By Monica CiociolaWoman Training

It can be discouraging when your results don’t seem to match the efforts you’re putting into getting in shape. But instead of giving up on your fitness program, or worse, diving into the Twinkies® (trust me, you’ll regret it!), try making just a few easy changes to your diet and your lifestyle. Sometimes the smallest things—like getting more protein in the morning or enough rest at night—can lead to the biggest weight loss surprises.

  1. Don’t skip breakfast. Eating lean protein in the morning will help get your metabolism revved up for the day ahead. Protein from egg whites, for instance, will help stabilize your blood sugar, make you feel fuller, and keep you from overeating later in the day.
  2. Resistance training. Working out with some form of resistance—resistance bands, weights, or a stability ball—helps build your muscles. And because one pound of muscle burns way more calories than a pound of fat does, the more muscle you have on your body, the higher your metabolic rate will be.
  3. Interval training. Short 10-minute explosive cardio sessions followed by less intense cardio for the same amount of time will rev up your metabolism. For some of the best interval training workouts, check out INSANITY® or TurboFire®.
  4. Get your beauty rest. Human growth hormone works directly on cells to increase your metabolic rate by 15 to 20 percent and can only be produced during the hours of deep sleep. So make sure you get a good night’s sleep!
  5. The magic mix. At mealtime, try consuming lean proteins from chicken and white fish along with complex carbohydrates from fruits and veggies. This magical Hot Pepperscombination will speed up your metabolic rate as food is transformed into usable nutrients, and you’ll build muscle and burn fat during the digestive process.
  6. ¡Ay, caliente! Studies show that hot peppers, spices, green teas, and caffeine can give your metabolism a sudden surge by stimulating the release of stress hormones. If jalapeño and cayenne make you wince, turn to our all-natural Slimming Formula supplement, which contains green tea, for the same metabolism-boosting effect.

Also check out – Video: Keeping Your Metabolism On FIRE!

Food you should eat!So you are only eating 1500-2000 calories.

You should be losing weight, right?

Well, what are those calories made up of?

It makes a difference.

You need to eat GOOD calories to lose weight and to be healthy.

Stay away from:

  • processed foods
  • high fructose corn syrup
  • trans fats
  • fast food

Eat:

  • whole foods
  • lean meats or fish for protein
  • lots of different colored fruits and vegetables

My secret weapon against the carbohydrate black hole is Shakeology! What’s your secret weapon? Let me know!

By Steve Edwards

“Don’t want to look small!” —Lou Ferrigno in Pumping Iron

Guys have a thing for mass. It’s hard to explain, really, but boys seem to grow up wanting nothing more than to be big. Guys want speedboats and trucks, and they want to look like The Hulk, regardless of what their wives may think of green skin. If this sounds like you, here’s the article you’ve been looking for: customizing P90X for mass.

Even if mass is your only goal, make sure to read the subsequent articles in the series on customizing the X. The principles discussed in subsequent articles will be put to use here. To look like The Hulk, you don’t need to have a mad scientist father, but you do need to consider science as we know it. The articles that have appeared in our last few issues all led up to the question: what is mass?

What is mass?

Because many of our Success Stories, not to mention Tony, aren’t exactly skinny, we must begin by defining mass—most of you are looking for more. Mass simply means size. As part of the word massive, we assume it means above average in size. It doesn’t, but that’s beside the point. A program targeting mass is concerned with one thing: muscle growth (from here on in referred to as hypertrophy), and a lot of it.

In a training cycle for mass, we should target hypertrophy even at the expense of other fitness goals. P90X is not a system designed for mass. It’s designed for overall fitness, which means that ultimate gains in targeted areas, like speed, strength, flexibility, and muscle growth, are compromised to provide a program that improves all of your body’s physical energy systems during one 90-day effort. We feel as though this is the preferred training system because it addresses the big picture. But if your picture is quite literally being bigger, then you’ll need to read on.

Foundation

You’ve read about the capacity for improvement throughout this series, so here’s where I tell you to do a round of P90X as it’s designed before embarking on a mass-specific program. It’s healthier, sure, but it’s more than that. Training all of your body’s energy systems until they’re running efficiently increases your body’s ability to do, well, anything. Part of anything includes looking like Lou Ferrigno. Once you’ve done a round of the X and aced your fit test, the foundation has been laid. You’re ready to start gettin’ big.

Resistance

Man with Resistance BandsTony loves the word specificity. He often uses it when referring to exercise movements, but we’re going to use it to refer to the equipment you’ll need. With mass as your goal, you’d better acquire specific resistance equipment. The simplest form is weights; however, mass can also be created by using other forms of tension, like resistance bands. The bottom line is that if mass is your goal, you’ll need to have more weight available than you’ve been using. Body weight and plyometric movements can be used effectively for strength training, but strength and hypertrophy are not synonymous (read “Sore, Hungry, and Slow: 3 Signs That Show Your Program Is Working” in the Related Articles section below). To make hypertrophic gains, you’re going to need to find ways to make your body fail at a given number of repetitions. You’ll want an array of weights and bands, and some extra devices like ankle and wrist weights, or a weight vest, to add resistance to all the movements you’re doing.

The difference between size and strength

As we touched on last time, hypertrophy training simply increases the size of the muscle. Strength training increases the efficiency of the muscle. Large muscles have a greater capacity for strength. Absolute strength is the ability of the muscle to use all of its muscle cells for movement. People in sports dependent on strength-to-weight ratios target high muscular efficiency in their training, whereas those in sheer size-dependent sports will focus more on hypertrophy. Most sports are somewhat dependent on both size and strength, which are ideally improved during different cycles of training.

Periodization

The periodizational concepts that have been discussed in prior issues need to be explained here before a mass schedule is created. Remember that a standard schedule would look similar to this:

Foundation phase (Power 90® or what you did pre-X) + block 1 + transition/recovery + block 2 + transition/recovery + block 3 + recovery = peak (final fit test)

The difference here is that we’re going to structure an entire training cycle based only on hypertrophy. This means we won’t be setting up a peak phase. Over a long period of time, you would want to teach your muscles how to function more efficiently. We’ll get to this at the end.

For now, we’ll just say that there is still a periodizational approach to consider. You will still adapt, gain, and plateau over time, so we’ll need a structure to keep this happening. But the structure will be dependent simply on rep schemes (the number of repetitions that you target to bring you to failure) and progressive overload. The blocks of our 90-day schedule will each target a different number of repetitions, which you’ll want to aim for to induce failure. But because we’re not changing the schedule much, and thus creating less Muscle Confusion™, we won’t need such frequent recovery phases.

Progressive overload

Man with WeightHypertrophy is all about creating progressive overload. To create muscle growth, you must keep stimulating the muscles during each workout. This requires that you add weight as necessary to create failure at the desired number of reps.

Recovery

The more we can focus on hypertrophy, the more muscle we’ll gain. Since we only have so much energy to expend, this means we should spend less time working on other areas. This is where you’ll see the biggest differences from the traditional P90X schedules. When you’re not training for hypertrophy, your entire focus should be on preparing your body to create more hypertrophy. Therefore, the P90X mass schedule will have a lot of active recovery and flexibility work and very little intense cardio. This means we’ll spend more time recovering during each training block and taking fewer periods focused solely on recovery.

Putting it all together

Before we get to the schedule, here are some general things to consider. The first is pacing. Instead of following the kids in the videos, target your rep scheme (and push pause when necessary). Do each set to failure (if you can add enough resistance; if not, get as close as you can), and don’t exceed your targeted number of reps. Do not, however, use the pause button simply to increase the time between exercises.

A good way to choose the resistance for each movement is to use enough so that you can only do the lower number of your targeted rep scheme. Once you can do the higher number, it’s time to increase the resistance.

Do your repetitions slowly and with control. Speed is for power, not size. Focus on perfect form and only add weight when you can do each rep with great form.

When you’re done, you’re done. You don’t need to finish an entire workout if you’re struggling. Once you lose the ability to move the weight or do the move in strict form, stop the workout. Any further training would only create more breakdown than you could recover from and increase your risk of injury.

Your diet

Healthy MealYou won’t be burning as many calories as you would during the classic schedule of the X. If you eat the same amount, you may gain more mass, but you’ll also gain more body fat. This might or might not be acceptable, so pay attention and adjust your diet as necessary. If you want mass, then you need to eat enough for your body to put on weight. I will write more about this diet scenario in the future.

Block 1, phase 1
Weeks 1 through 3

  • Day 1: Chest, Shoulders, & Triceps
  • Day 2: Cardio X, Ab Ripper X
  • Day 3: Legs & Back
  • Day 4: X Stretch; Ab Ripper X
  • Day 5: Back & Biceps
  • Day 6: Yoga X
  • Day 7: Off

Targeted number of reps: 8 to 12 (focus on 10 to 12)

Block 1, phase 2
Weeks 4 through 6

  • Day 1: Chest & Back
  • Day 2: Cardio X, Ab Ripper X
  • Day 3: Shoulders & Arms
  • Day 4: X Stretch; Ab Ripper X
  • Day 5: Legs & Back
  • Day 6: Yoga X
  • Day 7: Off

Targeted number of reps: 8 to 12 (focus on 8 to 10)

Recovery Block
Week 7

  • Day 1: X Stretch
  • Day 2: Yoga X
  • Day 3: Core Synergistics
  • Day 4: Kenpo X
  • Day 5: Yoga X
  • Day 6: X Stretch
  • Day 7: Off

Block 2, phase 1
Weeks 8 and 9

  • Day 1: Chest, Shoulders, & Triceps
  • Day 2: Cardio X, Ab Ripper X
  • Day 3: Legs & Back
  • Day 4: X Stretch; Ab Ripper X
  • Day 5: Back & Biceps
  • Day 6: Yoga X
  • Day 7: Off
  • Day 8: Chest & Back
  • Day 9: Cardio X, Ab Riper X
  • Day 10: Shoulders & Arms
  • Day 11: X Stretch; Ab Ripper X
  • Day 12: Legs & Back
  • Day 13: Yoga X
  • Day 14: Off

Targeted number of reps: 6 to 10

Block 2, phase 2
Weeks 10 and 11

Same schedule as weeks 8 and 9
Targeted number of reps: 4 to 8

Block 2, phase 3
Week 12

Same schedule as weeks 8 and 9
Targeted number of reps: 4 to 6

Final note: This is an entire cycle of training based only on hypertrophy. To have an athletically efficient physique, you should do other training cycles that target different goals. Even if your only goal is hypertrophy, training these other systems properly will improve your body’s physical systems and increase your capacity for muscle growth, as well as the speed at which you can add or shed muscle and fat. So while you can tweak and reuse this basic structure over and over, it will also benefit you to get back to basics and do P90X classic from time to time.

A Recovery Drink IS EssentialNutrition, to some people, it’s just a nine-letter word synonymous with food and dieting. 

To others, people who know the secrets behind a better workout and a leaner body, nutrition means so much more than just filling their plates. 

These people know that with proper nutrition, your body can experience beneficial results that out-compete any fancy pill or expensive surgical intervention. 

It’s true! And, to take it even a step further, the timing of your nutrition with correct food choices will turn your body into an energetic, elated, lean, fat-burning machine!

And who doesn’t want that?  We sure do!

Not that being lean means you’ll be automatically happier, but, if you eat the right foods at the right times, you’ll feel less grumpy, you’ll have more energy to exercise hard the next time you hit the gym, and you’ll be pleasant for others to be around!  Plus, you’ll look good too! 

Hopefully, you already learned that eating balanced meals every few hours is one of the keys to a healthy physique, but that’s not what we’re talking about here. 

We are talking about eating the right foods at the right times following your workout that will make a huge difference in how you feel when you’re working out and how you feel for the 23 hours that you’re not working out.

Eating correctly after your workout will also help you be able to work out hard the next time you exercise, build more lean muscle, and improve your overall health. 

Isn’t that almost too good to be true?  But really it’s not!

Still, for some reason, eating correctly after your workout has gotten lost in the vast sea of nutrition information that is on our internet, in textbooks and in other “expert” nutrition reports. 

So, right here, right now, we’re going to explain it all to you in this easy to understand list: 

  • Avoid eating excessive fat in your post-workout meal – this will slow carbohydrate and protein absorption and minimize the anabolic effects of insulin.
  • Avoid consuming alcohol – it stops your body from being able to replenish muscle glycogen stores and reduces the muscle protein repair process.
  • Avoid waiting too long to eat – you will miss your “recovery window” if you wait longer than 60 minutes to eat. Plus, your blood sugars will likely drop leaving you starving for food. 
  • Avoid consuming slow-digesting, high-fiber carbs with incomplete protein. Your carbs should be quick-digesting and your protein should contain all the essential amino acids.
  • Avoid junk food, empty calories and processed fats in the several hours following your workout – You need quality food all day long to help you build a better body.
  • Drink plenty of water and be well hydrated before, during, and after each exercise bout to maximize performance and ensure an optimal hormonal response.
  • Most importantly, never eat nothing after your workout. You’re better off eating something rather than skipping a meal for several hours after your exercise session is over.

What could you have after a workout?

Have you heard of the P90X Results and Recovery Formula? It’s proven to help replenish and recover your body from intense workouts. It’s designed to deliver the nutrients you need at the time you need it. If you want to recover faster and more completely, if you want to feel refreshed and ready for every workout, then all you have to do now is get your hands on this re-hydrating, re-energizing drink, the P90X Results and Recovery Formula! Remember that by ordering the P90X Results and Recovery Formula HD (home direct) you can save money on shipping and never have to worry about running out!

Another option, and the one that I use after my workouts, is Shakeology!

Do you want to be a sumo wrestler?Many times, diet is the missing “ingredient” in a recipe for success!  Exercise by itself, just is NOT enough. You have to have a good diet. What is a good diet?  A good diet consists of eating well-balanced meals throughout the day. Ideally, eating 5 meals spaced 3 hours a part. NO SKIPPING MEALS!

Skipping meals DOES NOT give you the results you want, unless you want to be a sumo wrestler!!!

Have you thought about drinking Shakeology, a healthy and delicious shake, for breakfast? It’s my SECRET weapon!