Thursday, June 21, 2018

Eat your way to Muscle Mass & Fat Loss


A Calculated Diet for Muscle Mass & Fat Loss



This diet is part of the absolute basic knowledge for building muscle mass.Finding out the calories burned - both at rest, during or after exercise - remains tricky . It is difficult to calculate this very precisely with home-garden-and-kitchen equipment such as an app or a sports tire. It is only with an accurate measurement of your oxygen consumption (by breathing measurements) and CO2 production (by temperature recording, measured in a closed room) that you can calculate the exact energy consumption. Such measurements are only fairly labor-intensive and therefore difficult to carry out.
For that reason, when calculating the number of calories burned, use is an approach that is based on gender, age, height and weight that the user enters into the application. Sometimes someone's condition, based on the amount of exercise that he/she does per week, is also taken into account.
 

Nutrition is very important for building muscle mass. Nutrition is the reach your desination! To begin with, we need to determine how many calories you need per day to grow. Then we divide these calories into the different food sources of proteinscarbohydrates and fats. I'll show you exactly how and what to eat to build muscle mass! I've worked it out using the example of someone weighing 80 kilos.


For those who are in a hurry to lose body fat, I have come across a little known scientific method to Melt Away All Your Unwanted Stubborn Body Fat in Just 14 Days!!
Watch it in this video

Nutrition is very important, whether you want to lose weight or want to build muscle in addition.
By way of correct nutrition, you will achieve your desire... 

And in this case.. BOTH!!

The first thing we need to find out is how many kcal per day you burn. There is such a thing as the BMR (Base Metabolic Rate), or the resting metabolism. This is the amount of calories you burn if you do absolutely nothing. Everything you do - no matter how little the activity is - is counted on top of it. 



A rule of thumb is to multiply your bodyweight in kilos by 27. Now you have approximately the number of calories you burn on a day at rest. Add your activities here. An 80 kg person with an office job that trains an hour a day has approximately 80 x 27 + 400 burns = 2560 kcal. It is not very important to know the exact number of kcal, we can always adjust it later. In order to arrive in quality muscle mass now (and not in fat mass), we increase the number of kcal that you burn with 400 kcal. A person weighing 80 kilos comes to 2960 kcal. Let's take this as the base to calculate our diet.
Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) and Daily Calorie Needs - Calculator Online (Harris-Benedict equation)
- 30% of the
 total kcal will come from protein, since 1 gram of protein contains 4 kcal, the total protein intake is 0.3 x 2960 = 888: 4 = 222 grams of protein.

- 55% of the
 total kcal will come from carbohydrates, since 1 gram of carbohydrate contains 4 kcal, the total carbohydrate intake is 0.55 x 2960 = 1628: 4 = 407 grams of carbohydrate

- 15% of the
 total kcal will come from fats, as 1 gram of fat contains 9 kcal, the total fat intake is 0.15 x 2960 = 444: 9 = 49 grams of fat.

Good protein sources are: poultry (turkey, chicken fillet), lean meats (steak), dairy products (quark, skim milk, yoghurt), protein shakes, meal replacement shakes and lean fish (salmon, tuna). Good carbohydrate sources are brown rice, wholemeal bread, vegetables, breakfast cereals (oatmeal, brinta), potatoes and kidney beans. You can add fats in the form of e.g. olive oil.





The meals 

The breakfast 
This is the most important meal of the day, besides the meal after the training. Your body needs a lot of nutrition right now, both complex carbohydrates and protein. Eat as much as possible. E.g. a 1/2 liter yogurt with whey protein powder and 100 grams of muesli.

The meal between breakfast and lunch 
This meal should contain a lot of protein with moderate carbohydrates. E.g. a can of water-based tuna mixed with some pineapple and ketchup. If you do not have time to make this meal, replace this meal and the meal before the training with a meal replacement. Meal replacements consist of a balanced composition of proteins and carbohydrates.

Lunch 
This meal should contain a lot of complex carbohydrates and also a good protein source. E.g. a bowl of fruit curd, 2 slices of bread with chicken breast and a glass of orange juice.

The meal before the training 
This meal should be consumed at least one hour before the training. The goal is to provide you with sufficient energy during training and to prevent muscle breakdown. E.g. a bowl of low-fat  fruit curds and a banana. Or replace this meal with a meal replacement.

The meal after the training 
This meal actually consists of two parts and, like breakfast, it must contain a lot of carbohydrates and proteins. The first meal comes immediately after the training. E.g. a weight gainer. Your body is crying for sugars right now, therefore a liquid meal is the first choice, it can be recorded right away. The second meal consists of solid food and is best taken 45 minutes later. Rice with turkey breast and lots of vegetables would be a good choice here.

The last meal 
It is better not to take carbohydrates now, your burn is now lower and these carbohydrates are no longer used. They are then stored as fat reserves. Take a meal that contains about 30 grams of protein before bedtime. E.g. a half bowl of low-fat French cottage cheese, 150 gr of fish or a protein shake.

Before you start measuring your fat percentage (with a fat clipper), measure your fat percentage again if you have followed this diet for a week. If the fat percentage has decreased, add 200 kcal per day. If it has increased, take 200 kcal per day less. This way you automatically arrive at your ideal calorie intake. But keep doing this, if you increase in weight, your burn will also be higher and you will need more kcal.
Here's the example diet for someone weighing 80 kilos 



You can replace the above calculation based on your own body weight. I hope that you have gained value out of this.


But what if..
..You didn't have the luxury of time..
..there's that cousin's wedding around the corner..
..or your own wedding around the corner..
..or that crucial and important conference or client meeting
..or the big job interview

And you NEED to look in Shape NO MATTER WHAT?

Tuesday, June 19, 2018

..But(t) Seriously, I want to work my BUTT off!!







Training tight buttocks: tips and exercises!


Many men & women are not completely happy with their bodies - and especially the buttocks are a real nightmare for many women. Those who are very slim, often complain about the lack of curves. And women who want to get rid of have the opposite problem: there may be something wrong. How do you find the golden center between these two extremes?
The secret of tight buttocks is really only one thing: the buttock muscles. When you know how to train your buttocks, it is almost difficult to be dissatisfied with your buttock-shape! How can you train buttocks? Here I give you 5 effective exercises in this blog post. With some additional tips you know exactly how you can get started.

Training the butt muscles

Ultimately, strength training is the best way to train tight buttocks. In short: we want to make the buttocks bigger. What is needed for that? Muscles need to be overloaded to develop themselves. You walk and stand throughout the day, these are your leg and buttocks already accustomed and that is why they do not adjust themselves. These need new training incentives to develop further.
Try to train your buttocks at least once or twice a week. If you train less, it will take a long time before you get to see a really significant result. Try to make your training a bit heavier on a regular basis. Without progressive overload, your progress will probably come to a halt soon.
Many people think that muscles grow during training, but this is not the case.Your (buttock) muscles grow during the period that they are recovering, about 24 to 72 hours after your training. So rest enough after a workout so that your buttocks can recover and be ready for the next training!

Do you want to know the secrets to achieving the best shape of your Butt? Learn all those shortcuts from Brian Klepacki, MS, CSCS - aka Coach Brian - a Certified Strength & Conditioning Specialist with a Masters Degree in Exercise Science. As a Functional Movement Specialist, having trained 100's of athletes, body builders and fitness models, he really knows what works. Click here to learn from his 16 years of experience.

Tight buttocks training exercises

Much has been written about it on the internet. Often there is one exercise for the gluteal muscles, namely the squat. The squat is definitely an effective exercise, but you also train your leg muscles a lot. If you specifically want to train your butt, then there are better alternatives.

Your buttocks consist of 3 main muscles, namely the gluteus maximus, gluteus medius and the gluteus minimus (collectively also known as 'GLUTES'). These work together with other small muscles, so you speak to multiple muscle groups with each exercise. With the following buttock exercises you will train each muscle group as specifically as possible so that you develop it optimally.
Make sure that you perform all exercises in a calm and controlled manner.Especially when the exercise becomes heavy, you tend to compensate with other muscles, we do not want this! Keep focusing on the muscle you are training and breathe in and out quietly.

Training buttocks exercise 1: Donkey Kick

With this exercise you train very specifically the biggest gluteal muscle. You do this exercise as follows:
  • Grab a mat or sit on the floor on your hands and knees. Make sure your hands are on shoulder width and that your legs have a 90 degree angle from the side. Tighten your stomach and keep looking down. This ensures that you have a nice, straight back. This is your starting position.
  • From this position you lift one leg straight up (you kick up straight into the air). Tighten your buttocks well and finish the movement if your thigh forms a straight line with your back. Even now your leg forms another angle of 90 degrees.
  • Slowly lower your leg to the starting position. Make sure it does not touch the ground and repeat the movement. Is this still too heavy? Then you let your leg rest for a while on the floor and then you immediately continue with the next repetition.

Training buttocks exercise 2: Single Leg Lunge

The name says it all: exit card with one leg. With this exercise you speak a little more buttocks than with the previous exercise, but mainly the biggest buttock muscle. It is best to perform this exercise with an elevation (for example, a step or the edge of your bed).
  • Stand with your ankles against the elevation and put one big step forward. Then you put 1 foot on the elevation behind you so that it hangs in the air.
  • Make sure your body stays upright, not that you hang over to keep balance.You do this by tightening your abdominal muscles and keeping your shoulders back. Keep looking straight forward during the exercise.
  • Now lower your entire body until your front leg has an angle of about 90 degrees. Make sure that your knee stays above your ankle and does not bend forward.
  • Once you are down you push your body up again from your front leg. That is also the reason that your back foot is on an elevation. This way you can get less strength out of that leg and put more focus on your front leg.
  • If you're upstairs, do not stretch your leg completely. Make sure there is a slight bend in it and then lower it again. You repeat this a number of times.
  • If this is too heavy or you do not have a raise in the neighborhood, do the same movement but with both feet on the floor. Try to get as much strength from your front leg as possible and not from your rear.

Training buttocks exercise 3: Glute Bridge

This exercise is known to most sports enthusiasts among us. This exercise is fairly simple and can be performed anywhere! You can do this with resistance or without. To start with, this buttock exercise with your own body weight is more than enough.
  • Grab a mat or go flat on your back on the floor. Keep your arms stretched along your body next to you on the floor. You put your feet flat on the floor until your lower leg is vertical. If you put your feet a bit further away from you, you will notice that this is less effective for your buttocks.
  • Tighten your torso, leg and gluteals and raise your entire torso. You go up so far until your body forms a straight line from your shoulders to your knee.
  • Once you are upstairs, you tighten your buttock muscles even further. Hold it for 1 second and then lower it again.
  • When you are down you start the next repetition. To make this exercise heavier with your own body weight, you make more repetitions, hold the exercise above longer or you do not come back all the way down but you just stop above the ground and then immediately go on to the next repetition.

Training buttocks exercise 4: Side-lying Hip Abduction

The fourth exercise to train tight buttocks is the side-lying hip abduction. That's quite a mouthful, but means nothing more than lying on your side and moving your leg out (literal translation).
  • Lie on the floor on your side. Support your head with your arm or with a pillow. You can bend your lower leg but you do not have to. This does provide more stability.
  • You keep your upper leg stretched. This is the starting position.
  • Lift your upper leg straight up towards the ceiling (upwards). You do not lift it straight up, but also slightly backwards, so upwards. Lift it up as high as possible so that you really feel the tension in your buttocks.
  • Now lower your leg to the starting position and repeat the movement. To make the exercise easier, let your upper leg between the repetitions rest on your other leg. 
    With this exercise you mainly speak the side of your buttocks, or the gluteus medius.

Training buttocks exercise 5: Single Leg Squat

Tada, there he is again: the squat! With the traditional squat you also speak a large part of your leg muscles, but with this variant you focus mainly on a part of your gluteus, namely the gluteus minimus. This exercise can be performed by everyone, even by inexperienced athletes.
  • Stand upright with your feet close together. Make sure you have a straight position and look forward.
  • Lift 1 leg slightly and look for your balance. This is important because your balance is now only determined by one leg. Now slowly go through that leg and make sure your knee stays above your ankle, not that your knee bends far forward. You can go a little bit with your body for counterweight to keep the balance. Make sure your back stays straight.
  • Bag as far as possible. It does not matter whether you go through a little bit or at all, adjust the exercise to your level. If you have dropped deep enough, push your body back up from your leg and buttock muscles. Make sure you do not stretch your leg on return but keep a slight bend in it.
  • To make the exercise heavier, you stay down for a short while before you go upstairs again. 
    If you find this exercise too heavy in this way, stand next to a wall or take a seat. Lean as you lower with your hand (s) on the chair or wall. Even now you still train your glutes!

Example diagram training buttocks for home

Below an example schedule to train your buttocks at home. You repeat this circuit three times. Between the circuit rounds you can take a little longer rest than between the exercises. Keep challenging yourself and make the exercises a little heavier by doing more repetitions or taking less rest.
Donkey KickSingle leg
lunge
Glute BridgeSide-lying Hip AbductionSingle Leg
Squat
20 repetitions right leg15 repetitions right leg15 repetitions20 repetitions right leg15 repetitions right leg
20 repetitions left leg15 repetitions left legHold 10 repetitions with 5 seconds20 repetitions left leg15 repetitions left leg
Rest for 30 secondsRest for 30 secondsRest for 30 secondsRest for 30 secondsRest for 30 seconds

Lost fat on the buttocks

Is the fanatic training of your buttocks sufficient? Unfortunately! I have said it before, but muscles are virtually invisible if there is too much fat. That means that you will also have to fall off to get those tight buttocks. Contrary to what is often thought, it is not possible to burn 'locally' fat .
The fat on your butt does not disappear if you do enough exercises for tight buttocks. Instead, you will have to lose fat all over your body. You do this, simply put, by eating fewer calories than you consume. This is easiest with many fresh foods - especially vegetablesfruitcomplex carbohydratesproteins and healthy fats .
Still, training your buttocks is one of the most important tactics when you want to get tight buttocks. Not only because it causes you to burn extra calories, but also because those muscles get your buttocks in a good shape. The skin becomes tighter and the shape becomes firmer.

Cardio for tight buttocks

And is it still advisable to do extra cardio exercises for tight buttocks? It is possible, but it is not immediately necessary. Cardio is useful to improve your fitness, and you can burn some extra calories with it. However, you will not be able to make your buttocks really firmer.
Strength training, on the other hand, has an enormous advantage: it also causes you to burn more calories when you are not exercising, so when your body is recovering from the training.
Moreover, it is relatively also how many calories you lose through cardio training . If you do not have a lot of time, it is probably the wisest to choose HIIT interval training . If you combine this with training your buttocks regularly, you will progress much faster than with all those hours on the treadmill!

Finally

You can also take a number of simple measures in everyday life to get tight buttocks. Try to move as much as possible so that you keep the blood circulation going. Take the stairs as often as possible, walk at least every hour for a few minutes and always prefer to take the bike rather than the car.

Monday, June 18, 2018

3E's to a Complete Body Build


So we're here to discover and learn more about the best methods to build muscle with a long-term perspective. No matter what the type of fitness regime you want to implement, if want it to work, then it would have to comprise of, atleast these elements. So here we discuss the 3E's or "Eight Essential Elements" that are important for every schedule, regardless of whether you are a beginner or an advanced strength athlete.

1. Volume


One of the most important factors for muscle building is volume. Volume means the amount of work sets and repetitions you perform per muscle group. For example 5 work sets of 10 repetitions (5x10) for the chest. With insufficient volume, the training stimulus is lacking to stimulate muscle growth. If the volume is too much, the trained muscle groups can be trained less often and you need longer recovery time from the extra fatigue and inflammation.
Research has shown that per training 4 to 8 work sets per muscle group is sufficient for building muscle mass. Everyone has their own optimum volume and it is possible that someone has an optimal training effect when 4 work sets are performed for the chest, while another athlete needs more work sets for the chest. This depends on various factors such as age, gender, recovery capacity, physique, lifestyle pattern, sports history, sleep rhythm, genes, stress level, and so on.
To determine the volume, it is especially important to investigate which training category (beginner / intermediate / advanced) you fall into. Beginners advance optimally with 8 work sets per week. Intermediate (1-3 years experience with strength training) need 16-18 work sets per week to develop muscle mass and advanced (4> years experience with strength training) even more than 20 work sets per week.

2. Effort / intensity


For muscle building it is not necessary to always train to muscle failure. Training to fail -means that you fail with the last repetition of a toolbox. Training to fail can lower the quality of the training, because you are limited by the extra acidification and fatigue that the failure entails. This means you have less power and less volume can be performed.

The amount of recovery needed by you is getting bigger (less training can be done) and there is more rapid decline in technique. This can lead to an injury in the short / long term. Hence, a good guideline is to keep 0-1 repetition (s) with most work sets. You can then recover better and the quality of your training remains high.

It is important to continue the training effort in the long term. Your muscle fibers have no incentive at a given time if you always use the same schedule. The foundation of muscle growth is an increase in strength with the exercises you use (progressive overload).
Sometimes there are also trainings that you are less taxable than normal. It is then wise to adjust your training accordingly, so that you are better recovered for the next training session. By properly managing the intensity of your training (auto-regulating) you get to know the body well and you have better results in the long term.
For beginners, a minimum intensity of 60% of the current 1RM (1 rep max) is required to activate all muscle fibers. By training with an effort of 30% of the current 1RM, not all muscle fibers can be activated. Intermediate and advanced people need an intensity of 70-95% in order to properly load all muscle fibers and to allow the muscles to grow faster.

3. Exercise selection


For maximum muscle building, it is recommended that you train the entire body and divide the volume in the early years about the muscle groups (unless you really have muscle groups that dominate other muscle groups). It is important that you perform a supine and upright pressure (push / press) and vertical and horizontal pulling movement (pull / row) for the upper body. For the lower body a knee flexion (squat / lunge) and hip extension (deadlift / hip extension).
In addition, extra exercises can be added that match your goals. Remember that small muscle groups such as the arms and shoulders are for a large part co-trained with the large muscle groups. For the small muscle groups, therefore, less specialization is generally required. It is important to spend most of the time in the important compound movements (exercise that loads multiple muscle groups at the same time).

a)    Compound exercises

Compound exercises are more important than isolation exercises. Isolation exercise is a workout in which only one muscle group is charged. Compound exercises activate more muscle groups / muscle fibers, are often friendly to the joints and tendons and have a greater impact hormonal and cardio-respiratory than isolation exercises. Compound exercises can also be more efficient in terms of time and provide a better training effect. For example, doing chin-ups is more effective for the back and biceps than barbell curls and straight pull downs.

b)      Tax the muscle group(s) you want to load

The muscle group you train must be the limiting muscle group in an exercise (first to become acidic or tired). If during an exercise you are limited by your grip, balance, acidification or fatigue of other muscle groups, you will not achieve an optimal training effect for the muscle group you want to train.
When you perform a squat and you feel more like your lower back than your legs or you do not feel your chest during the bench press, it may be the technique or the exercise is not suitable for your physique. It is therefore important to check whether a particular exercise is suitable for optimally stressing certain muscle groups.


c)       A regular exercise selection

Often 2-3 exercises per muscle group are sufficient to properly load all muscle fibers. The less advanced you are, the fewer exercises you need in principle. It is important not to vary much with the large compound exercises. It is also difficult to keep track of progress if different exercises are performed each time.

4. Technique


With a defective execution of the exercise it is not possible to activate all muscle fibers and put them in tension. Because of this you do not use the full potential of the muscle. Below you will find a number of important tips to optimize your technique.



a)      Full ROM (Range-of-Motion)

For building muscle mass there is a lot of evidence that training with a full movement path (full ROM) is preferable to training with a shorter movement path. By training with full ROM, the muscles are addressed over the entire length (with the correct exercise selection). So more muscle fibers are activated.

Stretching a muscle under a load is also a strong incentive for muscle growth. It results in the addition of sarcomeres (Sarcomeres are composed of long, fibrous proteins as filaments that slide past each other when a muscle contracts or relaxes) in series and in parallel. This creates a longer and thicker muscle. A combination of activation and stretching under load is therefore optimal to develop a larger and stronger muscle. For every push and pull movement it is therefore important to touch the body.

In terms of grip width, the ROM is the largest when you take the exercises around shoulder width. The body is also made to move the weight and a narrower or wider grip is less fine for the shoulders and wrists. The progression is also easier to keep track of when the path is identical for every training session.
The entire path is different per person. Some people really cannot squat around in parallel or complete a bench press and dead-lift. This has mainly to do with the structure of your body. It is therefore important to check what your (active) full ROM is.

b)      Dynamic contraction

For the development of muscle mass, a concentric (pushing away or pulling) and an eccentric phase (lowering or restoring) is necessary. It is especially important not to neglect the eccentric phase if maximum muscle growth is the goal. For example, if you do a bicep curl, it is important that you do not swing the weight upwards or drop the weight back after the concentric phase. Otherwise, you limit the potential to stimulate muscle growth.
During a leg exercise such as a squat, you lower yourself to the deepest position and try to squeeze up explosively from there. It is therefore not the intention that you go for a very slow concentric or eccentric phase. The total load is decreasing and it becomes difficult to address all muscle fibers.

c)       Tempo

For more force increase it helps to carry out the concentric phase as quickly / explosively as possible. A faster concentric phase forces the muscles to generate maximum strength, activating the largest / strongest muscle fibers. When a weight is moved slowly, it is not necessary for the body to activate the strongest or all muscle fibers. During the eccentric phase, it is important not to lower the weight slower than necessary so that you can switch to an explosive concentric phase.

     d)      Rest break

Strength athletes who place the emphasis on muscle building should take about 30 to 45 seconds of rest between the series. Longer rest breaks of a few minutes is mainly intended for athletes who want to focus on muscle strength instead of muscle building. Research shows that shorter breaks have stronger anabolic (muscle building) effects.

5. Periodization

Periodization is a form or resistance training that may be defined as strategic implementation of specific training phases. These training phases are based upon increasing and decreasing both volume (which is reps multiplied by sets) and intensity when designing a training program.
The body can quickly adapt to a specific training system. If you always do work sets of 10 repetitions, you will reach your ceiling at a given moment. You cannot optimize hypertrophy if you stick to a certain repetition sequence of, for example, 8-12 repetitions. It then helps to increase the repetition range by training with a different intensity. Think of work sets between 3-20 repetitions.
Periodization is necessary when the increase of a jump in intensity is too great to allow your body to adjust to a training session. By systematically periodizing, you will continue to make progress in the long term. Several periods of adaptation are then needed to make real progress. Linear periodization can be applied, but this is a sub-optimal approach. Programs that use, almost exclusively, volume for progressive overload are not optimal. A good program has incorporated multiple forms of periodization. Consider, for example, double-wavy periodization in which you spread the progressive over 2 trainings.

6. Realism

It is important to know that something exists as a genetic potential. In your 1st year of training it is possible to put on 8-12kg muscle mass (women 4-6kg). Then this potential to grow per year is halved. After 4-5 years of strength training you have reached about 80% of your genetic potential and you can be happy if you can put on 0.5-1kg of muscle mass per year. If you still get a lot at that stage, it means that a lot of body fat is put on.
It may seem contradictory to your perception with regard to what is naturally feasible. However, this is the reality and it is important to remain realistic. I do not discourage you not to train hard, but to be realistic. It is also not possible to build a complete physical within 1-3 years.
For most people it takes about 5 years to build a good physical. The fact is that as an average natural you cannot become very big and dry. Only with good genes or the use of AAS can faster and more muscle growth be realized. Be realistic and keep in mind that it takes more than 3-4 years to build a good physique.
After 4-5 years of strength training, further muscle building is limited and it is important to have patience and to train sensibly in order to make further progress. Gaining knowledge, consistency (good training, eating and recovery) and patience are the important factors for more muscle mass.

7. Frequency

The best results can be achieved by training three times a week. This is especially true for a beginner. Advanced people are physically able to train more than three times a week in a responsible manner. If you barely respond to this, all the hard work in the gym can be counter-productive. In the long term, regression (the reverse of progression) can occur.

8. Rest

The classic example is to train on Monday, Wednesday and Friday so that you always have at least one rest day in between. Regardless of which strength training schedule you choose, make sure you take at least 48-72 hours of rest between the training sessions. The general recommendation is to focus on two muscle groups with each training session.
You need rest in order to grow. You no longer develop muscle mass in the gym. The changes occur at home, long after your last set. During the training you "break them off", so that they come back in a larger form.

Drink away your Fats!!!

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