There are six strategies you must use to lose every bit of flab
- the natural way - without plateaus, metabolic slowdown or lingering fat pockets:
(1) LOSE FAT VERY SLOWLY
Here's where most of the problems begin: Most people have no
patience. How many times have you been told to lose no more than two pounds per week? How many times have you ignored that
advice? All the time, right? The American College of Sports Medicine told you this, your trainer told you this, your dietician
told you this, your doctor told you this, etc. Almost everyone agrees 1.0 to 2.0 pounds per week is usually the maximum rate
for safe, permanent weight (fat) loss. But few people want to listen theyre ecstatic when the scale registers a 5 or 7 pound
weekly weight loss.
I advise my clients to lose 1-2 lbs per week. Naturally, most
go for the two pounds (and often ask if three is okay). Personally I go for 1 lb per week before competitions. If I lose more
than one pound per week, I eat more. Losing too much weight too quickly always causes muscle loss, which in turn causes metabolic
slowdown. Don't ever confuse weight loss with fat loss. You can lose weight quickly, but you can't lose fat quickly. If you
think you can outwit Mother Nature and you're dead set on losing 4, 5, 10 pounds a week, you're going to lose fat in the beginning,
but not all of it you will plateau and rebound before the last fat pockets are gone. Set your goal to lose one or two pounds
per week, but also set your goal to lose this fat weight consistently every week. When there aren't any plateaus, this really
adds up over time.
2) REFEED REGULARLY - DONT STAY ON LOW CALORIES ALL THE TIME
I GUARANTEE you are going to hear a LOT more about the refeeding
concept in the near future. It's not a new idea, however. Fred Dr. Squat Hatfield was writing about this in the late 1980s!
He called it Zig Zag Dieting.
Carbing up, Cyclical Dieting, zig-zag dieting, re-feeding, call
it whatever you want; to me, its so obvious that increasing calories for a short periods while youre dieting is the best way
to avoid metabolic downgrade, that I can't see how anyone would dispute it. But of course, die hard academics often demand
concrete undisputable scientific evidence before anything is deemed true.
I would suggest you do not wait for such evidence and you begin
using this technique immediately! All you really need to understand is this basic principle:
If staying on very low calories for a long time is what causes
your metabolism to slow down and if the slowdown in metabolism is the reason you have a difficult time losing that last bit
of stubborn localized fat, then its only logical that the way to lose the stubborn fat is to avoid metabolic slowdown by not
staying on low calories all the time!
The re-feeding concept can all be boiled down to this simple
advice; just raise your calories every few days instead of staying on low calories all the time. This is the method smart
bodybuilders use to diet all the way down to low single digit body fat and lose the last fat pocket without hitting a single
plateau.
3) DIET IN CYCLES OR SEASONS USING NUTRITIONAL PERIODIZATION
- CHRONIC DIETING IS DANGEROUS
Everyone knows someone who is ALWAYS on a strict diet. Maybe
you're one of them. As paradoxical as it seems, chronic dieting is a great way to get fatter! You see, everything in life
has a certain rhythm or seasonality to it: Winter- Summer. Tide comes in tide goes out. Sun goes up sun goes down. To lose
fat for good, you have to diet in seasons. All sunshine makes a desert.
In sports training, a big buzzword is periodization. This refers
to a cyclical approach to training an athlete, so the athlete peaks at his or her best performance level on the day of an
event, or maintains optimal performance for the duration of a season.
In periodization training, there is an off-season and an in-season.
Training continues year-round, but the programs are quite different during these two cycles. The long major cycles are called
macrocycles. Smaller weekly and monthly cycles within the larger cycles are called mesocycles. There are even tiny day-to-day
variations in sets, reps, poundage, intensity, duration and tempo called microcycles.
Nutrition can be periodized too, and this is another topic I
predict will become very hot in the near future. Re-feeds are like nutritional mesocycles while the annual seasons are like
nutritional macrocycles (the muscle building phase versus fat burning phase).
I've always claimed that the bodybuilders method to fat loss
is the superior one, and isn't cyclical dieting exactly what bodybuilders do? Don't they diet strictly in a deficit for a
period of months, then train for muscle growth for a period of months? Doesn't a really astute physique artist cycle the calorie
levels throughout the year? Of course. That's why bodybuilders who use this strategy are the supreme examples of effective
permanent fat loss.
Bulk too long, you gain too much fat and get completely out
of fat burning mode. Diet too long, you lose muscle and downgrade your metabolism. Cycle the two every year in a seasonal
fashion, whether you compete or not, and you have the perfect balance.
Three time Mr. Olympia Frank Zane continued to diet once a year
after he retired, exactly as if he were still going to compete. As a personal challenge to himself, each year he continued
to attempt to beat his previous best or at least he strived to be the best he could be at any given time of his life. Smart
guy. And now in his 60s, he has a body that would make men half his age green with envy.
Cycle your nutrition and your training. Diet strictly at times
and relax your diet at times. Train with everything you've got at times, and train to maintain at other times. Don't listen
to experts who constantly warn of overtraining and say things like daily cardio is catabolic and unnecessary. Daily cardio,
as part of a short term fat loss cycle, supported with the proper nutrition and weight training, is the best way in the world
to lose body fat. Of course you can do cardio daily! What you can't do is continue with a high volume of daily training all
year round.
There's no such thing as a double winter, so why put your body
through severe dieting weather two seasons in a row? Diet strictly for a while, then slowly ease back for a while... eat more,
relax then go back at it even harder, pushing this time for an even higher peak. Be like the athlete trying to beat last years
record. And continue with this approach for the rest of your life.
4) DEVELOP A LONG TERM TIME PERSPECTIVE AND SET LONG TERM
GOALS
You need patience and the right mental attitude to lose body
fat. If you have a lot of fat to lose and you want to lose it permanently, you need to set up some long-term goals for your
nutritional seasons. Otherwise, your body is going to fight back.
I know dozens of people who did phenomenally well on before
and after transformation programs, only to quickly gain back all of the fat they lost. Do YOU want to diet for 12 weeks, look
great for a week or two then slip right back where you started from, or do you want to get lean and stay lean?
Here are the reasons why so many people re-gain the weight:
They only had a 12-week goal... Short-term time perspective... No long-term goals... Failure to develop goal setting as a
lifelong continuous discipline... Failure to develop nutrition and training disciplines as habits All fatal errors.
Every season or "nutritional macrocycle", you must strive to
improve on your previous best by setting new goals. Goal setting is not an event; it's a never-ending process. Isn't this
what any world-class athlete does? Doesn't the Olympian strive to beat his record at the last Olympics? Run faster, throw
farther, jump higher? Doesn't that require a very long-term time perspective? Can't you apply this concept in your own training
even if it's just for health, fitness and recreation? Wouldn't this keep you motivated for years at a time instead of just
doing ONE 12 week program and then slipping backwards to square one? Couldn't this mindset for constant and never ending improvement
in a seasonal fashion keep you motivated for LIFE? Of course.
5) RE-SET YOUR SET POINT (AKA, TURN DOWN YOUR FAT THERMOSTAT)
When I was in college, my body fat usually hovered around 15-16%.
(Yes, I confess I DID drink my share of beer in college). I lost the beer belly, of course, dropping my fat all the way down
to the mid single digits. However, I always seemed to slide back where I started (16% or so). It seemed like that was a natural
set point for me, kind of like my fat thermostat had the dial locked in at 16%.
One day, I finally got wise and I decided to set a LONG TERM
GOAL to get better every year and MAINTAIN a lower off-season body fat every year. First 14%, then 12%, then 10%, and finally,
today, I don't allow myself over 9.9% at any time. I refuse to go to double digits and I'll tighten up my diet or add cardio
the second I notice myself slip.
In contest season, I decided that 6-7% wasnt lean enough, and
I strived to beat that, which I did, hitting 6%, 5%, 4% and eventually as low as 3.4% body fat.
Basically, I raised my standards of what body fat level was
acceptable to me during the off season and for competitions. I vowed to improve both.
I disciplined myself and stopped "bulking up." After I made
this commitment, then each year it got easier to lose the fat because I wasn't putting myself under prolonged periods of dieting
stress to get there; I was already close, and starting closer every year because what I had done, unbeknownst to me at the
time, was to re-set my set point.
I'm sure you've heard of the set point theory before. This is
the genetically pre-determined body fat level towards which you tend to gravitate. The good news is, you can lower your set
point (your fat thermostat) through nutritional discipline, increasing your lean body mass, dieting in seasons/cycles, setting
long term goals, and raising your standards in terms of how much body fat you are willing to carry.
A lowered set point won't happen over night. It doesn't happen
by the day or week, it happens by the month and year and is achieved by setting higher standards for how lean you stay over
prolonged periods of time.
6) WATCH YOUR INTERNAL DIALOGUE: YOU BECOME YOUR I AMS
Be careful what you call yourself and what you say to yourself.
It's a psychological truth that you become your labels you become your I ams.
If you want to lose body fat, then why on Earth do you walk
around all day long saying over and over again, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't lose this stubborn fat? Why say, I'm fat?
Why affirm the negative? Why would you do that to yourself? Over and over the tape plays in your head programming your subconscious
building your belief systems forging your paradigms directing your behavior creating your own reality.
Why not visualize your ideal and affirm the positive?: I am
getting leaner and leaner every day! Do not dwell on your present condition. Dwell on your future vision. Refuse to use the
term stubborn fat again. Never say, I can't lose this fat. Do not look at localized fat as any different than other fat on
your body. Understand that it was the first place on, and will be the last place to come off but it WILL come off IF you do
it the right way.
CONCLUSION
Usually articles on stubborn fat discuss breakthroughs in transdermal
delivery systems, adrenergic agonists, alpha-2 receptors and lots of other scientific stuff. I've read papers on this subject
that were so scientific, you'd need a medical dictionary to translate them. The so-called experts list dozens of references
and write overly technical articles for an audience they know damn well has only a seventh grade reading level and couldn't
give a whiff about anything except seeing their abs. However, they do it anyways to make themselves look like almighty, all-knowing
gurus and to sell worthless products. The reality is, these really arent even articles they're advertisements for spot reducing
gimmicks
Listen; there is nothing complicated or overly scientific about
the process of fat loss even the last 10 pounds. Sure, there are proven products such as thermogenic supplements, but they
don't work miracles, nor are they spot reducers. Theres no such thing as spot reduction. Theres no such thing as stubborn
fat it only appears that way for lack of understanding about the way the human body and mind work.
You can do this naturally with nothing more than exercise, proper
nutrition and the right attitude. To lose fat steadily without plateaus - right down to the very last fat cell - all you have
to do is work with your bodys inherent nature, not against it. It may not be easy, but its incredibly simple and 100% predictable.
Embrace the challenge, expect success, use what you've just learned, and in the long run, you'll agree that the rewards were
well worth the effort.