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Fitness & Strength 04 Aug 2007 10:31 pm

Here is an excelent article by Ted for a home workout routine. Feel free to check out his website below: No Gym, No Cardio-Equipment, No Running…No Problem When trying to burn fat, most of us think of cardio-activities such as …road running, or gym-based activities such as stationary cycling, treadmills, rowing machines. In the battle to burn fat, gym training in some form is usually seen as a pre-requisite, and if we don’t want to go to gym, we sometimes opt for home versions of cardio machines and other exercise equipment in the hope that we will burn fat whilst staying at home. In most cases, home-based fat burning efforts usually don’t succeed. This is mostly due to a lack of motivation as there is almost always something else to do that can distract us when at home. Also, there is no-one around to motivate us. At least when you go to the gym, you’re making a concerted effort to go to a place that is designed purely for exercise, and is also full of other people who are training. The home, although a convenient exercise location, is sadly also not usually associated with hard exercise. But, if we are to succeed in burning fat and getting in shape at home, then we need to put some rules in place, namely:

1) Consistent Time

Make sure that you set aside 3-4 times a week for exercise. Don’t rely on deciding spontaneously to exercise. Plan your exercise times and be strict.

2) Same Place

Create a "workout space" where you know you will train. For variety, you can change this area every now and again, but get used to a fixed place where you know you will train.

3) Water/Towel/Clock

Make sure you have water, towels, and a clock close by so that you don’t need to keep going to other areas in the house and be potentially distracted

4) No phones, TV or Family

This is your exercise time – so don’t be interrupted

The Routine: Understanding Basics

So how can we lose fat and get fit and strong without any expensive equipment and without "pounding the pavement" or doing some other traditional aerobic activity? The key here is to first understand that all exercise is based on a single fundamental principle…the contracting of muscles. If we contract our muscles continuously for a minimum of 12 minutes, it is an aerobic activity – so if we exercise on a stationary cycle for 12 minutes without resting it is an aerobic activity. Similarly, if we perform a circuit of several exercises without resting, and continue the circuit for a minimum of 12 minutes, it is also an aerobic activity. It is important then to understand that "aerobic exercise" refers to ANY exercise activity that is sustained for a minimum of 12 minutes, not just traditional aerobic activities such as running, cycling, rowing etc. Circuit training – i.e. performing a series of exercises in succession, without any rest inbetween – is extremely demanding on the aerobic system and is also a form of PHA training (Peripheral Heart Action). Where traditional aerobic activities such as running or cycling place an emphasis on just one part of the body (i.e. the legs), full-body circuit- training continually distributes the load across all the muscle groups. If there is no rest between each exercise and the circuit of exercises is sustained for a minimum of 12 minutes, the heart is constantly pumping blood to various areas of the body which dramatically improves circulation and aerobic performance. This is PHA training.

The Best Exercises

These are the best Exercises that can be performed anywhere – at home, in a hotel room - all you need is 3 chairs, a few towels or cloths, a door, and a broomstick. Each exercise uses several muscles at a time, thus placing considerable demand on the body’s energy supply.

  1. Pushups (Traditional, with both feet on ground)
  2. One-legged Pushups (traditional, but with one foot elevated off the ground)
  3. Elevated Pushups (traditional pushups with feet elevated on a chair)
  4. Dip Pushups (traditional pushups between 3 chairs - with each hand on a chair, and feet elevated onto another chair)
  5. Door Chins (Wedge a thin book under a door to support door and stop door swinging. Place towel along top edge of door to rest hands and do chins on door, pulling yourself up along face of door – hands shoulder width apart)
  6. Chair Chins (Face the backs of 2 chairs towards each other with a small towel draped over the back of each chair. Place a broomstick across both chair backs on each towel. Lie on ground between 2 chairs and hold broomstick, each hand holding close to each chairback. Elevate your feet onto a 3rd chair in front of you. Pull yourself up to horizontal position).
  7. Crunches (feet on floor, knees bent, curling yourself up, hands next to sides)
  8. Wallsit (stand upright, back against a wall, slide down wall with back touching until in a sitting position. Hold position, pushing back continuously into wall –slide back up and repeat)
  9. Squats (Traditional squats, squatting down until top of legs are parallel to ground)
  10. Chair Hamstrings (lie on floor, knees bent with feet on placed on seat part of chair. Push feet into seat using hamstrings and lift butt off floor as high as possible. Hold and lower)
  11. Burpees (traditional burpee: 1 Repetition: From standing, drop to haunches, shoot legs out (to pushup position), shoot legs back (to haunched position), go back to standing.
  12. Handstand Pushup (Optional Exercise; Very Advanved). Facing a wall, go into a handstand with feet touching wall (you should ideally be as close to the wall in the handstand position and also as straight as possible). Lower your head to the floor, but don’t let it touch and push up again. This is a very tough exercise if you are not used to it. At first, just maintain handstand position until arms are stronger to perform pushup.

The Routine

This routine is not easy, so if you are a beginner or intermediate – please start slowly and take longer rests between exercises. Also, some of these exercises take some getting used to, so it is recommended that you do a few "orientation workouts" to familiarize yourself with each exercise. Perform 1 set of each exercise with minimum rest between each exercise. Aim to do at least 8-10 repetitions of each exercise. At first aim to do one circuit of each exercise. As you get fitter, increase to 2 complete circuits. Feel free to change the order of the exercises.

  • Pushup (advanced: do one-legged)
  • Crunch
  • Elevated pushup (advanced: do one-legged)
  • Door Chins
  • Crunch
  • Dip Pushup
  • Door Chins
  • Burpees
  • Wallsit
  • Squats
  • Wallsit
  • Burpees
  • Chair Hamstrings
  • Chair Chins
  • Handstand Pushup (Optional)
  • Crunch

Please Note: This routine is very demanding. Take it slow until you feel comfortable with the movements. Then gradually increase intensity.

Ted has been dedicated to Health and "Wellness Revolution" for 20 years and has written a fast-selling e-book "The Total Diet Solution" . Visit Ted’s website http://www.total-diet.com and download the first chapter of his e-book FREE!

Curiosities & Fitness 04 Aug 2007 01:22 am

This is the workout the actors from "300" had to go through. No machines, no expensive equipment. Just old-school brutal force to build muscles and cut fat in record time. A training aimed at real strength and performance, not even close to the "pussies" bodybuilding. The looks came as a by-product. Quality above quantity: a true bodytweaker spirit!

Few key notes:

  • The workout was designed to create strength and power the actors would need to BE real spartan warriors.
  • No muscle group concentration: no curls, no extensions, no any of the crap you will be taught in an average gym. Through full-body exercises your neuromuscular system is taught to use all muscles together as teamplayers for real-world tasks.
  • Dymanic training. No workout was like the other. New exercises, variations and combinations kept the muscles stimulated.

Fitness & The Plan 03 Aug 2007 01:18 am

Speed up and you will hit the wall. The most common reason people start a diet and fitness program, but fail after few weeks is the subconscious resistance for drastic changes. Try to go from 3000 to 1400 kcal in one day and from 0 to 2 hours daily training and you will hit that depression wall. I give you 10 days, at most.

Your subconscious mind is not much different from a frog: Remember this experiment from the biology class? If you put a frog into the boiling water it will jump straight out. But if you put it into cold water and start heating up slowly, it will sit there until getting served.

Same happens to your sub-mind. You will get much less resistance, if you change your workout and nutritional habits slowly over the time. And you will have a much bigger chance to keep on with the plan over longer period of time.

 

incremental workout and diet plan

 

One step at a time, fellas. :) Good luck!

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