Train the Whole Body As One Piece!

“They aren’t connected to the head. But the whole body grows from the head. The muscles and tendons hold the body together. And God causes it to grow.” – Colossians 2:19

I’m posting the information below from one of Alwyn Cosgrove’s recent blogs.

In some of my previous blogs, I talked about focusing on movement patterns and compound, multi-joint exercises to achieve a variety of fitness and fat loss goals. The information below reinforces what I said before. The study below proves that isolation exercises are not as beneficial compared to compound, multi-joint exercises.

All the talk about bodypart training versus full-body routines, isolation exercise versus compound exercise, etc. is based upon a fundamentally flawed concept: That hypertrophy is somehow completely regionally specific.

Here’s a study that examines this in a bit more detail:

Rogers et al.

The Effect of Supplemental Isolated Weight-Training Exercises on Upper-Arm Size and Upper-Body Strength

Human Performance Laboratory, Ball State University, Muncie, IN.NSCA Conference Abstract (2000)

The researchers compared the effects of a weight training program on 5RM strength and arm circumference and divided the subjects into two groups.

Group One performed four compound upper body exercises.

Group Two used the same program but included bicep curls and triceps extensions.

The results showed that both groups significantly increased strength and arm size. However, the addition of direct arm training to group two produced no additional effect on strength or arm circumference after 10 weeks of training.

The additional localized training did not result in anything that the bigger compound exercises didn’t provide.

Let me present a hypothetical example:

Twin brothers eating the same diet and working at the same job. Three times a week for the next 52 weeks: Both brothers undertake a progressive resistance training program – each adding weight, sets or reps in a logical manner over the whole year.

One difference: The first brother does deadlifts only. The second brother does arm curls only.

After a year, who do you think will be bigger overall? Including bigger arms? Obviously, it will be the first brother who put more overall stress and load through his system. Even though he didn’t bend his elbow at all.

Charles Poliquin is fond of quoting that in order to gain an inch on your arm, you’d have to gain 15lbs of muscle mass. If that’s true, it will happen a lot sooner with an exercise like the deadlift than it will with the dumbbell curl.

Bottom line is that muscle growth is a systemic issue not a localized one. If I put a stress on the forearm only it would grow, of course, but there would be a limit to that as the systemic load is small. But if you performed deadlifts, the systemic load would be so big that everything would grow.

And when we think about anabolics or anything that can enhance muscle growth, they are injected or consumed into the system. You don’t inject steroids in equal amounts into every muscle group. You don’t rub Surge or another post-workout recovery drink on your arms. Increased protein synthesis is a systemic phenomenon.

Therefore why not develop training strategies that target the entire system at once if fat loss or hypertrophy is what we want?

Meal Frequency: Eat 4-6 Meals Per Day!

“The best food and olive oil are stored up in the houses of wise people. But a foolish man eats up everything he has.”
- Proverbs 21:20

I’m sure you’ve heard that you should eat 4-6 meals per day when embarking on a fat loss program or health and fitness routine.

The reason it’s important to eat 4-6 small meals per day is to help keep your metabolism elevated and to provide the body a steady stream of nutrients, including amino acids from protein-containing foods.

Research proves that small, frequent meals are better than two or three larger meals. Here are a few studies that Alwyn Cosgrove recently posted on his blog.

(1) A study from 2003:

Louis-Sylvestre et al.

Highlighting the positive impact of increasing feeding frequency on metabolism and weight management.

Forum Nutr. 2003;56:126-8. Review

This one showed that adults who were accustomed to eating 4 meals a day gained bodyfat and weight when switched to 3 meals a day (despite calories remaining the same). There are several other studies that show the same thing.

A 2006 study from the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition showed that eating 6 times per day was associated with eating fewer calories per day, lowering cholesterol levels and lowering post-meal insulin levels.

Conclusion: It seems that meal frequency is an important tool.

(2) A study from 1957:

Kekwick and Pawan

Metabolic study in human obesity with isocaloric diets high in fat, protein or carbohydrate.

Metabolism. 1957 Sep;6(5):447-60

This study compared THREE hypocaloric diets:

1000 cals at 90% fat: subjects lost 0.9lbs per day

1000 cals at 90% protein: lost 0.6lbs per day

1000 cals – 90% carbs – actually gained slightly (not really significant though).

Conclusion: It’s not just about the calories! There does seem to be an advantage to adjusting the macronutrients.

(3) And finally one more from 2003:

Greene, P., Willett, W., Devecis, J., et al.,

Pilot 12-Week Feeding Weight-Loss Comparison: Low-Fat vs Low-Carbohydrate (Ketogenic) Diets,” Abstract Presented at The North American Association for the Study of Obesity Annual Meeting 2003

Obesity Research, 11S, 2003, page 95OR.

Three groups on different diets for 12 weeks:

Low fat/low cal (1800 cals per day) diet: Lost on average 17 lbs

Low carb/higher cal (+300) group: Lost on average 20 lbs.

But when they combined low carbs AND low calories (1800 again) – that group lost 23lbs.

Conclusion: It might not be just about the calories – but calories STILL count!

So we see that increased meal frequency and the amount and types of calories consumed do indeed affect fat loss.

The easiest way to begin eating more frequent, small meals is to make sure you eat breakfast, lunch and dinner and add two small snacks per day. It can look like this:

8am – Breakfast

11am – Snack (apple and 2 tbsp natural peanut butter)

1pm – Lunch

4pm – Snack (cottage cheese and fruit)

5-7pm – Workout (be sure to have a protein shake or at least some chocolate milk after your workout)

6-8pm – Dinner

For ideas on other snacks and meals, feel free to contact me!

Book Recommendation: Boundaries

“Get all the advice and instruction you can, so you will be wise the rest of your life.” – Proverbs 19:20

Here’s another good book recommendation: Boundaries by Dr. Henry Cloud and Dr. John Townsend.

In order to call themselves good Christians, many people have drawn overly flexible boundaries (unwilling to say no, always accommodating others’ needs) or overly rigid boundaries (to the point of being righteous and judgmental). Psychologists and inspirational speakers Cloud and Townsend show readers how to set reasonable boundaries in order to follow the true path of Christianity.

Having clear boundaries is essential to a healthy, balanced lifestyle. A boundary is a personal property line that marks those things for which we are responsible. In other words, boundaries define who we are and who we are not. Boundaries impact all areas of our lives: Physical boundaries help us determine who may touch us, mental boundaries give us the freedom to have our own thoughts, emotional boundaries help us to deal with our own emotions and spiritual boundaries help us to distinguish God’s will from our own.

This book uses Christian-based teaching to show you how to set proper boundaries with yourself and others in your life. I highly recommend this book if you are someone who “gives in” to others too much or has too many “walls” preventing proper boundaries with others.

How To Perform Interval Training

“Intelligent people are always ready to learn. Their ears are open for knowledge.” – Proverbs 18:15

There are a number of ways to perform interval training. If interval training is new to you, or if you would like to incorporate it into your weekly training plan, I’ve listed some suggested ways to progress along with the most effective exercises to use.

Weeks 1-4:

Warm-up for 3-5 minutes (I use a circuit of bodyweight exercises. You can also perform a fast walk, light jog, jump rope, jumping jacks or other type of exercise.)

Beginners: Perform 3-4 rounds (1:2 ratio = 60sec “hard” interval and 120sec active rest/light activity)

Intermediate/Advanced: Perform 6-8 rounds (1:2 ratio = 60sec “hard” interval and 120sec active rest/light activity)

Cool down for 3-5 minutes (I use a circuit of bodyweight exercises. You can also perform a fast walk, light jog, jump rope, jumping jacks or other type of exercise.)

Weeks 5-8:

Warm-up for 3-5 minutes (I use a circuit of bodyweight exercises. You can also perform a fast walk, light jog, jump rope, jumping jacks or other type of exercise.)

Beginners: Perform 4-6 rounds (1:2 ratio)

Intermediate/Advanced: Perform 8-10 rounds (1:1.5 ratio = 60sec “hard” interval and 90sec active rest/light activity)

Cool down for 3-5 minutes (I use a circuit of bodyweight exercises. You can also perform a fast walk, light jog, jump rope, jumping jacks or other type of exercise.)

Weeks 9-12:

Warm-up for 3-5 minutes (I use a circuit of bodyweight exercises. You can also perform a fast walk, light jog, jump rope, jumping jacks or other type of exercise.)

Beginners: Perform 6-8 intervals (1:2 ratio)

Intermediate/Advanced: Perform 10-12 rounds (1:1 ratio = 60sec “hard” interval and 60sec active rest/light activity)

Cool down for 3-5 minutes (I use a circuit of bodyweight exercises. You can also perform a fast walk, light jog, jump rope, jumping jacks or other type of exercise.)

Frequency: Start out with 2-3 intervals per week for the first 8 weeks and increase to 3-4 interval sessions per week during the last four weeks (if fat loss is your main goal).

Use a variety of interval methods to prevent boredom, overuse injuries or adapting to the exercises.

The best methods for interval training include (in order of most effective to least effective):

Hill sprints
Sprinting outside
Treadmill sprints
Strongman type exercises/medleys (car pushing, sled drags, clean and presses, farmer’s walks, etc.)
Bodyweight or Kettlebell circuits (burpees, jump squats, pushups, swings, snatches, etc.)
Hybrid and weighted exercises (thrusters = front squat/push press, front squats, sandbag clean and presses, etc.)
Bike sprints
Rope Jumping
Elliptical

Remember that a “hard” interval means an exertion level of 8 or 9 out of a possible 10 (the hardest you could possibly go). Your active rest/light activity should be at a level of 4-5 out of 10. Your cool down should be at a level 3.

For a beginner, a “hard” interval at level 8 or 9 could be a fast walk or light jog. For someone who is an intermediate or advanced, it could mean sprinting 400 meters while wearing a weighted Xvest! You have to adjust intervals to your level of conditioning and increase/improve over time.

As mentioned many times before, the first and most important step to achieving your fat loss, health and fitness goals is your diet. Read my previous blog posts for some good tips and information.

Good luck!

Fat Loss Training – Articles and Program

“Joyful is the person who finds wisdom, the one who gains understanding.” – Proverbs 3:13

Below are a few good articles on fat loss by Alwyn Cosgrove. One explains the Hierarchy of Fat Loss and the other is an actual training program that will help melt the fat off your body in no time.

I do recommend reading both of these articles to gain a better understanding of how to lose fat in the most effective way possible while also increasing your strength and conditioning levels. Some of what you read may be familiar to you as many of my previous blogs have touched on these recommendations and studies.

WARNING: There may be some offensive language used in these articles and on this site.

The Hierarchy of Fat Loss

Real Fast Fat Loss

A quick note: The Real Fast Fat Loss training program is not for beginners. It is better for someone who has been weight training for about a year and has a basic understanding of proper form and experience lifting free weights.

If you can commit yourself to working hard and following the training plan as written, you’ll be on your way to a leaner and more fit body in no time.

Remember, simple, hard work is all you need!

Simple. But not easy.

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