Uploaded by fatburningman on Dec 10, 2011
Is exercise making you fat? Can you get ripped in minutes of exercise a week? Abel James from FatBurningMan.com explains the strange answer. Subscribe and get more cool free stuff at http://FatBurningMan.com
The Secret to Getting Ripped with Just Minutes of Exercise A Week
Yes, despite what conventional wisdom tells you, it is possible to get ripped with just minutes of exercise a week.
Why Grinding on a Treadmill Does NOT Burn Off Body Fat
Many people exercise constantly, experience cravings as a result, eat a ton, and never lose weight.
"Burning off" calories through low-intensity cardio is not the best way to burn fat because the actual caloric burn of aerobic exercise is minimal.
To put it into perspective, an hour on the treadmill burns off approximately one Starbucks muffin.
Why You Can't Get Ripped While Training For A Marathon
When it comes to getting lean and fit, your body responds to quality over quantity. Overtraining reduces your body's ability to burn fat and catabolizes muscle. This applies to both frequency and duration of exercise. Growth hormone and testosterone begin to decrease and muscle wasting increases after just 60 minutes of training.
Effective exercise does not mean subjecting your body to punishment. Sure, with enormous amounts of volume and intensity you could burn off a fair amount of calories through grit and sheer force of will. If your only goal is to lose weight (and aren't worried about sacrificing muscle) you could potentially eat crappy food and run a half marathon every day. I did once, and I became skinny (and meek -- see below)... But it's not particularly good for you, sustainable, or necessary.
Low-Intensity Vs. High Intensity Exercise in Pictures
In one of my many experiments guinea-pigging on myself, I wanted to see how my body responded to different levels and types of training. After finishing in the top 3% of runners in my second marathon in 2 months, I decided to switch to shorter distances and prioritize sprints (and finished in the top 4% of the 10k a few weeks later). I assumed that since I was exercising more (running 50 miles a week versus less than 10) with a very solid finish time, my body would be optimized when I was in tip-top marathon shape.
The results are far more interesting.
Not only did my muscles get bigger and more defined after replacing long runs with high intensity exercise, but my body also looked and felt much healthier. I reduced bodyfat and increased lean muscle by 10 pounds. The pictures don't show the extent to which my body regained healthy color and a more masculine shape. Even my face changed... from being Sam-the-Eagle-from-Sesame-Street-skinny to a healthy "normal." All from exercising less.
So What Happened Here?
Have you ever noticed that endurance athletes are rail-thin, pale, and look a little unhealthy? But what about athletes that are required to perform short bursts of maximum output, like sprinters? They are jacked!
This is what happens when you run too much: your body does not know you are running a marathon or have just been run over by a truck. Your body simply knows it is experiencing significant trauma. So your hormones go wacky, your fight/flight response is heightened, and your body pumps you full of stress hormones. For long-term training, fat loss, and health, this is all bad news.
Because it's always trying to recover from what you just did to it and protecting itself from whatever might happen next, your befuddled body never has a chance to heal. As a result, your body gleefully eats away at your muscle.
While endurance training sends a signal to become more energy efficient and use more fat as fuel, high intensity training sends the muscles an adaptive signal to become bigger and stronger and more efficient using glucose for fuel. With high amounts of endurance training you are at a higher risk of fat storage due to starvation response and associated metabolic slowdown when not replenishing enough calories after a long run (not to mention fat gain after overdoing it with post-exercise binges -- try to not eat an entire pie after a marathon -- I dare you).
If you want to build muscle and get huge results in the shortest amount of time, don't run marathons. Run sprints.
How to Build Muscle Instead of Burn It
When I went from exercising many hours a week to just minutes, I got ripped. But How?
Exercise is only beneficial up to a point, after which you start wasting muscle instead of building it, retaining fat instead of burning it, and increasing the release of stress hormones that throw your metabolism out of whack.
The truth is that you don't need to grind it out on the Stairmaster or powerlift all day to achieve spectacular results. Simply following the right diet will achieve 80% of your results ! But HOW you spend that 20% that makes up your training can be the difference between a six-pack and a spare tire.
http://FatBurningMan.com
The Secret to Getting Ripped with Just Minutes of Exercise A Week
Yes, despite what conventional wisdom tells you, it is possible to get ripped with just minutes of exercise a week.
Why Grinding on a Treadmill Does NOT Burn Off Body Fat
Many people exercise constantly, experience cravings as a result, eat a ton, and never lose weight.
"Burning off" calories through low-intensity cardio is not the best way to burn fat because the actual caloric burn of aerobic exercise is minimal.
To put it into perspective, an hour on the treadmill burns off approximately one Starbucks muffin.
Why You Can't Get Ripped While Training For A Marathon
When it comes to getting lean and fit, your body responds to quality over quantity. Overtraining reduces your body's ability to burn fat and catabolizes muscle. This applies to both frequency and duration of exercise. Growth hormone and testosterone begin to decrease and muscle wasting increases after just 60 minutes of training.
Effective exercise does not mean subjecting your body to punishment. Sure, with enormous amounts of volume and intensity you could burn off a fair amount of calories through grit and sheer force of will. If your only goal is to lose weight (and aren't worried about sacrificing muscle) you could potentially eat crappy food and run a half marathon every day. I did once, and I became skinny (and meek -- see below)... But it's not particularly good for you, sustainable, or necessary.
Low-Intensity Vs. High Intensity Exercise in Pictures
In one of my many experiments guinea-pigging on myself, I wanted to see how my body responded to different levels and types of training. After finishing in the top 3% of runners in my second marathon in 2 months, I decided to switch to shorter distances and prioritize sprints (and finished in the top 4% of the 10k a few weeks later). I assumed that since I was exercising more (running 50 miles a week versus less than 10) with a very solid finish time, my body would be optimized when I was in tip-top marathon shape.
The results are far more interesting.
Not only did my muscles get bigger and more defined after replacing long runs with high intensity exercise, but my body also looked and felt much healthier. I reduced bodyfat and increased lean muscle by 10 pounds. The pictures don't show the extent to which my body regained healthy color and a more masculine shape. Even my face changed... from being Sam-the-Eagle-from-Sesame-Street-skinny to a healthy "normal." All from exercising less.
So What Happened Here?
Have you ever noticed that endurance athletes are rail-thin, pale, and look a little unhealthy? But what about athletes that are required to perform short bursts of maximum output, like sprinters? They are jacked!
This is what happens when you run too much: your body does not know you are running a marathon or have just been run over by a truck. Your body simply knows it is experiencing significant trauma. So your hormones go wacky, your fight/flight response is heightened, and your body pumps you full of stress hormones. For long-term training, fat loss, and health, this is all bad news.
Because it's always trying to recover from what you just did to it and protecting itself from whatever might happen next, your befuddled body never has a chance to heal. As a result, your body gleefully eats away at your muscle.
While endurance training sends a signal to become more energy efficient and use more fat as fuel, high intensity training sends the muscles an adaptive signal to become bigger and stronger and more efficient using glucose for fuel. With high amounts of endurance training you are at a higher risk of fat storage due to starvation response and associated metabolic slowdown when not replenishing enough calories after a long run (not to mention fat gain after overdoing it with post-exercise binges -- try to not eat an entire pie after a marathon -- I dare you).
If you want to build muscle and get huge results in the shortest amount of time, don't run marathons. Run sprints.
How to Build Muscle Instead of Burn It
When I went from exercising many hours a week to just minutes, I got ripped. But How?
Exercise is only beneficial up to a point, after which you start wasting muscle instead of building it, retaining fat instead of burning it, and increasing the release of stress hormones that throw your metabolism out of whack.
The truth is that you don't need to grind it out on the Stairmaster or powerlift all day to achieve spectacular results. Simply following the right diet will achieve 80% of your results ! But HOW you spend that 20% that makes up your training can be the difference between a six-pack and a spare tire.
http://FatBurningMan.com