This is the
most effective method for achieving stronger muscles, fat loss, and a more
toned body.
Despite what you may
see on late-night infomercials or read in your spam inbox, there are no magical
ways to sculpt the ideal body overnight. Building a lean, toned physique takes
hard work and dedication. While it's true that no fitness fad or diet of
the month will ever replace good, old-fashioned clean eating and exercise,
there are ways to speed up your lean body journey and achieve the look you've
always wanted in a more efficient manner. Luckily, we spoke with a few
accredited fitness trainers and strength coaches to get their take on the most
overlooked secret to getting lean. To start, stop expecting results within a
matter of hours or days. Personal fitness is about the journey just as much as
the destination. Your road toward a better body will be much more enjoyable
once you accept that. "If your best-laid plans for leaning out are taking
longer than anticipated, make sure you don't view it as a failure,"
explains Jack McNamara, Ms.C., NASM-CPT, C.S.C.S., of TrainFitness.
"Progress can occur in peaks and troughs, so remember to be kind to
yourself and stick with the plan. The key to successful fat loss is consistency
over severity."
PRIORITIZE SLEEP: Changing your
physique may start in the gym, but it continues at bedtime. When we exercise,
we push our bodies to exhaustion, burning stored energy and breaking down muscle
fibers along the way. In many ways, however, this is only half of the fitness
process. Proper rest following an intense bout of exercise is just as important as
the workout itself. "Perhaps the most overlooked aspect of getting lean is
also one of the most important, especially if you're already leaner to start
with. Getting decent sleep may be the most important thing you can do to
improve fat loss if you're lean," McNamara explains. He adds that numerous
bodily hormones are in charge of regulating both overall sleep quality and
circadian rhythm. "When these hormones are dysregulated, it can severely
impact our level of hunger, the types of food we crave, even how active we'll
be throughout the day. All of these combine to make successful fat loss an
uphill struggle," McNamara says.
STAY ACTIVE OUTSIDE OF THE GYM: Attaining
(and maintaining) a lean look is a lifestyle, not a chore to be accomplished
day in and day out. Stop viewing exercise and physical activity as a job and
start incorporating them into various aspects of your life. "One key aspect of getting lean that is forgotten about is
the activity outside of your strength sessions and nutrition plan," says
Jack Coxall, Co-Founder and Personal Trainer/UKSCA Accredited Strength and
Conditioning Coach at Fitness Lab. "Even if you work out 6 times a week,
that is 6 hours out of 168 hours in a week. The real success comes from
everything you do outside of the gym when it comes to getting lean." According
to Coxall, roughly 20-25% of an average adult's daily energy expenditure
(calories burned) actually comes via "non-exercise activity
thermogenesis" (NEAT), or all your activities and movements performed
throughout the day. "Yes, you have the classic 10,000 steps per day as an
example, but it doesn't have to be this," says Coxall. "Three brisk,
10-minute walks have proven to be just as beneficial. Do a 30-minute yoga
session, bike rides, dog walks, or Pilates. Improving and staying consistent with
your daily movement, up and away from the desk and sofa, is a key aspect of
getting lean from your strength session and diet plan."
PERFORM HIGH INTENSITY INTERVAL
TRAINING (HIIT): You no doubt already know that cardio is your friend when it
comes to weight loss. That being said, incorporating some HIIT, or
high-intensity interval training, into your usual cardio routine can make a big
difference in terms of leaning out. Characterized by short bursts of intense
motion followed by a shorter period of rest repeated in a cyclic manner, HIIT
has recently emerged as a popular approach to cardio. For example, perform 40
seconds of jumping jacks followed by 15 seconds of rest, and repeat 5-10 times
total, and boom! You've done a HIIT workout. HIIT has been shown to burn more
calories than traditional cardio, promote increased fat burning even while
at rest, and can be accomplished in a fraction of the time it would take
to complete a regular workout! "To maximize your metabolic rate, trigger
protein synthesis for the repair and replenishment of muscles and reap the
rewards of cardio exercise without having to take hours out of your day, HIIT
is the way to go," McNamara recommends. "Keep your sessions short,
sharp, and intense (30 minutes or less will suffice) and separate them from
your weight training sessions. Keep your HIIT session to a maximum of 2-3 a
week, ideally with 48 hours in between."
DON'T NEGLECT YOUR MUSCLES: While
working toward a lean, toned look, tons of people make the mistake of focusing
entirely on aerobics. This approach, however, is only covering half the fitness
fight. "Many people
think that the fastest way to get lean is to do cardio hours, maximizing the
'calories burned' figure on their treadmill or fitness tracker," McNamara
states. "But maintaining your weight-training throughout a fat loss phase
is essential to maintain strength and muscle mass. Cutting back on
weight-training when you cut back on calories will actually lead to increased
muscle loss, which, in turn, will cause your metabolic rate to plummet." We
all want to look our best and slim down, but at the same time, no one wants to
sacrifice their muscles or strength. Besides that, ensuring your muscles are
healthy and growing will actually help you lean out faster. Bigger muscles
mean more calories burned. "Trainers often ask their clients how they want
to feel when they achieve their sought-after goals. The most common answers are
'fit,' 'lean,' 'confident,' and 'strong,'" says Life
Time Dietitian and Personal Trainer Paul Kriegler. "To
achieve these results, following a relatively intense resistance training is essential. This could include bodyweight plyometrics, advanced yoga
practice, or a significant devotion to consistent weightlifting with heavier
weights than you might normally do." Kriegler adds that a resistance
training session should be strenuous enough to induce a period of rest and
recovery for your body. "The other tip I'd pair with strength training is
increasing your protein intake to about one gram per pound of your ideal body
weight," Kriegler says. "High-protein diets support the maintenance
or growth of muscle and are more effective than other diets for the maintenance
of weight after weight loss."
BY: John Anderer, Eat This, Not That, DECEMBER 13, 2021, FACT
CHECKED BY: Faye Brennan
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