The Ultimate Method for Permanent, Natural Fat Loss…

Discover How to Lose Stubborn Body Fat At Any Age, Even If You’ve Tried Everything And Nothing Has Ever Worked For You Before

Dear Friend,

If you want to lose fat permanently without losing muscle, and you want to do it naturally – without drugs, pills, gimmicks or fad diets – then this will be the most important message you will ever read. Here’s why:

A small health & fitness publishing company from New Jersey (Burn The Fat Enterprises), has finally decided to publish a full length e-book about how to lose body fat using the little known methods of natural bodybuilders and fitness models.

Here are some of the amazing and revealing facts you will learn when you read this exciting and revealing new book:

      • Why 95% of all diets fail…and the exact, detailed steps you must take to be in the successful 5% (and stay there!)

• Why it’s physiologically impossible for conventional diets to ever work…unless you know this one simple trick! It’s a metabolism-saver for chronic dieters and it’s one of the first things the author would teach you if he coached you in person

    • The twelve worst foods you should never eat
    • The twelve best foods you should eat all the time
    • Why dieting below your critical calorie level can wreck your metabolism and actually make you fatter! (and how to know when you’re in the danger zone)…also, the precise calculations for your optimal calorie level
    • How to eat 50% more calories without storing an ounce as fat – It’s true -you can actually eat more food while losing more fat if you use this simple, but often overlooked strategy!
    • The #1 reason why most people can’t drop the last 10 lbs of ab flab and how you can lose it with ease…and (if you want to), go even further and get “ripped” and rock-hard like a bodybuilder or fitness model
    • Important lessons you can learn from the Zone and Atkins diet…including the hidden reason why most people fail on both diets in the long run
    • The one food combination you should NEVER, EVER eat – break this rule and you’re guaranteed to pack on lumps of ugly fat so fast you’ll wonder what hit you! (and almost everybody’s doing it!)
    • Which body type classification you are and how to eat right for your body type (if you’re eating wrong for your body type you can forget about losing any fat no matter how hard you train or how strictly you diet)
    • The #1 most effective way to burn body fat ever (If you could only make ONE change to your current diet program, this would be it!)
    • 7 strategies to make sure your body never goes into “starvation mode” and the ONE THING you must do IMMEDIATELY if you suspect it’s already happened
    • The three critical factors that determine whether you’ll lose muscle while dieting…and how the slightest nutritional “tweak” can guarantee you keep every ounce of lean muscle mass while you quickly drop the fat
    • Dozens of the best-kept fat burning secrets of bodybuilders and fitness models that almost NOBODY knows about…compiled by a 14-year, rare study of the most “ripped” athletes on earth
    • What to do when you’ve tried everything and the stubborn fat still won’t come off (this is one of the little-known tactics bodybuilders and fitness models use in the final weeks before competitions)
    • Secrets of meal frequency and timing that will amplify your body’s natural rate of calorie-burning (There’s a lot more to it than just eating small, frequent meals)
    • How a “new spin” on the old low carb diet can increase your rate of fat loss to the maximum possible without muscle loss or metabolic downgrade
    • Why you will almost ALWAYS fail to keep the fat off if you use a conventional low carbohydrate diet – If you’ve failed on low carb diets before, this is the reason why
    • The truth about how much cardio you REALLY need to lose the fat and the best times to do it for maximum impact
    • Not one, but FOUR weight training programs designed to fit your schedule and experience level – plus a “conservative” routine for “time-crunched” people who can’t train as often as they’d like to
    • Unleash the awesome hidden powers of your mind and find out the psychological reason why most people unconsciously sabotage themselves…just when their diets are beginning to work!
    • The psychology of permanent fat loss…Goal setting and motivation tactics that program your subconscious mind for massive success…Follow this “secret mental training formula” and you’ll be practically “hypnotized” into eating properly and working out consistently

And that’s just a tiny fraction of what you’ll learn in this information-packed “bible” to a leaner, more muscular body.

This book comes with an iron-clad money back guarantee and it’s easy to order. Best of all, because it’s finally available as an instantly downloadable e-book, you can get started within the next 10 minutes and begin seeing and feeling results immediately. To get more information, or to place your order, simply click on the link below:

www.BurnTheFat.com

Best regards,

Silva S.

PS. You also get 5 FREE bonuses worth $380.00 if you decide to order before the introductory promotion ends…

Night Time Eating And Fat Loss

“Eat breakfast like a king, eat lunch like a prince and eat dinner like a pauper.” This maxim can be attributed to nutrition writer Adelle Davis, and since her passing in 1974, the advice to eat less at night to help with fat loss has lived on and continued to circulate in many different incarnations. This includes suggestions such as:

“Don’t eat a lot before bedtime”
“Don’t eat midnight snacks”
“Don’t eat anything after 7pm”
“Don’t eat any carbs at night”
“Don’t eat any carbs after 3 pm”
and so on…

I too believe that eating lightly at night is usually very solid advice for people seeking increased fat loss, especially for people who are inactive at night. However, some fitness experts today, when they hear “eat less at night,” start screaming, “Diet Voodoo!”…

Opinions on this subject are definitely mixed. Many highly respected experts strongly recommend eating less at night to improve fat loss, while others suggest that it’s only “calories in vs calories out” over 24 hours that matters.

The critics say that it’s ridiculous to cut off food intake at a certain hour or to presume that “carbs turn to fat” at night as if there were some kind of nocturnal carbohydrate gremlins waiting to shuttle calories into fat cells when the moon is full. They suggest that if you eat less in the morning and eat more at night, it all “balances itself out at the end of the day.”

Of course, food does not turn to fat just because it’s eaten after a certain “cutoff hour” and carbs do not necessarily turn to fat at night either (although there are hypotheses about low evening insulin sensitivity having some significance). What we do know for certain is that the law of energy balance is with us at all hours of the day – and that bears some deeper consideration when you realize that we expend the least energy when we are sleeping and many people spend the entire evening watching TV.

I had the privilege of interviewing sports nutritionist and dietician Dan Benardot, PhD, and he gave us a very interesting perspective on this.

Dr. Benardot said that thinking in terms of 24 hour energy balance may be a seriously flawed and outdated concept. He says that the old model of energy balance looks at calories in versus calories out in 24 hour units. However, what really happens is that your body allocates energy minute by minute and hour by hour as your body’s needs dictate, not at some specified 24 hour end point.

I first heard this concept suggested by Dr. Fred Hatfield about 15 years ago. Hatfield explained how and why you should be thinking ahead to the next three hours and adjusting your energy intake accordingly.

Although it’s not really a new idea, Dr. Benardot has recently taken this concept to a much higher level of refinement and he calls the new paradigm, “Within Day Energy Balance.”

The Within Day Energy balance approach not only backs up the practice of eating small meals approximately every three hours, AND the practice of “nutrient timing” (which is why post workout nutrition is such a popular topic today, and rightly so)… it also suggests that we should adjust our energy intake according to our activity.

Let’s make the assumption most people come home from work, then plop on the couch in front of the TV all night. Let’s also assume that the majority of people go to bed late in the evening, usually around 10 pm, 11 pm or midnight. Therefore, nightime is the period during which the least energy is being expended.

If this is true, then it’s logical to suggest that one should not eat huge amounts of calories at night, especially right before bed because that would provide excess fuel at a time when it is not needed. The result is increased likelihood of fat storage.

From the within day energy balance perspective, the advice to eat less at night makes complete sense. Of course it also suggests that if you train at night, then you should eat more at night to support that activity beforehand and to support recovery afterwards.

Those stuck on a 24 hour model of energy expenditure would say timing of energy intake doesn’t matter as long as the total calories for the day are in a deficit. But who ever decided that the body operates on a 24-hour “DAY”?

Try this test (or not!): Eat a 2500 calorie per day diet, with nothing for breakfast, nothing before or after your morning workout, 500 calories for lunch, 750 calories for dinner and 1250 calories before bedtime.

Now compare that to the SAME 2500 calorie diet with 6 small meals of approximately 420 calories per meal and then tweak those meal sizes a bit so that you eat a little more before and after your workout and a little less later at night.

Both are 2500 calories per day. According to “24 hour energy balance” thinking, both diets will produce the same results in performance, health and body composition. But will they?

Does your body really do a calculation at midnight and add up the day’s totals like a business man when he closes out the register at night? It’s a lot more logical that energy is stored in real time and energy is burned in real time, rather than accounted for at the end of each 24 hour period.

24 hour energy balance is just one way to academically sort calories so you can understand it and count it in convenient units of time. This has its uses, as in calculating a daily calorie intake level for menu planning purposes.

Ok, but enough about calories, what about the individual macronutrients? Some people don’t simply suggest eating fewer calories at night, they suggest you take your calorie cut specifically from CARBS rather than from all macronutrients evenly across the board. Is there anything to it?

Well, there’s more than one theory. The most commonly quoted theory has to do with insulin.

The late bodybuilding guru Dan Duchaine was once asked by a competitor,

“I want to get cut up for an upcoming contest. Should I eat at night? I heard I shouldn’t eat carbs after six pm.”

Duchaine answered:

“It’s true that insulin sensitivity is lowest at night. Let’s discuss what is happening in your body that makes it dislike carbs at night. Cortisol, a catabolic hormone, is highest at night. When cortisol is elevated, your muscle cell insulin sensitivity is lowered…”

More recently, David Barr wrote a tip on “lower carbs at night” for T-Muscle Magazine. He said:

“Even when bulking, you don’t want to start scarfing down Pop Tarts before you go to bed. Our muscle insulin sensitivity decreases as the day wears on, meaning that we’re more likely to generate a large insulin response from ingesting carbs. Stated differently, we’re more predisposed to adding fat mass by eating carbs at night because our body doesn’t handle the hormone insulin as well as it does earlier in the day.”

Mind you, Barr is a not a “voodoo” guy; he is a respected scientist who also happens to be well known as a “dogma destroyer” and “myth buster”… and Duchaine, although he had a shady past and some run-ins with the law, was nevertheless highly respected by nearly all in the bodybuilding world for his ahead-of-his-time nutrition wisdom.

As a result of advice like this, word got out in the bodybuilding and fitness community that you should eat fewer carbs at night. Real world results and the “test of time” have suggested that this is an effective strategy. I also don’t know a single nutrition or training expert who doesn’t agree that insulin management and improvement of insulin sensitivity aren’t effective approaches in the management of body fat.

However, it’s only fair to point out that not all scientists agree that cutting carbs at night will have any real world impact on fat loss, outside of any additional calorie deficit created by it. Dr. Benardot, for example, doesn’t think there’s much to it. He says that exercisers and athletes in particular, usually have excellent glycemic control, so the ratio of macronutrients should not be as much of an issue as the total energy balance in relation to energy needs at a particular time and the meal frequency (eating every 3 hours).

Regardless of which side of the “carbs at night” debate you lean towards, if you consider the within day energy balance principle, it makes perfect sense not to eat large, calorie-dense meals late at night before bedtime.

Keep in mind of course, that cutting back on your calories and/or carbs at night makes the most sense in the context of a fat loss program, especially if fat loss has been slow. It’s quite possible that I might give the exact opposite advice to the skinny “ectomorph” who is having a hard time gaining muscular body weight.

Also consider that this doesn’t necessarily mean eating nothing at night; it may simply mean eating smaller meals or emphasizing lean protein and green veggies (or a small protein shake) at night.

Many programs suggest a specific time when you should eat your last meal of the day. However, I’d suggest avoiding an absolute cut off time, such as “no food or no carbs after 6 pm, etc,” because people go to bed at different times, and maintenance of steady blood sugar and an optimal hormonal balance even at night are also important goals.

A more personalized suggestion is to cut off food intake 3 hours before bedtime, if practical and possible. For example, if you eat dinner at 6 pm, but don’t go to bed until 12 midnight, then a small 9 pm meal or a snack makes sense, but keep it light, preferably lean protein, and dont raid the refrigerator at 11:55!

An important rule to remember in all cases, is that whatever is working, keep doing more of it. If you eat your largest meal before bed and lose fat anyway, I would never tell you to change that. Results are what counts. On the other hand, if you’re stuck at a fat loss plateau, this is a technique I’d suggest you give a try.

Night time eating is likely to remain a subject of debate – especially the part about whether carbs should be targeted for removal in evening meals.

However, perhaps even those who are skeptical can consider, that if cutting out carbs at night is effective for fat loss, it may be for the simple reason that it forces you to eat less automatically.

In other words, setting a rule to eat fewer calories or to eat fewer carbs at night may be a very effective way to keep your daily calories in check and to match intake to activity, whereas people who are allowed to eat ad libitum at night when they’re home, glued to the couch and watching TV, etc., may tend to overeat when food is readily available, but the energy is not needed in large amounts.

Me personally? Unless I’m weight training at night, I have always reduced calories and carbs at night when “cutting” for bodybuilding competition. It’s worked so well for me that I devoted a whole section to it in my program, Burn The Fat, Feed The Muscle (BFFM) and I call the techniques “calorie tapering” and “carb tapering.” For more information on how I use these methods to help me reach single digit body fat, you can visit: www.BurnTheFat.com

Best regards,

Silva S.

The See-Food, Reach-Food Diet

You’ve heard of the “See-Food” diet haven’t you? No, that’s not the diet where you load up on fish, lobster, crab and mussels. The See-Food Diet is the one that so many of us crack jokes about – it’s the diet where you eat everything in sight! But don’t laugh too hard. Scientists at Cornell University and other research institutions have proven that you actually WILL eat more food if you see food more. In fact, if you can see it and it’s within arm’s reach, you could eat yourself obese within a few years and not even know what hit you because the eating happens unconsciously.

It should be common sense that when you’re constantly surrounded by food, you tend to eat more.

But one thing that hasn’t been clear until recently was how seeing food (visibility) and having it within reach (proximity) could influence unconscious eating (and how it influences what I call “eating amnesia”).

Developmental psychologists tell us that the more effort or time you invest in a unique activity, the more likely you’ll be to remember it.

In other words, if you have to go out of your way to get food, you’ll remember eating it. If the food is right there within arms reach, you’ll munch away and more easily forget it.

For years, Dr. Brian Wansink of the Food and Brand Laboratory at Cornell University has been conducting fascinating experiments to find out what really makes you eat more food than you need.

Some of his previous studies revealed that taste, palatability, mood, stress, social context, role models (parental influence), visual cues, visibility and convenience can all influence how much you eat (Eating behavior is environmentally and psychologically influenced – appetite is not just biological).

To explore the influence of food proximity and visibility on eating behavior, Wansink set up an experiment using 40 female staff members from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champain. The subjects were not told it was a weight loss or calorie-related study. They were told that they would be given a free candy dish filled with chocolates (candy “kisses”) and they’d be contacted and surveyed about their candy preferences. They were also told not to share the candies, take them home or move the dish.

Participants were divided into four groups:

1) Proximate and visible (can see and reach)
2) Proximate and non-visible (can reach but not see)
3) Less proximate and visible (can see but can’t reach)
4) Less proximate and non visible (can’t see, and can’t reach)

During each day of the four week study, 30 chocolates were placed in 20 clear containers and 20 opaque containers and delivered to the 40 subjects. The containers were replenished every afternoon. They were kept in the same location for 4 straight business days and then rotated on the following week. Researchers kept a daily record of the number of chocolates eaten from each container and comparisons were made from the data collected.

At the end of each week, each subject was given a questionnaire which asked them how much they thought they had eaten over the entire week and asked them about their perceptions regarding the chocolates (such as “it was difficult to stop eating them,” “I thought of eating the chocolates often,” etc).

When the results were tabulated, here’s what Dr. Wansink and his research team discovered:

The visibility and proximity of the candy dish also influenced the subject’s perceptions. Regardless of whether participants could actually see the chocolates, if the candies were sitting on the desk (as opposed to being a mere 2 meters away), they were rated as more attention-attracting and difficult to resist. Candies in the clear containers were also rated as more difficult to resist and more attention attracting.

Most interesting of all, this study confirmed that when food is close by and visible, you’ll not only eat more, you’ll also be likely to forget that you ate them and therefore, underestimate how much you’ve eaten (I like to call that “eating amnesia.”)

Is a few extra candies a day really a big deal?

If it becomes habitual it sure is! Over a year, the difference between the candy dish placement would mean 125 calories per day which adds up to 12 extra pounds of body fat over a year.

When given the advice to keep junk food out of the house and office, I often hear complaints that it’s “impossible” to do because the rest of the family would have a fit, or simply not allow it. As for the office, one of the biggest excuses I’ve heard for diet failure is that the temptations are always there and it’s out of your control to change. Invariably someone else brings doughnuts or candy to the office.

Now you know what to do to reduce temptation and successfully stick with your program more effectively:

If you can’t keep it out of your office or house, keep it out of sight and out of arm’s reach. That alone is enough to reduce consumption.

At home, if your significant other or family is not willing to remove all offending foods from the premises, then get their agreement that their food is not to remain in plain sight – it goes in the back of a refrigerator drawer and not on the shelf at eye level, or if non-perishable, it goes inside a cupboard that is exclusively the domain of the other person.

At work, tell your office pals to keep the candy, doughnuts and other temptations off your desk, at a distance and out of sight. If they put any unhealthy snacks on your desk, promptly remove them!

Environmental cues can trigger you to eat impulsively. If you can see it and reach it, you’ll eat more of it, and you’ll forget how much you ate. So get the junk out of your home and office now and if you can’t, then get it out of your sight. If you can’t do that, get it out of arms reach.

Better yet, setup an “environment for success” with a lifestyle program like my Burn The Fat, Feed The Muscle system.

What No One Is Telling You About Calories In VS Calories Out

I’m going to share with you the most crucial weight loss strategy that will literally make or break your success. This is the number one fat loss tip I could ever give you. If you don’t get this right, you can kiss your fat loss results goodbye. This is the one absolute requirement for weight loss, and it’s something you’ve probably heard of before. However, there’s one critical distinction about this familiar advice that you might not have considered – and this one thing makes all the difference in the world…

Let me quote Melvin Williams, PhD, professor emeritus of exercise science at Old Dominion University and author of the textbookNutrition for Health, Fitness and Sport (McGraw Hill):

“Human energy systems are governed by the same laws of physics that rule all energy transformations. No substantial evidence is available to disprove the caloric theory. It is still the physical basis for bodyweight control.”

There are a variety of diet programs and weight loss “gurus” who claim that calories don’t count. They insist that if you eat certain foods or avoid certain foods, that’s all you have to do to lose weight. Dozens, maybe hundreds of such diets exist, with certain “magic foods” put up on a pedestal or certain “evil fat-storing foods” banished into the forbidden foods zone.

Other weight loss “experts” invoke the insulin/carbohydrate hypothesis which claims that carbs drive insulin which drives body fat. That’s akin to saying “Carbs are the reason for the obesity crisis today, not excess calories.”

They are all mistaken.

Of course, there IS more to nutrition than calories in vs calories out. Food quality and nutrition content matters for good health. In addition, your food choices can affect your energy intake. We could even point the finger at an excess of refined starches and grains, sugar and soft drinks (carbs!) as major contributing factors to the surplus calories that lead to obesity.

However, that brings us back to excess calories as the pivotal point in the chain of causation, not carbs. A caloric deficit is a required condition for weight loss – even if you opt for the low carb approach – and that’s where your focus should go – on the deficit.

Now, here’s that critical distinction…

You’ve heard it said, “exercise more and eat less” a million times. However, saying “focus on the calorie deficit” is NOT the same thing. If you don’t understand the difference, you could end up spinning your wheels for years.

You could exercise more, but if you compensate by eating more, you cancel your deficit.

You could eat less, but if you compensate by moving less, again you cancel your deficit.

This type of compensation can happen unconsciously, which leads to confusion about why you’re not losing weight or why you’re gaining. That often leads you to make excuses or blame the wrong thing… anything but the calories.

Therefore, “focus on the calorie deficit” more accurately states the most important key to weight loss than “exercise more and eat less.” Make sure you understand this distinction and then follow this advice.

Last but not least, keep in mind that there are a lot of ways to establish a deficit and many of those ways are really dumb. Eating nothing but grapefruits, cabbage, twinkies… but in a deficit?… Dumb!

The bottom line is that a calorie deficit is required for fat loss, but once your deficit is established, the composition of your hypo-caloric diet DOES matter. That’s why any good fat loss program starts with “calories in vs calories out” but doesn’t stop there – you also need to look at protein, essential fats, macronutrients, micronutrients, food quality and how the diet you choose fits into your lifestyle. This is the pivotal strategy that my entire Burn The Fat, Feed The Muscle system hinges upon.

Don’t let the simplicity of this idea fool you. This is the #1 key to your successful weight loss now and in the future: Focus on the deficit!

Train hard and expect success,

Silva

Why Cardio Doesn’t Work For Some People: A NEAT Explanation

At the Burn the Fat Inner Circle member forums, I get a question which comes up with alarming frequency: “Why isn’t my cardio working?”  Despite not only doing regular cardio for weeks, but actually increasing the duration of her workouts, one member still saw no added fat loss and started wondering what she was doing wrong… or what was wrong with her!  I gave her the surprisingly simple answer, which I’ve printed for you as well in this article and new research has added even more to the answer – it’s a NEAT explanation…

How is it possible that some people do tons of cardio and don’t lose weight?

Simple: Weight loss is a function of caloric deficit, not how much cardio you do. Cardio is only one of the tools you use to create and increase a caloric deficit.

Endurance athletes are a perfect example for illustrating the error in thinking that “an hour a day” (or whatever amount) of cardio will guarantee weight loss…

They might train for two, three, even four hours or more on some days, but they are often not trying to lose weight. They (have to) eat huge amounts of food to fuel their training and keep their weight stable.

It’s not unusual at all for a cyclist to burn 4000 or 5000 calories per day and not lose any weight. Why? Same reason you’re doing a lot of cardio but not losing weight:  there’s no calorie deficit. Calories in are equaling the calories out.

What you need to do is shift your focus OFF of some kind of prerequisite time spent doing cardio and ON to the REAL prerequisite for weight loss: a caloric deficit.

If your caloric intake remains exactly the same and you add cardio or other training or activity you will create a deficit and you will lose weight, guaranteed.

With all this talk about “cardio” and “training” one important area that people often forget about is all the other activity in your life outside of your cardio and weight training. There’s a name for that:

Non exercise activity thermogenesis, or NEAT

NEAT is all your physical activity throughout the day, excluding your “formal” workouts.

NEAT includes all the calories you burn from casual walking, shopping, yard work, housework, standing, pacing and even little things like talking, chewing, changing posture, maintaining posture and fidgeting. Walking contributes to the majority of NEAT

It seems like a bunch of little stuff – and it is – which is why most people completely ignore it. Big mistake.

At the end of the day, week, month and year, all the little stuff adds up to a very significant amount of energy. For most people, NEAT accounts for about 30% of physical activity calories spent daily, but NEAT can run as low 15% in sedentary individuals and as high as 50% in highly active individuals.

I’m always telling people to exercise more – to burn more, not just eat less. This is not only for health, fitness and well-being, but also to help increase fat loss.

But some people say that increasing exercise doesn’t always work and they quote from research to make their case.  It’s true that some studies paradoxically don’t show better weight loss by adding exercise on top of diet.

But there are explanations for this…

If you add training into your fat loss regime but you don’t maintain your nutritional discipline and keep your food intake the same, you remain in energy balance. If a study doesn’t monitor this type of compensation, or if the researchers trust the subjects to accurately self-report their own food intake (hahahahahahahaha!), it will look like the exercise was for nothing.

In studies where the food intake was controlled when exercise was added… surprise, surprise, weight loss increased!

Stated differently, all these “experts” who keep saying that exercise doesn’t work for weight loss are  ignoring or not understanding the concepts of calorie deficit and energy compensation.

Why  Exercise “Doesn’t Work” – The NEAT Explanation

So a handful of people exercise and then eat more than they were eating before and then scratch their heads and wonder why they aren’t losing. DUH!

Or, they go on some idiotic crusade against exercise. “SEE! exercise is a waste of time… all you have to do is follow the ‘magic’ diet!”

Wrong. Dieting alone is the worst way to lose weight because without training, the composition of the weight you lose is not so good (goodbye muscle… hello skinny fat person!). Want to avoid skinny fat syndrome? It’s nutrition, then weight training, then add in and manipulate the cardio as your results dictate.

There’s another type of compensation that researchers have recently started studying.  When people increase their training, especially high intensity training, sometimes they also compensate by moving less later in the day and in the days that that follow!

For example, you work out like an animal in the morning, but then instead of your usual walking around and doing housework the rest of the day, you crash and plop your tired body in your LAZY BOY for a nice nap and a marathon session of TV. The next day, the delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) sets in and then you REALLY don’t feel like moving!

Research on NEAT is extensive and it tells us that NEAT plays a major role in obesity and fat loss. Finding ways to INCREASE NEAT along with formal exercise can be a promising strategy to increase your total daily calorie burn and thus, increase fat loss. The flip side of that equation is finding ways to avoid decreases in NEAT that we might not have been aware of. Because NEAT is so completely off most people’s radars, most people miss this.

(NOTE: For a real eye-opener, try a using a pedometer or bodybugg for a while)

Previous studies have confirmed that many people compensated and decreased their activity (NEAT) during the remainder of the day or on rest days after exercise training. This led anti-exercise pundits once again to spit out their party line, “see, exercise doesn’t work! You might as well just diet.”

However, a study published in Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise found no immediate debilitative effect on NEAT on the day of exercise or on the following 2 days. In fact, there was a delayed reaction and NEAT actually INCREASED 48 hours after the exercise session (60 minutes of treadmill walking at 6 kph @ 10% grade with 5 minute intervals at 0% grade).

Why the conflicting findings? Scientists aren’t 100% sure yet, but they have discovered that part of it has to do with exercise intensity.

Moderate Intensity vs High Intensity cardio: Effect on NEAT

You sometimes hear certain trainers claim that only high intensity exercise is worthwhile and everything else is a waste of time or at best inefficient. That’s not always true, on many levels, and one of them involves NEAT.

It looks like higher intensity training has more potential to DECREASE NEAT later on than low or moderate intensity training. You burn a lot of calories DURING the workout when training at high intensity. However, the calories burned during the formal training can be at least partly canceled out by a decrease in NEAT outside the training session.

It also appears that moderate intensity exercise may be better tolerated than high intensity exercise by some people, especially beginners and obese individuals. The low or moderate intensity workouts don’t wipe them out so much that they don’t become fatigued, sluggish and sore later in the day…. and there’s no decrease in NEAT.

Am I saying you shouldn’t do high intensity exercise? Not at all.

High intensity training can be very effective and very time efficient and a mix of high and lower-intensity training might be ideal. But if you do a lot of high intensity training, you have to be aware of how OVER-doing it might affect your energy and activity level outside the gym – on the day of training, and even in the days that follow the intense workout. Otherwise, you might end up with fewer total calories burned at the end of the week, not more.

If you don’t understand the calorie balance equation and the calorie deficit… if you don’t understand the compensatory effect of NEAT on energy out and you don’t understand the compensatory effect of eating behaviors on energy in, then you can do cardio until you’re blue in the face and you’ll still be in energy balance… and your body fat will stay exactly the same.

Important points

1. This study SUPPORTS the role of exercise for weight loss and debunks the idea that exercise doesn’t work for weight loss, provided all else remains equal when exercise is added on top of diet.

2. Exercise intensity can affect NEAT for days after a workout is over. Too much high intensity work might zap your energy and activity outside the gym, resulting in a lower level of NEAT. You have to keep up your habitual activity level outside the gym after pushing yourself hard in the gym.

3. This information supports the role of low moderate intensity exercise (like 60 minutes of treadmill walking) based on the effect this has on your activity outside the gym. It is not true that only high intensity training is worthwhile. There are pros and cons of training at various intensities.

4. If you can keep up your NEAT, you can increase your weekly calorie expenditure and increase your fat loss.

5. It’s important in research to look beyond short term results (during a workout bout, 24 hour studies, etc), and also consider longer term effects. We should watch out for more studies on NEAT that go beyond 24 hours to learn more.

NEAT is a great way to improve your total fat loss results, but it can also undermine your efforts if you don’t consider the toll it takes on your daily energy expenditure. The best thing you can do is follow a fat loss system like my Burn The Fat, Feed The Muscle Program that takes account of the big picture, including NEAT.

Train hard and expect success!

Silva


Lose Weight Fast – 10 Easy Ways To Knock Weight Off Quickly!

The tips below will help you lose weight fast and make sure that you do it quickly and in a healthy manner.

There are no fad diet tips below like the Atkins diet or no carbs all the tips are sensible and will help you lose weight fast be healthy and happy. So here are your proven tips.

1. Use the cabbage soup diet to start

We all need motivation and want to see results quickly and this diet that lasts for just a week is an ideal way to get started. It is guaranteed to help you.

Many people knock off up to half a stone and you can to.

This is not a long term diet, just to get you in the mood and show some quick results.

Now your started, here are your tips.

Note: Eat what you want within the guidelines and you will lose weight fast.

2. Eat 5 meals a day. 3 main meals breakfast lunch and dinner and two snacks in between

This will help you avoid hunger pangs. Make sure you eat breakfast, it’s the most important meal of the day.

Man is a grazer not a binger and we need constant nourishment throughout the day.

3. Portion Size

While you can eat 5 meals a day keep in mind portion size!

The way to gunge portion size is look at your fist.

Want some rice? Then that’s the amount you can have same goes for meat & fish and vegetables

4. Drink water

Drink two – three liters of iced water a day.

Many hunger pangs are simply thirst pangs, so to keep you hydrated and full drink plenty of water.

Water helps your body metabolize fat by helping the kidneys flush out waste.

When you don’t drink enough water the liver which works to provide stored fat for energy also takes on the role of helping the kidneys flush out waste and is then less effective at metabolizing fat.

5. Eat carbohydrates, protein and fat

Don’t ignore any group.

When eating remember to eat “naturally from the earth”, the less processed the food is the better.

What this means is eat healthy carbohydrates such as brown rice or potatoes, rather than pizza.

With fat it’s the same unsaturated rather than saturated fats. When consuming proteins make sure its lean protein.

6. Eat fiber and lots of it

Eating lots of foods rich in fiber helps keep food moving through your bowels.

Fiber bulks you up and makes you feel full.

The average person could lose around 10 pounds a year just from doubling their fiber intake. Start your day with a high fiber cereal and keep eating all day.

7. Lean protein

Protein can help you lose weight fast tool because of the immediate satiety factor it provides.

Protein also balances out carbs by stopping insulin spikes that can lead to low energy and sugar cravings.

Finally, protein helps maintain muscle mass which is important in the fat burning process.

At least 20% of calories per day should be in the form of lean protein.

8. Keep healthy food on hand

With our busy lives its easy to simply grab some junk food, so make sure you have healthy food always at hand so you can make a quick tasty snack.

Canned fish is ideal such as tuna, mackerel sardines or Salmon. Open the can, do a baked potato in the microwave, add some vegetables and you have a quick nutritious meal in under 10 minutes.

9. One day a week eat what you want!

One of the reasons most people fail on diets and don’t lose weight fast is they are to strict.

When you are deprived of something you want it even more, so one day a week ( it doesn’t matter which ) treat yourself.

Fancy a pizza go ahead, two Big Macs maybe? Do it and don’t feel guilty.

Keep dieting in perspective.

If you are eating healthy food the majority of time treating yourself will do you no harm and also keep you on the right track.

Eating is one of the pleasures of life so don’t deprive yourself totally of things you like.

10. Be realistic

If you follow the above guidelines you can eat what you want and lose weight fast.

Keep in mind once you are doing the above your weight will go down quicker than with any fad diet.

Don’t starve yourself this wont help.

Crash dieting is unhealthy and the pounds soon come back on.

Stay with the above and you will soon lose weight fast and reach the weight you desire in a healthy manner.

5 Tips on How to Lose Leg Fat Fast

I’m often asked how to lose leg fat by students in my local weight loss classes, particularly when bikini weather is coming and they want to look great at the pool or beach.

Luckily the answers aren’t difficult to learn or do, as Asian women have figured out how to lose leg fat and get skinny stick legs for decades and you can learn from our tricks!

Today we’re going to look at a few ways Asian women trim down and get lean legs without starving or doing insane workouts, and how you can get the same look without killing yourself at the health club.
Leg fat can be unsightly. Leg fat can be a source of tremendous anguish. Millions of people are overweight. Fact: people, in general, are judged by the way they appear to others. Life can be cruel that way, which is why we our brains are hard-wired to believe that we need to be thinner and more attractive, and our obsession with losing weight grows bigger and bigger.

The great part about shrinking your thighs is that number one, it can be done. And number 2 the fat on your thigh is connected to one of the largest muscles in the body. Your legs. And since your legs can be worked hard and often, losing thigh fat (and any fat for that matter) can be done quickly.

If you have not begun, start your program with walking. A good brisk walk not only gets the oxygen flowing, it gets your leg muscles prepped. It allows you to slowly integrate body’s ability to do more physical activity. It stimulates your metabolism, which is what you need to lose the thigh fat you desire.

Once you’ve been walking (I always recommend 20-30 minutes a day to start) for a while, you should notice an increased ability to do more. At this point find a place where you can do small step-ups. If you stairs in your own house, use those, nothing fancy here. The goal is to just make sure you do them. Try 20 steps alternating each leg.

This should not be too taxing, but it will make those thighs work harder. You will begin to feel as if you can produce more results. That’s the trick for how to lose thigh fat, or any fat. Set yourself up for success by doing small things first.

After several weeks prepping your thighs (and body) join a local health club and begin integrating the many leg and upper body machines into your workout regime. It doesn’t matter how much you weight now. It doesn’t matter how much weight you need or want to lose.

It doesn’t matter how many weight loss failures you’ve experienced in your lifetime. If you ease into a thigh reduction (weight loss) program, you can lose as much weight as you decide. Just get in there, head first, and give your best effort.

Weight loss is a decision you make. You make it everyday of your life whether you realize it or not. The great part is once you do realize that the way you look and feel is completely up to you, and not some outside source, then weight loss and thigh shaping becomes so much easier! Make a choice and begin today!

It’s The Way I lose Leg Fat

The best way I lost leg fat was when I used a diet program known as The Diet Solution Program.  The program shows you what diets to use for leg fat. It’s a pretty niffty program, I wasn’t expecting much, but it really helped. At all the diet programs I have tried. The Diet Solution Program really worked.

Step by Step – Here’s Exactly What The Diet Solution Program Program Gives You…

“Basically, you’re getting a how to guide on exactly how to implement the ‘The Diet Solution Program and videos which change literally 90% of the process.”

Click Here to Go To The Diet Solution Program Website.

Here’s exactly how the system works:

First of all, there is no weight lifting  involved – at all. I know, I was as shocked as you probably are. But seriously, you watch the videos follow the guide and that’s it.

So, what you do first is set your boundary’s, get a peace of paper and write down what they are. This is critical so you always have something to go back to.

After that you start on reading the guide and following the videos.  Keeping yourself focused on the task at hand, which is to lose weight.

Then you keep at as long as you want, watching you weight go down is best thing to watch. But, stick with it, don’t stop.

Note: The program does do much more than that but I’m unfortunately not allowed to reveal it at the time of writing (before Fat Burning Furnace program is launched).

You then keep at and don’t give up.  Sounds like the simplest thing in the world and it really is.
The Bad Points

Obviously, The Diet Solution Program is not perfect. Here’s what I didn’t like about it:

* My main gripe is that it’s a membership site and so you will have to keep paying month after month in order to access the program. While it’s definitely worth it I would have preferred one price and then to never be charged again.

The Good Points

* Most importantly: It works and it doesn’t matter what your experience level is, if you implement the system you WILL loes  fat. quite quickly.
* You don’t need anything else. While I recommend you pick up my bonus package to help your overall understanding of how to lose weight. You don’t need to. Everything you need to lose weight fast is included.
* You get the guide PLUS videos to do it for with. 90% of products only provide a guide and recommend some ‘helpful’ products. Fat Burning Furnace’s videos is built with THIS system in mind and is one of the most impressive pieces of program I’ve come accross.
* Anyone can use it. It doesn’t matter if you’re completely new to losing weight or an expert. The fact that you don’t need to diet and that you don’t left weights makes this the most accessible weight loss opportunity there is.
* A completely different system than anything you’ve ever seen. While this is for newbies, even if you’re an expert it’s worth getting. Fat Burning Furnace and it’s way of losing fat directly is amazing, even I learned a few things. If you’re already losing weight  then this can be yet another way system for you, seriously, I guarantee you won’t have seen anything like this before…

Last Word

And so we come to the end of my The Diet Solution Program review. Overall, this is one of the most impressive and complete lose weight programs  I’ve seen in a long time.

When you look past the flashy sales page about ‘Fat Burning this and Fat Burning that’ what you essentially have is an amazing, unique, simple yet powerful system that’s a sure win for any person who is looking to lose fat fast, no matter what you’re experience is. Heck, I’m going to start the program again  after I’m done writing this review.

Silva,
Click Here Go to The Diet Solution Program Website.

 

How to Lose Leg Fat Video!

Hey guys Silva here,

I just posted a quick video on how you could lose leg fat too. :)

Click here to watch video

It basically shows you one the exercises  in the coarse. Click here to see the course.

It’s really a great program that worked great for me. This expert is a great teacher! He helped me lose all my fat and if you’ve been reading my previous post then you know I use to be pretty big and clumsy.  A friend recommended this program and it really changed everything for me.

When I was turned down to become a bone marrow donor because I was so overweight and had sky-high blood pressure and cholesterol, it was a wake up call. It took time, but I lost 133 pounds and am now on the bone marrow registry. I’m currently working with the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society to raise money for blood cancer research by cycling 100 mile “Century” rides for Team In Training.

Who’d have thought that someone who was 356 pounds would ever become an endurance athlete? It is mind blowing.

For me, the beauty of the Fat Burning Furnace program is that I can change up my food and not lose muscle and yet still lose weight while eating enough carbs and protein to please my body’s training needs! WOW! For me, the flexibility of the program has been key. I’m able to track my results and make corrections each week. You don’t have that luxury with using other rigid weight loss programs.

In case you didn’t see it the video, you can watch it by clicking here

Click here to see the program

Never give up

 

Silva

The #1 Way to Lose Leg Fat Tip Of The Year

If you stopped me on the street to ask me what’s the number one way to lose leg fat  is, there are a hundred different directions I could lead you. Of course, there is one strategy that stands out among the others, and in almost all cases, this would be the first thing I suggest. This is the one absolute requirement for weight loss, and it’s something you’ve probably heard of before. However, there’s one critical distinction about this familiar advice that you might not have considered – and this one thing makes all the difference in the world…

Let me quote Melvin Williams, PhD, professor emeritus of exercise science at Old Dominion University and author of the textbook Nutrition for Health, Fitness and Sport (McGraw Hill):

“Human energy systems are governed by the same laws of physics that rule all energy transformations. No substantial evidence is available to disprove the caloric theory. It is still the physical basis for bodyweight control.”

There are a variety of diet programs and weight loss “gurus” who claim that calories don’t count. They insist that if you eat certain foods or avoid certain foods, that’s all you have to do to lose weight. Dozens, maybe hundreds of such diets exist, with certain “magic foods” put up on a pedestal or certain “evil fat-storing foods” banished into the forbidden foods zone.

Other weight loss “experts” invoke the insulin/carbohydrate hypothesis which claims that carbs drive insulin which drives body fat. That’s akin to saying “Carbs are the reason for the obesity crisis today, not excess calories.”

They are all mistaken.

Of course, there IS more to losing weight then calories. The program you use and how determined you are at following that program. Loosing leg fat can be easy if you stick with the program and don’t give up.  Never Give Up!

I sure wasn’t about to give up when the program really worked. Stick with it, and that’s how you’re going to lose leg fat.

Now, here’s that critical distinction…

You’ve heard it said, “exercise more and eat less” a million times. However, saying “focus on the deficit” is NOT the same thing. If you don’t understand the difference, you could end up spinning your wheels for years.

You could exercise more, but if you compensate by eating more, you cancel your deficit.

You could eat less, but if you compensate by moving less, again you cancel your deficit.

This type of compensation can happen unconsciously, which leads to confusion about why you’re not losing weight or why you’re gaining. That often leads you to make excuses or blame the wrong thing… anything but the calories.

Therefore, “focus on the deficit” more accurately states the most important key to weight loss than “exercise more and eat less.” Make sure you understand this distinction and then follow this advice.

Last but not least, keep in mind that there are a lot of ways to establish a deficit and many of those ways are really dumb. Eating nothing but grapefruits, cabbage, twinkies… but in a deficit?… Dumb!

A calorie deficit is required for fat loss, but once your deficit is established, the composition of your hypo-caloric diet DOES matter. That’s why any good fat loss program starts with calories but doesn’t stop there – you also need to look at protein, essential fats, macronutrients, micronutrients, food quality and how the diet you choose fits into your lifestyle.

Don’t let the simplicity of this idea fool you. This is the #1 key to your successful weight loss this year, and every year: Focus on the deficit!

Train hard and expect success,