WORKOUT
PROGRAMS
Lift Weights To Lose Fat
Author: Tom Venuto
Date: Apr 01, 2000
Publisher: Fitness Renaissance
Most people believe that if your goal is fat loss, you
should start with aerobic workouts and lose the body
fat first before adding weight training. That is a big
mistake and here's why: Obviously, weight training is
the chief element in developing strength and muscle
mass. What few people realize is that weight training
can also increase fat loss dramatically, so by skipping
the strength training in favor of aerobic-only training,
you are not increasing your fat loss - you are slowing
it down!"
Weight training is anaerobic and therefore burns primarily
carbohydrates (sugar) during the workout. Cardiovascular
exercises such as jogging, cycling, step classes, or
stairclimbing are aerobic and therefore burn primarily
fat during the workout. So it seems logical to focus
on aerobic training for fat loss. What you're missing
if you skip the weight training is the benefits that
accrue after the workouts.
Something interesting happens "beneath the surface"
when you lift weights. Intense, progressive weight training
increases your lean body mass - aerobic training does
not. Excessive aerobics combined with low calorie dieting
or aerobic training without weight lifting can even
cause muscle loss. If you lose lean body mass, your
metabolism slows down, and this makes it easier to gain
fat and harder to lose it. If you increase your lean
body mass, you increase your basal metabolic rate, and
fat loss becomes easier. Best of all, you increase metabolism
and fat burning even when you're not working out...
Weight training provides an additional short term increase
in metabolic rate after the workout, called "excess
post exercise oxygen consuption" or EPOC for short.
It's a myth that "all exercise" keeps you
burning calories for hours after the workout. Only high
intensity exercise increases post workout energy expenditure
substantially and weight training has the greatest effect
of all. (High intensity cardio also has a high EPOC,
but thats the subect of another article). This explains
why bodybuilders, who train with weights religiously
and have extremely high muscle to fat ratios, can stay
lean year round without doing much aerobic work.
Losing body fat as quickly and efficiently as possible
requires a three-pronged approach: (1) balanced nutrition
from natural foods, (2) aerobic training, and (3) weight
training. All three ingredients are essential. If you
neglect any one of these components, it will compromise
your results because you lose the "synergy"
created from this combination.
In "The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People"
Author Steven Covey wrote, "Synergy means that
1 + 1 may equal 8, 16, or even 1600. Synergy is everywhere
in nature. If you plant two plants close together the
roots commingle and improve the quality of the soil
so that both plants will grow better than if they were
separated. If you put two pieces of wood together they
will hold much more than the total of the weight held
by each separately. The whole is greater than the sum
of its parts."
When you include weights, cardio and balanced nutrition
in your fat loss regimen, the effects of the three parts
brought together are not linear, they are exponential.
Each part complements the others and multiplies your
results. You develop an efficient metabolism and a lean,
muscular body that could not be achieved with one or
even two of the components in isolation.
The best you can hope for from diet and aerobics alone
is to become a "skinny fat person." You may
lose weight from diet and aerobics, but much of it will
be muscle, your fat to muscle ratio will plummet and
you will take on a "soft" appearance. It's
not uncommon for a woman 5 feet 4 inches tall to weigh
125 pounds and yet have 25-30% body fat. According to
the Metropolitan Life height and weight tables, 125
pounds is ideal for a medium-framed 5’ 4"
female, but 25-30% body fat is extremely poor for anyone!
Without the weight training, you will never optimize
your muscle to fat ratio and you will always struggle
to keep fat off permanently.
If you have extremely limited time, and your main priority
is to lose fat, then you can keep your weight training
brief - maybe 30 minutes 3 days per week - and spend
the rest of your time concentrating on cardio. But never
neglect the weights completely - always do both, and
if possible, devote an equal amount of attention to
each.
Last, but not least, don't forget that weight training,
not cardiovascular training, is "shapes" and
sculpts your muscles. Simply put, lifting weights makes
you look better! If you want a lean, hard, fat-free
body, then get out of the aerobics studio, get off that
bike or treadmill, and pick up some barbells and dumbbells!
Lifting weights isn't just for "muscle-heads"
anymore.
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