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Cheat to Get Ripped

Steve Holman's abs - Cheat to Get Ripped

Q: I’m so ready to be ripped. I got your X-treme Lean e-book and am on the diet. Already dropped five pounds of fat in two weeks just by cleaning up and using your tips. My question is about the cheat day every week that you say is mandatory. Can I eat junk food on my cheat day, or do I just increase my calories with good carbs? I crave pancakes, so is that okay? I want to see my abs as quickly as possible.

A: Mmm, pancakes! Before we answer your question about junk food and how to cheat to get ripped, let us explain our reasons for a mandatory cheat day every week… [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: abs, appetite, belly fat burn, breakfast, carbs, cardio, cheat day, cheat to get ripped, cheating, diet, ectomorph, fat burning, fat loss, fat storage, fiber, glucose, hormones, insulin, junk food, leptin, mesomorph, metabolism, ripped, starvation, weight loss, x-treme lean

More Key Fat-to-Muscle Tips

Jonathan on stationary bike - More Key Fat-to-Muscle Tips

Q: In The Ultimate Fat-to-Muscle Workout routines, you have short cardio sessions as optional after the workouts. Can I do the quick cardio before my weight-training workout to warm up instead of after?

A: You must’ve jumped right to the workouts without reading the text. No problem. We realize lots of trainees do that because they’re anxious to get started; however, there are important points in the text that can help you understand and get the best results from the workouts. The optional postworkout cardio session is a good example… [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: blood ph, blood pressure, blood sugar, cardio, Charles Poliquin, fat burner, fat loss, fat-to-muscle, fat-to-muscle tips, GH, GH release, growth hormone, growth hormone release, journal of applied physiology, lactic acid, microtrauma, muscle microtrauma, post-workout, pre-workout, weight loss

Arnold vs. Mentzer—No-Cardio Fat-to-Muscle Training

Mentzer side triceps - Arnold vs. Mentzer—No-Cardio Fat-to-Muscle Training

Q: First off, I just picked up The Ultimate Fat-to-Muscle Workout, and it’s fantastic. I learned so much reading it, which I did at one sitting. Great info and easy-to-understand-and-follow workout, just what I need to kick off a new training program. In the first chapter, you tell the story about Arnold getting ripped and vascular without cardio. Didn’t Mike Mentzer do the same thing but with a lot fewer sets? It’s interesting that their training styles were so different, yet they both got very lean without much, if any, cardio. Do you think a lot of it could be genetics, and us average Joes need more cardio?

A: While genetics could have something to do with it, it might not have as big an impact as you might think. As far as Arnold vs. Mentzer, The key to both of their [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: arnold, arnold schwarzenegger, arnold vs. mentzer, cardio, end-of-set negatives, fat burning, fat-to-muscle, forced reps, genetics, GH, growth hormone, heavy weights, high-intensity training, mentzer, microtrauma, mike mentzer, muscle damage, muscle-repair, negative-accentuated, negatives, no cardio, ripped, volume training

Lean-Machine Workouts: Turn Fat to Muscle 24/7

Steve Holman outside - Lean-Machine Workouts: Turn Fat to Muscle 24/7

One of the toughest parts of building your physique is staying stoked to hit the gym—and not just hit it, but power drive it over the wall every time you work out. That can be especially tough in the winter when you’re all covered up and not necessarily thinking of your lean-machine spring and summer body… [Read more…]

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: abs, body fat, bodyfat, burn fat, cardio, constant tension, endurance, fat burning, fat-to-muscle, get lean, get ripped, intensity tactics, intensity techniques, lean-machine, lean-machine workouts, mass building, micro tears, microtears, mitochondria, occlusion, p/rr/s, pain to gain, physique, POF, pop power pyramid, positions of flexion, Power, power-pyramid, power/rep range/shock, research, ripped to the bone, spring body, stay lean, summer body, tension time, weight-room trick, winter workouts, x-hybrid tactics

The Best Exercise for Fat Loss

Jonathan on stationary bike - The Best Exercise for Fat Loss

Q: I keep reading that interval cardio is better than steady-state aerobic exercise for fat loss. Should I be doing intervals instead of ending my workouts with 30 minutes of medium-intensity fast walking?

A: Interval cardio, which is going all out for 30 seconds alternated with slower, steady-state work for one minute, has been shown in research studies to burn more fat postexercise than medium-intensity steady-state work. The reason? Muscle damage. Running or pedaling a stationary bike all out for 30 seconds brings in the fast-twitch fibers, just like a weight workout, damaging them. The repair process is what boosts the metabolism and fat loss. It’s been shown that fat is used as an energy source during the muscle-repair process.

In our X-treme Lean e-book we use the example of running on a track for interval cardio—you sprint the straight-aways and walk the curves. As we explain in that e-book (the Q&A section on page 87-88), interval cardio is very similar to an intense leg workout with weights. Because of that, if you choose to use it, you should not use it the day before or after a heavy leg workout. You can, however, use it as one of your weekly leg workouts or in conjunction with a leg workout. For example, you could do your normal leg workout, but reduce the volume so you can end the session with interval work on a treadmill or stationary bike.

Jonathan on stationary bike - The Best Exercise for Fat Loss

The main point about interval cardio is that it can trigger overtraining if you simply use it in place of your steady-state cardio. It takes more thought to implement it correctly because you are damaging muscles—essentially adding another high-intensity workout to the mix.

If you have a lot of fat to lose, steady-state work at the end of most of your upper-body workouts is a good idea—that is the 30 minutes of medium-intensity walking you’re now doing. After weight training, all of the sugar is out of your bloodstream, so your body is primed to burn fat almost as soon as you hit the treadmill.

If you want to do interval cardio, use the above recommendations—as part of your leg workout or as a separate leg workout during the week. It will add up to a faster fat-to-muscle transition rather than no-gaining overtraining.

Till next time, train hard—and smart—for BIG results.

—Steve Holman and Jonathan Lawson
www.X-Rep.com

Filed Under: X Files Tagged With: aerobic exercise, cardio, fast-twitch, fat loss, interval cardio, metabolism, muscle damage, overtraining, running, stationary bike, steady-state cardio, walking, x-treme lean

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