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By Carolyn Hansen
Whether you are looking to drop 10-15 pounds
of fat or add 10-15 pounds of lean muscle mass, it's important to first come to
grips with some of the biggest lies/myths in the fitness industry. Otherwise
you may end up wasting your valuable time and could even damage your long-term
health.
For starters, the myth/belief that muscle
turns to fat is totally erroneous.
Myth 1:
Muscle never turns to fat.
They are two totally, separate types of
tissue. Just as your heart is different from your liver and you wouldn't worry
that it could become your liver, your muscle cannot turn into fat. It would be
like watching an apple convert to an orange right before your eyes. Not going
to happen.
So, what does happen to someone who was once
very muscular and fit but stops working out? If muscle does not turn to fat as
many believe, then why does their once fit and trim body now appear fat, flabby
and unhealthy?
The reality is much worse than turning to fat.
Muscle is not being converted to fat, it is being lost. It is literally,
wasting away.
Because the body uses a lot of energy
maintaining lean muscle mass (which is why having more muscle is great for
preventing fat gain), when the body believes it no longer needs to maintain
muscle mass, it eliminates it. Whatever muscle mass is not being stressed
(used), starts catabolizing (breaking down).
Muscles shrink from non-use and fat pockets
grow bigger. Soon, what was
once an attractive, trim, fit body now appears flabby and fat. It is really
that simple.
Because muscle burns more calories than fat,
whenever workout habits change or slow down, changes in diet must follow. If
diets are not adjusted to align with a less active lifestyle, if food intake
remains the same but total calorie expenditure decreases, guess what? The
excess surplus of calories (that are no longer being burned through activity)
gets converted into body fat.
It's pretty simple science - when you exercise
less, you burn fewer calories and therefore, you must eat less.
The good news is, it only takes about 60 minutes
of strength training weekly at the gym (or your preferred strength training
workout) to maintain muscle once it's built. It takes far less effort to
maintain muscle once it's built than it did to build it in the first place.
Myth 2:
Exercising daily is optimal. Wrong.
Many people believe that if they fail to see
the progress they are after, it's because they are not training hard (or long)
enough so they immediately start pushing their body harder which is the exact
opposite of what should be happening.
Every time you train your muscles hard (at the
gym or elsewhere), you are creating micro damage to the muscle tissue and time
is needed for this to be rebuilt to withstand the same level of force once
again. If the time and energy needed to do this is not provided, muscles won't
get stronger and in fact can cause loss of valuable muscle mass.
Reality - when actively working out, the body
requires and needs rest days in a well-planned protocol to have the time needed
to get stronger than it was before. Ideally, one day off a week should be
allowed, if not two. But, even that is not hard science. Some people require
more. In fact, three to four days rest for beginner trainees or those who do
intense training is not at all uncommon.
Remember, as the intensity of your workouts go
up, your total rest required to recover from that workout will also increase.
It's very important to recognize when it's
time to work harder and when it's time to rest. Understanding the difference
and giving your body exactly what it needs is what gets you to that end goal.
Honor your workout, but balance it with rest.
Myth 3:
Cardio is a great way to get thinner - False.
Cardio - (referencing steady state cardio
sessions) - the workouts that people dread yet do daily after hitting the gym.
Jumping on a piece of cardio equipment and going at one pace for 20-60 minutes.
These workouts do very little for anyone. What
these extended cardio workouts achieve is to increase the appetite, causing us
to eat more. In fact, many people, who are classic "cardio bunnies,"
report ravenous appetites that just won't go away.
Cardio training can even cause loss of lean
muscle mass. When the body knows it must go for long periods of time at a
moderate intensity pace, it does what it can to be more efficient. Since muscle
tissue is energy-intensive to maintain, it is better for your body if you have
less of it.
Couple this with the fact that many are on a
lower calorie diet while doing cardio and now you have a body ready and willing
to drop lean muscle. So, fat is not really being lost in the process, but
rather, lean muscle.
The body may appear smaller after months of
cardio workouts because of lost weight, but, unfortunately, it is due to an
unhealthy, change in body composition. The body now contains more fat mass in
proportion to lean muscle mass and the result is not pretty. The look is soft,
jiggly, and anything but fit.
If you're looking to create a fit, lean, firm
body, cardio training is not the way to get there. Strength training is the
only thing empowered to reverse unhealthy, muscle loss.
"I help clients take charge of their
health before circumstance removes the option. If your quest for a life of true
physical and mental well-being is a journey I'll put you in the driver's seat."
For tools and resources to achieve this,
visit:
http://CarolynHansenFitness.com
Carolyn Hansen Fitness
For free downloadable resources visit:
https://HealthyLifeGifts.com
HealthyLifeGifts
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
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