Right, let's get into it.
If you want to lose fat whilst transforming the way you look and not just becoming a smaller version of yourself, YOU'LL ALSO WANT TO BE RESISTANCE TRAINING.
You DO NOT need to do cardio to lose fat.
All activity just helps you use more energy.
If you eat too much, you still won't lose fat, regardless of how much cardio or HIIT you do.
Muscle is important for health, longevity & quality of life. It will help you keep fat off and you'll look WAY better.
While you rest between training sessions and when you sleep, your body will repair and build the damaged fibres stronger than before.
As you adapt to the stress you're placing on your muscles, you will be able to lift heavier weights or perform more repetitions with the same weight.
Eventually you'll notice you look different!
Read that twice, women especially.
Bigger muscles are a good thing. I know you want to get "toned", but believe me, the women with the "toned" physiques you want probably all have significantly more muscle than you do right now.
It takes a VERY uncommon work ethic, genetics, hormones and a LOAD of food (and drugs) to get "too big".
Remember, millions of guys are TRYING to get as big as possible and not achieving it.
I recommend following @jerryteixeira @MattxFitness & @jackdcoulson for more on a pure bodyweight approach
learn.nothingbarredfitness.com/free-workout-p…
If you don't know what you're doing, don't just make up your own program.
You can easily make common mistakes that will hold back your progress or even prevent progress.
- Too much work
- Not enough rest (between sets and rest days)
- Too much chest, shoulders, biceps and abs
- Not enough back, glutes and legs
- Overly focusing on isolation exercises
- Avoiding things that are hard
Just follow a good beginner program.
If you want to read more in depth information around a beginner program, see this blog post:
Nothingbarredfitness.com/the-perfect-wo…
To lose fat, you've got to expend more energy than you consume.
The amount you expend depends on your weight, muscle mass, activity level and other factors to a lesser extent.
Yes, you can lose fat and build muscle at the same time, although this gets harder to do when you're more advanced.
Eat more than you expend and you'll gain weight (mostly muscle if you do it right)
More than that won't = faster or more muscle gain. There's only so much muscle we can build and it's SLOOOOOW.
Provide extra calories beyond this amount and you only add extra fat.
musclehacking.com/calorie-calcul…
I suggest you focus on protein and calories only, at first.
You need to pay attention to protein as it is required to help rebuild your muscles stronger than before.
That's because highly processed foods fill you less, make you hungry again sooner, drive cravings higher & are more "calorie dense" so you get to eat less food.
Protein & whole foods effectively make you burn more calories.
Follow @vincentninja68 for info on a whole food diet
You can get them here 👇
Learn.nothingbarredfitness.com/free-recipes
But for fat loss, you've still got to watch the total amount you eat, regardless of food quality.
Use the calculator I linked to to work out how many calories you need to lose fat.
Don't go recklessly low with your calories. Keep it to 20-25% under maintenance.
- Be accurate, try to use scales and not eyeball where possible
- This isn't forever, just until you get a much better feel for what and how much you should be eating
- Watch out for liquid calories
- Watch out for sauces, spreads, condiments etc.
Shrinking your eating window down to a 6 hour period (or smaller) can make managing your hunger levels much easier.
Follow @TheForeverFit for more on intermittent fasting
- Consume mostly unprocessed whole foods
- Focus on protein
- Calories matter, figure out a ballpark of how many you need
- Track your intake
- Stay consistent
- You can fit in some treats now and then. Making room in your calories is better than "cheat days"
Learn.nothingbarredfitness.com/free-fat-loss-…
What else?
👇
Heavyset is good for ios, fitnotes is good for android.
Aim to progress the weight in small increments or add reps from session to session.
More on progressive overload here 👇
nothingbarredfitness.com/optimal-traini…
Dont neglect this.
If you have to swing weights, use momentum, kip, or otherwise break from good form, then you're using too much weight.
Study videos & record yourself. Get feedback from someone who knows what they're doing if possible.
You're also putting yourself at risk of injury. If you get injured you can't train and your progress will start reverting back.
A deload is a period of time where you ease off the intensity and/or volume of your workouts.
It's normal to take about a week of lifting lighter weights or cutting about 50% of the total reps from your workout.
Training hard, week after week, with progressive overload causes your body to accumulate fatigue.
You need a break every so often to fully recover.
You'll make more progress long term WITH deloads.
You'll start recognising when you need one. You might be struggling to make progress, joints feel sore, motivation to train drops, you're getting sick or feeling tired etc.
If you're older or training more intensely, you may need more regular deloads.
Creatine is worth taking, 5-10% strength increase.
Vitamin D is worth taking if you don't see much sun.
Certain vitamins/minerals are worth supplementing if you're deficient. That's it.
Read and research. Don't stop learning. Get a good coach if you want a shortcut past all the mistakes.
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