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Intermittent Fasting Matters (Sometimes): There Is No Such Thing As A “Calorie” To Your Body, Part VIII In previous installments, we’ve proven the following:A calorie is not a calorie when you eat it at a different time of day. A calorie is not a calorie when you eat it in a differently processed form. A calorie is not a calorie when you eat it as a wholly different food. A calorie is not a calorie when you eat it as protein, instead of carbohydrate or fat.

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Intermittent Fasting Matters (Sometimes): There Is No Such Thing As …

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IIFYM and Intermittent Fasting ComboProblem with people dieting and trying to be healthy or lose a few pounds Is that people tend to go overboard with what they eat. If you know what you are eating and the nutrient breakdown of it, you would know how to set limits. That is why they recommend keeping a food journal most of the time. But who has time to carry an actual journal?So I recommend you get an application such as myfitnesspal, you enter what you are eating and it will track it for you.So let us start IIFYM stands for if it fits your macros.

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IIFYM and Intermittent Fasting Combo – UrbanQ8

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HIIT is a builder, not a burner – it builds the powerplants you need to burn. For you as loyal SuppVersity readers, the fact that HIIT is the #1 growth promoter for your mitochondria is no news. That 4×4 minutes of HIIT per week are yet already enough to promote significant increases in the mitochondrial counterpart of mTOR, PGC-1? – the master regulator of mitochondrial biogenesis (Wu. 1999) – will probably still comes as a surprise.

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4×4 Minutes of HIIT Per Week That's All It Takes For Already Well …

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Tabata training is intense: So if you don’t have the guts to do it on your own, find someone to suffer next to you. Trust me that’ll keep you going, if you’d have long surrendered if you had trained alone. Some gyms even offer special courses. Most of you will probably be familiar with the ultra-short + ultra-intense HIIT prescription that’s known as the Tabata protocol. Not really?

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Tabata Workouts: Do They Work & How Energy-Demanding Are …

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When you build a circuit training routine, don’t forget: There are lot’s of metabolically demanding kettle- bell exercises to spice things up. There are probably a dozen of reasons why people train. Many of them are really good: Wanting to stay healthy, to live longer, or to excel in your sports. Of others, however, I am not so sure whether they are actually worth pursuing, or do you think training to look like a walking stick to make it to the catwalk was a “good” motivation to go to the gym? Personally I don’t think so and that’s partly why I am hesitant to judge a workout by the amount of energy it may burn.

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Circuit vs. Classic Strength Training, Which System is More …

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High Intensity Interval Training Abs WorkoutThe benefits of interval training are many, including: increasing endurance, improving acceleration and speed, and burning more calories in less time. Basically, it makes you more athletic, quicker, and accomplishes what you would on a treadmill in a third of the time! Plus, it revs up your metabolism and keeps you burning fat for hours longer post workout which will help give you great looking abs. Now these exercises for abs is not for wussies, so get ready to put on your big boy pants and kick your abs butt with this H.I.I.T workout specifically targeted to your abdominal area for ripped abs!Repeat this abs workout twice a week for ripped abs you wouldn’t believe.Recommended for this routine: Water for hydration, a heart monitor, and an interval timer. We use the Gymboss Interval Timer, which is perfect for precise timing.H.I.I.T.

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H.I.I.T Your Abs Workout – Skinny Ms.

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The Female Athlete Triad 13 Comments Thursday, June 20th, 2013 As a dietitian, I’ve worked with a variety of individuals (ranging from those with eating disorders to  neurological conditions) improve their health through nutrition and other lifestyle modifications.  Often times when I meet with clients, the desired goal is weight loss, but when it comes to women that can come at a cost.Whenever we talk about weight loss everyone has theories on what constitutes the “best” program.  For some people, that means doing a very low carbohydrate/ketogenic approach, for others that means focusing on that “old school” calories in vs calories out equation.  Whatever the method you use to get there, there is one thing we all need to consider.  Women are fragile.Now, before you start attacking that statement and showing me how many 200 lb snatches you can do, let me rephrase that statement.  Women’s hormones are fragile.  For this very reason I am extremely prudent when working with women who want to tinker with intermittent fasting, frequent metabolic conditioning greater than 20 minutes, very low carbohydrate diets, or other stressful lifestyle “hacks,” as some call it.There has been some discussion about this in the community and for that I am very grateful.  Just as we talk about certain foods or diets not fitting into a one-size-fits-all model, we absolutely need to take into consideration the differences between the female and male anatomy when it comes to handling stressors.Women’s health is my passion.  I am dedicated to having women understand how their bodies work and empowering them to take actions that help support their beautiful temple.  With that being said, I’d love to introduce a topic to this community that hasn’t really been discussed.Enter: The Female Athlete Triad.So what IS the Female Athlete Triad?The word triad signifies three, so it makes sense that this syndrome would include three different interrelated conditions.  These three problems include:Low energy availability/intake – this is with or without an eating disorder Menstrual disturbances – amenorrhea or irregular cycles Bone loss – osteoporosis/osteopenia *Please check out Figure 1 from the position paper by ACSM for a fantastic model showing the progression of the triad here.As I mentioned before, these conditions are interrelated.  If a female athlete is experiencing one of the conditions of the triad, the others should also be considered.An example of how these conditions flow together is as follows:Scenario:A female athlete is trying to maintain her lean body composition and struggles with an eating disorder.  She is not consuming adequate calories to meet the requirements of her sport and due to this calorie deficit she starts to lose her cycle.  She may go a few months, or even years, without having a period.  The stress from the low energy intake starts reprioritizing which hormones she makes and her sex hormones get the back seat.  She is now looking at a low estrogen state, even having a sex hormone panel similar to a post-menopausal woman. Since estrogen is important factor in bone health, the lack of estrogen prompts bone loss. One day during practice, she ends up fracturing her foot even though there was minimal impact to the area.Who is at risk?Any female is susceptible to the triad, but it is commonly seen in female athletes whose sports emphasize low body weight or leanness – think gymnasts, ballerinas, or endurance runners.  The female doesn’t have to be an athlete nor do they need to be in a sport that emphasizes leanness.  It could simply just be a woman who is  restricting her calorie intake.**As a side note: while it is not technically called the Female Athlete Triad for guys, energy deficits can also lead to problems with bone health and hormone disturbances for men too.  Low testosterone anyone?  It doesn’t matter who you are or what sport you play, there has to be balance.  Too few calories and too much exercise is a recipe for hormonal havoc.Problems associated with the triadLow nutrient intake:When we’re looking at a low energy intake, we also need to think of a likely low micronutrient (vitamin/mineral) intake.   The female is probably not getting adequate building blocks for proper bone formation in addition to having low estrogen.Do you think having a low bone density is a problem for a female athlete?  Most definitely.  Think about sports where the body is constantly “pounding the pavement” or participating in high impact sports.  You’re just “cruisin’ for a bruisin’” if your bones are weak.  And what about the fact that during your reproductive years your bones are building their potential?  You’re putting the breaks on a very important time for peak bone density.In fact, sometimes women have no idea that they are experiencing the female athlete triad until they present to the doctor with a broken bone.  It sounds crazy, but even signs and symptoms, such as a lack of a monthly period, become second thoughts to these women.  Sometimes they are even happy about not having to DEAL with a monthly cycle.  This is not okay.  Women are supposed to have monthly cycles during their reproductive years. Fertility is a sign of health – whether or not you want to get pregnant.

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The Female Athlete Triad – Robb Wolf

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By Andrew Heffernan / June 2013: Discover Something WonderfulWhen it comes to cardio exercise, most gym-goers are either hares or tortoises: They like their workouts fast and furious or they like them slow and leisurely. Hares love the intensity of going full out; tortoises relish the relaxed groove of a meditative pace.Both types of exercise have proven benefits. Problems can arise, however, when you stick too closely to one type of workout or the other. That’s because your body runs on three separate but interrelated metabolic engines: the aerobic, the glycolytic and the ATP-CP systems. (For more on these systems, see ELmag.com/energysystems.) Each is built to power you through a different type of exercise.Slow and steady long-distance exercise uses primarily the “aerobic” system.

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Three-Speed Cardio : Experience Life

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I LOVE Tim’s blog posts like this… it’s like a formula to go from zero to “successful.”  While you  may not be positioned to write a book, or pitch it, or get an advance, you can learn a lot from this long guest post.With that, I’ll let you go over there now.  It’s a long post, but it’s worth it. I need to print all of the posts like this on Tim’s blog and study them!How a First-Time Author Got a 7-Figure Book Deal This entry was posted on Wednesday, April 17th, 2013 at 7:07 am and is filed under Business, Entrepreneur, On writing. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.

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Tim Ferriss and John Romaniello on getting a 7 figure … – Jason Alba

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Dear Fitbabe, What are your thoughts on intermittent fasting? I have heard about this a lot in the media lately. Do you eat this way? Thanks, HenryDear Henry, Intermittent Fasting is the process of taking a break from eating for a certain period of time

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ASK A TRAINER #12: “What's Up with Intermittent Fasting …

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