I Have A Bean To Grind

Dated: 28 Jan 2010
Posted by Kevin Weiss
Categoiry: Overall Fitness
0 Comments

Anyone who know me knows I love coffee.  Maybe a little too much. Although everybody knows that C is for “cookie” to a certain blue haired googly eyed friend, C is definitely for “coffee” when it comes to Kevin.

I have always enjoyed dark, strong coffee. I have never drank it any other way but black and the blacker the better.  I believe it is properly referred to as “bold”. I don’t really care what it is called, all I know is I like it, I want it, got to have it.

This type of talk about a substance seems to border almost on obsession or addiction to some and I guess I would have to agree. If you have to have something everyday to be happy you are probably addicted to it.  I can accept that.  I am not sure it warrants a room full of my friends and family telling me how it has negatively affect my relationships with them, but it is an addiction all the same.

Like most addicts I have always been able to justify to myself why I needed coffee and how it was not that big of a deal.  I turned a blind eye to any study that shone a negative light on coffee  or caffeine and always held steadfastly to the belief that it was not a harmful as it was made out to be.  I even preached to people about how coffee was not the problem, it in fact was the sweeteners and coffee whitener or cream that was doing all the harm.  This of course is a very convenient stand for some who only drinks black coffee to take. It was also based on nothing more than my own self serving imagination.

While I pay no heed to any studies that find negative effects from coffee,  I embrace the studies that show the positive.  There has been quite a few of them lately actually so I want to hurry up top my soapbox and shout them to the masses before the new batch of studies comes out that disproves everything the last study established.

It seems all this time coffee has gotten a bad rap because of the crowd it keeps. Regular coffee drinkers generally seemed to be people who did not get enough sleep, smoked cigarettes, drank alcohol, and overall led a less health conscious lifestyle. Rob van Dam, an assistant professor at the Harvard School Of Public Health, claims early studies that linked coffee with such conditions as heart disease and cancer did not take into account these other lifestyle factors. When larger more long term studies were conducted, no evidence was found that coffee had any effect on mortality rates from any cause including cardiovascular disease and cancer. Some of the subjects in the long term studies drank up to 6 cups per day (lightweights).

Van Dams research also found that coffee drinkers had reduced risk of liver disease and Type 2 diabetes. A recent study published in the Archives Of Internal Medicine suggested that 3-4 cups of coffee per day might reduce the chances of Type 2 diabetes by roughly 25 percent.

Harvard researchers found that drinking coffee might lower mens risk of developing aggressive prostate cancer by up to 60%.  The men who drank the most coffee seemed to receive the most benefit. Other studies have also shown coffee consumption can reduce your risk of ailments like Alzheimers, Parkinsons, dementia,colon and endometrial cancer and gallstones. Coffee has also been shown to improve mental and aerobic performance,endurance and mood, while decreasing depressive symptoms.

Sweet vindication!!  This black gold is nothing short of a miracle elixir!  I knew I was right all along and there is only one thing I like more than coffee and thats being right.  Ok back to reality.  Although the benefits of coffee have been well established just like anything else there is two sides to this story.  In my next blog I will discuss the other side to this coin and show why some people should avoid coffee all together, or at least some types of coffee. Until then enjoy that cup of coffee. I know I will.

kevin@kevinweiss.com
Whole Body Hypertrophy

Share on Facebook

No Happy New Year? What a jerk!

Dated: 12 Jan 2010
Posted by Kevin Weiss
Categoiry: Fat Loss, Overall Fitness
0 Comments

Happy middle of the second week of January everybody.  Hope everybody had a great holiday. This may start out sounding like a belated happy new year  wish but it is not.  Don’t get me wrong I have nothing against new years.  What I do have a problem with is the new years resolution.  This thing that so many people feel obligated to make after tipping a few tall boys on Dec 31, but have no troubling discarding before February 1st.  No guilt, no shame.  I give up, pass the pie please.  I am not sure how I got headed down this path but it leads me to what I really want to talk about. Weight loss marketing in January.

Being in the business of fat loss, this could be a very lucrative time for me.  I know with a little marketing, I could sell dozens of 8 and 12 week “quick and easy” fat loss programs.  I could even put a 100% money back guarantee on it to sweeten the deal.  How could people resist!  ” I can be in shape by spring and if not I get my money back?  How can I lose?  Where do I sign?”

The thing is some people would lose weight.  Some would not.  The only thing I can can guarantee is I would not be giving any money back.  Not because I am a shady SOB but because any short term weight loss program with a 100% money back guarantee has one requirement.  The program must be followed exactly as laid out for as long as specified.  Miss one meal, one workout, eat 2 green beans more than specified, “Sorry  you did not follow the program, thats why you did not lose weight, not my fault”.

The same goes for weight loss supplements.  Many have money back guarantees  but in the fine print you will see that a specific diet and training program must be followed. If not, too bad, your fault not mine. Next please.

This may seem like a very glum message for the beginning of a new year but it is not meant to be.  Here is the brighter side.  You don’t need New Years resolutions to set you on track.  You don’t need quick and easy diet and training programs or magic weight loss supplements.  Everything you need to lose fat, gain muscle, or improve your performance is already in you.  That “secret” ingredient is desire for change.  I am not just talking about wanting to make a change. I am talking about a deep burning desire to change your current physical situation. If you simply would like to make a change, the first slip up or tough situation will surely derail your efforts and put your right back on the path you have already been on for so long.  If you truly desire change, little slip ups and roadblocks still happen, but they become obstacles to overcome, not excuses to fail.

I would like to end with this one simple thought.  Anybody that has ever attempted  a goal or tried to conquered a demon has slipped and fallen.  Success belongs to the ones who keep getting up.

P.S.

Happy New Year Everyone

Kevin

kevin@kevinweiss.com

Share on Facebook

Put some inefficiency in your fat loss

Dated: 14 Dec 2009
Posted by Kevin Weiss
Categoiry: Fat Loss
1 Comment

Everybody is trying to be more efficient these days. We want fuel efficient cars, energy efficient houses, time efficient schedules, and space efficient buildings. The whole point of being efficient is to use less of something, or make the most of what you have to work with. This is a great idea when we are talking about fossil fuels, but not such a great idea when we are talking about out bodies greatest source of energy reserve. Our bodyfat.

If your goal is to lose fat in the most time efficient way possible  you need to do something that expends maximum calories in minimum time. Makes sense right?  Well then why are most people that are trying to lose fat doing things that they are very efficient at. Remember if you are efficient at an exercise you will burn less calories per unit of time. It does not take long to get efficient at walking or running. If it  did  golfer would be some of the leanest athletes around. This is usually not the case.

indexThe golfer that are lean do not get that way from all the walking and swinging they do. They usually  1) are young  2) workout with weights. The PGA actually has a workout trailer at all of their events and most of the players that are in shape have trainers they work with on a regular basis.

I am sure we have all seen the people that occupy the treadmills and spin bikes at the gyms day in and day out. Many of them religiously put in their 1-2 hours everyday but look no different than they did a year ago. They have become very efficient at that movement. Their body no longer needs to adapt so it doesn’t.

If I wanted to expend a huge chunk of calories over a given period of time a great exercise for me would be swimming. Now before you jump all over me and say that swimming is a endurance activity that is all about efficiency, trust me I know that.  I also know I am about as efficient in the water as a one legged man in an ass kicking contest. I don’t so much swim as try not to drown really. Someone that is a excellent swimmer could do dozens of laps in the time it takes me to do 2 lengths. They would be fresh as a daisy, I would be on the verge of cardiac arrest.  If I took swim lessons and practiced every day soon I would be able to do lap after lap as well.  This would be ideal if I wanted to be a swimmer. Since I am interested in body composition, becoming efficient at swimming would mean I am doing too much of it and need to do something else. That or tie a rock around my neck and proceed to fight for my life once again.

Practice makes perfect and that is what you are doing when you are doing a repetitive activity for a long time. You are practicing.  If you hit 1000 golf balls, you are practicing to become a better golfer, If you run 10 hours a week you are practicing to become a better runner. If that is your goal great.  If your goal is to look your best, try practicing something you are not good at, and change it often.  Have a great day.

kevin@kevinweiss.com

Share on Facebook

Food companies do not care if you have six pack abs.

Dated: 27 Oct 2009
Posted by Kevin Weiss
Categoiry: Fat Loss, Overall Fitness
0 Comments

Yes it is true. Food producers do not care if you ever get a six pack. They don’t care if you lose fat at all. They don’t even care if you are healthy. In fact when it comes down to it, the producers only care about one thing when it comes to consumers. That they consume, and that they consume often.

If we cannot count on the people and companies who produce the foods we eat to watch out for our waistlines and health, who can we count on?  Where does the responsibility lie for making sure what we are consuming on a daily basis is serving our ultimate well being?  Is it the government agencies who have established the RDA’s?  No I don’t think so.  The fact is they have as much interest in your health as the food producers. Their interests lie more in making sure you consume lots of the products that are subsidized by government like corn, wheat, and soy. How you consume these products and in what form is secondary to the fact that you consume them, a lot of them.

If we can’t count on big business or government to make unbiased healthy food choices for us, who do we turn to? Who should make the final decisions on what goes into our mouths and how it is going to affect our “bottom line”? Guess what? It is that person staring back at you in the mirror.

Maybe nobody wants to hear it but if you are overweight or unhealthy it is  mostly if not completely your fault. Nothing affects your bodyfat levels and your health more than what you eat. Exercise is a close second but without proper eating on a consistent basis you will ultimately gain weight and lose your health.

Making healthy food choices can seem like a pretty daunting task in todays world. Everywhere we turn there are foods of convenience that, lets face it, everybody knows are not good food choices. You don’t need a degree in nutritional science to figure out french fries and ding dongs for dinner is not a good call.  But what about all the products that are have the words “natural” and “healthy” and “organic”  screaming across the packaging. Surely these must be good choices.  These term are really meaningless and are far more about getting you to buy the product than contributing to your health. The very fact that these products are in a package nearly guarantees they are not all they are cracked up to be. “Organic” or “whole grain” ding dongs are still crap and they will still make you fat. End of story.

Here is a simple way to evaluate foods. Test the food against these 3 rules and if it passes, its in your basket, if it fails its out.

1) Is it a food or a food product.

Most of the contents of any grocery store is not food but rather food products. Taking a whole food and processing it into another product typically removes any goodness the original food contained. As an example lets use oats. Oats on its own is a highly nutritious food with lots of fiber, vitamins, minerals, and a good source of slowing digesting carbohydrate.  All things conducive to a lean and healthy body.  Take those whole large flakes of oats and grind it into a flour, remove the fiber so you have a nice fine consistency,  bleach it so it is all the same color, add sugar, salt and a host of other preservatives, form it into a shape appealing to the eye and put it in a box. Now you have a whole grain oat cereal. Because studies have shown that oats can reduce cholesterol and reducing cholesterol may prevent heart disease lets put a government approved heart healthy badge on it just for good measure. It should be easy to see although these foods both contain oats, that is where the similarities end. This actually leads right into the next rule.

2)Does it have more than 5 ingredients.

The more processed a food is the worse it is going to be for your health and your waistline.  The more processed the food the more ingredients will be added to ensure that product can stay on the shelf longer without spoiling. The longer it can stay on the shelf, the more profit is made because of factors like central manufacturing,shipping, and storage facilities. A loaf of wonderbread can be shipped across the country, sit on the shelf in a warehouse or in the store for days or weeks, and still be sold as soft and white as the day it was made. It also has over 20 ingredients, most of which no one but a chemical scientist would even know what they were, that ensure it will remain soft and white for a long time. Try leaving a loaf of homemade whole grain bread on your counter for a week and see what happens. Hope you are not allergic to penicillin.

Ideally it would be nice to pick foods that only have one ingredient.  A whole apple contains apple, a steak contains steak for example. This is not always possible though.  If you make a effort to fill your cart with as little “ingredients” as possible and stick to food, you will be way ahead of the game. No need to count calories or gram of protein or carbs. Try counting ingredients. Its easier and it works.

3)Could I pick it, dig it from the ground, or chase it down.

This is the simplest rule of all but it is also very effective.  You can put any food to this test and if it passes you are pretty much guaranteed a wise choice.  You can pick apples, dig potatoes or carrots from the ground, or chase down a chicken.  There is no Apple Cinnamon Cheerio tree, no french fries in the garden, and no chicken nuggets, or tofurkey running around in the barnyard.  All of these products started out as whole foods but after processing they are now products.  See rule 1.

Using these guidelines to chose your food takes out most of the guess work and make counting calories a thing of the past. No eliminating foods based on macro-nutrient profile but instead eliminating “non nutrient food”.  Give it a try. Your health and your waistline will thank you.

Have a custom diet designed for you

kevin@kevinweiss.com

Share on Facebook

Cardio for fat loss. Is there a best way?

Dated: 18 Apr 2009
Posted by Kevin Weiss
Categoiry: Overall Fitness
0 Comments

In the past 25 years I have heard it all when it came to cardio and fat loss or a least it seems like it.” Cardio must be done on a empty stomach first thing in the morning”. “steady state cardio will not make you ripped, you must do intervals” and of course the ever popular “cardio must be done in the target “fat burning zone” to be effective for fat loss. All  of these statements are backed up by reams of scientific studies, sometimes the same study is even used to prove two opposite opinions.

There is nothing wrong with scientific studies. Many amazing life changing things have been discovered,either on purpose or by accident, by such studies. It actually amazes me that so much time and money has been spent on the subject of exercise and fat loss. It seems like such a waste of time for the rats and untrained college students that are usually the subjects in the studies. Isn’t there cheese to be eaten and beer to be drunk? This would seem like a much better use of this resource.

Why not look at more relevant examples for the answers. People that actually get lean for a “hobby” Subjects that get themselves into single digit bodyfat land just for shits and giggles. Yes if you have not guessed it I am talking about the lowly bodybuilder. More specifically the natural bodybuilder because you can not attribute his extreme leanness to some pharmaceutical concoction. He or she has had to achieve this leanness through their training protocol. Surely the answer must lie with these speedo wearing hairless creatures. Funny thing though, when you examine the cardio stategies employed by this group.  Some swear by early morning cardio, some by slow long steadystate and others worshiped at the interval alter. There isno more agreement among this group than the lab coat wearing pencilnecks.

The simple fact is all of these methods have been used with success to achieve extreme leanness. But how can this be?  Surely there must be a best way! Well sorry, there is no best way to do your cardio to promote fat loss and here is why. cardio is not the biggest factor in getting your body to lose fat. In My opinion there are two factors that are much more important.

1) calorie deficit

 2) efficient metabolism

The single biggest fact that effects these two thing is, drumroll please, DIET. A properly designed diet can effectively put you into a calorie deficit while still maintaining a efficient fat burning metabolism. No matter what type of cardio you do if your diet is not on track you will not achieve extreme leanness, not even close. And the beauty is the better your diet the less cardio you will have to do before the six pack makes its grand entrance.

So lets end the debate about the hows, and whens, of cardio. Put some of that time into tightening up your diet and then do whatever type of cardio you chose. Just be careful not to step on any  rats doing wind sprints along the way.

Share on Facebook

No Magic found in cleanses

Dated: 15 Apr 2009
Posted by Kevin Weiss
Categoiry: Fat Loss, Misc.
0 Comments

I came across this article from Dr Doug Cook Rd commenting on a popular “fat loss/cleanse system. I found it interesting, maybe you will to.

Isagenix is not new but it seems to have taken on new life. I have been approach by representatives of Isagenix on several occasions to be a distributor – that’s right, it’s a multi-level marketing scheme. While some product lines like Avon are a little more straight forward, Isagenix is a line of nutritional products making unsubstantiated claims and promises.

Keeping with the fad of detoxing, these products claim to help rid the body of excess ‘toxins’, which they say, are the reason why so many people struggle with weight. One of their main arguments is that people are unable to digest and use the food they eat making them malnourished at a cellular level. When people are starved of nutrients and when they are loaded with toxins, their bodies can not use stored fat for fuel and so it just accumulates and people gain weight, according to pitch I’ve been presented with.

Upon closer examination of their weight loss plan, you replace two meals with Isalean shakes (about 250 calories each), and eat a ’sensible’ dinner – this would provide about 1000 to 1200 calories per day! You don’t need to be an expert in nutrition to know that this will result in weight loss, and the weight loss is not due to the herbal supplements etc that they claim help to ‘flush’ the body of toxins or the cayenne pepper/green tea ‘accelerator’ used to ‘boost’ metabolism.

When pressed for supporting research to substantiate these claims, I’ve always been given the run around. This system does nothing more than line the pockets of the distributors while leaving the buyer with products that just don’t measure up! What’s amazing to me is how people take the sales pitch of the distributors, who tend not to know the first thing about nutrition or human physiology, as proof positive. Reiterating the information that comes with the product does not make someone knowledgeable! Please save your money for real wholesome foods, a good multivitamin and of course vitamin D to start!

Share on Facebook

Who are you trying to convince?

Dated: 13 Apr 2009
Posted by Kevin Weiss
Categoiry: Overall Fitness
0 Comments

Let me take you down a familiar road. Perhaps you have been there yourself or have been down it with someone else. This journey usually begins for me with a client, usually one that does not know me to well, standing before me and with the best of poker faces claims to be doing everything I have told them to do, but is not making any progress in fat loss. I usually listen to their story for a short while and don’t say a word. Just looking and listening. Then i begin to ask basic, small questions. Like a well seasoned investigator i begin to pick apart there stories little by little. Very soon it is obvious to us both that they are not following the plan at all. The seemingly small insignificant facts that were left out of the original tale made all the difference. The moral of the story is, very rarely is the plan “failing”. You are failing the plan. Just because you tell yourself close enough is good enough does not make it true.

Share on Facebook