Monday, July 6, 2009

Loss Weight

Running intervals, or sprints with intermittent rest periods, burns three times as much fat as running at slow, consistent speeds, according to new research from the University of New South Wales, in Australia. We've developed a six-week plan to rev up your body's natural fat burners.

Start by taking a baseline measurement of your endurance at high speeds. Head to a track, football field, or other measured area with room to run. Sprint for 45 seconds and record your distance. Rest for 60 seconds, then sprint again for 45 seconds. If you don't regularly run intervals or don't participate in intermittent sports, your second span will probably shorten by as much as 25 percent, says Craig Ballantyne, M.Sc., C.S.C.S., owner of TurbulenceTraining.com. "A distance drop of only 10 percent between runs is excellent," he says. Use this plan to improve your endurance and burn fat, measuring your progress every week.

The Program

Alternate between workout A and workout B for a total of three sessions a week for six weeks.

Workout A

Jog two minutes, do the following exercises, then do the intervals below.

REPS EFFORT TIME REST
1 50 percent 60 sec 60 sec
1 75 percent 60 sec 60 sec
3 or 6* 100 percent 30 sec 90 sec


Workout B

Jog two minutes, do the following exercises, then do the intervals below.

REPS EFFORT TIME REST
1 50 percent 60 sec 60 sec
1 75 percent 60 sec 60 sec
3 or 6* 100 percent 45 sec 90 sec


* Do three of these high-intensity intervals the first week, and six each week after.

Prisoner Squat

Stand with your hands behind your head. Sit back at the hips and bend your knees to squat down. Squeeze your glutes and push back up. Do 10 reps.



Waiter's Bow
Pinch the skin of your lower back. Push your hips back and bow forward as far as you can while squeezing an inch of skin. Contract your glutes and stand back up. Do 10 reps.
Elbow-to-Instep Lunge
Step forward with your left leg and place your right hand on the floor. Press your left elbow down toward your left in-step. Do six reps a leg.
Single-Leg Romanian Deadlift
Stand on one foot. Keeping the arch in your spine, push your hips back and lower your hands. Press your heel into the floor to return to standing. Do six reps with one leg, then six with your other leg.
Lunge
Take a large step forward with one leg. When your front thigh is parallel to the floor, hold for two beats and return. Repeat with your other leg. Alternate for six reps per leg.
Leg Swing
Swing your leg in front of you, then bend your knee and swing it behind you so your heel moves toward your butt. Do six reps with each leg.

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Uncover Your Abs


Use this 5-step plan to sculpt the body you've always wanted.
By Adam Bornstein, Men's Health
Find more:

6 Weeks to a 6-Pack
Chisel a Rock-Hard Core
Carve a V-Shaped Upper Body

There's a secret every trainer in Hollywood knows, and it's one you should know, too:

"The fastest way to look like you've packed on 20 pounds of muscle is to lose 10 pounds of fat," says Alan Aragon, M.S., the Men's Health Weight-Loss Coach. That's because the closer you come to removing the lard that covers your six-pack, the more defined every muscle becomes, making you look buff all over. Which is why I've spent a lot of time trying to lose my last 10 pounds of flab. Unfortunately, like many men, I've found that goal to be frustratingly elusive. That is, until I enlisted the help of Aragon, whose nutrition and training methods have shaped the bodies of NBA athletes, Olympians, and competitive bodybuilders.

Using Aragon's advice, I slashed my body fat in half—down to a lifetime low of 6.8 percent—and sculpted not only the muscles of my midsection, but the ones everywhere else, too. Now it's your turn. Combine Aragon's simple 5-step diet plan (below) with the exclusive Men's Health 4-week flab melting workout. You'll finally finish off your gut for good—and make every muscle pop.

Download the MH Trade Your Belly for Biceps Workout to your MP3 player here.

Step One: Calculate Your Calories

When it comes to calories, Aragon has a simple rule: Eat for your target body weight. Let's say you weigh 220 pounds but would like to tip the scales at 180. You'll adopt the calorie intake of a 180-pound man. The formula If you perform one hour or less of exercise a week, multiply your target body weight by 10. That's how many calories you should consume daily. However, if you work out more than that, add one to the multiplier for every additional hour you train. So if your target body weight is 180 pounds and you exercise for 3 hours a week, you'd multiply 180 by 12—giving you a target of 2,160 calories a day. You can divide those calories into however many meals you want—three, four, five, or six—as long as you don't eat beyond your daily limit.

Step Two: Eat By The Numbers

Sure, you could just focus on calories. But by eating the right amounts of the right nutrients, you'll speed your results without feeling like you're on a diet.

Protein

You probably don't need to be sold on the virtues of protein, since it's the raw material for muscle growth. But it also helps extinguish your appetite and aids in fat loss.

The Formula: Eat 1 gram for every pound of your target body weight. If you want to weigh 180 pounds, you'll eat 180 grams of protein. One gram of protein is about 4 calories. So to calculate the calories you'll be eating from protein, multiply the number of grams by 4. In this case, that's 720 calories.

Fat

For years, this nutrient was considered a dietary demon. However, recent studies clearly show that it's not fat that inflates your belly, but too many calories, period. And, it turns out, fat may actually keep you from overeating because it makes you feel full. The end result: You stop eating sooner and stay satisfied longer.

The Formula: Eat half a gram for every pound of your target body weight. If your goal is to weigh 180 pounds, that'd be 90 grams. And since 1 gram of fat has about 9 calories, that's 810 calories from fat. This will be about 40 percent of your total calories.

Carbohydrates

Carb-containing foods not only taste good, but can also be rich in vitamins and minerals. So you don't need to eliminate them altogether; you just need to make sure you don't eat them in excess. And consuming the right amounts of protein and fat will make that goal far easier, since both keep hunger at bay. That's one key reason Aragon places a greater priority on protein and fat and leaves the remainder of your calories for carbs.

The Formula: Add your calories from protein and fat, and subtract that total from your allotted daily calories. Using the 180-pound example, that leaves you with 630 calories. This is the amount of calories you can eat from carbs. As protein does, carbs provide about 4 calories per gram—so divide your carb calories by four to determine how many grams of carbs you can eat. In this case, it's about 158 grams.

Step Three: Create Your Menu

Build your diet around whole foods—those you'd find in nature. You should choose mainly meat, eggs, dairy, fruits, vegetables, nuts, and legumes, plus grain products that are made with 100 percent whole-wheat flour. Note that typical junk foods—candy, baked goods, and sugary drinks—don't make the list. Use the food options on the right as a guide for designing your diet. Mix and match the foods in any way you like while following the calorie, protein, fat, and carb guidelines for your target body weight. The nutrition numbers listed don't provide exact amounts of calories and other nutrients, but these ballpark averages allow you to eyeball your intake.

Step Four: Dial In Your Diet

Follow these rules to make your eating plan even more effective.

Consume at least two servings of vegetables a day. Vegetables are low in calories and high in belly-filling fiber.
Eat at least two servings of fruit a day. Fruit provides your muscles with plenty of carbs for energy, but has less impact on your blood sugar than grains and other high-starch foods do. This is important because it can help you avoid the cravings and binges that occur when your blood sugar rises quickly and then crashes. Ideally, the majority of your carbs will come from fruits and vegetables. So limit yourself to just two daily servings of grains, beans, and high-starch vegetables, and consume the rest of your carbs from produce.
On the days you work out, eat 1 hour before you exercise and again within 60 minutes after your last rep. For both meals, aim for 0.25 gram per pound of your target body weight in protein and carbs. So if your goal is to be 180 pounds, you'd eat 45 grams of each nutrient. This provides your muscles with a healthy dose of nutrients for fueling your workout and for upgrading your muscles after you're done. Keep in mind that your total protein and carb intake for the day doesn't change; you're just eating strategically for better results. Options are ...
A preformulated shake, such as At Large Nutrition Opticen (atlargenutrition.com/), that has a mix of protein and carbs. Add fruit if it requires more carbs.
A shake that's almost entirely protein—such as Optimum Nutrition Whey—along with ½ cup of oatmeal and a piece of fruit.
A tuna-salad or turkey sandwich.
Step Five: Forget About the Details

One meal a week, go ahead and splurge. "There's always room for junk food, as long as it's a minority of your intake," says Aragon.