Posts Tagged ‘burn belly fat’

Best Abs Workout to Burn Belly Fat

Thursday, December 9th, 2010

Mixed Equipment Workout

ADRENALINE ABS Workout- 20 minutes: Alternate between 10 seconds of maximum effort for a total body exercise and a core stability exercise with a short 5-second transition between exercises. Perform for 5 straight minutes followed by a 1-minute rest and transition. The workout ends with a surprise finisher consisting of 2-minutes of continuous work for a total body exercise.

Station#

Exercise Variation

Level I

Level II

Level III

1

1- TOTAL BODY:

KB 1-Arm Hang Clean Variation

DB 1-Arm Hang Clean

KB 1-Arm Assisted Hang Clean

KB 1-Arm Hang Clean

2- CORE STABILITY:

Side Pillar ABDuction Hold Variation

Short-Lever Side Pillar Hold

Long-Lever Side Pillar Hold

Side Pillar ABDuction Hold

2

1- TOTAL BODY:

Med Ball Slams Variation

Decrease Loading and/or Speed of Movement

Med Ball Slams

Increase Loading and/or Speed of Movement

2- CORE STABILITY:

Med Ball Mountain Climbers Variation

MB Push-up Hold

MB Slow Mountain Climber

MB Fast Mountain Climber

3

1- TOTAL BODY:

Band Split Stance Push Press Variation

Band Parallel Stance Push Press

Band Split Stance Push Press

Increase Resistance

2- CORE STABILITY:

Back Pillar Hold Variation

Bent-Knee Hip Extension Hold

4-Point Back Pillar on Hands

3-Point Back Pillar Hold on Hands

FINISHER

Running in Place Variation

Upper Body Running or Marching in Place

Jogging in Place

Running in Place

Battle Ropes Alternative Workout

ADRENALINE ABS Workout- 20 minutes: Alternate between 10 seconds of maximum effort for a total body exercise and a core stability exercise with a short 5-second transition between exercises. Perform for 5 straight minutes followed by a 1-minute rest and transition. The workout ends with a surprise finisher consisting of 2-minutes of continuous work for a total body exercise.

Station#

Exercise Variation

Level I

Level II

Level III

1

1- TOTAL BODY:

Battle Ropes Up-Down Waves Variation

Decrease Speed of Movement and Size of Waves

Battle Ropes Up-Down Waves

Increase Speed of Movement and Size of Waves

2- CORE STABILITY:

Side Pillar ABDuction Hold Variation

Short-Lever Side Pillar Hold

Long-Lever Side Pillar Hold

Side Pillar ABDuction Hold

2

1- TOTAL BODY:

Battle Ropes Side to Side Waves Variation

Decrease Speed of Movement and Size of Waves

Battle Ropes Side to Side Waves

Increase Speed of Movement and Size of Waves

2- CORE STABILITY:

Mountain Climbers Variation

Push-up Hold

Slow Mountain Climber

Fast Mountain Climber

3

1- TOTAL BODY:

Battle Ropes Figure 8 Waves Variation

Decrease Speed of Movement and Size of Waves

Battle Ropes Figure 8 Waves

Increase Speed of Movement and Size of Waves

2- CORE STABILITY:

Back Pillar Hold Variation

Bent-Knee Hip Extension Hold

4-Point Back Pillar Hold on Hands

3-Point Back Pillar Hold on Hands

FINISHER

Partner “I Go, You Go” 20 Battle Ropes Alt Waves and T-Push-ups Superset

20 Battle Ropes Alt Waves/Push-up Hold

20 Battle Ropes Alt Waves/T-Push-up Hold

20 Battle Ropes Alt Waves/T-Push-up

Want more of this insane ADRENALINE ABS template?? Click the links below to check out audio and/or video samples to see which product is the right fit for you:

Bootcamp Automator- 1-Month of Done-for-You ADRENALINE ABS Group Ex Program Design

http://www.workoutmuse.com/music/adrenaline-abs-for-fitness-professionals

Workout Automator- 1-Month of Done-for-You ADRENALINE ABS Home/Travel Fitness Program Design

http://www.workoutmuse.com/music/adrenaline-abs-for-fitness-enthusiasts

Workout of the Month- Featured AA Workout with Workout Videos and Soundtracks

http://www.workoutmuse.com/music/workout-of-the-month-september-2010

Soundtrack of the Month- Featured AA Interval Workout Music Track

http://www.workoutmuse.com/music/soundtrack-of-the-month-september-2010

Crank it!
BJ

Complexes: The Simple Way to Burn Belly Fat

Tuesday, November 16th, 2010

I have always found that success leaves clues so I obsessively study the methods of the many great coaches and business minds out there- I find it fascinating

One thing that I keep seeing time and time again in my research is the KISS principle:

Keep It Stupid Simple
It love this concept and I firmly strive to apply it to everything I do, including the workouts I create.

Most people get too overwhelmed with how to lose weight or how to build a good workout that’s space and time-efficient.

After all, with all of the fads, gimmicks, and misinformation out there about fat loss it’s quite difficult to know what’s right and wrong and where to start.
And if you’re anything like me, you’re super busy and probably don’t have more than 30 minutes available to workout on a regular basis.

However, there is no simpler and brutally effectively way to burn belly fat, crank up metabolism, and tone and tighten your whole body then the training style referred to as “Complexes.”

Complexes allow you to get a maximum amount of work done in a very short period of time and in a very small amount of space making it the perfect fit for home/travel workouts.
Want to learn more?
Then keep reading ;)

Complexes Defined:

- Choose 2 or more exercises using the same implement or load and then perform them for either a certain number of reps or for a certain period of time

- The key to properly performing complexes is that each exercise is performed back-to-back without any rest between exercises. In other words, you should not put the implement or load down at any point until completing all exercises within a given complex

- Like anything in fitness, progressive overload is the key to building lean muscle, burning belly fat, and improving conditioning. Complex progression is accomplished in any of the following ways:

a.) Increasing the Number of Exercises within the Complex: Moving from a 2-exercise complex to a 4-exercise complex and then to a 6-exercise complex

b.) Increasing Intensity: Using heavier loads and/or more advanced exercise variations within each complex

c.) Increasing Density: Complete more reps with a given load within the same work period or complete the same reps or more with a given load while employing shorter rest and transition periods between complexes

Types of Complexes:

- There are 3 main types of complexes listed below in order of difficulty, from easiest to most difficult:
1.) Succession: This complex involves completing the prescribed reps or work period for each movement before moving to the next movement Below is a great example of 2 different 15-Second Succession Complexes that work your whole body at once:

Kettlebell/Dumbbell Complex

1- KB/DB 1-Arm Bent-Over Row (L) @ 15 s of work
2- KB/DB 1-Arm Bent-Over Row (R) @ 15 s of work
3- KB/DB 1-Arm High Pull (L) @ 15 s of work
4- KB/DB 1-Arm High Pull (R) @ 15 s of work
5- KB/DB 1-Arm Squat to Press (L) @ 15 s of work
6- KB/DB 1-Arm Squat to Press (R) @ 15 s of work

Rest for 60 seconds and repeat up to 8 times for 20 total minutes

Bodyweight Complex

1- Side Pillar Leg Swings Variation (L) @ 15 s of work
2- Side Pillar Leg Swings Variation (R) @ 15 s of work
3- Push-up Variation @ 15 s of work
4- Lunge Variation (L) @ 15 s of work
5- Lunge Variation (R) @ 15 s of work
6- Squat Variation @ 15 s of work
Rest for 60 seconds and repeat up to 8 times for 20 total minutes
2.) Sequence: This complex involves shifting from one movement directly into another until you complete the entire complex. It’s a bit more challenging both mentally and physically to switch between different movements after every single rep compared to succession complexes. Below is a great example of 2 different 3-Minute Sequence Complexes that work your whole body at once:
Kettlebell 3-Minute Sequence Complex: Perform 3 minutes of continuous work followed by 1 minute of rest for up to 5 total rounds

Beginner: KB 2-Arm High Pull, Catch Squat + Overhead Press
Intermediate: KB 1-Arm Clean, Reverse Lunge, Overhead Press (switch sides halfway)
Advanced: KB 1-Arm Clean, Forward Lunge, Overhead Press (switch sides halfway)

Dumbbell 3-Minute Sequence Complex: Perform 3 minutes of continuous work followed by 1 minute of rest for up to 5 total rounds
Beginner: DB Sumo Deadlift + Curl to Press
Intermediate: DB Burpee, Push-up Row, Curl to Press
Advanced: DB Burpee, Push-up Row (Integrate Push-up), Curl to Press, Overhead Lunge
3.) Combination: This complex involves joining several movements together to form one smooth movement with minimal to zero transition between movements. Combining high pulls and squat to presses is a great example of a 2 movement combination complex. This integration of multiple smaller movements into “one big movement” makes it the most “complex” of the complexes.

- Complexes can also be performed with any of the following tools: kettlebells, battle ropes, dumbbells, barbells, bodyweight, bands, suspension trainers, med balls, and cable systems

The Top 6 Ways to Build a Perfect Complex
1.) Choose the load for a given complex based on the load you can use for your weakest movement within the complex. In other words, if your weakest movement within a given complex is the overhead press, be sure to select the appropriate load for the prescribed rep total or work period for the overhead press and use that same load for all other movements. In general, select a load that you can successfully use for the more upper body-dominant movements as the lower body is much stronger.
2.) Place your weakest movements earlier on in the complex when you are most fresh. Examples include weak sides (weak arm, weak leg, weak rotation to one side), lagging muscle groups (glutes, upper back, hamstrings), and lagging movement patterns (hip-dominant and upper body pulling movements).
3.) Place higher skill movements that require lots of coordination and motor skill earlier on in the complex when you are most fresh. Examples include olympic lift variations like snatches, cleans, and jerks.
4.) Place fast, explosive, and power training movements earlier on in the complex when you are most fresh. Examples include ballistic kettlebell exercise variations and bodyweight plyometric exercise variations like squat jumps, plyo push-ups, and box jump.
5.) Ensure proper exercise flow by ordering the exercises in your complex to allow for smooth, seamless transitions. For example following KB Goblet Squats with KB 2-Arm Overhead Presses is ideal because the holding position at the top of each exercise is the same.

6.) The only limitations when performing complexes are skill set, pain tolerance, exercise recall, and fitness level. However, the exercise selection and ordering for complexes is unlimited!

It’s quite ironic that the simplest way to boost your fitness results is with something called complexes, isn’t it?

Ha ha!

Are you ready for the Complexes Challenge??

We shall see ;)

Crank it!
BJ
PS- Stay tuned for the official launch of the the 15-Second Succession Complexes Track and the 3-Minute Sequence Complexes Track from Bootcamp Automator November 2010 later in the week ;)

PPPS-I’ve been testing iWorkout Muse PRO for the iPhone and iPod Touch most of the day today. One of the many cool new features is the ability to build complexes mixed to your favorite music- pretty slick!!

PPPS- Invite Buddies. Get $25 Store Credit! For each buddy you invite to our website, Workout Muse will credit your account with $25 after your buddy’s first purchase has been processed.
Remember, marketing is a numbers game so invite as many buddies as you can and if they buy something you get $25 of store credit for their first purchase as a sincere thank you from WM for helping us spread the muse ;)

3 Killer Exercises to Burn Belly Fat this Halloween

Friday, October 22nd, 2010

You can approach Halloween one of two ways. The first option is to go nuts with all of the eats and treats. The second is to indulge in moderation and offset any extra caloric consumption with a seasonal pumpkin workout. I recommend the later… it’s a lot more figure-friendly!

Pumpkins can be used just like medicine balls for an unlimited number of exercise options. I like to take it one step further and use total body exercises that combine upper body, lower body, and core movements into one big bang for your buck exercise.

Here are my top three total body pumpkin exercises that guarantee to help you burn fat and build muscle in minimal time. I recommend performing at least one circuit of the following three pumpkin exercises, with little to no rest between movements, for every Halloween treat you eat:

1) Pumpkin Swings: Holding a pumpkin in your hands with your arms extended, stay on your heels and hinge back at your hips while bringing the pumpkin underneath your body with your eyes up and chest out. Then push your hips forward and swing the pumpkin up to chest level being sure to squeeze your glutes at the top of the movement. Increase the intensity by swinging the pumpkin overhead. Perform for 30 seconds.

2) Pumpkin Squat to Presses: Holding a pumpkin in your hands at chest level, push your hips back and squat down until your front thighs are parallel to the floor with your eyes up, your chest and knees out, and your weight on your heels. Then simultaneously stand up and press the pumpkin overhead. Increase the intensity by jumping up from the bottom of the squat position while simultaneously pressing the pumpkin overhead while airborne, then land softly and repeat for time. Perform for 30 seconds.

3) Pumpkin Mountain Climbers: Place a pumpkin on the floor. Place your hands on the pumpkin and assume a perfect push-up position with tight abs, tight glutes, and a straight line from the head through the heels. Now bring one knee to your chest while keeping your hips and shoulders square, then switch sides and repeat for time. Increase the intensity by adding speed of movement or by integrating a pumpkin push-up between each knee-in. Perform for 30 seconds.      

For the most complete pumpkin circuit featuring spook soundtracks to automate your Halloween fat-smashing, click the link below (or copy and paste the link into your browser):


http://www.workoutmuse.com/music/halloween-bootcamp-3.0

Half of all proceeds go to the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF)- thanks for your support!
Crank it!
BJ

PS- If you live in Milwaukee, WI, we’ll be holding his annual Freaky Fat Loss event on October 30th at 10 am at The Fitness Asylum in Bay View located at 2612 S. Greeley St. Ste. 220 Milwaukee, WI 53207. The event is open to the public, families are welcome, and tickets to the event cost $10 for adults and $5 for children. Participants must bring their own pumpkin to the workout. Pre-purchase is required due to space limitations. Tickets can be purchased at missionmetabolismbootcamp.com/halloween. For more info, please email missionmetabolismbootcamp@gmail.com or call (414) 455-4332.

45-15 Unilateral Circuit Training

Wednesday, October 20th, 2010

Not a day seems to go by that some new crazy abdominal exercise or gizmo hits the market promising us quick and easy results.

By now I hope you know that spot reduction doesn’t work and that you can crunch and sit-up until your spine snaps (and it probably will after too many reps) and you still won’t be happy with the way your abs look.

And I’m going to give you the benefit of the doubt that you know you just can’t put on some goofy waist belt that shoots electrical impulses and get a flatter, more toned tummy.

But how exactly do you get awesome abs?

Well, today I’m going to share the truth about abs and here the 2 reasons why most fall short:

Reason#1- You need to burn the belly fat that’s covering up those coveted abs

Reason#2- You need to do the right exercises that build flat, chiseled abs so they pop when you flaunt them

What if I told you the best way to get a more cut core was to perform all of your exercises one side at a time?

And how slick would it be if we could combine these core-intensive one-sided exercises into one monster belly fat-smashing, muscle-sculpting total body metabolic circuit to take your abs to the next level?

Want to learn more?

Then keep reading ;)


I. Bilateral Verus Unilatateral Exercises?

Bilateral exercises simultaneously use both limbs in unison to generate force or move a load. Classic examples include double-leg exercises like squats, deadlifts, and swings for the lower body and double-arm barbell exercises like presses and bent-over rows and bodyweight exercise like push-ups, rows, and pull-ups for the upper body.

Unilateral exercises involve each limb working independently of the other. This can be accomplished by either performing exercises one side at a time or by using training tools like dumbbells, kettlebells, and bands that allow you to independently push and pull your limbs at the same time or in an alternating fashion. Classic examples include lunging, 1-leg squat, and 1-leg hip-hinge variations for the lower body and 1-arm row, press, and curl variations for the upper body.


II. The Benefits of the Unilateral Training

One of the biggest reasons why most people hit strength plateaus on classic bilateral exercises like the bench press, squat, push-up, or pull-up is because of a strength and/or flexibility imbalance between limbs.

It is critical to understand that when it comes to performing any bilateral exercise, if one limb pushes or pulls harder than the other then the load will not move evenly.

Thus a weak and/or tight side becomes the limiting factor for your performance and needs to be fixed if you want to progress. You must strengthen your weaknesses to make big and sustainable gains.

For example, if you are struggling with your squat, incorporate a healthy dose of 1-leg squats to both boost single-leg strength and achieve balanced strength between limbs. This will improve your 2-leg squatting as a direct result.

And if you find yourself coming up uneven from the bottom on push-ups, the same thing can be achieved by working more 1-arm presses so you can strengthen the weak side and push back up with no problem.

Unilateral training allows you to assess and correct the weaknesses and imbalances that are holding you back from reaching your true athletic potential.

More specifically, when unilateral exercises are performed one limb at a time it will generate greater demands on your core muscles due to the imbalanced loading.

In fact, there’s great study called “Trunk Muscle Electromyographic Activity With Unstable and Unilateral Exercises” from the National Strength and Conditioning Association’s (NSCA) Journal of Strength & Conditioning Research that proved just that. Check out the abstract from the aforementioned study below for more info:

Abstract


The purpose of this cross-sectional study was to evaluate the effect of unstable and unilateral resistance exercises on trunk muscle activation. Eleven subjects (6 men and 5 women) between 20 and 45 years of age participated. Six trunk exercises, as well as unilateral and bilateral shoulder and chest presses against resistance, were performed on stable (bench) and unstable (Swiss ball) bases. Electromyo-graphic activity of the upper lumbar, lumbosacral erector spinae, and lower-abdominal muscles were monitored. Instability generated greater activation of the lower-abdominal stabilizer musculature (27.9%) with the trunk exercises and all trunk stabilizers (37.7-54.3%) with the chest press. There was no effect of instability on the shoulder press. Unilateral shoulder press produced greater activation of the back stabilizers, and unilateral chest press resulted in higher activation of all trunk stabilizers, when compared with bilateral presses. Regardless of stability, the superman exercise was the most effective trunk-stabilizer exercise for back-stabilizer activation, whereas the side bridge was the optimal exercise for lower-abdominal muscle activation. Thus, the most effective means for trunk strengthening should involve back or abdominal exercises with unstable bases. Furthermore, trunk strengthening can also occur when performing resistance exercises for the limbs, if the exercises are performed unilaterally.

(C) 2005 National Strength and Conditioning Association

III. Core-Intensive Unilateral Circuit Training

So now that we know that unilateral exercises are ideal for lighting up your core to build beautiful abs, how do we go about burning the belly fat covering them up?

The answer can be found in 3 words:

UNILATERAL CIRCUIT TRAINING

Circuit training consists of performing alternating sets of non-competitive exercises and thus allows for maximum intensity due to full recovery between movements. It is also by far the most time-efficient approach to melting off that chubby tummy.

I believe circuit training is the foundation of any solid fat-burning, muscle-building, and metabolism-boosting workout. Let’s take a look at two breakthrough scientific studies that support the fat-smashing, metabolism-cranking effects of circuit training:

Burn over 500 calories in 20 minutes: In a recent study by the University of Southern Maine, researchers discovered a more accurate method of estimating calorie burn from weight training than had been used previously. They discovered that a weight training circuit burned 71% more calories than previously thought. In fact, an eight minute circuit burned somewhere between 159 and 233 calories which breaks down to about 20-28 calories per minute!

Elevate metabolism for up to 38+ hours post-workout: In a study by the European Journal of Applied Physiology, researchers determined that a 31-minute circuit training protocol of three compound, multi-joint movements significantly elevated metabolism for 38 hours post-workout– at which point they decided to stop tracking. This metabolic afterburn was due to a couple of factors. The first is due to increased tissue turnover due to the need to build and repair muscle microtrauma after high-intensity training. The second is due to increased Excess Post-Exercise Oxygen Consumption (EPOC) due to the oxygen debt created by high-intensity anaerobic exercise.

And by building a total body circuit that burns belly fat while using core-intensive unilateral exercises that build rock-hard abs, we can achieve the best of both worlds!

IV. Putting It All Together- 45-15 Unilateral Circuit Training

Now that we know the method behind the madness, below is an outline of both the equipment and bodyweight versions of this incredible workout template:

Equipment-Based Metabolic Workout Routines

Workout C- 45-15 Unilateral Circuit Training: 20 Total Minutes. You will alternate between 45 seconds of work and 15 seconds of rest for all 5 unilateral exercises in the following circuit. Be sure to complete both the left AND right side before moving on the next exercise.

Exercise Variation

Level I

Level II

Level III

TRX Hip Hinge Variation L/R Side

TRX Hip Hinge

TRX Hip Hinge +

High Knee

TRX Contralateral Hip Hinge + High Knee

Battle Ropes Split Stance Waves Variation L/R Side

Battle Ropes Split Stance Waves

Battle Ropes Split Squat Hold Waves

Increase Speed of Movement and Size of Waves

Kettlebell 1-Arm High Pull, Clean, Snatch Sequence Complex Variation L/R Side

Progress from KB 1-Arm Sumo Deadlift to 1-Arm High Pull

KB1-Arm High Pull and 1-Arm Clean Sequence Complex

KB 1-Arm High Pull, Clean, Snatch Sequence Complex

1-Arm Band Squat to Row Variation

L/R Side

Decrease Resistance

1-Arm Band Squat to Row

Increase Resistance

1-Arm Suitcase Deadlift Variation

L/R Side

Decrease Loading

1-Arm Suitcase Deadlift

Increase Loading

Equipment-Free Metabolic Workout Routines

Workout C- 45-15 Unilateral Circuit Training: 20 Total Minutes. You will alternate between 45 seconds of work and 15 seconds of rest for all 5 unilateral exercises in the following circuit. Be sure to complete both the left AND right side before moving on the next exercise.

Exercise Variation

Level I

Level II

Level III

Lunge + Overhead Reach Variation L/R Side

Split Squat + Overhead Reach

Reverse Lunge + Overhead Reach

Forward Lunge + Overhead Reach

Lateral Lunge Variation L/R Side

Lateral Squat

Lateral Lunge

Lateral + Cross-Under Lunge

Rotational Lunge Variation L/R Side

Rotational Squat

Rotational Lunge

Rotational Lunge + Internal-External Hip Rotation

1-Leg Hip-Hinge Variation

L/R Side

1-Leg Hip-Hinge

with Reach

Prisoner

1-Leg Hip-Hinge

Overhead

1-Leg Hip-Hinge

Side Pillar Variation

L/R Side

Short-Lever

Side Pillar Hold

Long-Lever

Side Pillar Hold

Side Pillar Hold with Internal-External Shoulder Rotation

This workout will really strengthen your weaknesses and dramatically improve your muscular endurance and overall exercise performance.

Are you ready for the 45-15 Unilateral Circuit Training Challenge??

If YES, then choose between the 3 options below and click which option works for you to listen to audio samples and/or view video samples before you buy:

#1- Bootcamp Automator October 2010- “I train people for a living and I want a done-for-you month of program design for my group workouts with videos that show my staff and I what to do and soundtracks that tell my clients and campers what to do!”

http://www.workoutmuse.com/music/bootcamp-automator-october-2010

#2- Workout Automator October 2010- “I love to workout and want a done-for-you home/travel fitness program with videos that show me exactly what to do and soundtracks that tell me exactly what to do!”

http://www.workoutmuse.com/music/workout-automator-october-2010

#3- Soundtrack of the Month October 2010- 45-15 Unilateral Circuit Training: “I just want the music to tell me exactly what to do!”

http://www.workoutmuse.com/music/soundtrack-of-the-month-october-2010-45-15-unilateral-circuit-training

We shall see ;)

Crank it!
BJ

The 7 DEADLY Workout Sins

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

MISSION: METABOLISM

Discover How to Fix the 7 Deadly Workout Sins to Achieve Metabolic Breakthrough

By BJ Gaddour, CSCS

As a former fat kid and disgruntled owner of a naturally slower metabolism, I have made it my life’s mission to help other people like me achieve metabolic breakthroughs to dramatically improve body composition, performance, and overall health.

I have always struggled with my weight and it affected me a lot as a kid.

I used to shower in the dark to avoid seeing my reflection.

I used to fib to my friends that I was allergic to chlorine to get out of having to go shirtless to swim and risk turning the pool party into an expo at Sea World.

I was so afraid to talk to girls because I feared they found my mere existence to be nauseating.

But I remember the day everything changed for me– It was after a family cruise and we finally received our photos from the trip and one photo particularly caught my eye.

It was the photo you take with your group before you first board the boat.

What I saw absolutely horrified me.

It looked like I had a double chin, bordering on triple chin status.

At the time I was wearing a XXL shirt and a size 42 pants and I looked absolutely miserable.

I was literally a prisoner in my own oversized body and I finally had enough.

After seeing this picture I knew I had to make some changes because I just couldn’t live like that anymore– it was too painful and too depressing.

What follows is a culmination of years of research and trial and error to produce rapid and lasting weight loss through cutting-edge metabolic training that only requires a 90-minute commitment each week.

This is the exact system I used for my own personal metabolic breakthrough and I still follow these guidelines today to maintain single-digit body fat percentage year round.

Alright baby, time to crank up that metabolism!

What is metabolism?

Metabolism is the sum of all chemical processes that take place in the human body to sustain life. Many people are born with slower metabolisms that make them prone to weight gain. Other people, known as lucky ____ (fill in the blank), are born with faster metabolisms and seem to have no problem being lean regardless of their activity levels or dietary habits- I hate them too!

Though metabolic rate is largely determined by genetics, there are various ways to increase metabolic rate (the speed of your metabolism) through exercise, nutrition, and supplementation. Here we will focus solely on the metabolic impact of a properly designed exercise routine.

The 7 Deadly Workout Sins… And How to Fix them to Achieve Metabolic Breakthrough!

Deadly Workout Sin#1- Performing daily body part workouts

One of the longest running inside jokes within the fitness industry is the fact that Monday is “international chest day” where most gym-goers will do endless sets and reps of bench presses and chest flies until their boobies “burn so good” and swell as if being nipped by a swarm of ginormous mosquitoes.

We can thank the drug-abusing bodybuilding world for the concept of training one body part per day for best results. If you open the typical bodybuilding magazine, below is a great example of a training program you might come across (or some variation of this):

Monday- Chest

Tuesday- Quads

Wednesday- Back

Thursday- Hamstrings

Friday- Triceps

Saturday- Biceps

Sunday- Calves

Please keep in mind that when you take a cocktail of anabolic performance enhancing agents, just about anything you do will result in less fat and more muscle– not to mention a host of deadly side effects and the possibility of growing a tail (anything is possible).

The reality is that training your whole body more frequently will result in bigger strength and muscle gain, greater fat loss, and more metabolic boosts than training each muscle group once per week– and the science supports this.

In a recent study at the University of Alabama, researchers had two groups of men perform two different strength-training programs with the same total training volume (sets and reps) for each muscle group. However, one group split the work across three total body workouts while the other group trained each muscle group separately one time per week. They discovered that the total body workout group gained five additional pounds of lean muscle mass compared to their body-part training counterparts.

It’s critical to understand that the more muscle you have the greater your resting metabolic rate (RMR). Your RMR is the total number of calories you burn every day regardless of activity and adding several pounds of lean muscle mass will result in an additional daily calorie burn of up to several hundred extra calories per day. This translates into an awesome fat-smashing snowball effect over the course of weeks, months, and years. Think of more muscle as the fat-burning gift that keeps on giving.

Another benefit of having more muscle is that your body’s carbohydrate tank gets bigger. The human body has a limited ability to store glycogen (sugar) in your muscles and liver before it spills over into the blood stream and leads to unwanted fat gain. The total amount of glycogen your body can hold, or your sugar tank, depends on a host of factors including gender, body size, age, etc. However, by building more muscle through high-intensity training your body can subsequently store more sugar.

For example, let’s just say that your sugar tank was originally 250 grams of carbs but is now 300 grams due to intensive training and muscle-gain. The extra 50 grams of leeway before your sugar tank over flows means two things:

1.) You can consume more total carbohydrates before your sugar tank reaches capacity where you then begin to gain fat and smooth out unless that energy is expended. It’s just like when you overfill the gas tank in your car— the fuel spills on the floor and all over your hands and shoes costing you money and making you a pyromaniac’s wet dream. Though consuming excess sugar may not be as deadly, it’s the source of the raging obesity epidemic plaguing our sedentary society and leads to host of scary health problems like heart disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, metabolic disorder, etc.

2.) The lower your sugar tank the more your body will revert to using both dietary and stored fat to make up for that energy deficit. Thus if you gained more muscle and simply consumed the same amount of total carbohydrates, you will automatically burn more fat for fuel throughout the day. Now if you consume less total carbs in conjunction with more muscle mass then you will be a lean, mean fat-melting machine.

Plus, it doesn’t take a genius to realize that working your entire body each workout will torch more calories and thus accelerate metabolism and fat loss results. More muscles used equals more total work performed equals more total sugar, fat and calories expended– all good stuff!

Lastly, it appears that it’s best to wait about 48 hours before performing your next total body workout. In multiple studies at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston, researchers determined that muscle protein synthesis was elevated for up to 48 hours after a resistance training workout before it returned to normal. Performing another total body workout with less than 48 hours of recovery may not allow for adequate muscle repair thus impairing performance.

THE FIX: For busy people looking for the biggest bang for their fitness buck, best results will be achieved with 3 total body workouts per week with ideally 48 hours between workouts to maximize muscle growth and recovery.

Deadly Workout Sin#2- Performing marathon workouts lasting 60 minutes or longer

I’m not sure what it is about our society that thinks its cool to do things for an incredibly long period of time. There’s no better example of this than the typical college student who brags to his or her friends about pulling an all-nighter to cram for a final exam. In reality, best results would have been achieved by spreading out all of that studying over the course of the entire semester in order to achieve true and lasting knowledge rather than simple and useless short-term memory. I’d be lying if I said I’ve never procrastinated before myself as I’m literally writing this article the day before its due date– but don’t tell my editor, wink.

Fitness is no different. What do most people who want to lose weight do? They either sign up to run a marathon and/or join a gym to do endless hours of long, slow, boring cardio on a treadmill, elliptical, bike, or step machine.

On a side note, if I ever see you “getting your cardio-on” while reading a magazine or checking your email I will slap you in the mouth and have you arrested for being a hopeless moron.

Why so harsh??

Well, a landmark aerobic training study from the International Journal of Sports Nutrition determined that 45 minutes of steady state aerobic training 5 days per week had zero effect over dieting alone when it came to weight loss— that’s 45 hours of activity for nothing! However, the lack of results wasn’t solely due to the length of the workouts, but also the low-intensity nature of these workouts.

In addition, long, drawn out workouts have diminishing returns and create a negative hormonal environment in our bodies. That’s because during one-hour plus exercise bouts our body enters survival mode and releases a catabolic stress hormone called cortisol that both causes muscle loss and results in unwanted fat gain in trouble spot areas.

According to the National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA), anabolic, muscle-building hormones like testosterone are maximized in about a 30-minute high-intensity workout window. It is at about the 45-minute mark that anabolic hormones begin to fall as their catabolic counterparts, mainly cortisol, simultaneously begin to rise.

THE FIX: Shorter, more focused and intense workouts produce better results than one hour plus marathon sessions. If you have to workout for longer than 30-45 minutes to feel satisfied than you probably weren’t working hard enough in the first place or you were committing some form of the other deadly workout sins.

Deadly Workout Sin#3- Using single-joint isolation exercises that address only one plane of movement

When we discussed Deadly Workout Sin#1, we mentioned the disgraceful practice of training each muscle group one time per week. Well, to make the matter even worse, lots of fitness enthusiasts will comprise these body part workouts with useless single-joint isolation exercises that often take place in only one plane of movement.

Single-joint, isolation exercises involve the use of only one joint at a time. Classic examples are leg extensions and leg curls (only involve the knee joint) and biceps curls and triceps extensions (only involve the elbow joint). Though these single-joint, isolation exercises may result in a better “pump” or “burn” in a specific muscle that makes it feel more effective, it doesn’t mean that they are providing the optimal muscle-building stimulus when compared to their multi-joint, compound counterparts.

Multi-joint, compound exercises involve functional movement patterns that occur in the real world across multiple joints at the same time thus resulting in greater total muscle activation and heavier loading and subsequently greater calorie burning, fat loss, and muscle growth. For our purposes, there are six foundational movement patterns that comprise the ultimate total body metabolic workout:

Hip-Dominant: Any exercise that primarily targets your posterior chain (glutes, hamstrings, and spinal erectors) and involves the flexion, extension, rotation, adduction, and abduction of the hips. In addition, lower body exercises where your torso is bent forward more than 45-degrees are best classified as hip-dominant. The exception to this rule is for any exercise where the upper body is NOT actively involved like a hip extension. Classic hip-dominant exercises include deadlift, step-up, hip extension, and swings.

Push: Any exercise that primarily targets your chest, anterior and medial shoulders, and triceps and involves a pushing pattern in either the horizontal or vertical plane. Horizontal pushing exercises involve pushing a load away from your torso as if your torso was upright while performing them. Classic examples include push-up and chest press variations. Vertical pushing exercises involve pushing a load in an upward or downward direction relative to an upright torso. Classic examples include dip, vertical push-up or overhead press variations.

Knee-Dominant: Any exercise that primarily targets your quadriceps and involves the flexion and extension of your knees. In addition, lower body exercises that actively involve your upper body and where your torso is vertical or bent forward less than 45-degrees are best classified as knee-dominant. Classic knee-dominant exercises include squat and lunge variations.

Pull/Scapulothoracic: Any exercise that primarily targets your lats, posterior shoulders, upper and mid back, scapulothoracic joint, biceps and forearms and involves a pulling pattern in either the horizontal or vertical plane. Horizontal pulling exercises involve pulling a load towards your torso as if your torso was upright while performing them. Classic examples include rowing and Y, T, W, L, I raise variations. Vertical pulling exercises involve pulling a load in an upward or downward direction relative to an upright torso. Classic examples include pull-up, pull-down, high pull, and bicep curl variations.

Pillar- Integrated Shoulders, Hips, and Core: Any exercise that primarily targets your shoulders, hips, and core. The primary objective is to train spinal stabilization in all 3 planes of movement including anti-flexion, anti-extension, anti-lateral flexion, and anti-rotation. Classic examples include front, side, and back pillar or plank variations. Pillar movements also include functional, ground-based rotational exercises like chopping variations.

Total Body: Any exercise that integrates any combination of the aforementioned movement patterns or simultaneously calls upon your upper and lower body. The total body nature of these exercises also results in maximum heart rate elevation and the optimal fat-burning, muscle-building stimulus. Classic examples include squat to presses, swings, and explosive olympic lifting variations like cleans, snatches, jerks, etc. In addition, traditional cardiovascular locomotive and plyometric exercises like running, leaping, hopping, skipping, bounding, jumping, shuffling, etc. also fit under this category.

In a study at Ball State University, researchers determined that additional isolation exercises for the arms had no additional benefit in terms of arm strength and hypertophy (muscle growth). One group did four compound upper body exercises (like presses and rows) in each workout while the other group did the same four exercises plus some extra biceps curls and triceps extensions. Since they both achieved the same results it appears that single-joint, isolation exercises have minimal if any benefit.

So now that we know the importance of training movement patterns (not body parts) with multi-joint, compound exercises, let’s not forget about the importance of incorporating exercises that occur across multiple planes of movement.

Too often people perform exercises in only one plane of movement, typically the sagittal plane that encompasses movement up and down and front to back and divides the body into left and right halves. The classic exercises that fit the bill here are bench presses and squats.

However, movement in life and athletics occurs in three planes of motion: sagittal, frontal, and transverse. Frontal plane movements occur side-to-side and divide the body into front and back halves. Transverse plane movements occur in a rotational manner and divide the body into upper and lower halves.

Let’s use the lunge as an example. A forward lunge takes place in the sagittal plane, where a lateral lunge takes place in the frontal plane, where a rotational lunge takes place in the transverse plane. Performing lunge variations in all three planes of movements best ensures optimal strength, functional carryover, muscle gain, and proper muscular balance. This in turn improves posture and injury reduction.

I should add that performing exercises in free space is ideal (also termed “free weights”). Machines limit movement to a fixed path and do not properly engage your body’s key stabilizers, particularly your hip, spinal, and scapular stabilizers, which will put you at a much greater risk of injury outside of the gym.

THE FIX: Employ functional multi-joint, compound movement patterns that address all three planes of movement for maximum muscle growth, fat loss, and metabolic spikes.

Deadly Workout Sin#4- Using low-intensity work periods lasting 2 minutes or longer to burn fat

This one is mainly for all of the ladies out there- and I’m not about to sing a Michael Bolton or Marvin Gaye song here… unless of course, the price is right.

Women have the relentless tendency to perform endless hours of cardio and if they do use weights they tend use loads that are so light that they might as well not even bother—so small that they can barely be seen by the naked eye.

Heck, most guys out there have a hard enough time gaining muscle. Now factor in that women have 15-20 times less testosterone than men do and the answer is clear. In other words, women never have to worry about gaining too much muscle– it would require freakish genetics and loads of drugs to even come close. Using heavier loads will just result in greater calorie burning, a faster metabolic rate, and a tighter, more toned and athletic physique.

One of the biggest myths in fitness is the concept of the fat-burning zone. It all started in 1993 when researchers at the University of Texas determined that lower to moderate intensity activity burnt the greatest amount of fat for fuel. In addition, peak fat oxidation (burning) appeared to occur at 65% of aerobic capacity. This is basically the exercise equivalent of conversational cardio or a power walk or slow jog.

However, we’ve already established that aerobic training has zero effect on weight loss over dieting alone, so we know that a power walk or slow jog will just not cut it.

Furthermore, though lower intensity exercise burns proportionately more fat than high-intensity exercise, high-intensity exercise burns more total calories per minute and thus still results in a similar amount of total fat burnt during exercise as its lower to moderate intensity counterpart.

The fact of the matter is that high-intensity exercise is scientifically proven to burn nine times more body fat than ordinary exercise per unit of effort. Plus, it’s not about how much fat your burn during your workout that’s important. The harder you exercise the more sugar you burn for fuel and this allows you to burn more fat during rest periods and in the hours and days between your workouts for maximum total body fat burning.

For the best real world example of which style of training is best for lean muscle gain and fat loss, just look at the body of sprinter versus the body of an endurance athlete. Sprinters are not only more muscular but actually have a significantly lower body fat percentage than endurance athletes. Though I’ve seen lots of overweight distance runners and walkers in my day, I have never seen an overweight sprinter. That has to count for something and again the science supports this anecdotal evidence.

In the Gibala Study, researchers collected a bunch of college students who were in good health but not participating in any athletics. One group rode a bike at a sustainable pace for 90-120 minutes. The other group performed 20-30 seconds of cycling at maximum effort followed by four minutes of full recovery and they repeated this sequence up to four to six times for a total of 18-27 minutes. Each group exercised three times per week for two total weeks. In the end, they discovered that both groups achieved identical improvements in endurance even though the high-intensity group had only exercised for six to nine minutes while it took the low-intensity group five hours to achieve those same results! I know, crazy, right?

What’s even crazier is the fact that the high-intensity group had greater weight loss than their low-intensity counterparts. According to the head researcher Martin Gibala the “rate of energy expenditure remains higher longer into recovery” from high-intensity interval training.

There’s just something special about high-intensity anaerobic (without oxygen) work periods of 30-60 seconds. First of all, they are glycolytic in nature meaning that they burn muscle glycogen, or the sugar stores in your muscles, at optimal rates. The more sugar you burn during your workouts the more body fat you will burn in the hours and days between your workouts.

Second of all, it is generally accepted among fitness experts that maximum hypertrophy, or muscle growth, occurs when performing exercises with heavy loading and a time-under-tension lasting 30-40 seconds. At a rep speed of two to three seconds per rep that comes down to the classic bodybuilding rep range of eight to 15 reps per set. More muscle gain means greater metabolism which means more rapid and lasting weight loss.

Lastly, high-intensity anaerobic work periods of 30-60 seconds also create the optimal hormonal environment for fat loss by releasing hormones knows as catecholamines (mainly adrenaline). This surge of adrenaline mobilizes body fat, particular in the stubborn areas like the abs and lower back for men and the hips and thighs for women.

Interestingly enough, resorting to shorter and even higher-intensity work periods of 20 seconds or less actually causes a greater catecholamine release that leads to even greater fat mobilization during the workout. On the other hand, not as much glycogen will be depleted with these shorter work periods thus resulting in less fat being burnt at all other times of day. However, employing shorter, more intense work periods with incomplete rest periods will deplete your phosphagen stores (ATP-CP) and force your body to start using more sugar for fuel (this is beyond the scope of this article).

In general, I believe it’s a fair trade off. Plus, I’m a firm believer that the best interval training protocol is the one you haven’t done in a while, if ever. In other words, I recommend incorporating a wide variety of work periods ranging between 30-60 seconds or less for maximum fat blasting and metabolic disturbance and to keep your body guessing.

The bottom line is that intensity is the only thing that truly makes your body change. If you take one thing away from this article, I hope it is this!

THE FIX: To burn fat and skyrocket metabolism 24-7-365, employ high-intensity work periods lasting 30-60 seconds or less to deplete muscle glycogen stores during your workouts in order to burn more fat fuel when resting and at all other times of the day.

Deadly Workout Sin#5- Performing straight sets of a single exercise

It takes about three to five minutes following intensive exertion for your body to completely recover and get ready for another bout of maximum effort without any significant decreases in performance. In traditional weight training, if you’re performing three sets of 10 reps, that means that it would take a minimum of 10-15 minutes to complete your first exercise in your workout putting you on track for one of those one hour plus marathon sessions that we already know is not optimal.

However, there is a very simple way that we can maintain peak intensity while allowing for full recovery: perform alternating sets of non-competitive exercises. My preferred method of alternating sets for metabolic acceleration is circuit training.

Typically it takes a trainee about 30 seconds to complete 10 reps of a given exercise at a controlled tempo of three seconds per rep. Previously we outlined that there are six basic movement patterns that make up any sound training plan with each movement pattern emphasizing a different region(s) of the body. So let’s build ourselves a killer six-exercise metabolic circuit where we allow for about 15 seconds of rest and transition between exercises and a 60-second rest and transition at the end of the circuit to re-group, grab a swig of water, and say a quick prayer to the fitness Gods begging for mercy:

1- Hip-Dominant Exercise @ 30 seconds on, 15 seconds off

2- Pushing Exercise @ 30 seconds on, 15 seconds off

3- Knee-Dominant Exercise @ 30 seconds on, 15 seconds off

4- Pulling Exercise @ 30 seconds on, 15 seconds off

5- Pillar Exercise @ 30 seconds on, 15 seconds off

6- Total Body Exercise @ 30 seconds on, 15 seconds off

Let’s examine the beauty of what we just did here:

- In approximately five minutes, the circuit format allowed us to perform all six exercises that comprise a whole body workout where in the straight sets format it took us the same amount of time to complete one set of a single exercise

- By alternating between non-competitive exercises in a circuit format, we are able to achieve maximum intensity while allowing for a full 5-minute recovery by the next time we repeat that same exercise

- In only 20 minutes, we can complete four rounds of this whole body circuit and be done for the day while we’d just be starting our second set of the second exercise in straight set format

Clearly the circuit training format is by far the most time-efficient approach and it also has many other of the key variables for proper metabolic training in place such as high-intensity work periods, quick and focused 20-minute workouts, short rest periods, total body workout, etc.

I believe circuit training is the foundation of any solid metabolic workout. Let’s take a look at two breakthrough scientific studies that support what I’ve seen in the real world:

Burn over 500 calories in 20 minutes: In a recent study by the University of Southern Maine, researchers discovered a more accurate method of estimating calorie burn from weight training than had been used previously. They discovered that a weight training circuit burned 71% more calories than previously thought. In fact, an eight minute circuit burned somewhere between 159 and 233 calories which breaks down to about 20-28 calories per minute!

Elevate metabolism for up to 38+ hours post-workout: In a study by the European Journal of Applied Physiology, researchers determined that a 31-minute circuit training protocol of three compound, multi-joint movements significantly elevated metabolism for 38 hours post-workout– at which point they decided to stop tracking. This metabolic afterburn was due to a couple of factors. The first is due to increased tissue turnover due to the need to build and repair muscle microtrauma after high-intensity training. The second is due to increased Excess Post-Exercise Oxygen Consumption (EPOC) due to the oxygen debt created by high-intensity anaerobic exercise.

From a personal standpoint, when I was a young and stupid football player I used to workout for two to three hours at a time using the straight set format. It was always incredibly mentally draining to know that half of my day would be eaten up every time I worked out. However, I had all of the time in the world to workout then so I took advantage of that. Strangely enough, I had a lot of extra body fat for someone who was working out for several hours a day— that’s weird, right?

Now that I’m not as young and a little less stupid (I think) and I am the owner of several fitness companies, both online and offline, the only workouts I currently have time for are metabolic workouts that have me in and out in 30 minutes and on with my busy, hectic days. Today I maintain a single-digit body fat percentage and it’s all due to these circuits and a sound diet that emphasizes protein, produce, and water every couple of hours.

The choice is yours– get better results in less than half the time or take hours of your precious time to get nowhere and fast. Well, I guess it’s not much a choice after all.

THE FIX: If your goal is maximum results in minimal time, employ alternating sets of non-competitive exercises each and every time you workout. Metabolic circuit training is by far the best way to get into the best shape of your life in 30 minutes or less so you can get on with your very busy day.

Deadly Workout Sin#6- Using long rest periods of 2 minutes or more between exercises

How many times have you seen this happen in the gym:

A big, burly, meathead of a man lays down to grunt out a couple reps of heavy benches presses where the bar bounces off of his chest like a basketball while his ass leaps off of the bench with his lower back resembling the Arc de Triomphe.

Then he racks the weight and goes and grabs a swig of water or chugs a vat of protein.

A couple minutes pass and now he’s watching some highlights on Sports Center with a few of his meathead buddies.

A couple more minutes pass and now he’s molesting some good-looking cardio queen with his eyes.

Finally, five to seven minutes after he completed his last rep on the bench press, he’s ready start his next set.

More likely than not, this guy will take several hours to complete his workout at this pace. Clearly, this is not the most efficient way to exercise.

Now, if your goal is maximum strength and power, then three to five minute complete recovery periods have their place.

But chances are, if you’re like most of the general population, you could care less about how much you can bench or squat and are more focused on having the lean, muscular build of a Men’s or Women’s Health model.\

In other words, most people can afford to lose some fat and gain some muscle and the key to doing so is to maximize training density. Density describes the amount of work completed per unit of time. Density also happens to be the biggest primer for fat loss because the more work you can complete in the same amount of time or less the leaner and more muscular you will be.

How do we accomplish this? We do so by reducing our rest periods between exercises. According to the NSCA, shorter rest periods lasting 30-60 seconds or less resulted in the greatest growth hormone response. Growth hormone is one of the most powerful fat-burning and muscle-building hormones in your body.

Look no further than the world famous Tabata Study for the fat-burning, metabolic-boosting benefits of high-intensity work periods combined with short rest periods. In this groundbreaking cycling study, researchers discovered that only four minutes of a 20-10 interval protocol (20 seconds of maximum effort followed by 10 seconds of rest) provided greater fat loss and conditioning than 60 minutes of steady state cardio.

Now one of the problems with this study is that in the real world most people aren’t able to perform multiple bouts of max effort for the same exercise with short rest periods (in fact, most of the elite cyclists in the study couldn’t complete all four minutes of the 20-10 protocol because it was too intense).

However, by employing a circuit training format where you perform alternating sets of non-competitive exercises, we can maintain the high-intensity work periods in conjunction with the short rest periods as in the Tabata study.

Furthermore, I have personally found this 2:1 negative work to rest ratio (in this case of Tabatas, 20 seconds on, 10 seconds off) to be unreal for rapidly improving fat loss and fitness for my campers and for my own personal workouts.

THE FIX: Employ short rest periods of 30-60 seconds or less between exercises in order to maximize training density and the growth hormone response from exercise for maximum fat loss and metabolic acceleration.

Deadly Workout Sin#7- Performing the same fitness routine for six weeks or more

This one is pretty straight forward- if you perform the same workout routine day in and day out, week in and week out, your body will stop changing and you will hit a dreaded plateau.

The classic example of this can be seen in any run of the mill gym or health club. On day one, after your sign a contract where you pay money to use somebody else’s equipment, you’ll meet with a “personal trainer” who probably is wearing some cute little jacket that says “personal trainer” on it (I’m convinced the reason for this is because some personal trainers may actually forget what they do for a living– too much protein on the brain). Then he or she will teach you how to use all of the machines (don’t get me started on machines) and will then recommend doing a circuit of three sets of 10 reps for each body part every time you workout.

Now keep in mind that if you are sedentary and haven’t exercised in years (if ever), absolutely anything you do in the gym will elicit a positive response.

If you exercise with heavier loads, your body will respond by gaining more muscle to accommodate the new training demands.

If you employ shorter rest periods between sets while maintaining the same total work output, your body will respond by improving conditioning and melting unwanted body fat.

If you perform a new exercise altogether that challenges your body in a very unique way, your nervous system will quickly figure out how to master this movement resulting in increased performance.

The human body is a smart and efficient machine and will quickly adapt to any training plan that you throw its way. Within the first two to three weeks of any new training program you will notice the biggest improvements in your performance and physique. However, the human body is constantly striving for homeostasis and efficiency and after performing the same program for about four weeks there are diminishing returns.

That’s why it’s critical to change-up your fitness routine every month. By simply tweaking a couple of variables in your training plan, like your exercise selection, exercise order, work periods and rest periods, etc., you provide a new stimulus that will force your body to change and prevent dreaded physique and performance plateaus.

Now, don’t get me wrong here– we always perform the same movement patterns in every training program because they are foundational. However, there are lots of different exercises that fall under the same movement pattern category that we can cycle between. New exercises require more mental and physical energy to perform thus burning more calories and causing a greater metabolic disturbance and this is exactly the type of stimulus your body needs to break out of any fitness rut.

The best example for this is the push-up since there are literally hundreds of push-up variations. We pretty much do some sort of push-up variation every workout, but by constantly switching up the type of push-up we’re using there is always a new stimulus that keeps the body changing. Plus, the better you get at one type of push-up, the better you get at all of the others and visa versa.

In addition, let’s not forget about the mental component here. The brain needs variety and performing the same routine for extended periods of time will not only decrease performance but will also lower your motivation to workout. So you’ll start skipping training sessions here and there and then all of a sudden you’ll find yourself back at square one—sitting on your butt, twiddling your thumbs while watching an infomercial about this incredible new waist belt that will give you the flat tummy of your dreams… all for only four easy payments of $19.95 so it can sit under your bed and collect dust before your dog uses it a new chew toy.

I have personally programmed for thousands of people online and I have worked with hundreds of campers in the trenches for many years. What I’ve discovered is that if I simply swap in new exercises and move to a different interval training protocol every three to four weeks I can constantly keep their bodies changing and performance continues to improve. Not to mention the fact that their motivation to workout remains sky high with every new challenge I throw their way.

Also, my camps operate on a three weeks on, one week off schedule– I’ve found this to be the sweet spot for the typical busy person looking for general fitness in their 20’s through 50’s. We work very hard for three weeks trying to keep pushing the envelope each subsequent week by using a gradual progressive overload. Then we employ an active recovery week to allow for mental and physical regeneration, prevent overtraining, and reduce the risk of injury. Then we start a new program altogether and we wash and repeat like clockwork. The results have been simply amazing.

THE FIX: Change-up up your fitness up your fitness routine each and every month to prevent dreaded weight loss and performance plateaus. Employ new exercises and different work and rest periods (or interval protocols) to constantly provide a new stimulus that your body must learn how to adapt to.

How “Metabolic” is Your Workout?

Please reference the chart below to assess the current metabolic status of your fitness routine. If your main goal is to improve your body composition (burn body fat and build lean muscle) and revamp metabolism then you absolutely must structure your workouts to fall under the metabolic breakthrough column.

Metabolic Rut

Metabolic Breakthrough

Training Split

Daily body part workouts

3 total body workouts per week with ideally 48-hours between workouts

Length of Workout

60 minutes or more

30-45 minutes or less

Exercise Selection

Single-joint, isolation exercises that address only 1 plane of movement

Functional multi-joint, compound movement patterns that address all 3 planes of movement

Exercise Intensity

Low-intensity work periods of 2 minutes or longer to burn fat

High-intensity work periods of 30-60 seconds or less to burn sugar

Rest Periods

Long rest periods of 2 minutes or longer

Short rest periods of 30-60 seconds or less

Exercise Order

Straights sets of a single exercise

Circuit Training:

Alternating sets of non-competitive exercises

Periodization

Perform the same fitness routine for 6 weeks or more

Progress to a new fitness routine every 3-4 weels

Putting It All Together

Now that we’ve outlined the seven keys to metabolic breakthrough, let’s put it all together in a readily usable metabolic training program so you can start cranking it today!

A Metabolic Workout features a total body workout that employs high-intensity work periods with short rest periods in an alternating set or circuit format that combines the muscle-building benefits of resistance training with the fat-burning benefits of interval training. The result is a killer bootcamp-style workout that will supercharge metabolism for up to 48 hours post-workout, tone and tighten your whole body, blast stubborn fat, and get you into the best shape of your life with only three 30-minute express workouts per week.

If you recall from the Gibala study, it was determined that 30-second maximum effort work periods followed by four minutes of rest for 20 straight minutes resulted in identical fitness improvements and greater weight loss than 90-120 minutes of aerobic training. By building a circuit of non-competitive exercises we can allow for this same full recovery, and thus peak intensity, by the next time we return to the original exercise.

Furthermore, we demonstrated that 30-second max effort work periods provide both a big-time metabolic boosting muscle-building stimulus plus deplete your body’s sugar stores at optimal rates forcing it to burn more fat during recovery period and in the hours and days between workouts.

In addition, I outlined the Tabata study which found that a 2:1 negative work to rest ratio found in a 20-seconds on, 10-seconds four-minute high-intensity interval training protocol resulted in greater fat loss and conditioning than 60-minutes of steady state cardio. Short rest periods increase training density and produce a growth hormone response that boosts whole body fat-burning and lean muscle gain.

However, I have found that for most de-conditioned beginners, 20-second work periods do not allow for a sufficient amount of time to adequately perform enough muscular contractions for optimal results and that 30-second work periods are a much better time frame to best accommodate people of all fitness levels. Using this 2:1 negative work to rest ratio for 30-second work periods means that we would employ a 30-15 interval protocol with 15 seconds of rest between exercises.

Ladies and gentlemen, without further adieu, below is what I’ve discovered to be the ultimate metabolic experience…

30-15 Six-Exercise Metabolic Circuit- 20 Minutes: Alternate between 30 seconds of work and 15 seconds of rest for each exercise in the following 6-exercise circuit followed by a 60-second rest and transition between circuits. Perform up to 4 total rounds for a 20-minute total body workout.

Station#

Exercise Variation

1

Hip-Dominant Variation

2

Push Variation

3

Knee-Dominant Variation

4

Pull Variation

5

Pillar Variation

6

Total Body Variation

Crank it!
BJ

PS- Stay tuned for the official launch of my MISSION: METABOLISM BOOTCAMP product featuring programming that incorporates all of the aforementioned protocols to help you and your clients go from metabolic rut to metabolic breakthrough!!


Killer Pumpkin Workouts to Burn Belly Fat this Halloween!

Sunday, October 11th, 2009

Killer Pumpkin Workouts to Burn Belly Fat this Halloween!

By Interval Man of HELP! MY WORKOUT SUCKS!

You can approach Halloween one of two ways. The first option is to go nuts with all of the eats and treats. The second is to indulge in moderation and offset any extra caloric consumption with a seasonal pumpkin workout. I recommend the later… it’s a lot more figure-friendly!

IMpumpkin1

Pumpkins can be used just like medicine balls for an unlimited number of exercise options. I love to take it one step further and use total body exercises that combine upper body, lower body, and core movements into one “big bang for your buck” exercise.

Below are my top three total body pumpkin exercises that guarantee to help you burn fat and build muscle in minimal time. I highly recommend performing at least one circuit of the following three pumpkin exercises, with little to no rest between movements, for every Halloween treat you eat to best prevent any unwanted weight gain:

1) Pumpkin Swings: Holding a pumpkin in your hands with your arms extended, stay on your heels and push your hips back while bringing the pumpkin underneath your body while keeping your eyes up and chest out. Then push your hips forward and swing the pumpkin up to chest level being sure to squeeze your glutes at the top of the movement. Repeat for 10 total reps. (more…)

ADVANCED Strength Workout Powered by Workout Muse

Monday, August 17th, 2009

Our last blog post was about an advanced core workout, so today I am going to share an advanced strength workout.

This cable crossovers picture is an perfect example of an exercise that doesnt make the cut when it comes to big bang for you buck exercises to select for your total body workouts

This cable crossovers picture is a perfect example of a useless isolation exercise that doesn't make the cut when it comes to big bang for you buck exercises to select for your total body workouts!

The shorter work period in conjunction with the longer rest period allows for more intense exercise variations and heavier loading than in the classic 50-10 format as found with the Best Boot camp Workout Music from Boot Camp Dynamite.

See below for a great example of an advanced total body strength workout to help build lean muscle and burn belly fat: (more…)