Saturday, August 10, 2013

How To Lose Weight And Prevent It From Piling Straight Back On

By Russ Howe


When it comes to the world of fitness, most people cannot tell you how to lose weight and prevent it from piling straight back on the moment you come off your healthy eating routine. In today's post you will discover why it's not rocket science.

A recent survey in the fitness industry showed that almost 89% of gym members were struggling to understand how to reach their target body weight.

Bizarrely, despite the number of people who claim to need assistance with this particular issue, we have reached a point of information overload. With too much information, much of it conflicting, many gym users have reverted back to trial and error methods and trying to figure things out for themselves. There are a few scientifically proven methods you can use.

The four rules to fat loss are as follows:

1. Look to improve your protein intake.

2. Stop cutting out carbohydrates and fats.

3. Start weight training in your local gym.

4. Replace long aerobic exercise with short HIIT workouts.

An increase in your protein intake will work wonders for your body - particularly those who have fat loss goals in mind. Many people unfairly label protein, and particularly whey protein supplements, as a nutrient for people who want to get big and muscular. This is completely false, of course. Protein is your best friend when you are trying to cut down body fat levels. Eat around 1.5g per kilo of your body weight. So an 80kg person would eat around 160g protein on a daily basis.

This will do you no good, of course, if you then fall for the commonly made mistake of avoiding fat and carbohydrate based foods. This misconception was first made popular in the early 2000's by celebrity diets who believed that cutting these two vital nutrients would lead to quicker weight loss. It did, but at a very high price. Individuals often felt very ill and then piled on any pounds they had lost the moment they went back to eating a regular diet. An eating plan high in protein, moderate in carbohydrate and quite high in healthy fats is a perfect match here.

Next, it is time to dust off those old dumbbells in the garage and start lifting them on a regular basis.

As soon as people think about dieting, they couple that thought with cardiovascular exercise. For some reason, weight training is relegated to the status of afterthought, something which they later come to regret. Resistance training has been shown to burn considerably more body fat than steady state cardiovascular exercise, as well as helping you to take advantage of an increased protein intake and getting your muscles leaner for when you lose some body fat.

If you are just starting out in the gym, try using an approach to training which allows you to perform a full body resistance training session, either with free weights or resistance machines and cables, three times per week. Increase that frequency to four times per week a few months down the line.

If your cardiovascular sessions are overly long and drawn out, there is another way to get more out of them without boring yourself to death on the treadmill. I am talking, of course, about high intensity interval training. This proven method has been around for over 20 years and is proven to be much more effective and time-friendly than regular aerobic cardiovascular exercise, although it has only really reached the mainstream in the last 10 years.

A combination of HIIT with a targeted resistance training routine is definitely a move in the right direction if you are learning how to lose weight that you can keep off forever once it is gone. It's easy to progress, unlike steady state cardiovascular routines, and it offers a much needed dosage of variety into your training sessions.




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