Learn How To Measure Your Success plus Ten fat Mistakes Free Audio download

 

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Learn How To Measure Your Success!
Ten fat Mistakes F.ree Audio download
By
Jeremy Likeness


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There are many ways to measure your success with any fitness program. Many people become too focused on one or two "numbers" and can become frustrated when they don’t see positive results from their hard work. More often than not, they are simply looking in the wrong place! There are many factors that can illustrate your progress, and many ways to measure each factor. This article will discuss several ways to measure your success!

Pictures

A picture is worth 1,000 words. Many people do not realize that the mirror lies. Even after reaching ultra-low body fat and taking control of my life, I still see a different image in the mirror than what a picture can show me. We live with ourselves every day, and our self-perception is shaped by many factors, most of them psychological. So when you look at the mirror, you might not see the changes that you are looking for!

Taking a picture every few weeks can add a level of objectivity. When you place two pictures side by side, it’s hard to miss the changes that are taking place. You can see the fat melting off or the muscle slowly accumulating, and remain satisfied that you are maintaining the shape that you want. I invested in a digital camera a few months ago, and the investment has paid off in a big way.

I use my digital camera to chart my progress every week. When I would become frustrated because I felt I had gained maybe a little too much fat, the pictures were able to provide the proof I needed to know that I was headed the right direction.

Before and after pictures are very important in any transformation. Many people refuse to take "before" pictures because they are so out of shape and are either embarrassed or simply do not want to share these pictures with anyone else.

Keep in mind that the only person who has to see these pictures is you. You might regret not having a "memory" to refer back to once you reach your ultimate goals - I do not know many people who don’t keep their "before" picture close at hand to constantly remind themselves where they came from to help focus on where they’re going.

Calipers

When you are trying to lose fat or gain muscle without gaining substantial fat, there is no tool superior to a skinfold caliper. A skinfold caliper measures the thickness of a "pinch" of skin. Skin is very thin - only a fraction of an inch - so when you pinch a fold of skin, any thickness beyond that fraction of an inch is subcutaneous fat (fat stored beneath the skin). A skinfold caliper can measure this fat and help provide clues to your progress.

Notice that this section is not about body fat. I will address body fat calculations later. You do not have to perform a body fat calculation to measure your progress! I am a prime example. Once I lost a substantial amount of fat, I stopped storing fat in certain places such as my chest, triceps (back of my upper arm), thigh, and even my suprailiac, or above my hip ("love handles"). In fact, the main place I was keeping those last stubborn pounds of fat was the one where I least wanted it - my stomach!

By keeping track of my umbilicus skin fold (a vertical pinch of skin just one inch to the side of my belly button) I was able to track my progress. For example, with my most recent photo shoot, my skinfold at my umbilicus was 13mm several weeks out. I had to lower that measurement to around 8 - 9 mm in order to take my professional pictures.

Body Fat Calipers.

Instead of having to worry about my body fat, I could simply focus on that measurement. Now I know that to get back into "picture" shape, I simply need to drop enough fat to bring that skinfold measurement down to 8 - 9 millimeters.

Body Fat

Body fat is another great indication of progress. There are many methods of testing your body fat, and all have their pros and cons. Anyone who is extremely overweight - over 30% body fat - will most likely not get an accurate reading using most methods. There are methods such as water or hydrostatic weighing and the "Bod Pod" that try to assess body fat by analyzing volume. These methods are considered fairly accurate, but can be prone to their own errors.

Bioelectrical impedance, such as hand-held devices or body fat scales, measure body fat by passing a current through your body and are also great for watching trends in body fat. Skinfold calipers are considered the gold standard - inexpensive yet fairly precise - and become more accurate as you lower your body fat.

Keep in mind that, like all other measures of success, body fat should be used as a tool and nothing more. Many people become obsessed with a "number" for body fat, and there is no reason to! 8% body fat is not necessarily healthier than 12% - and for women, 8% might even be unhealthy! Instead, body fat can be used to gauge your progress.

If you are 12% body fat but feel like you are in the best shape of your life and love how you look, why worry about becoming any leaner? Conversely, what good is 8% body fat if your ultimate goal is to see your abs, and they still are not visible?

Many people focus on changes in "lean mass" with body fat. When you take your body fat percentage and multiply this by your weight, you compute pounds of fat.

What Are Your Goals?
>Lose Fat
>Build Muscle
>Improve Energy
>Other

This is how much fat you are carrying. When you subtract this from your total weight, you have a measurement called "lean mass". Lean mass is NOT just muscle tissue - it is everything but the fat in your body. While this includes muscle tissue, it also includes your skeletal structure, other tissues in your body, the contents of your stomach and even water.

Just because your lean mass increases by 5 pounds doesn’t mean that you gained 5 pounds of muscle tissue - you could just have easily accumulated that much water weight or have that much food in your digestive system! Conversely, it is rather common to lose a substantial amount of water weight when you begin a new nutrition and exercise regimen. A rapid loss of 5 - 10 pounds of weight is not necessarily muscle mass - it could easily be water being flushed from your system, and while this is a change in "lean mass" it is not a change in muscle!

Tape Measurements

So what is a good way to gauge muscle change? My favorite method is a combination of pictures and tape measurements. I know if my body fat stays about the same, but my arm measurements go up, I am probably gaining muscle mass there!

When you lose body fat, you typically lose it around your abdominal area. Taking an accurate tape measurement can help you gauge your progress. If this measurement is decreasing, you are losing fat! Many people use clothes (pants size or dress size) as their "ruler" for fat loss.

You can buy a pair of pants that are slightly too small for you, and try them on frequently. As nutrition expert Keith Klein recommends in an article of his, if you are on track, you will slowly begin to fit into those pants more comfortably!

One key ratio from your measurements will certainly help you gauge your progress, and this is the ratio of your biceps measurement to your waist measurement. I take them both flexed. Let’s say your flexed biceps is 16 inches and your waist measurement (with abs flexed) is 32 inches. This is a 2:1 ratio (2.0).

Tape Measuring Devices.

As long as this number stays the same or is going down, you should be gaining muscle and losing fat. For example, if you end up with 17-inch biceps and a 32- inch waist, the ratio drops to 32:17 or 1.88 from 2.0. If, on the other hand, your waist stayed the same but your flexed biceps diminished in size to 15 inches, the ratio would become 32:15 or 2.13. This would imply a loss of lean mass or increase in fat.

The Scale

Many people are told to avoid the scale. While this is good advice when beginning a program, it can be an invaluable tool for continued fitness.

Any person beginning a new exercise and nutrition regimen is likely to experience dramatic changes in scale weight. It is common to lose up to 10 pounds the first week as excess water is flushed from the system. People are often encouraged by this rapid loss of weight, then become frustrated as the rate of loss slows.

Furthermore, a beginner is likely to accumulate muscle mass at a much faster rate than someone who has been training for some time. This means that the scale weight will drop more slowly or not at all - if you lose 3 pounds of fat, then gain 3 pounds of muscle, the scale won’t move at all - but you are making progress!

There is a limit to how much muscle your body can gain in a short amount of time. It is more than likely that you will not gain more than 10 pounds of muscle even when beginning a 12-week transformation program. So if you have 20 - 30 or more pounds of fat to lose, it stands to reason that the scale weight must go down! The scale can help you "fail fast" by recognizing if you are not progressing and making adjustments up front.

Ten Fat Mistakes! -F.ree Audio
This audio is to help those who have a lot of fat to lose. It is not for the experienced bodybuilder, preparing for a competition, or even the fitness enthusiast struggling to drop those last 5 or 10 stubborn pounds.

Click-Here to download Ten Fat Mistakes Audio

Or copy and paste the following link into your browser…
http://tinyurl.com/46otnz

If you would like the e-book version of Ten fat Mistakes Click-Here.
Or copy and paste the following link into your browser…
http://tinyurl.com/5h2d9q

When I was over 245 pounds, I could easily drop 5 pounds of fat and not "see" the difference. I had to lose 65 pounds of fat to reach my "target" weight, and there was no way I would be gaining 65 pounds of muscle! So I knew that the scale had to go down, and I would adjust my portion sizes accordingly - if the scale stopped moving, or even headed in the wrong direction, I knew that the portion sizes had to be decreased to continue my progress.

When you are gaining muscle, the scale is an important measure as well. If you track your skinfolds and/or body fat, then the scale can tell you if you are accumulating lean mass.

By keeping skinfolds and body fat relatively constant, but gaining scale weight, you know that you are increasing lean mass. Some of this will be water weight, but in the long run, it is a great indication, along with the tape measure and photographs, of progress.

Strength

Keep a diary! Your progress is important. When I am discouraged because I’m stuck at a certain weight on my bench press, I can refer to a journal entry from 1 ? years ago when I could barely lift half the weight that I can now! Strength is important. While an increase in strength doesn’t directly correlate to an increase in muscle mass, it is a good indication that you are progressing.

I keep detailed journals of every workout. I make sure that in each workout, I lift at least one more repetition or a heavier weight than the previous one. This lets me know that I am progressing.

Strength is not just limited to the weight room. You have cardiovascular strength as well! If you could not even run a mile one year ago, and now run 3 miles with ease, your heart is certainly stronger! That is great progress - even if your physique is not where you want it to be, celebrate the fact that your health and fitness level have improved!

Health Factors

Many people become so focused on the outside that they forget what’s going on in the inside. In less than one year of exercising and eating clean foods, my resting heart rate dropped to 48 beats per minute from 60.

A woman I know with high blood pressure lowered that to a healthy, normal level. I have a good male friend who cut his cholesterol and triglycerides in half, while reversing a liver condition, after only half a year of exercise and proper nutrition!

Every healthy food you eat and every ounce of sweat you expend with exercise will take you a step closer to your peak physique. When you feel you are not progressing, remember that there are many tools you have to gauge your progress. Some changes happen on the outside, but the most important changes happen on the inside - a true transformation is inside-out! So the next time you become frustrated, take a deep breath then step back and measure your success!

Get Jeremy Likeness’s Lose fat Not Faith .

 

A little bit more about this book…

What if you could wave a magic wand and suddenly look into your mirror to find the lean, healthy body you’ve always dreamed of smiling back at you?

What if you could stop falling out of breath when you tie your shoes, and instead have the energy to keep pace with your own children? What if you had the confidence and self esteem to pursue your dreams? It’s not as easy as waving a wand, swallowing a magic pill, or snapping your fingers … but if you feel it is difficult or impossible, it’s time you experience the keys to releasing your fat and embracing your faith. It’s time you join those around the world who have overcome obstacles and triumphed through the power of International Health Coach Jeremy Likness’ expert advice contained within Lose Fat, Not Faith: A Transformation Guide.

This book answers questions like … how do you make a true commitment to yourself to change? What is the most important thing to have before you begin your journey? What is more important than reaching your destination? Why do you experience fear when you are preparing to step outside of your comfort zone, and how do you overcome it? What under-appreciated nutrient in your kitchen plays a major role in fat loss? Why do you need carbohydrates to lose fat? Why is most of the information you read about the glycemic index wrong? What in the world is glycemic load? Why is the insulin index perhaps more important than the glycemic index? (And why haven’t many people even heard of it before?) What is the satiety index and how is it important for you to lose weight? What are the most common mistakes people make when starting a fitness program? What is your most important muscle, other than your mind? What is the difference between high-intensity and low-intensity cardio?

What zone should you really train in? What steps can you take when starting a weight-lifting program to avoid injury and maximize your results? What are sets and reps, and how exactly should you choose them? What common mistakes do people make when attempting the "big three" (squat, dead-lift, and bench press)? Unlock the answers to these questions and many more when you Sincerely,
Lewis + Sarah
www.atozfitness.com

If you have any questions, you can contact me by clicking here.

© Enterprise AtoZfitness

 


If you liked this article, then checkout these by the same author...

The Bench Has Many Faces by lewis on March 27th, 2008
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Fast and slow-twitch muscles, what does it mean? by lewis on March 31st, 2008
.

Fast and slow-twitch muscles, what does it mean?

  AtoZfitness.com Article Blog Post

Fast and slow-twitch muscles, what does it mean?
March 31 2008
 

I’m here to share with you another excerpt from the Lose Fat, Not
Faith transformation kit: Lose Fat, Not FaithLose Fat, Not Faith

Have you heard about muscle fiber types? If you have, then you are familiar with the concept of "fast-twitch" and "slow-twitch" muscle fibers. If not, we will describe this briefly in the following excerpt.

Of course, knowing about muscle fibers is fine … but how does it apply to you? Knowing your muscle fiber type will help you design the right training program for YOUR body. Of course, the only way to truly know your muscle fiber types is to perform a biopsy. I’m assuming you don’t want to do this … well, this excerpt from the Training Encyclopedia that is included in the Lose Fat, Not Faith transformation kit explains just how to determine what fibers you have and how they can impact your training!

Fiber Distribution

Fiber distribution refers to the composition of your muscles. There
are various types of muscle fibers. Some fibers can handle high
repetitions of weight but are not equipped to deal with high
intensity (i.e. very heavy loads). Other muscle fibers can handle
heavy loads, but damage easily and cannot handle multiple
repetitions. By performing a very simple test, you can determine
what distribution your various muscles are and adjust your training
accordingly.

The test is straightforward. For the muscle you are targeting, and
we’ll use chest as an example, pick a standard exercise (in this
case, the bench press) and a weight that you can perform about 10
reps. This means that if you used that weight and pushed the
barbell until you couldn’t possibly lift it any more, you would
complete about 10 repetitions. This is known as your 10-rep max.

See our one-rep max calculator:

One-Rep Max Calculator

Now, simply perform 7 sets to failure. That’s it! Load the weight,
push out as many repetitions as you possibly could do, rest exactly
one minute, then repeat for a total of 7 repetitions.

Besides being a great workout in itself, this will tell you exactly
how to design your training program! Let’s explain. If you were to
perform the above test and your repetitions for each set looked
like this:

10, 10, 9, 9, 12, 11, 10

We would know you had a high endurance fiber distribution in your
chest. It may seem odd that you would suddenly have a higher rep set after fatiguing, but this can actually occur. It is a phenomenon
known as neuromuscular facilitation and happens as your central
nervous system adapts to the workout. For muscles that exhibit this
type of fatigue, you would want to perform higher repetitions - when
the typical recommendation is 12 reps, for example, you would
perform 15 - 20. When the typical recommendation is 4 reps, you
might perform 8 reps instead.

If your scores looked like this:

10, 8, 4, 2, 1, 1, 1

Then we would know this muscle fatigues quickly. We would assume it contains fast-twitch or "explosive" fiber. This muscle has more
potential to increase in size, but you must take care not to
annihilate it. For muscle groups that exhibit this type of fatigue,
we would work fewer repetitions. If the typical recommendation is 12
reps, you would perform only 8 - 10. If the recommendation were 4
reps, you would perform 2 - 3 reps instead.

This will be a continuum between fast and slow twitch, so there is
no exact method other than an actual biopsy of your muscle to
determine the structure. This type of test, however, can help you
get closer to a program that is right for you.

This is one of the many training gems that are contained in the
299-page Training Encyclopedia, that is included in your Lose Fat,
Not Faith transformation guide. To pick up your copy today, visit:

Lose Fat, Not Faith Transformation Kit

 

Sincerely,
Lewis + Sarah
www.atozfitness.com

PS - feel free to forward this email to anyone else you know who might enjoy this fitness article post .Click Here to forward this message to a friend

If you have any questions, you can contact me by clicking here.

© Enterprise AtoZfitness

 


If you liked this article, then checkout these by the same author...

The Bench Has Many Faces by lewis on March 27th, 2008
.

Learn How To Measure Your Success plus Ten fat Mistakes Free Audio download by lewis on May 9th, 2008
.

The Bench Has Many Faces

  AtoZfitness.com  - Article Blog Post
The Bench Has many Faces
By Jeremy Likeness
http://losefatnotfaith.atozfitness.com

March 27 2008
 

So many people think that there is only one way and only one way to bench press. The bench press has many faces, and we’re going to explore them today!

The bench press is probably one of the most well known resistance training exercises. While some people may scratch their heads when you ask them what a "skull crusher" or "front squat" is, they’re more than happy to demonstrate the motion of a bench press. Some people go so far as to say, "This is the proper way to bench press." What?! Are you kidding me? The bench press has many faces, and we’re going to explore them today!

The Different Ways To Bench

The notion that there is one way to perform a bench press is just not valid. If you are bench-pressing for a competition, then the "proper" form is dictated by the rules of that event. Power-lifting has a set of rules that describe exactly how a bench press should be performed, and in the context of that sport, there really is only one proper way to do it - the way that keeps you from being disqualified!

For general training, however, there are many variations that serve different purposes. So let’s get started. The traditional flat bench press involves lying on a flat bench and grasping the bar slightly outside of shoulder’s width. The bar is unracked, then lowered slowly to touch the chest. In a bench press competition, the bar may have to sit there for a specified period of time. The person benching then drives the bar upward and completes the repetition with arms perpendicular to the floor and locked out or just slightly bent.

For power-lifting, which requires moving a very heavy weight, the bench press is more than just a chest exercise. Any type of bench press movement will involve the shoulders and triceps to a certain extent. During a power-lifting repetition of the bench press, the lower body also comes into play. The legs are used to drive the torso into the bench for stability. The shoulders are retracted and the back is flexed to further keep the torso stabilized and also to provide more surface area against the bench to support the load. A slight arch in the back is not uncommon as the entire body is used to drive the bar upward.

Some people focus on the bench press as a chest exercise - the goal is to increase mass in the chest. They wish to minimize the involvement of the shoulder and triceps and even the lower body. For this variation, you can lift your legs off the ground and keep them bent or crossed in the air, to eliminate their involvement with the movement. Biomechanics tells us that the best grip to target the chest will place your wrists over your elbows when your upper arm is parallel to the floor. In other words, your arms should form a perfect right angle when your elbow is level with your shoulder.

 

By elevating the bench that you are pressing on, you shift emphasis to your shoulders. As the bench becomes more inclined, more tension is placed on the deltoids. While this means more shoulder involvement, it also means less chest involvement. Lowering the bench to a decline will shift tension lower on the chest. Keep in mind that, as a muscle, the chest cannot "selectively" contract the upper or lower portion - the entire muscle performs work against tension. The change in angle, however, can shift more tension overall to the chest, by reducing the tension that is handled by stabilizer muscles or other secondary movers. Since the chest is stronger than the shoulders, most people can press the heaviest weight in a decline. The load that can be handled decreases as the bench moves into a sharper incline.

Grip has an important function with respect to bench press. When you grasp the bar at exactly shoulder width or less, you are forcing most of the angle of motion to occur in the elbow joint rather than where your upper arm meets your body. This means that more tension is shifted to the triceps muscles. A close-gripped bench press is often considered a triceps exercise, even though the chest is still somewhat involved (any movement of the upper arm with respect to the torso will involve the chest).

Keep in mind that with an extremely narrow grip, it might be beneficial to rotate the arms so that the elbows stay close to the sides. This minimizes tension on the elbow joint - many people performing narrow grip bench presses find that they feel tremendous stress in their elbow joint. Keeping the elbows close and arms rotated slightly (the bar will be above the abdomen rather than the chest) will reduce some of this stress.

Grasping the bar with a reverse grip also changes the way that work is distributed during the movement. Many believe that a reverse grip bench press places more tension on the triceps, and can serve to build the "belly" of the triceps muscle. Since your arms move through the same range of motion as a traditional bench press, most of the same muscles are involved. The reversal of the grip, however, shifts the emphasis through phases of the lift, and therefore involves the triceps through a larger range of motion. Keep in mind that a reverse grip makes it extremely difficult to manage the bar when it is over your head. You should always have a spotter unrack the bar for you when performing this movement, or load the bar onto a rack and lift directly from the rack or pins.

Dumbbells vs. Barbells

Using a dumbbell rather than a barbell will require your body to stabilize the dumbbells. This will involve more muscle groups and therefore provides a different stimulus than a barbell bench press. It is always good to balance dumbbell movements with barbell movements.

The dumbbell movements help work stabilizer muscles and improve coordination, while allowing imbalances to be addressed - for example, if the left side of your chest is larger than the right side, you can perform one armed bench presses to work on correcting that imbalance.

Barbells eliminate the involvement of many stabilizer muscles and require less coordination, so a heavier load can be used to place more tension on the chest muscle. The dumbbell will also allow a fuller range of motion - but be warned, the lower you allow the dumbbell to travel, the more torque you place on your shoulder joint (stress) which can be dangerous, especially for someone with weak shoulders.

As you can see, there are many variations to the bench press. So which one is right? It depends on your goals! Incorporating a variety of movements is the best way to stimulate all muscle groups that are involved in the bench press. It also forces your central nervous system to constantly adapt to the new stimulus, which will help avoid plateaus. Alternating between dumbbell and barbell movements allows all aspects of the bench to be perfected.

 Remember, however, that in order to perform an exercise a specific way, you must practice it that way. If you are benching for a competition, you must include presses that follow the competition guidelines in order to maximize your ability to execute that variation of the movement.


click-here to download Jeremy Likeness’s 10 Fat Loss Mistakes  or copy and past this link into your browser. http://www.bestofallstars.com/thanksjl.php
 

Check out Jeremy Likeness’s Lose Fat, Not Faith web site and see his Amazing Fat Loss Success Story Video on the page.

Sincerely,,
Lewis and Sarah
www.atozfitness.com
www.trainwithsarah.com

PS - feel free to forward this email to anyone else you know who needs to finally get out of this "cardio fanatic" mentality that is getting everyone NOWHERE 

If you have any questions, you can contact me by clicking here.

© Enterprise AtoZfitness

 


If you liked this article, then checkout these by the same author...

Fast and slow-twitch muscles, what does it mean? by lewis on March 31st, 2008
.

Learn How To Measure Your Success plus Ten fat Mistakes Free Audio download by lewis on May 9th, 2008
.

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