How To Write A Workout

When it comes to weight loss, all that really matters is how much you move, period.  It can be sets and reps and long bouts of cardio at the gym, or it can be regular evening walks.  The point is to move more often.

When it comes to functional movement, posture, and muscular balance, then the how of writing your own workout comes into play.  Every week, I meet people at the gym who do, “…about 30 minutes on the elliptical, and then I go downstairs and do some abs, and some lifting.”

“What kind?”

“You know, like sit-ups, and crunches, and that big chair where you lift your legs up and down… and then I do some biceps curls, and some front shoulder raises, and some of these…” and then they demonstrate a military press.

I nod, thinking that they’re a perfect candidate for personal training–and not because they’re overweight or at risk for heart disease–but because they seem bored, aimless.

Writing a workout is easy.  Writing a balanced workout takes more concentration.  It’s important to first expand your exercise library.   Start by making a chart like this, filling it in with your own exercises, by whatever name you call them.

LEGS

ARMS/CHEST

CORE

BACKSIDE

AEROBIC

Squats Military Press Sit-ups Seated Row Jump Rope
Step-ups Pushups Crunches S.L. Dead Lift KB Swing
Lateral Step-ups Shoulder Raises Leg lifts SDLHP Run
Lunges Haloes Cherry Pickers KB Swing Box Jumps
Side Lunges High Pull Plank High Pull Ice Skaters
V-Lunges Triceps Extensions Obliq. Side Raises Sumo Dead Lift Burpees
Box Jumps Biceps Curls Oblique V-ups S.L Dead Lift Ribbons
S.L. Dead Lifts Dips Scullers Seated Row Slam Ball
KB Swing Front Squat Lat Pull Down
Jumpies Weighted Sit-up Supermans
Ice Skaters KB Swing
Cable Twists

As you can see, some of the exercises overlap categories, since they are compound movements.

When writing a total body circuit workout, it’s important to hit the whole body.  By no means is this is hard rule, but if your goal is a good balanced effort, stick with the rule.  If you are working on something specifically (such as an imbalance between your anterior and posterior chains, you may decide to omit certain muscle groups).

By choosing an exercise from each group (we’ll take the first exercise from each column), you get a list that looks like this: Squats, Military Press, Sit-ups, Seated Row, and Jump Rope.  You could make a ton of different workouts with these exercises, depending on the weights you want to use and the intensity you’re going for, but to keep it simple, we’ll just say:

Complete 7 rounds of:

10 Squats, 10 Military Presses, 10 Sit-ups, 10 Seated Rows, and 100 skips with the rope.

This is a 280-rep workout + 700 skips with the jump rope. My guess is that it would take anywhere from 25-35 minutes to complete.

But there’s something wrong with this workout in terms of balance.  Yes, we have most of the body covered, but it’s extremely dominant in the sagittal plane.  It’s important to understand planes of motion.  Sagittal plane motions are exercises that move forward and backward, or up and down in a forward backward direction.  Frontal plane motions are exercises that adduct and abduct, or move out to the side, and back in.  Transverse plane motions are rotational.

Planes Of Motion

SAGITTAL

FRONTAL

TRANSVERSE

Pushups Jumping Jacks Cable Twists
Squats Lateral Step-ups Cherry Pickers
Box Jumps Jane Fonda Leg Lifts Wood Choppers
Burpees Oblique Side Raises Ice Skaters
KB Swing Side Plank Figure-8 Swings
Sit-ups Military Press Windmills
Leg Lifts Side Lunges Arm Circles
Step-ups Side Shoulder Raises Leg Circles
Dead Lifts Upright Rows Haloes
Seated Row Oblique V-ups
Plank
Slam ball

This is just to name a few.  As you can see, the sagittal column is dominant (I have no trouble filling in the exercises in the other columns to catch them up, but it’s my job to know, whereas the average gym-goer has a much more difficult time thinking of exercises for the frontal and transverse planes). When writing your workout, make sure you select at least one exercise from each plane.

So our original workout of 7 x (10 Squats (S), 10 Military Presses (F), 10 Sit-ups (S), 10 Seated Rows (S), and 100 skips with the rope (S)) needs modification.  It would be wise to substitute one of the sagittal exercises with a transverse exercise.  Transverse exercises typically originate in the core, so the easiest substitution to make it to swap out the sit-ups for cherry pickers.  Both work the core, but the latter breaks you out of the monotony of sagittal dominance.

Now the workout looks like this:

7 x (10 Squats (Legs-S), 10 Military Presses (Shoulders-F),  10 Cherry Pickers (Core-T), 10 Seated Rows (Back-S), 100 skips with the rope (Aerobic-S)

Choosing only five exercises certainly doesn’t cover every part of the body, but it’s a good start.  When writing your circuit workout, or as I like to call it, aerobic resistance training, you are more time-efficient at the gym, you get a great cardio workout by cycling through the non-competing exercises, and you end up sore the next day.  Not a bad approach.

Circuit Training: A More Effective Tool For Body Re-Composition

The typical person at the gym who wants to “lose a little weight and tone up” may spend a lot of time doing cardio (to burn calories) and then gets off the machine to do a bit of aimless resistance training.  He or she will say, “Then I do, you know, some biceps, triceps, chest, shoulders, and some of these thingies,” and then will awkwardly demonstrate some kind of frontal or sagittal plane motion.

“How many sets and reps do you do?” I’ll ask.

Usually 1 or 2 sets of 10.

If it’s a woman, she probably doesn’t want to “bulk up.”

Interesting, since a set range of 1 to 3 sets, and a rep range of 8-12 reps is what causes hypertrophy (in Greek, hyper means “excess” and trophy means “nourishment”), that is, an increase in the volume of tissue.  Hypertrophy causes muscles to grow bigger–to “bulk up.”

“Toning up,” on the other hand, means having more visible muscle definition; it means burning the fat off the top.

Theoretically, in order to tone up, one would want to burn as many calories as possible in order to lose pounds of fat.  One should probably dedicate more time to cardio–which burns the most calories–and less time to resistance training, right?

Wrong.  And this is the mistake I see people making over and over and over again at the gym.  It’s usually women, too.

Cardio, as defined by personal training textbooks, is defined by any activity performed on a machine designed to maintain an elevated heart rate: ellipticals, treadmills/running, stair-steppers, etc.  Cardiovascular fitness is essential for health, as it trains the heart (the body’s most essential muscle), increases stroke volume, VO2 max, cardiac output, oxidative capacity of muscles, and it also decreases both resting and exercising heart rates.

But cadio, as defined by me, is any activity that keeps the heart rate elevated period.  After all, that is how the heart gets trained.  It doesn’t care what kind of activity you’re doing.

Circuit training is perhaps the most beneficial form of cardiorespiratory training out there.  Circuit training is basically a series of resistance training exercises performed one after another, with minimal rest in between.  Resistance training, we know, is also a very important component of a balanced fitness program, and the benefits of it are numerous: increased bone mineral density, increased strength, increased range of activities and motion, improved mobility, improved stability, and more.

  • Circuit training breaks the body out of the traditional, limiting movement patterns and required the body to change position and direction often.  This burns more calories than maintaining the same direction of movement.  It also dynamically improves an individual’s range of motion and flexibility.
  • Circuits can combine different intensities of exercises, rep ranges, and times with extreme ease, enabling the individual to target higher or lower heart rates during activity.
  • Circuits can be designed with hypertrophy or muscular endurance in mind, depending on the individual’s goals.
  • Circuits allow for “active recovery.”  For example, after working the legs by doing squats, the individual can switch to a non-competing exercise.
  • Circuits more easily elevate heart rate and oxygen consumption.  Because of active recovery, its easier to maintain a higher heart rate throughout the workout by switching to another muscle group before the first group reaches its lactic acid threshold.  Higher intensity leads to higher EPOC, which leads to more calorie burn outside of the gym.
  • A circuit can be designed to work any part of the body that has the energy to exercise.
  • Circuit training is cross training.
  • Circuit training is cardiovascular, resistance, and dynamic range of motion training in one.  Think “cardio weight lifting with improvements in flexibility.”

Why wouldn’t you circuit train?  Try it.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Lowering Body Fat: Excess Post-exercise Oxygen Consumption (EPOC)

What do most of us want?

To lose a little weight and tone up.

What that really means is we want a reduction in body fat percentage.  After all, “toning up” is really just skimming a little fat off the top of the muscles that already dwell beneath.

And what is the most effective way to reduce body fat?

Burn more calories than you eat.

Sure, you can calorie-restrict.  Or, you can do lots of cardio.  If you’re really good, you can do both, and sure enough, calorie-by-calorie, you will lose body fat.

But I’m more interested in being time-efficient. And that’s where EPOC–excess post-exercise oxygen consumption–comes in.

In order to maximize the amount of calories burned in a workout, you must maximize the amount of oxygen used during activity.  In other words, the harder you’re breathing, the more calories you are burning.

But there’s more to it.

By maximizing the amount of oxygen you use during the day–and not merely in your workouts–you can burn more calories.  After your workout, your body needs to use more oxygen to replenish energy supplies, lower tissue temperature, and return the body to a resting state.  The harder you work out, the longer it takes to perform these tasks, the more oxygen your body utilizes, the more calories you burn post-exercise.

When people say, “You’re metabolism runs higher after you work out,” they are really referring to this EPOC principle.

The higher the intensity of exercise (the more calories you burn during exercise), the higher the magnitude of EPOC (the more calories you will burn after exercise).  Double-whammy.

It’s like taking your car out for a drive.  If you drive it hard, red-lining occasionally–burning more gas–and then park it back in the garage, your car will take much longer to cool down its engine (more EPOC).  If you simply take it for an easy Sunday drive–being fuel efficient–it will take less time (less EPOC) to cool.

In the goal of body fat reduction, the key is to burn calories, rather than focus on burning fat.  Long bouts of cardio are a nice way to improve cardiovascular fitness, but they aren’t the most efficient use of time at the gym, and they certainly don’t contribute as much to high EPOC as other types of training.

And what happens after long bouts of cardio?  You deplete glycogen stores.  If you’re a cardio-holic, you may have a tendency to always be running on empty, and that paves to way to a binge on carbohydrates later, as your body begs for repleted glycogen.  This makes for fit-fat people.

The after-burn of EPOC should not be underestimated.  Swap out your 40 minutes of steady state cardio for 20 minutes of work on the bubble between aerobic and anaerobic work, and enjoy the after-burn.  Eat immediately after your workout (preferable a source of easily digestible carbohydrates and some protein) within 30 minutes of working out in order to give your body the building blocks it needs to replete glycogen stores and repair muscle tissue, while offsetting a binge later.  This, in effect, will lead to more sustainable weight loss.

Less time at the gym; more bang for your buck.  More time for other things: like recovery.

How To Lose Fat

I had a good laugh reading about muscle gain and fat burning.

Will More Muscle Rev Up Your Metabolism?  The answer, from Marticia Heaner in “Triggering Your Body To Burn Fat”, was short and sweet.  “Probably not.”

Most personal trainers, including myself, tell others that building muscle is one of the best uses of time at the gym.  It is metabolically more active tissue, it is denser.  When you build muscle, you tend to lower your body fat percentage

…but in terms of losing fat, objectively.  Well, building muscle guarantees nothing.

Why?  Because to build muscle, you have to eat.  And you tend to eat a lot.  You will likely overeat, as muscle is hungry, and building it makes you tired.  That marginal metabolic edge conferred through muscle gain is often eclipsed by an over-compensation in eating.

I know this first hand.  If you’re like me, and exercise is easy, but fat is stubborn, your problem is probably food.  Plain and simple.

Sure, a lot can be said (by me, especially) about efficiency in exercise.  If you have a small amount of time, you’re aim should be to burn the most energy possible, get the highest afterburn, and build the most muscle.  Easy, right?  Yeah… not really.  But that’s content for a different article.

I can tell my readers first hand that putting on lots of muscle will not necessarily make you lose body fat.  What often happens is you become a larger, stronger version of your fat self! What to do?

Fat loss, according to every credible article, is not scientific.  It is an annoying, objective numbers game.  Move more, eat less.  Burn more than you eat.  Period.  It does not matter what type of energy you burn.  If you write down every calorie honestly and prove you are creating a deficit of 3,500 calories, but fail to lose a pound of fat… then maybe, just maybe you have a thyroid problem.  But I’d wager that 99% of thyroid problems are simply denial.

Eat less.  Bottom line.  Eat less. Front load your calories in the beginning of the day, taper toward the evening, and if you go to bed a little bit hungry (a little, not a lot!), you’re probably on the path to body fat loss.

Increase your total movement, not necessarily your exercise.  Lift too many weights, and you might get too hungry to stick to your lower calorie diet.  Take trips by foot, park the car far away, clean things by hand, pace around, whatever you have to do.

Here we go again: move more, eat less.

Top Three (part 3 of 3): Cardiovascular Activities

This is the third part of my three part series of, you guess it, Top Threes.

Everyone things that cardio is it’s own entity, such as dancing, ellipticizing, jogging, or cycling.  Cardio is equating with continuous, forward movement.  Cardio is easier than that.  It’s continuous movement, period.

If you lift weights and take minutes of rest between sets, you’re heart isn’t doing a tremendous amount of work, even though your exercise is beneficial and stimulating in other ways.  In order to keep your heart rate elevated continuously, you have to keep moving.

Here are my Top Three Cardiovascular Activities.

1) Body Weight Exercises – Considering the thousands and thousands of pounds of weight that can be found at the gym, your body weights relatively little, and yet most people who are quite strong lifting weights are actually quite poor at lifting themselves in various functional motions.  For example, a man who can squat 200lbs down to a 90 degree angle might have a very difficult time squatting just his body weight 50 times, over a full range of motion.  It would likely make him sore, too.  body weight exercises are anything that wouldn’t require weight or fancy equipment: push-ups, squats, jumps, dips, pull-ups, sit-ups, leg lifts, planks, roll-ups, burpees, lunges, long jumps, cartwheels, etc.  Because they are “light,” body weight exercise and be performed rapidly, can be switched around, used in a circuit, or completed from a list in order to get a good cardio workout.

2) Running/Hiking - Humans are bipedal.  We are extremely efficient runners and walkers, with special ligaments to support these activities, the ability to perspire, and breathe continuously without interference.  Running and hiking are a sure-fire way to get your heart rate up, wherever you are.

3) Kettle Bell Swings - The kettle bell swing is a cardiovascular activity unlike anything most people have encountered.  It seems entirely unnatural (and judging how difficult it is for people to learn initially, I’d say it truly is unnatural), but the body’s mechanics take to it extremely well, and it uses large muscle groups.  Kettle bell swinging is what I call “aerobic weight lifting,” and is an excellent option for anyone needing to improve core strength, or avoid impact activities.  It is an excellent tool for rehabilitating low back issues (if done properly), strengthening the glutes, hip flexors, and hamstrings, as well as upper back, lat, and grip strength.

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