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Information: Super Lean Secrets of Achieving Very Low Body Fat, Excerpt #1

February 11, 2008 By Michael Mahony, ISSA CPT Leave a Comment

Plateaus – Why Your Fat Loss Stops

Today I'm posting an excerpt from one of two recent teleseminars featuring fat loss excerpt Tom Venuto. Tom had them transcribed and turned into ebooks and MP3 audios that he's actually giving away for free as part of a 3 day special promotion ending February 14th. Go to www.Burnthefat.com for more information on that.

I wanted to share this excerpt from the seminar with you in particular (I got permission from Tom to reprint this). I think you’ll find it fascinating because it explains the real reasons why people hit fat loss plateaus. It happens especially when you get down to that “last 10 lbs” or when you drop a lot of weight, and you hit the “good” body fat category, but you’re an “overachiever” and you still want to get even leaner… all the way to “ripped”, or at least lean enough to see your abs.

Breaking through plateaus is a challenge, but there IS something you can do about them… read on and see what Tom says about it.

EXCERPT FROM THE “SUPER LEAN” SEMINAR

QUESTION: “Our first question says, “Tom, I know you often say that to get to the point to be able to see your abs, you need to get to single-digit body fat. What if I hit a plateau at about 12% body fat? What do I need to do to break the plateau and get my fat% down to single digits? Should I do more cardio, more weight-training, manipulate my diet somehow?”

ANSWER: “You could do any of the above. You could manipulate your calories, change type of cardio, add cardio duration or frequency. You could increase cardio intensity. You could change your weight-training. You shouldn’t limit yourself.

One of the problems I see with quite a few programs is that they’re too dogmatic. If you hit a plateau, the person with the most flexibility in their approach is the person who’s going to be most likely to get through that plateau.

The first thing though is to understand what a plateau really is. This is important, because if you were losing weight, but now you’re not, there’s only one thing that that could mean; you were in a calorie deficit but you’re no longer in a calorie deficit.

You may be wondering why that happens.

There are four primary reasons you hit a plateau:

The first reason you hit a plateau is because your metabolism decreases. While this does not completely stop fat loss, it does slow down fat loss. If you’ve been cutting calories, especially if you cut them severely, your body adapts by decreasing the metabolic rate. That’s sometimes known as the “starvation response” or “Adaptive thermogenesis.”

The second reason is that you need fewer calories after you lose weight. Calorie needs are directly tied into your body weight. One problem is that after people lose a lot of weight, they tend to keep eating the same way they were eating when they were heavier.

So they’re feeding a smaller person the way they were when they were a bigger person, but when you’re a smaller person, you don’t need as many calories, even at rest (your basal metabolic rate is lower).

A third reason is that when you move that smaller body, you’re not burning as many calories. If you strap on a weighted vest or heavy backpack and go out and hike up a hill, you can tell, obviously, that if you’re lugging around extra weight, you’re burning more calories. So now can you see why, after you lose weight, you burn fewer calories?

The fourth reason is that most people either cheat on their diets or they forget to record part of their food intake. This one requires a little bit of honesty with yourself. Even if you don’t do it intentionally and you don’t “cheat” per se, unconsciously, we’re all terrible at estimating how much food we eat.

Some studies have even showed underreporting calorie intake as much as 50%. In other words, you say, “I’m only eating 1,200 calories a day, but i’m stuck at a plateau!” but you’re really eating 1,800 calories a day which doesn’t give you much of a deficit.

All of these reasons for plateaus get amplified in the later stages of a diet, because biologically speaking, your body is doing everything it possibly can to get you to go off your diet and to get weight to stabilize.

After a long period of dieting and after a large weight loss, your body cranks up the appetite, stimulates cravings and tries to trick you into eating more.

The leaner you get, the longer youve been dieting and the more aggressively you cut calories, the more your body tends to defend its weight, and hold on to remaining body fat.

So it’s really common to hit that plateau when you’re dieted down and leaner. Usually it’s nowhere near as difficult for the overweight person to start losing weight as it is for the lean person to get even more lean. The last 10 lbs is usually a lot harder than the first 10.

If you think about it, it’s pretty unnatural from a biological perspective to walk around with really low single-digit body fat. It’s not beneficial from a survival-of-the-species point of view to have low body fat. So this metabolic adaptation becomes more pronounced the leaner you get.

you’re also at a higher risk of losing muscle, because extra muscle is not econmical when there’s a calorie shortage. Having extra muscle is like having an engine that’s bigger than you need – It’s like a gas guzzler.

The ultimate answer to why you plateau, why that last 10 pounds is so hard to lose and why it’s hard to break into those single digits is that you were in a calorie deficit but for all of the reasons mentioned above, you’re no longer in deficit.

The way to break the plateau then is to:

(1) re-stimulate metabolism and re-set fat-burning and starvation hormones, and

(2) re-establish the deficit.

(3) KEEP AFTER IT!

The question was, “How do I do that? More cardio, more weight training, manipulate my diet?”

You could do all of the above. Eating less or exercising more can both increase a deficit. But one thing you might want to do first, is give yourself a little break. Take your calories up to maintenance level, maybe for a week.

The idea there is not to try to accelerate fat loss, because what you’re actually doing is removing your calorie deficit for a short period of time. What you’re trying to do is facilitate the fat loss when you jump back into it.

It gives your body a physiological break from the stress of dieting; it resets some of those starvation hormones and stimulates your metabolism so when you go back to the calorie deficit, your body responds again.

You also get mental break from the diet as well, which makes it easier to stick with the program when you go back to it.

You could also use a calorie cycling approach, to help prevent yourself from hitting another plateau, and we already covered calorie and carb cycling in the last call.

I also recommend, because so many people underestimate how much they eat, don’t take any chances. Count your calories, or at least become really aware of the portion sizes and maybe even consider keeping a journal.

You’ve probably been told many times by a lot of different “experts” that you don’t have to count calories. But when you’re in a plateau, I’d recommend that you stop guessing and really get serious about what you’re taking in.

Then what you need to do is reestablish that calorie deficit using every tool at your disposal.

Use nutrition by pulling back your portion sizes. Or use cardio. And by increased cardio, I mean increasing energy expenditure. You could increase your frequency. You could increase your duration.

But increasing energy expenditure is not necessarily doing longer workouts, just burning more calories. You could also take the same amount of time that you’re spending right now and increase your intensity.

The whole idea is just burn more calories and stimulate metabolism, which gives you your deficit back again or you can pull back your food intake and give yourself a deficit again from the food side.

There’s more than one way to do it and I don’t think that you should lock yourself in. Use all of the variables and remember that there are TWO sides to the energy balance equation, not one.”

# # #

I Hope you enjoyed this excerpt, and mostly, I hope you put the information to good use!

This was just one short excerpt from almost two hours of audio in Tom's new “Super Lean” seminar. Tom is giving away the entire seminar for free with the purchase of his ebook Burn The Fat, Feed The Muscle, but only until February 13th.”

You can get more information on Tom's Burn The Fat program AND his new “Super Lean” seminar at: www.BurnTheFat.com

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Mission 2, Day 8: Perfecting the planning of meals

February 11, 2008 By Michael Mahony, ISSA CPT Leave a Comment

So after seeing my results for the week and analyzing what I did right and wrong (minutia, trust me), I started studying up on planning my meals.  What a ton of work!  No wonder I eat boring all the time.  It is so much work to get the perfect macronutrient ratios that it is just easier to get it right one time and then just repeat that daily.

I spent the better part of an hour on fitday.com entering and tweaking meals.  I managed to get the perfect high carb day with 3073 calories at 55/35/10 (remembering that a refeed day should be low in fat).  Now I need to work on the perfect low carb day(2500 calories at 40/40/20).  It just takes so much time to get it right that I am too burnt out now to proceed with the low carb day and since tomorrow is a high carb day, I'm set until Tuesday.  I will work on the low carb day tomorrow.

I know that this type of planning will go a long way towards me reaching my goals.  I guess this is why I liked the Metabolic Surge approach.  It made it very simple to “get it right” each day because I'd basically eat protein and vegetables on low carb days, all protein on the all protein days and then all fruit on the all fruit days.  Finally, I'd just add starchy carbs for the first 3 meals on the 40/40/20 days.  At the same time, the starvation mode issue bugged me alot.  Even though Nick says that I don't have to worry about that with Surge, I can't wrap mybrain around that concept.  Seems to me that if 20% deficit is 2500 calories and I'm only managing to hit 1900 calories on Surge, my calories were just way too low.  That risks going into starvation mode. 

I've read so much about how to up your metabolism.  Some will say that you need to first fix your metabolism through a conditioning phase.  What they say strikes a chord with me.  The concept is that you slowly increase your caloric intake up to your maintenance level.  When you hit maintenance, you rotate through 3 lower calorie days. Let's say my maintenance is 3000.  That would mean that a 20% reduction would be 2400 calories.  Thus, I would aim for 2400 calories on Day 1, 2600 calories on Day 2, 2800 calories on Day 3 and 3000 calories on Day 4.  After Day 4 you just repeat the cycle all over again.  It makes alot of sense to me because it totally avoids any one caloric deficit number being kept for too long. 

Planning is the only way to make this all happen the way it is supposed to happen. 

Accountability Log:

Week Begins 2/10/2008
  Sun Mon Tues Weds Thurs Fri Sat
Cycle spot LC HC LC LC LC HC LC
M1 * 5:30 a.m. 3:30 a.m. 3:30 a.m. 3:30 a.m. 3:30 a.m. 3:30 a.m. 5:30 a.m.
M2 * 8:30 a.m. 6:30 a.m. 6:30 a.m. 6:30 a.m. 6:30 a.m. 6:30 a.m. 8:30 a.m.
M3 * 11:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 11:30 a.m.
M4 * 2:30 p.m. 12:30 p.m. 12:30 p.m. 12:30 p.m. 12:30 p.m. 12:30 p.m. 2:30 p.m.
M5 * 5:30 p.m. 3:30 p.m. 3:30 p.m. 3:30 p.m. 3:30 p.m. 3:30 p.m. 5:30 p.m.
M6 * 7:30 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m.
Weights * Lift N/A Lift N/A Lift N/A N/A
Cardio * N/A AM N/A AM N/A AM AM
Abs * N/A FYA FYA N/A FYA FYA N/A
Water * 194 oz            
Post-workout nutrition * Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Pre-sleep nutrition * Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Vitamins/Supplements * Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Accountability * Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Cals 2450            
Cals within 5% (+/-) * Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Ratios (C/P/F) 38/42/20            
Total Completed 15            
Total Possible 15            
Mission 2 Total Complete 118            
Mission 2 Total Possible 120            
* = Counts towards total
Success!
Failed
Not Counted!

Nutrition Log:

  Mission 2:  Day 8 of 100    
  Meal/Training Plan:  Real-time accountability    
  Day 8: February 10, 2008    
5:30 a.m. Meal 1:  Protein shake and oatmeal and 3 glasses of water
5:30 a.m. Supplements:  Animal Pak, Glucosamine Chondroiten, calcium, chromium, glutamine, BCAAs
6:00 a.m. Workout: Lifting and 6 glasses of water
6:30 a.m. Supplements: Protein shake, BCAAs, glutamine
8:30 a.m. Meal 2:  Tuna (6 oz), 10 baby carrots, 2 slices of whole wheat bread and large salad and 3 glasses of water
11:30 a.m. Meal 3:  Chicken breast (1-1/2), 15 baby carrots, oatmeal and large salad and 3 glasses of water
2:30 p.m. Meal 4:  Chicken breast (1-1/2), 15 baby carrots and large salad and 3 glasses of water
5:30 p.m. Meal 5: Chicken breast (1-1/2), 15 baby carrots, large salad and 3 glasses of water
7:30 p.m. Meal 6:  Chicken sausage in marinara, large salad, 10 baby carrots and 3 glasses of water
8:30 p.m. Supplements:  Casein protein shake, glutamine, calcium and 3 glasses of water

Workout Log:

Sunday, 2/10/2008 A4
Exercise Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5 Set 6
BB Bent over row 170 x 4 170 x 5 170 x 6 170 x 6 170 x 7 170 x 8
BB Incline Bench Press 165 x 4 165 x 4 165 x 4 165 x 4 165 x 3 160 x 4
Lat pull down 160 x 4 180 x 4 180 x 5 180 x 5 180 x 5 180 x 5
Barbell Push Press 135 x 5 135 x 5 135 x 5 135 x 5 135 x 5 135 x 8
Swiss ball crunch 20 20 20      

My final conclusions regarding my day is that I had an awesome workout.  I pushed myself extra hard today and managed personal bests on all my exercises.  It was an incredible feeling today to put up the weight I was putting up.  The Barbell Push Press in particular made me feel like a strong man.  I've taken things to a new level today and plan on pushing even harder as the month continues.

Until tomorrow…GET BACK TO LIFTING!

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Mission 2, Day 8: Posting photos

February 10, 2008 By Michael Mahony, ISSA CPT Leave a Comment

All of these pictures are misnumbered because they say Day 7 when they are in fact from today, which makes them Day 8.  Sorry about the confusion.  These are here by popular demand.

Until later…GET BACK TO LIFTING!

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Chin up challenge: Week 7

February 10, 2008 By Michael Mahony, ISSA CPT Leave a Comment

The Challenge

Complete the most unassisted chin ups.

I challenge all of you who currently cannot complete a single unassisted chin up to see who can do the most unassisted chin ups by March 22, 2008.  It is important that you currently cannot complete a single unassisted chin up.

How do you get involved?

Leave a comment letting me know you want to be involved.  I will post an entry outlining my plan for how to accomplish some unassisted chin ups and in that entry will be the list of people interested in joining the challenge. 

What is involved?

Starting on Sunday, December 23, 2007 (80 days from the end of the challenge), I began a weekly post regarding the challenge.  Each of you should provide me (via email) your current progress regarding chin ups.  I will post this every Sunday for all the world to see.

Participants:

Tea [visit her blog]
Lynda [
visit her blog]
Suzette [
visit her blog]
Lilla [
visit her blog]
Jeff
Michael [You are here]

Progress:

Tea — ?? Need an update please
Lynda — ?? Need an update please
Suzette — Suzette is figuring out how to get the training in to do the chin ups. 
Lilla — ?? Need an update please
Jeff — Assisted Chin machine: 2x (part of back routine)
            Assisted Chins: 3×10,4×10
Michael — Completed 2 unassisted chin ups.  Training with 5 x 5 with 30 pounds assistance.

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Mission 2, Day 8: The stats are in!

February 10, 2008 By Michael Mahony, ISSA CPT Leave a Comment

The statistics are in for the start of Week 2.  I'm not happy, but I'm also not surprised at what has happened.  Read on.

Mission 2 – Stats
February 3, 2008 thru May 13, 2008
                         
                         
Date Weight BF % LBM Fat Lbs Chest L. Bi R. Bi Abs L. Thigh R. Thigh L. Calf R. Calf
3-Feb-08 223 13.00% 194.01 28.99 44.00 15.00 15.00 41.75 25.50 25.50 17.50 17.75
  0 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
10-Feb-08 223.5  13.60%  193.10  30.40  44.13  15.00  15.00  41.25  25.50  25.50  17.50  17.75
   0.5  0.60%  (0.91) 1.41  0.13   0.00  0.00  (0.50) 0.00  0.00  0.00   0.00
17-Feb-08                        
                         
24-Feb-08                        
                         
2-Mar-08                        
                         
9-Mar-08                        
                         
16-Mar-08                        
                         
23-Mar-08                        
                         
30-Mar-08                        
                         
6-Apr-08                        
                         
13-Apr-08                        
                         
20-Apr-08                        
                         
27-Apr-08                        
                         
4-May-08                        
                         
11-May-08                        
                         

I had a strong feeling that rotating in a higher calorie day was going to increase my weight and my fat percentage.  I'm concerned just a little, but I am not going to do anything different this week.  I am going to stay focused on the plan and if things don't change this next week, I will make some major adjustments to fix the potential issue that I am seeing.

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