Shopping to get in shape-or the big U

As anyone will tell you, preparing your own food is the most crucial step in order to get a lean physique. It all starts with cooking, but even before that, there is food shopping. Since you will always eat what you have at home, it is a must to buy the right things.
    
Unfortunately, the layout of the modern supermarkets makes it easier for you to run (and buy) the prepackaged foods that are high in sugar, fats, and salt. The way to avoid the supermarket trap is to make your pick in the outer aisles only, thus following a big U.
If you shop in the exterior aisles only, you will find produce, vegetables, meat, dairy, eggs and such. These are the items that should make up for 90% of your diet. Lean meats, fish, eggs and dairy for protein and fat, vegetables for their fiber and vitamin content, followed by potatoes, oats, and rice for complex carbohydrates. Throw in some nuts or nut butters for unsaturated fatty acids and you have a winning formula.

Try your best to avoid the middle aisles that primarily display prepackaged and processed foods such as cookies, breads, sweets and frozen meals. Eating those items regularly will derail any attempt to get leaner or more muscular.
Another very simple rule is the one ingredient rule: if you look at a label and you find 24-letter words, chances are that the item is full of chemicals that you shouldn’t be eating in the first place. You should not need a degree in chemistry to understand what you are eating. Stick to foods that simply say: oats, chicken, salmon.

And lastly, never shop hungry! You are bound to crave, overbuy, and reach for junk foods

Till next time

Maik

A pro routine will make me big

A pro routine will make me big

A routine that supposedly got Mr. Olympia to where he is will most likely not work for you.

By the same token, asking the biggest guy for advice is probably the worst mistake you can make during your quest for a better body.

Here’s why: Pro bodybuilders can train at a much higher level since they hold several advantages over you: superior genetics, the ability to sleep eight hours a night, and eating six to seven meals a day. If you look at pictures of top athletes as young people, they are already more muscular and leaner than their counterparts.  They tend to store less body fat and push nutrients into the muscle, which is why they can consume 5,000 calories a day without becoming obese.

And yes, there are drugs, a whole plethora of them, which enable them to diet more strictly and recover more quickly. There are anabolic steroids, growth hormone, insulin, diet drugs, thyroid medication, appetite suppressants, fat burners, and plenty more.

Anyone who tells you that this type of development can be achieved without drugs is lying or trying to sell you a supplement. ( I just have a book)

The average person, who has to deal with job, family, and career, simply cannot maintain such a demanding regime. If you’re like most of us, you just have to carefully track your progress and adjust your routine accordingly.

Ask yourself every ten weeks:  Am I getting stronger? Can I do more repetitions? Am I leaner?

If after several months the answer to all these questions is no, you need to adjust your routine and diet. Overtraining could be one of the problems.

If you haven’t progressed in the gym for several weeks, take a week or ten days off from the gym. You can take up other sports for a while, but rest as much as possible. While you’re resting, keep your calories slightly elevated without eating a lot of junk food. Many trainees are over-trained and underfed; so the combination of rest and food can produce amazing gains.

While your body is given a chance to recover and rebuild, you should use that time to come up with a new personal routine for the next eight to ten weeks and then stick to it.

When the eight to ten weeks are up, it’s time to reevaluate (pictures or an honest friend can be very helpful) and plan your next step.

Welcome to find a workout!

My name is Maik Wiedenbach and this is my blog, where I would like  to present excerpts from my book “101 fitness myths ” in an attempt to cut through the clutter in the fitness world. My goal is to provide answers and solutions for the fitness enthusiast in regards to training, diet and the fitness lifestyle as such. I am trying to show people a way to succeed in the gym as well as in the kitchen, without giving up their lives. If you like what you read, my book has plenty more. Each blog post is a chapter from my book.

Today we start with the question about genetics or are we mere mortals doomed to have a sub-standard physique?

Myth 1: I don’t have the genetics

I hear this a lot––both in the gym and casual conversation. Genetics are a favorite scapegoat for athletic shortcomings. We blame genetics for our failure to build muscle or lose body fat. But how much do genetics really influence your success in the gym?

The answer is less than you would like to believe. While everyone has inherited a certain blueprint, which includes having good and not-so-good muscle groups, certain hormonal levels, and fat storage tendencies, it is also true that ANYONE can get in amazing shape.

You are trying to build the best body for you, not to emulate someone else.

Think of your body as a plant. Given the right conditions, a plant will grow and blossom. If it doesn’t, that means something is wrong–– a parasite, not enough light, or too much water, perhaps.  The same applies to your body: There is always an explanation for why you’re not progressing.

Success in training has three pillars: training, recovery, and nutrition. Most people at best get two out of three right.

Most of us don’t have the potential of Arnold Schwarzenegger, but that doesn’t mean we cannot achieve our own goals. By way of example, look at the guy next to Arnold: Frank Zane.

He had narrow clavicles, a long torso, sixteen-inch arms, and weighed 190 pounds at a height of 5’10″. In short, he had one of the worst possible genetic make-ups for a pro bodybuilder.

Yet, he won Mr. Olympia three times, beating Arnold!

How did he do it? He stuck to his diet, trained with unmatched intensity, and did not take no for an answer. He realized that he couldn’t compete with Arnold on the basis of mass; so he created the most symmetrical physique, which many people still consider as close to perfect as a human can get.

Frank Zane’s story is inspiring. Your first step is to honestly assess yourself, your schedule, and your training experience, and devise the plan that’s right for you.

What is my goal? Mass in the upper body? Lean legs?

If your progress has been snail-like, then you might need to work out less often to give your body enough recovery time. Another approach would be to focus on certain body parts that you deem weaker and train them twice a week. Look at your body like a piece of art. You are the artist; it’s up to you to create the perfect physique for your particular body.

For example, if you have wide hips, don’t waste your time with oblique training to make your hips narrow; train your shoulders instead. The wider your shoulders are, the narrower your waist will appear.

Be honest do yourself: have I really been eating all my meals? Doing my workouts? Also, take photos, or better yet have someone else take them gor you. An honest friend with a cell phone can go a long way here.

Also, stop working out and start training. Training means, “to increase the capacity to perform a skill or work.” If you are still training with the same weights after twelve months, you are simply not better. Push yourself to the limit in every workout to achieve your goals. Training is a lifestyle; whereas working out is neat and cute like a French class you take every two weeks. The only way you’ll really learn French is by moving to France and speaking only French.

The same applies to your body; it is a twenty-four/seven project––training, eating, resting, and learning.

Remember, creating a physique is not a race against other people. You are doing this for yourself. If someone else gets in shape quicker or with seemingly less effort, don’t be discouraged. Don’t psych yourself out with complaints about your genetics because you can’t change them. The time you spend complaining could be much better used cooking a healthy meal or working out.

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