The Real Scoop on Cardio

March 18th, 2010
Posted by Michael Allen in Everything Cardio

You are committing a tragedy against time if you are wasting it with cardiovascular routines. There’s a good path to a healthy, lean body that doesn’t include cardio at all. Of course, you won’t be able to go as slow and easy. It’s a shame that so many people at the gym spend most of their time doing aerobic workouts since they’re not getting the results they want. The real way to get rid of all that blubber you’re dealing with is to workout in interval training.

Intervals are nothing less than intense periods of exercise alternating with easier recovery periods. There are plenty of research studies that have demonstrated that intervals are more effective at fat burning than any other approach to exercise.

The high intensity component of an interval is going to last between one and two minutes. Once you complete that part, you recover at an easier rate for about a minute and a half.

As an example, the intense period on the treadmill will be at a seven mile-per-hour rate and then you’d slow down to a three mile-an-hour walk to do the resting part of the interval.

Do this for about a third of an hour and you’re going to get better results over an hour of traditional cardio. The thing I want to emphasize is that you get better results in less time and that’s saying something, even though you do have to work harder.

This also is less repetition that you have to do so it’s a little bit easier on your joints.

So now you get to avoid those repetitive injuries that are so closely tied to cardio. Interval training cuts back on the amount of work and length of time of your workout to get more quality movements.

In addition, you get flexibility to choose from the kind of work you do for your intervals.

Cardio And Controlling Your Eating

March 13th, 2010
Posted by Michael Allen in Everything Cardio

You’d think that people doing cardio would lose fat. After all, exercise is exercise no matter how slow it is. So it sounds really nice, but the problem is that in practice it doesn’t help at all with losing fat. It’s amazing how that people who do cardiovascular exercises every day for hours every week and they still have stomach fat to spare. A Brit study took a sample of thirty five heavyweights who weren’t working out at all.

These people worked out for three months and did it five days weekly. With all that work, they averaged an eight pound loss.

Over the three months, one person lost thirty pounds and then another gained almost four. Those running the study distringuised the losers from the gainers saying that some got hungry and ate more to compensate for it, erasing all the gains from their exercise.

This amounted to an average of almost 300 calories on each day.

The message is that slow cardio has the effect of intensifying hunger. So you should avoid cardio if you can’t control your urge to eat.

This is one more good reason to pursue intervals as your choice method for buring fat and losing weight.

Don’t forget that intervals combined with strengthening routines are ideal for extreme fat loss and practical weight control. I’ve never heard of someone doing intervals developing that ravenous appetite. So, maybe you are impressed with the person who lost thirty pounds with cardio, so you want to do it yourself.

But if you want to try it you have to be committed to eat less and not more. You might need to put duct tape over your mouth.

Because the people who lose weight with cardio are the exceptions, not the rules.

If the truth is told, you’ll realize that more people gain weight on cardio rather than lose it.

The Real Truth About Interval Training And How It Can Help You

March 10th, 2010
Posted by Michael Allen in Everything Cardio

There are some pros who will try to tell you that one way of doing intervals is better than other ways: they aren’t being accurate. You see, all the studies have shown that interval style workouts are what do the best versus fat, but no one has really compared the different styles against each other. All this shows is that you can decide upon the kind of interval that suits you best. In essence, the principle of the interval is what provides for fat loss, not your preference for doing it.

If you’re running distances, intervals of two or more minutes are helpful in building performance, but for losing flab, you’ll do half minute intervals. You can use a cardio machine for intervals if you’d like: work intensely for half a minute and then recover for a minute at a slow rate.

Narrower interval periods would be hard to do on machinery because of the time it takes to adjust speed. So I am contradicting what some Internet gurus say when they tell you that one interval is better than another, but I have proven them wrong.

In fact I will change the types of intervals I’m doini from time to time.

If you’ve gotten used to doing the half-minute iterations over the past months, change to a longer one minute period to get results again. When you make this kind of change, your body will change in response.

I think that the exercise bike is a good choice to make for intervals so that you can change easily from intensity to recovery.

Of course, you should also stretch the tightest muscular groupings at the end of every workout. Make sure you workout with your intervals several times during a seven day period.

Periodically change the timing of your intensity and recovery periods to keep your body guessing.

In fact, you can change every day, rotating among different timing combinations.

Blast Fat With This 10 Step Sequence

March 9th, 2010
Posted by Michael Allen in Everything Cardio

One day last week I performed a complete anti-fat workout that used my entire body to exercise. After that I went back to work answering inquiries people have about losing body fat. I had even more questions about using intervals as part of a workout plan and using one’s own body mass to exercise. I get questions from males and females alike from all over the place.

One message that caught my eye was from a new member that had a motivating story to tell me. We were talking about how to exercise on days off and he told me about the 10 step sequence he did that day.

When he got to the gym he met up with a few people who were doing their typical cardio routine, but he talked them into following my all-inclusive workout. They found it to be a great experience that was so exciting, they want to make it a weekly event.

This kind of series is lots of fun, plus it’s very effective to burn fat right off your body.

I’m going to list this series for you and you need to do it instead of intervals if you want.

One: Warming up with bottom half drills. Try a squat or an extension

Two: A medium top half warming drill like a push-up or kneel push-up would do.

Three: One legged moves, such as a lunge or step up for a medium fit person.

Four: Do some harder varieties of push-ups here with a high number of repetitions.

Five: Squats with high repetitions. These are great for getting your body conditioned.

Six: Next do a high number of repetitions that do the whole body like climbing mountains.

Seven: Another 1-legged drill. Choose a different one from before, perhaps the dead lift on one leg.

Learn Ways To Get Incredible Shrinking Thighs

March 9th, 2010
Posted by Michael Allen in Everything Cardio

Cardio isn’t really an effective way to get rid of belly and thigh fat.You can try it, but it’s not going to get the results you want. The tratitional thought is to do crunching moves to improve your stomach and then get on the thigh machine to get the fat off your things. This is not the best approach. What you really need to do is intervals on a regular basis to get that flab burned off and to get your muscles toned. I’ve been getting my clients on interval plans for more than ten years, way before this style of training became popular.

Back then it was worse than it is today: people thought I was nuts for getting people off cardio and onto intervals. Even now people are still skeptical, but the difference is that they get great results.

I have a study from Australia where 3 sections of females were guided through a four month prgram for losing fat. There was one group used for reference. Another one performed interval training 3 days out of seven for 20 minutes.

Then the last group worked out with 3 periods of traditional cardiovascular drills of forty mins. each.

This study involved 45 females with weight conditions that averaged a BMI of 23.22.

At the end of the study they found that the women doing intervals had made significant headway against fat.

This was valid for all of them, although the heavier participants got the best results.

You might have guessed it: the women who worked with cardio didn’t accomplish anything at all. Intervals are accomplished in a number of ways: on machines inside, outdoors on your feet or on a bike.

What you do is alternate periods of high intensity with periods of low intensity, repeated for six cycles.

Which One Will Burn More Fat: Interval vs. Cardiovascular Training

March 5th, 2010
Posted by Michael Allen in Everything Cardio

Observation will tell you that cardiovascular training actually works for some people who want to lose wright. For the most part, these people are young, males, and have more than average amounts of time to spend exercising. Also true is that the people who benefit from cardio in this manner are in the minority. For example, there was a study that suggests to us that cardio makes women fatter than if they did nothing.

Sitll, those who are getting some results with cardio aren’t getting the best results they can get. And again, cardio doesn’t get the results people expect. Some of that’s due to the new study that shows how it boosts your appetite.

There’s no doubt that there is a minority that has burned pounds using cardio, but there is a much larger majority that has gained weight through cardio. There’s nothing so disappointing as working out all the time and getting bigger rather than smaller.

The study I’m referencing was done over an 8 week period and showed that one of the reasons cardio fails is because it boosts appetite: those involved ate more than ever.

If you think that’s helpful, than just stick with cardio. It sounds bad to me. How will you reach your goal this way? A similar study that has been released shows that the ones who do lose weight through cardio only lose about 6 lbs over the course of a whole year.

That’s after investing an hour each day 6 days every week: not a very good return on investment.

So, again, scientific researchers contradict cardio as a valid method of weight loss. There have also been two head-on comparisons of interval training against cardiovascular training for weight loss.

Consistently, those who work with interval training will lose more fat than anyone doing cardio.

Ditch Cardio for Rapid Fat Loss

March 3rd, 2010
Posted by Michael Allen in Everything Cardio

Many folks just don’t realize that cardio exercises are not required in order to lose fat. I know plenty of people who are bodybuilders and have lean bodies who never do any of the traditional cardio activities. You can be a champion without doing any cardio at all. You do resistance training and work on your nutrition plan. That long, slow cardio routine you do wastes a lot of time that you can use for other things.

You’ll see that if you do interval training, you’ll see the fat come off your body in a lot less time. The good news is that intervals work for novices and experts alike.

So if you’re a beginner, you can keep using the treadmill. You’ll just use it differently. You’ll get a period of hard work followed by a slower recovery period and then do more hard work in a cyclical manner.

So you can see that it’s easy to phase in the interval approach to your workout program.

You’ll find that you work hard for a period and then slow down to a rate that’s below traditional cardio. As you develop your training, you’ll morph into a seven mph rate alternating with a three mph walk. You have to have a good contrast in intensity between the burst and recovery for intervals to be effective.

An advanced workout will probably start with an intense ten mph run and then recover at a three mph walk. One more thing: you want to keep your interval sessions short.

You don’t need to be doing this for forty five minutes, else you’ll lose your form and your benefits. Just do about six intensity-recovery cycles and you’ll be done with an effective workout. Once you get in the habit of interval workouts, you’ll never want to go back to slow cardio.

Get Some Great Cardio Using Your Own Body Weight

February 27th, 2010
Posted by Michael Allen in Everything Cardio

People are always asking me ways to work out should they be stranded outside civilization somewhere. You know, without electricity, fitness clubs with televisions, mechanical devices, etc. what’s left to exercise with? This sounds like it’s somewhere in the jungle, but it can also be similar to the conditions at a hotel or at home. The good news is that you can build muscle and improve your body composition without any equipment.

All you need to do is put together a series of exercises that use your body’s weight. Here’s a good example of a good workout that you can build on for your own routine.

#1 – A rapid motion drill such as the jump-jack or the stationary run.

#2 – Squats with each hand in back of the neck to help your back’s higher section.

#3 – Simple push-ups done from a kneel or from a standard position.

#4 One Legged exercises like lunges.

#5 – Work for the back’s high section via the pull up, chin up, inverse row, or rowing with DBs or bands.

#6 – A different 1-leg routine like a splitting squat.

#7 – An abdominal drill that engages your whole physique. The climber is good for this.

#8 – A rapid motion exercises to end the session. Use burpees, jump-rope, sprint, etc.

Go through all 8 moves with a number of repetitions without resting as if it were one long sequence.

Then go through the whole circuit again two or three more times.

You want to make sure you get a good workout that stresses your body, but you don’t want to overdo it either. Assuming you make an honest effort at this sequence, someone who is new to fitness should limit themselves to one cycle until you get acclimated.

You won’t need to be stuck on an island to benefit from this kind of routine: you can do it right now.

Stop Buying Into Everyone’s Cardio Myths

February 26th, 2010
Posted by Michael Allen in Everything Cardio

Here’s the truth: cardio’s effective for fat-loss if the exercise is done with intensity. There were some studies done recently that spearated twenty seven overweight females into 3 categories: a control group, a Low Intensity Exercise (LIE) group that worked five days out of seven, and an High Intensity Exercise (HIE) group that worked 3 days out of seven. The intense work is done after the point where acids are accumulated in the bloodstream faster than they can be processed. At this level, there is a certain amount of discomfort that makes it difficult to deal with for more than half an hour.

The report that came out discussed how that the exertion period wasn’t measured by minutes, but by calories, so that both exercise groups burned the same amount. Each person worked off a caloric load of four hundred.

So the low intensity folks had to work a lot longer than the high intensity folks. In the end, the more intense group showed much better results.

In fact, the low intensity group was the same as the control group. They looked as if they did nothing.

This is why I recommend to people to avoid low intensity cardio. The ones who pushed real hard had lost stomach flab.

To review, let’s see what we know for a fact.

The harder you exert yourself, the quicker you’ll get a lean body. Pushing yourself hard is going to get rid of abdominal fat.

And, of course, you’re wasting your time doing slow cardiovascular workouts.

The obvious drawback is the time. Even with more intensity you have to spend at least half an hour just to use four hundred calories.

So if you want to get your body composed of less fat and more muscle, your best bet is with HIE, unless you’re willing to do intervals. Just get away from the cardio LIE: it’s going to nothing but frustrate you and make you lose time.

Eight Killer Moves to Lose Weight Fast

February 26th, 2010
Posted by Michael Allen in Everything Cardio

I’m going to list the top eight body mass moves that will make you muscular and lean when you string them together as a series. These are done without a gym membership and without any other equipment. Furthermore, working out this way is mobile. You can do it at home, in your yard, or in a park. So this can really make a difference to your freedom and you cash flow.

The way you can tell if your sequence is good or not is by seeing how many muscles are being engaged through it. A good aspect of this type of fat-burning routine is that you are making yourself more mobile.

This should improve your athleticism because it counters the over-use of muscles that you probably do every day. To have an effective series of exercises, you’re going to need pulls, pushes, squats, abs, and legs in a a half hour session.

Here I’m going to see what I can give you as an expert fat loss sequence that uses your body’s weight.

1. Jump Jacks – fifty repetitions.
2. Prison Squats, twenty repetitions.
3. Push-up +, fifteen times
4. Squatting Splits, Bulgaria style – twelve repetitions.
5. Inverse Body Rows, twenty repetitions.
6. Lunging Diagonally, twelve repetitions for left and right.
7. Climbing Mountains, fifteen for left and right.
8. Stationary Higher Knee, do twenty for left and twenty for right for 40 counts.

Some of you might be wondering if body weight routines can help build muscles: the answer is yes, unless you’re very advanced.

For the top half, doing dip and pull movements should be the first choice, with push ups coming in third. The bottom half is served well with one legged squatting and giant step-ups. You can change the speed and style of your work to make things harder.



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