08.06.08

Review: Fat Loss Troubleshoot

Posted in Nutrition tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , at 4:07 pm by leslie

Ever wonder why you “hardly eat” but can’t lose weight? Why you work out like a maniac but don’t lose weight? Why you follow Program X but see no results?

What secret forces are conspiring to prevent your weight loss? (Genes? Hormones? Aliens?)

The answers to those questions and more are in Leigh Peele’s e-book Fat Loss Troubleshoot. Leigh’s main goal is to get you in, get the weight (fat) off, and get you on with your life; dieting should not be a way of life but rather a brief phase. She looks at common misconceptions and “advice” and shows you why that isn’t right and what, instead, is. She also includes case studies from her clients that shows how she was able to find and fix what they were doing incorrectly.

A lot of the advice, you might be tempted to think, “Oh, I knew that already.” Oh, really? Then why aren’t you losing the fat? Sure, you might know a lot of this, but you haven’t quite put it all together. Leigh lays it all out; you get no more excuses by the time you finish reading.

The section that really hit me was on training & eating for your goals and getting enough recovery. If your goal is strength, you need to eat for strength and rest & sleep for strength. But if your goal is fat loss, you need to eat for fat loss (that is, in a deficit) and train for fat loss (that is, not so intense that you can’t function) and make sure your body is recovering. So sure, do the fat loss thing — and just the fat loss thing — until you’re at your goal, and then change goals.

FLTS is mostly a breakdown of the how’s and why’s and why not’s of fat loss. It includes calorie calculations for maintenance and deficits and an activity quiz to determine how much you’re really moving. In addition to FLTS, though, Leigh also offers “OPT for Fat Loss,” which is a workout and calorie deficit program based on everything you learn in FLTS so you don’t have to do it all yourself, and the “Metabolic Repair Manual.”

MRM is for people who have dieted for years and who may have created a slow metabolic response and/or other intestinal problems. (There’s a quiz in the manual to see if you qualify.) MRM takes you through a process of resting and slowly eating more until your metabolic response and digestion is normal. A plan that makes you eat more? Sounds crazy and like a recipe for massive weight gain, right? Except Leigh’s plan works and with little to no weight gain, and sometimes even weight loss! (See this thread in the JP Fitness Forums for one lady’s experience with MRM.) I’m only a Level 1 (little to no damage) mostly because I haven’t been able to stick to any “diet” for more than two weeks. =P

And, as if she hasn’t written enough yet, Leigh answers questions in the Fat Loss Troubleshoot forum at JP Fitness, and her blog has more info, articles, and comments. Subscribe to her podcast; sign up for the Subscribers’ section. Also, watch her Fat Loss Tips video. (Btw, the answer to the question “What secret forces are conspiring to prevent your weight loss?” is found in that video.)

* * * * *

I really started following Leigh’s advice at the end of June (July 4th holiday not included!). With BJJ/MMA only 3 days/week and injured toes, I had the time to pay attention. And it made a huge difference. In the last month, my clothes have started to fall off as I’ve lost weight. I have progress pictures taken back in May and some taken last weekend, and the difference is amazing. In the last month I’ve started to get “You’ve lost a lot of weight!” comments. (And one hilarious addendum: “Did you do it on purpose?” Erm, yes.)

* * * * *

Update 08/15/08: Skwigg has reviewed both FLTS and MRM. (As for the grammar issues, yes, they’re there (and I had to hide all my red pens), but Leigh explained that she hired an editor who did a bad job. She’s the Fat Loss Troubleshooter, not the Grammar Queen, after all.)

04.08.08

NROLFW, 3A2, & BJJ class #2

Posted in Training Log tagged , , , , at 11:14 am by leslie

Last night, I went to my second BJJ class. (There’s a class every night of the week, except Sunday.) And I made it through the warm-up, no passing out. Nice. :) Couldn’t completely do everything, but got at least half of it and didn’t pass out. Good start. Did some rolling, and then went home for NROLFW Stage 3 A2. Because I’m that crazy.

NROLFW 3A2

  • DB Snatch: 3×6x25lbs
  • DB single-leg RDL: 3×6x25/10lbs (25-lb DB in off hand; 10-lb DB in other)
  • Bent-over Row: 2×6x50lbs, 1×6x40lbs
  • DB Single-arm OH squat: 3×6x5/10lbs
  • DB incline press: 3×6x25lb DBs
  • Planks: 1×60s

After that Plank, I dropped to the floor for the rest period… and didn’t get back up again. Body was done. Got to bed and was asleep in under 30 minutes. Nice.

I’d skipped the third lifting session last week because I was too tired; I slept away most of the weekend. So I’m a workout behind. Now I just have to figure out how to fit lifting around BJJ & TKD without burning out.

This morning, I’m sore, especially in my shoulders. One of the things we practiced at BJJ last night, you had to partially lift the other guy with your legs/arms; then the snatch & incline press really hit the shoulders.

03.17.08

NROLFW, 2A2

Posted in Training Log tagged , , at 8:16 am by leslie

Uh-oh, I’m 0-for-2 on my last two workout updates. Stage 2 is wearing me out! All I want to do when I’m finished is go to sleep. I don’t even want to eat, just sleep. (So, of course, in bizarre way, I think it’s fun.)

Part of it is that these workouts are getting longer. Stage 2 adds a third alternating set, and there are two single-leg exercises. I’m dropping some of the rest times between the alternating exercises and leaving just the last one (before repeating the sets). Still, it’s taking a while.

  • Front Squat/Push Press: (1×10xOH/bw, 1×10x20lbs) 1×8x40lbs, 1×5x35lbs, 1×5x30lbs, 1×2x30lbs
  • Step Ups: 2×10x10-lb DBs
  • DB 1-pt Rows: 1×10x20-lb DBs, 1×10x10-lb DBs
  • Static Lunge, rear foot elevated: 2×10x10-lb DBs
  • Pushups: 2×10
  • Plank: 2×60s
  • Woodchop: 2×10x10lbs

My form was off in the front squats and I kept toppling forward, which in turn put more stress on my wrists/forearms, so I had to keep dropping the weight. Meh.

The DB 1-pt Rows, wow–I know I can do a bent-over row with more weight, but it’s the balancing part that gets you. You spend so much energy trying not to fall over!

03.14.08

NROLFW, Stage 2B1

Posted in Training Log tagged , , , , , , at 8:21 am by leslie

Oops, I was supposed to post this yesterday. Instead, I took the day off from work and slept. Woke up to eat and slept again. Didn’t get much sleep Wednesday night after 2B1, probably because of the intervals getting my heart rate up. Whew.

Anyways:

  • Wide Grip Deadlift: (1×10x20lbs, 1×5x40lbs) 2×10x50lbs
  • Bulgarian Split Squat: 2×10xbw
  • Underhand Pulldown: 2×10x50lbs
  • Reverse Lunge + Reach: 2×10x10-lbs DBs
  • DB Cuban Snatch: 2×10x5-lbs DBs
  • Swiss Ball Crunch: 2×10x10lbs
  • Reverse Crunch: 2×10
  • Flexion #1: 2×10
  • Prone Cobra: 90s
  • HIIT (road running): 3x(1min/2min), 1x(30s/2min)

Wowzers. This workout isn’t easy. Really, all of these workouts look so innocent on paper, but once you add heavy weights and start working through them, they’re anything but. And some of these exercises (BSS, Cuban, and flexion) look really easy, so you want to add more weight, but it’s really almost impossible! I was tired enough after the weights part, but I figured that intervals were there as a finisher anyway, so I went outside and ran as many as I could (which was far fewer than I’d thought I could).

I was so sore after 2A1, lasting until Wednesday evening. But I’m not so sore after 2B1, just so tired.

Part of the sleeping problem, I think, is that this workout took so long. Probably an hour to an hour fifteen minutes for the weights, plus the intervals afterward. Part of the time problem is the two single-leg exercises. I may drop the rest after those and just do straight supersets; I did that on the two crunches/flexion superset.

03.11.08

NROLFW, Stage 2A1

Posted in Training Log tagged , , , , at 9:04 am by leslie

I just finished a week off from NROLFW. The off week ended up coming at just the right time; VT was on spring break and I was heading off to visit a friend. Anyway, so last night I started Stage 2.

Pre-workout: 1 scoop Full-Blown Extreme, Berry Blast, + 1 scoop Iso-Extreme, Berry Blast

  • Front Squat/Push Press: (squat: 1×10xbw; fspp:1×10x20lbs) 2×10x40lbs
  • Step Ups: Lx10×20-lb DB, Rx10×10-lb DBs; Rx10×20-lb DB, Lx10×10-lb DB
  • Dumbbell 1-Point Row: 2×10x10-lb DBs
  • Static Lunge (rear foot elevated): 2×10xbw*
  • Pushups: 2×10 (elbows close)
  • Plank: 1×60s; 1×45s, 1×15s
  • Horizontal Woodchop (on Swiss ball): 2×10x10-lbs

*My big toes don’t bend that way…? Huh? And this was just hard after everything else. Ugh.

Ack, there are still step ups. Why don’t these go away?? They hurt! *end whine*

The thrusters (front squat/push press) take a lot out of you. I barely finished that second set. By rep 7 I was slowing down, but I pushed through to finish the other reps.

This workout took me nearly an hour. I had to pause between legs on step ups and lunges. And then all I wanted was to go to bed. Today, I’m sore and stiff. Ooo, yeah.

03.03.08

NROLFW, Stage 1 Finished

Posted in Training Log tagged , , , , at 11:51 am by leslie

I did the two AMRAP workouts last week. Workout A didn’t go so well–I bonked in the squats. My own fault; I hadn’t had carbs in a very long time and I decided to do AMRAP on my current weight. Workout B wasn’t so bad: I got 1×5x75lbs in deads, good form. Much happiness.

Genius that I am, though, I forgot my workout notebook this morning with all the measurements. So I’ll probably wait until next Sunday, when I will also hopefully remember to get the scale back, to post any of that.

This week is a week off. After bonking on Workout A and with this also being VT’s spring break (no TKD), I’m ready for it. Goal #1 is to not obsess about total cals, though I will keep measuring out my food so I know what I am eating. Goal #2 is to sleep! (Fat chance, but I’ll put it on the list anyway.)

02.28.08

And rest, 2, 3, 4…

Posted in Injuries tagged , , , , , , at 9:00 am by leslie

You workout, you eat right–and you’re still not losing weight (fat or otherwise). What gives?

Check your recovery and rest.

How often do you exercise? Every day? Too much, most likely. Your body needs time to rebuild what you tore down the last time you worked out. It’ll usually take your body 36-48 hrs to strengthen a muscle and have it ready for tearing down again. Take a day off between lifting or intense cardio sessions (HIIT, kickboxing or spinning classes, etc.). Some people say you can do LSD (long slow distance) in between, but I think that may still be too much, especially if you’re already burned out.

What about sleep? For me, even 8 hours isn’t always enough. While you’re asleep, your body can get even more work done because you’re not interrupting it. Get to bed an hour earlier to recover, or sleep in instead of throwing in another LSD session. Grab a nap, if you can.

Resting is one of the things I have a hard time with. I want to lift every day just because it’s fun, and, while I do like to sleep, I also have so many things I want or have to do. I use my lifting hour on non-lifting days to get things done. And I’m trying to get that extra hour of sleep each night, even though it’s hard to quit the video game, put down the book, get off the internet, or stop studying. I even started setting one of my alarm clocks to go off at night, to tell me to shut everything down and go to bed.

While it may seem that “not lifting” or “not exercising” is counter-productive and not logical, in reality, it’s an essential part of getting stronger. Purposely add rest & sleep to your schedule.

02.06.08

NROLFW, 1B4: Get a Grip!

Posted in Training Log tagged , , , at 9:47 am by leslie

My grip is failing. :( By the end of deadlifts this morning, the pinky side of my right hand (the last two fingers) was unable to grip the bar. I finally switched to an alternate grip, with that side facing away.

Then in the lunges, I had the same problem and no way to change my grip. The dumbbell in my right hand was sagging–almost perpendicular to the floor by the end! Holding the dumbbells up by my shoulders didn’t work so well, either, since I’d already reduced my arms to rubber.

I’ve already looked at StrongLift’s suggestions for deadlift grip, but the grip issue is also in my lunges (and step-ups, from Monday). I think a lot of it is that my pinky and ring finger on my right hand have less work to do than all the other fingers when I type/use the mouse. I’m paying attention to those two as I type right now, and I notice that I don’t use them nearly as much as the other fingers or even as much as the same fingers on the left hand. So I think I need to work on engaging that half of my right hand more throughout the day.

All my weights today were really heavy by the end. Those last few reps… whew. Got them out, somehow.

Deadlifts: 2×12x50 lbs
Dumbbell Shoulder Press: 2×12x30 lbs (total)
Wide Grip Pulldowns: 2×12x30 lbs
Lunges: 2×12x30 lbs (total)
Crunches: 2×12x10 lbs (on Swiss ball, long arm)

I just noticed I haven’t mentioned my sleeping problems for the last two weeks. Probably too sleep-deprived to remember… :P Anyway, the last two weeks (that is, since starting this program), I’ve had trouble sleeping. I’ve been waking up 2-3 times per night for no reason. I fall asleep with no problem initially and after each wake-up. So for the last two weeks, I’ve been really sleepy all day and have needed extra coffee just to make it to 5 p.m.

I finally noticed Monday night (yeah, I’m slow) that Lou mentions that your sleep patterns may be disrupted when you first start the program. So I’m not abnormal. Well, at least not in this. But then last night I slept soundly and woke up three minutes before my alarm went off. I’d call that a success.