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Note: The following is an interview with Brad Pilon, who’s best known for his work on intermittent fasting and his book Eat Stop Eat. I’ve been a huge fan of Brad and his approach to fitness for years now ever since I read the first edition of Eat Stop Eat back in 2008 so it’s pretty awesome to interview him on my site. Hell, without Brad I would still probably be eating 6-8 meals per day.1) So for those that don’t know, can you give us a super quick rundown of what intermittent fasting is and what your approach (Eat Stop Eat) is all about?Intermittent fasting is really nothing more than learning to take periodic, planned breaks from eating.

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Brad Pilon Interview – 7 Questions With The King Of Intermittent …

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12 Minute H.I.I.T. Elliptical Workoutby Glenneth on October 3, 2012Updated 9-14-13 to remove broken Pinterest items. Good morning and Happy Hump Day! First things first, I want to wish my friend A a very Happy Birthday! I look forward to seeing her tonight at her birthday dinner.

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12 Minute H.I.I.T. Elliptical Workout — Let's Talk and Walk

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Recently by Ori Hofmekler: The Best Foods that Fill You Up and Boost Your Metabolism and Shed PoundsStory at-a-glance There is an emerging consensus that narrowing the window of time that you consume food may have enormous health benefits and also help you reduce the percentage of body fat. Benefits of intermittent fasting include reduced oxidative stress; increased insulin sensitivity; increased mitochondrial energy efficiency; and increased capacity to resist stress, disease, and aging Most intermittent fasting programs, including alternate day fasting, once or twice a week fasting, and once every other week fasting are, in the best case, only partially beneficial as they do not accommodate your circadian rhythm Your body is programmed for nocturnal feeding, and the one meal a day regimen is the only intermittent fasting (IF) program that accommodates your innate circadian clock and maximize the beneficial effects you get from IF on a daily basis Most foods negate the effects of fasting, but there are some exceptions. Foods that can be safely eaten without compromising your fast include fast-assimilating nutrient-dense foods such as quality whey protein, green vegetables and berries The intermittent fasting approach has been getting increased recognition these days. But 10 years ago, it was a different story.When I introduced The Warrior Diet concept about 12 years ago, it was highly criticized by mainstream fitness authorities as an “extreme and dangerous” approach to dieting.

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The Intermittent Fasting Dilemma: How Many Meals Per Day Should …

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ADD this Infographic to your Website/Blog:Simply copy the code below and paste it into the HTML of your blog or website:More Health and Fitness News & Tips at Greatist.Love this graphic? Buy the poster through Greatist’s online store!The Complete Guide to Interval TrainingTargeting Maximum Fat Loss Through High-Intensity Interval TrainingHigh-intensity interval training (HIIT) is a popular form of exercise that combines two of the most effective fat-burning methods.The first is high-intensity training, which pushes the body to maximum effort to achieve muscle fatigue and maximum oxygen use in a quick burst. The harder muscles work, the more oxygen they require. This is measured relative to one’s VO2 max, which is the highest amount of oxygen your body consumes during exercise

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The Complete Guide to Interval Training [Infographic] | Greatist

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It’s time to amp up the intensity. Circuit, HIIT, and Tabata training produce killer results in little time. Circuit training involves moving from one workout directly to the next, HIIT is short bursts of intense exercise followed by quick rest, and Tabata (a form of HIIT) is strictly 20 seconds of intense work followed by 10 seconds of recovery for eight cycles.

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10 Interval Training Mobile Apps to Download Right Now | Greatist

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How to Use Metabolic Resistance Training with ZERO EquipmentMike Whitfield, CTTCome on knock on our door. We’ve been waiting for you. Remember that? That was the introduction to “Three’s Company” years ago.

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How to Use Metabolic Resistance Training with ZERO Equipment

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Venturing into the weight room can be overwhelming at times. People grunting in the corner while heaving heavy dumbbells, weights clanking together on a barbell; and to top it all off, there’s a sea of machines with multiple moving parts and levers. Toss in choosing the right exercises and number of sets and reps, and strength training can seem overly complex (calculator anyone?).But there is a method to the madness. When done effectively, lifting weights offers amazing benefits, not only for building bigger muscles and achieving that desired physique, but also boosting your resting metabolism (translation: burn more calories outside the gym!) . Regular strength training can even improve mood and confidence levels .Ready to find that perfect training plan

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How to Make a Strength Training Plan (and Keep It!) | Greatist

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Before you start IF I recommend you reading my experience, since it might be a scary experience just dwelling into it and not knowing whats going on, like it happened to me. As many of you know, I’ve practiced various methods of Intermittent Fasting (IF) for the greater part of the last half a year. I’ve used Ori Hofmekler’s The Warrior Diet,Brad Pilon’s Eat Stop Eat and eventually I created a few variations of my own.All in all, throughout my time spent Intermittent Fasting I’ve learned a great deal, experienced great results for the six pack abs, and thoroughly enjoyed myself while doing it.Recently, however, I gave it up for now. Its a great tool to have in your physique building tool box but this is why I gave it up:I write the benefits and side effects I experienced, but the side effects out weight the benefits in my opinion:benefits:- 10 pounds of fat lost during 14 days.- I got incredibly vasculine and shredded, easy to loose fat with little or without cardio.-

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Read This Before You Attempt Intermittent Fasting! Woman, Food …

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by Craig BallantyneI am traveling to Vegas this week and one of the first things I typically do is check out the gym of wherever I’m staying at.  I can know within seconds my workout plans.  But before I even decide on how I want to dominate the evils of the Whitfield genes (in other words, us Whitfields have genes that literally enjoy belly fat), I like to jack with the people at the gym’s front desk.You see, I still have my old driver’s license from when I was 300 lbs.  So when they ask for my ID, I hand it to them and wait for a response.   If I get a second look, I’m in.  The games will ensue.  Sometimes, I’ll just say something like, “Yep.  Boom.”, or if I’m in a playful mood, I’ll just tell them, “I ate a lot of salt yesterday.”  Ohhhh man, it’s good times.Anyway, back to the workout decision.  If I go through the doors and see a few machines and no free weights or at least a chin-up or pull-up bar, I know that my exercise plans will be bodyweight workouts.  If there is a bar but no free weights, I can hang around the gym and incorporate chin-ups, pull-ups and body squats, among other good-time moves.  It will still be a bodyweight workout, but I like the chin-up and pull-up options.  It will also allow me to perform a metabolic resistance training program. Is Bodyweight MRT Possible? Here’s the thing though – how do you incorporate metabolic resistance training using just bodyweight, and can you have a solid MRT workout using just your own body?  The cool, hip answer is “yeah mang”.  Don’t think I added a “g” at the end by mistake.  That’s slang for “yeah man”.  It’s a new trend I’m trying.  Anyway…There is a lot of debate of what exactly is MRT, but by now you know that it incorporates non-competing supersets or circuits with short rest periods.  That’s the overall theme.  A MRT program can involve:Non-competing strength training (chin-ups supersetted with Bulgarian squats for example) Metabolic conditioning exercises (mountain climbers, jumping  jacks, Spiderman climbs) Shorter rest periods  (like 20 secs) Longer rest periods (but still challenging enough to not allow full recovery – like 1 minute) So do you take all of these components, toss them in a blender and then get to work?  No, mang.  Ha-ha, who started that slang?  I like it.  Anyway, of course you wouldn’t just throw these things together and hope for a solid MRT workout.  When I put together a bodyweight MRT workout program, I do like to use everything above, but there’s typically a template I put together and it looks like this:Warm-up2-3 Supersets of strength exercises using 1 minute of rest between supersets1 Metabolic conditioning circuit using 3-5 conditioning exercises using 30 seconds to 1 minute of rest (depending on my mood)Metabolic Workout Finisher (this really varies, but the principles remain the same – high intensity and short rest periodsA basic bodyweight program is great – for example, a circuit of pull-ups, squats and planks.  But I also think that protein shakes are great.  But if you incorporate strength exercises, metabolic conditioning and a metabolic finisher, then it’s fantastic… like a protein shake blended with peanut butter, almond milk and cinnamon.  Analogies are fun.The art behind the program design is important.  You should perform the strength exercises at the beginning of the program when you are fresh and your muscles haven’t been fatigued.  That way, you will give each strength exercise your best effort, allowing you the maximum benefits… like smoking belly fat.  Then, you follow that with metabolic conditioning and/or a metabolic finisher.Putting a Bodyweight MRT Workout TogetherAlright, let’s do this.Warm-upDo the following circuit twice, resting for 30 seconds between circuits: Jumping Jacks (15) Arm Crosses (15) Prisoner Squats (15) Pushups (10) Plank (30 secs) Leg Swings (15 ea) Close Grip Pushups (8) Superset 11A) Pull-ups or Wide Overhand Grip Inverted Rows (1 rep short of failure)1B) Split Squat or Bulgarian Squat (1-1/2 rep style) (8 ea) (1-1/2 rep style is done when you go down, come halfway back up, back down and finally all the way up (that’s one rep)Rest 1 minute and repeat 2 more timesSuperset 22A) 1-Legged Deadlift (12 ea leg)2B) Decline Pushups (1 rep short of failure)Rest 1 minute and repeat 2 more timesMetabolic Conditioning CircuitDo the following circuit 3 times, resting for 45 seconds between circuits3A) Jump Squats (5)3B) Cross-Body Mountain Climbers (8 ea)3C) Total Body Extensions (15)3D) Spiderman Climb (10 ea)FinisherDo the following circuit resting only when needed.  In the first circuit, you will perform 6 reps of each exercise.  In the next circuit, you will perform 5 reps.  Continue in this fashion until you complete 1 rep of each exercise.  Time yourself.  The next time you perform this finisher, see if you can beat your previous time.  Remember, form takes precedence.4A) Burpees (6, 5, etc., down to 1)4B) Lunge Jumps (6 ea leg, 5 ea leg, etc.

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How to Use Your Bodyweight with Metabolic Resistance Training

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Here is Craig Ballantyne from Turbulence Training to explain the new phenomenon known as  Metabolic Resistance Training. In this little video about Metabolic Resistance Training he is going to explain what it is and what we are going for as well as some cool ways about thinking of why we do this type of training. Read through or watch the video below explaining the concept of metabolic resistance training.What is Metabolic Resistance Training?Metabolic Resistance Training falls under the umbrella of  training with resistance and it could be bodyweight, weights or kettlebells. These workouts combine incomplete recovery with a little bit higher reps. So obviously it’s not power lifting.

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Metabolic Resistance Training

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