a lifetime natural bodybuilder, an NSCA-certified personal trainer (CPT) and a certified strength & conditioning specialist (CSCS). Tom is the author of the #1 best-selling e-book, "Burn the Fat, Feed The Muscle,” which teaches you how to get lean without drugs or supplements using the secrets of the world's best bodybuilders and fitness models. Learn how to get rid of stubborn body fat and increase your metabolism by visiting: www.BurnTheFat.com. To learn more about Tom's Fat Loss Support Community, visit: www.BurnTheFatInnerCircle.com.

Saturday, June 9, 2007

Free Report "The Fifth Element: The Missing Piece Of The Fat Loss Puzzle"


www.BurnTheFatInnerCircle.com

Tom Venuto has just published a new free report entitled "The Fifth Element: The Missing Piece Of The Fat Loss Puzzle".

Tom asks, "Could this ancient success secret, combined with 21st century technology be the obesity epidemic solution?" Read the report to find out more.

It's a 17-page PDF file that you can download at the link below.

www.BurnTheFatInnerCircle.com/fifthelement

Friday, May 18, 2007

The Math of Weight Loss


People often ask questions like:

"How do I lose fat?"
"How much weight can I safely lose per week?"
"How do I know if I am losing fat, water or muscle?"

Luckily a little math can help answer these questions. And you thought it would never be useful after high school!

First, I suggest you Google "basal metabolic rate" and use one of the BMR calculators (or try this one: www.bmi-calculator.net/bmr-calculator) to see how many calories a day you need just to live, breathe, blink etc. Any activity, such as weightlifting or walking, will add to that number.

Then, all you have to do is make sure you have a slight calorie deficit each day, and you will lose weight. One pound of fat is 3500 calories, so if you have a 400 calorie a day deficit you will lose 7x400=2800 calories per week, or a little less than one pound. If you want to work backwards, then 3500/7=500, so this means you need about a 500 calorie deficit each day to lose one pound of fat (not muscle or water!) per week. This doesn't sound like much, but if you lose it slowly it's much less likely to come back.

Why? Well, any more than a 20% calorie deficit and you risk entering metabolic slowdown, or “starvation mode.” If this happens, you will find it more difficult to lose weight, burn fat, and risk gaining back more fat than you lost if and when you abandon or stray from your calorie deficit. In starvation mode, your body would rather burn anything but fat because it thinks food is scarce, so you will start to lose muscle instead, and your slower metabolism and reduced muscle mass makes regaining the fat lost (and then some) more likely.

Do not confuse weight loss with fat loss. Anyone can lose two pounds or more per week if they eat some ridiculously low number of calories like 800 per day, and your bodyweight can fluctuate by 1-2 pounds a day based on factors such as how well/poorly hydrated you are. Muscle weighs more than fat, so if you go on a starvation diet you will lose weight quickly, but it will be muscle that you are saying goodbye to.

It's also a good idea to check and monitor your body fat percentage. This is the best way to check that you are burning fat rather than water or muscle. Many scales have body fat calculators on them, or you can get some calipers & measure that way. There are also some online estimators based on various body measurements. Some ways are more accurate than others, but the point is to measure and look for nice, consistent drops in your percentage about every week or so. Men are considered “lean” if they are in the 10-15% range, women 16-20%, and “lean” sounds like a nice way to be described!

I highly recommend Tom Venuto's ebook "Burn The Fat, Feed The Muscle" if you want to do this right. www.BurnTheFat.com