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 7 Tips for Long Term Leanness Getting shredded

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mihou
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Nombre de messages : 8092
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Date d'inscription : 28/05/2005

7 Tips for Long Term Leanness Getting shredded Empty
11072008
Message7 Tips for Long Term Leanness Getting shredded

7 Tips for Long Term Leanness
Getting shredded ain't that tough. Staying that way is!
by Chris Shugart

The fitness magazines are full of them. The bodybuilding rags are full
of them. Even T-Nation is full of them: articles about how to lose fat
and discover your abs. What's missing? Simple: Info on how to stay that way once you've reached your goal.
Sometimes
we resistance-trained gym rats make fun of housewife-types for their
yo-yo dieting ways. Yet don't many of us do the same thing, only give
it different names like "mass phase" or "cutting phase?" Now, there's
nothing wrong with getting your bulk on during certain times of the
year, but this desire for size sometimes results in a guy who basically
just looks fat 300 days of the year.
Nice traps, but nice love handles too. Nice life-shortening central adiposity you've got going there, buddy.
These
days, I prefer to stay under 12% year around. Right now I'm sitting at
9% and feel incredible. This, by the way, isn't a natural state for me.
I was chubby during most of my childhood and rode the fat-ass express
train in college. With hard training, trial and error nutrition
strategies, and some good supplements, I was able to win the battle of
the bulge. Win the battle? Yes, but the war is never over.
How
come no one talks about the struggles of staying lean? Probably because
most people are fat, and there's just a bigger audience (no pun
intended) for how-to-lose-it articles than how-to-keep-it-off articles.
This article may change that.
Here's
how I've learned to stay in the single-digit body fat zone in spite of
my fat boy genetics and hungry-man ways. There's not a lot of deep
science here, just practical strategies to help you stay ripped for
more than a couple of weeks at a time.


Tip #1: Strategically vary meal size.
Here's the scoop: Eat a big breakfast. Eat medium sized, frequent meals during the day. Eat a very small meal at night.
Science has backed up this style of eating, but I want to focus on the common sense stuff. A big breakfast does two things:
1)
It breaks the fast of sleep. You need a lot of good food in the morning
because you haven't eaten all night. Eat breakfast every day, and eat a
big one!
2) Breakfast fuels you for the rest of the day.
Basically, you can "burn up" almost anything you eat for breakfast
because you'll be awake for the next 15 or 16 hours. Studies have shown
that breakfast skippers tend to overcompensate later in the day. In
other words, they skip breakfast and pig out on crap at lunch and at
night. Not exactly the key to long term leanness.
Okay,
so a big, honkin' breakfast is a good idea. So why a small dinner? For
almost the same reason: you're about to go to bed; is your body going
to use that caloric energy or store it? Store it, of course.
I
like eating strategies that have been supported by both science and
in-the-trenches lifters, and this meal sizing trick isn't new.
Bodybuilder Lee Haney used it back in the day, and nutritional studies
support it today.
7 Tips for Long Term Leanness Getting shredded Image002


Tip #2: Strategically time carb and fat intake.
I'm
going to keep the language here real simple: Your body handles carbs
much better in the morning. It handles carbs poorly at night, but tends
to handle fats better.
So go with your body's natural
flow: Have a good shot of carbohydrates for breakfast and consume fewer
at night. Likewise, keep the dietary fats low in the morning and higher
in the evening. Dr. Lonnie Lowery refers to this as Temporal Nutrition,
and it works, especially if you're in a phase where you want to stay very lean and avoid excess fat gain.
Based on Tips #1 and #2, here's what a typical breakfast and dinner will look like for me:

Breakfast (big, low fat, high carb, high fiber)

Two servings of Quaker Old Fashioned oatmeal, Fiber One, or Post Shredded Wheat 'n Bran

Two servings of Grow!

One serving of Hood Carb Countdown milk beverage

Two servings of fruit (mixed berries, banana, pineapple, etc.)

Dinner (last meal of the day, small, low carb, higher in good fats)

Tuna filets or chicken breasts

Green salad with olive oil based dressing
This
basic strategy keeps me at 9% body fat without sacrificing good,
anabolic nutrition. In other words, I don't feel deprived and I'm not
giving up muscle gains, although obviously I'm not going to gain muscle
as fast as I would in a traditional "bulking" cycle. And that's fine
when my primary goal is leanness.
Now, the exception to the above
guideline is post-workout. I train around noon so this strategy works
out for me. However, if you train at night, don't sweat a high carb
post-workout drink. As Dr. Lowery has stated, the post-workout period
is the "great corrector." Carbs consumed after training are "put to
work," so have them, even if you train at 9PM.


Tip #3: Increase your NEPA.
When
I dropped from around 12% to 9% body fat, one of the strategies I used
was a daily walk. I know, I know, I've teased these chubby "walkers" in
the past myself. "Get a real workout!" I wanted to yell from my pick-up
truck window. But if you're already weight training and maybe doing
some sprints, an early morning or nightly walk will really take you to
the next level of leanness, and keep you there.
Increased
NEPA (non-exercise physical activity) is a powerful tool when you want
to keep your abs fully visible. You may only be in the gym three to
five hours per week; what about the rest of the time? For desk jockeys,
actively increasing NEPA could be the difference between single-digit
body fat and "muscular guy with fat gut syndrome."
To boost
my NEPA, I take stairs whenever possible, I park far away from stores
so I'll have to walk more, I refuse to roll my luggage at the airport,
and I generally try to take more steps per day. You can do that or you
can just take a scheduled walk. I usually pop in an audio book, leash
up my Labrador, and take off either early in the morning before
breakfast or late in the evening after my last meal. The pace is fast,
but it's not exactly "cardio."
I never thought this made much of a
difference until a few months ago when I stopped doing it. Although my
diet and weight training stayed the same, my body fat climbed slowly
back into the double digits. After two weeks of getting back into the
walking habit, I was back to single-digit delight; all from the
ridiculously simple activity of walking more.


Tip #4: Stop it with the cheat meals (or most of them anyway).
My
philosophy used to be this: Eat clean all week; reward myself with
piles of garbage on the weekend. Here's what woke me up. One day I'm at
a seminar in Canada with Dr. John Berardi. We're shooting the shit and
I mention my "pig out on the weekend" philosophy. JB looked me up and
down, his eyes pausing on the gut I had at the time, and said, "It's
not working though, is it?"
Oh man, I cussed that cocky bastard for days. But he was right.
In
the years that followed, I cut back to Saturday-only pig-outs, then a
"one cheat meal per week" strategy. I slowly became leaner and leaner.
These days, cheat meals come rarely, if at all. After the Velocity Diet
I lost my taste for most cheat foods. I simply stopped liking most of
them and developed a taste for healthier fare, an unexpected but much
appreciated side effect of that strict diet.
A couple of weeks ago I had the
chance to go to The Cheesecake Factory, a restaurant that used to be my
ultimate choice for a cheat meal. I'd planned to pig out too; it had
been months since I'd dove into a big 1000 calorie dessert. I got there
and, much to my surprise, I just didn't want it. The habit was finally
dead. (I had a great Thai steak salad instead.)
For
those that still blow the hell out of their diets at least once per
week, I only ask that you examine both your goals and your physique. If
you're a skinny guy trying to gain weight, well, a whole pizza on
Saturday night may not be a bad thing.
But
if you're like I was, a "fit" guy with a gut, then maybe it's time for
a change. I'd suggest a step-by-step approach. Have only one cheat per
week if you're currently having two. If you're having one, go to one
every two weeks.
Step
it down. Break the cycle. You'll feel better, you'll look better,
you'll be healthier in the long run, and women will grab your butt.


Tip #5: Don't eat too late at night.
Long
story short: For years I worried about "going catabolic" as I slept at
night. I visualized my hard-earned muscle atrophying away as I dreamed
about leopard skin thongs.
To prevent this, I had a big meal right before bed. I mean, right before. I'd swallow the last bite as my head hit the pillow. Guess what?
I could never stay really lean doing this. Single digit body fat defied me.
In
short, I stopped doing it. Now I don't eat in the two hours or so
before bed. Now I can easily stay at 9%. Coincidence? I don't think so.

I still worry a little about losing muscle, but as long as
my last meal is high protein and slow digesting, and as long as I wake
up to a big, equally high-protein breakfast, then I don't lose muscle.
Now,
if you're a hard-gaining, skinny-as-a-rail teenager, go ahead and eat
before bed. Maybe chug a protein shake in the middle of the night too.
But if you've struggled to stay lean and have "fat boy tendencies,"
don't eat right before bedtime.


Tip #6: Don't eat quite as much on off days.
This
is pretty straightforward. You need more fuel to get through a tough
workout, and you burn up more fuel (calories) during it. So on your off
days, eat a little less to match your lower energy expenditure.
How
much less? Play around with it. There are a lot of variables involved
but try 100 to 300 calories less and see what happens.
If you use a quality post-workout drink like Surge, then you may already be following this
tip since you only ingest that supplement on weight training days anyway.


Tip #7: Use Carbolin 19.

Carbolin
19 is an interesting supplement because it can give you an edge in mass
phases and cutting phases. Long story short, what you'll notice is a shift
in body composition toward lean mass. I consider Carbolin 19 to be a
staple for the person who wants to gain muscle while staying lean. For
more detailed info, click HERE.


Long Term Leanness
These
strategies aren't for everyone. They're for the guy or gal who's lost a
lot of fat and wants to keep it off. If you're the type that gets
shredded for summer and bulks up in the winter, then these tips should
help you easily stay lean all summer long.
These
strategies may also help you if you're a guy like me: a former fatty
who got lean, loves it, and refuses to get fat again. For you, these
tips may be your key to long term leanness!

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