When
the warm weather arrives, so do your insecurities about being seen with
your top off. Hence adverts that promise fat-burning potions, shakes
that build muscle overnight, and gym equipment salvaged from the Spanish
Inquisition that promises to turn beer belly to washboard in six easy
payments.
But
ignore these drastic interventions. If you’re no stranger to the gym,
then the best route to a better body is to fix the missteps that
undermine your sweat. So switch off the infomercials and start crafting
that beach physique.
You’re Disciplined In The Gym, But Not The Kitchen
Your
beer belly is, to grossly simplify human physiology, the result of some
basic maths – calories consumed minus calories expended. But the
left-side of that equation is punchier than the right. If you run a
marathon, you’ll torch around 2,500 calories, in four hours of
nipple-rubbing, toenail-losing torture. But all that work’s undone by
one pepperoni pizza, which clocks in at 2,570 kcals. In, let’s face it,
half an hour (or less).
Your
body has, over millennia, developed all manner of methods to keep you
alive. And when it senses an energy imbalance because you’ve suddenly
dusted off that gym membership, it tries to ramp up calories ‘in’ to
counter the sudden increase of calories ‘out’.
A
study from the University of Ottawa found that people ate more after
intense exercise than when they hadn’t worked out, in some cases
counteracting their sweat session entirely. Remember, your body is built
in the kitchen. Even if your brain thinks an hour of kettlebells buys a
large stuffed crust.
Your
fix is to eat slow-release carbs before you hit the gym, to give you
enough energy to work hard, then a high-protein snack – think tuna or
some chicken breast – once you’re out of the changing room, which
provides fuel to rebuild torn muscle and kills hunger pangs. And
remember – if you buckle to Just Eat, you’ve wasted an hour of agony.
Your Workout Routine Is Too Routine
Your
January gym membership came with a free PT session, which you accepted
gladly, but were too savvy to fork over £30 an hour to continue. I’ve
got the routine now, you thought. I’ll just do it on my own. But after
some quick results, your progress has flatlined.
Exercise
forces your body to adapt to something new. Practice makes perfect and,
if you do the same exercises every week, your body learns to do them
perfectly. A study from California State University found you need to
overload your muscles to see physical change – which means if you’re
doing the same regime as when you started, you’ll look the same as when
you started.
It
can be as simple as increasing the weight you use, the speed you run
at, or adding a new move into your routine. But every time you leave the
gym with something left in the tank, make sure your next visit is a
step up.
#TeamCardio V #TeamLifting
Most
people have a preference for either cardio or weight lifting. But a
better body comes from combining the best of each. The further you can
run, the quicker you recover between squat sets. And the stronger you
are, the more efficient your body becomes, meaning you can go further,
and faster, for longer.
You’ll burn your belly off faster too; according to a study in the Journal of Sports Science and Medicine,
people who pair aerobic and resistance training eat 517 fewer calories a
day than those who do only cardio. That’s nearly a whole Big Mac.
The
best way to combine both forms of exercise is through high intensity
interval training (HITT). HIIT cycles between short bursts at maximum
effort, then brief rest periods. Because you’re working for time, as
your fitness improves, so does your performance. Which means that each
session you run faster than before, or lift more weight than before, and
ensure that all-important overload.
Set
up a circuit that cycles between cardio and resistance moves – think
sprinting, deadlifts, step-ups, press-ups, squat jumps and shoulder
presses – and do 30 seconds at max effort, rest for 30, then move onto
the next exercise. Rotate through the entire circuit four times to burn
blubber and build muscle, plus ensure that your regime never gets a
chance to stagnate.
Burning The Candle, Not Your Love Handles
You might fancy just one more episode of The Walking Dead, but besides shuffling around like one of its extras the next day, late nights are bad news for your physique.
Not
getting enough sleep increases stress levels, spiking the levels of the
hunger hormone, ghrelin, and causing leptin – which makes you feel full
– to flatline. Your willpower also nosedives, according to a review in Frontiers In Human Neuroscience, which makes a McDonald’s breakfast that much more tempting than scrambled egg whites.
If
you’ve hit the gym, sleep is also vital for transforming that work into
results. Your body rebuilds when you’re out cold, so every hour shaved
off the eight it wants is less time to turn sweat into pecs. Shut the
laptop and get some shut-eye. You’ll sleep easier seeing your middle
firm up.
You’re Looking For A Quick Fix
The
biggest culprit that kills progress is expecting too much, too soon.
Don’t believe the shopping channel: no supplement will burn your beer
belly in weeks; no electric belt will build a six-pack without you
having to work. Results come to those who are persistent and consistent.
Punchy
expectations mean you’re doomed to disappointment. Exercise starts with
flexing your willpower, and if you’re not seeing the progress you want,
it becomes easier to skip an evening in the squat rack for a night in
the pub. This ‘false hope syndrome’ makes it harder to continue,
according to a study in American Psychology. Every failure makes it tougher to get back on the pommel horse.
The
key is to set achievable goals based on concrete targets. ‘Build a
better body by summer’ is nebulous and impossible to stick to. But ‘lose
4kg in a month’ is trackable and, when you hit, provides impetus to
keep going. Each win encourages you onto the next one, according to
research presented to the American College of Sports Medicine. So your summer physique is a handful of small steps away. Not one giant leap.
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