Certain foods are extremely difficult for the human body to convert into
body fat - not impossible but damned near impossible. By consuming
calories derived from these foods, the anabolic margin of error is
extended dramatically, which means it will be easier to lose fat and
gain muscle, if you choose.
Lean protein, protein devoid of saturated fat, has been the staple, the
bedrock nutrient of elite athletes for 50 years. Why? You can eat a
mountain of lean protein and not get fat - assuming you train with
intensity sufficient enough to trigger muscle growth. Lean protein is
difficult for the body to break down and digest. As a direct result of
this digestive difficulty, the body kicks the metabolic thermostat
upward to break protein down into subcomponent amino acids.
The human body wants to preserve stored body fat as a last line of
defense against starvation. If overworked and under-fed, the body will
preferentially eat muscle tissue to save precious body fat.
Obese people that go on crash diets, precipitously slashing calories,
might lose 100-pounds of body weight, yet still appear fat. Despite
losing from say 350-pounds to 250-pounds, they still appear fat because
they still are fat. The body has cannibalized muscle tissue and saved
the fat. Though they might weigh 100-pounds less, they still possess
25-40% body fat percentile.
Lean protein is the bedrock nutrient in the physical renovation process
because it supplies muscle tissue battered by a high intensity weight
workout with the amino acids needed to heal, recover and construct new
muscle tissue. Lean protein is a bedrock nutrient in the physical
renovation process because it causes the basal metabolic rate (BMR) to
elevate; the metabolic thermostat, the rate at which our body consumes
calories, increases when digesting protein. Lean protein is a bedrock
nutrient in the physical renovation process because it is damned near
impossible for the body to convert it into body fat.
The other bedrock nutrient in the physical transformation process is
fibrous carbohydrates: carrots, broccoli, green beans, bell peppers,
spinach, cauliflower, onions, asparagus, cabbage, salad greens, Brussels
sprouts and the like. Fibrous carbohydrates, like lean protein, are
nearly impossible for the body to convert into body fat. Fibrous
carbohydrates require almost as many calories to digest as they contain.
A green bean or carrot might contain 10-calories yet is so dense and
difficult to break down that the body has to expend nearly as many
calories to break down that bean or carrot as the vegetable contains.
Fibrous carbohydrates have a wonderful "Roto-Rooter" effect on the
internal plumbing: as they work their way though the digestive
passageways they scrape mucus and gunk off intestinal walls and help
keep sludge buildup to a minimum. For this reason fibrous carbohydrates
are the perfect compliment to a lean protein diet. Too much protein can
cause bile buildup: fiber is the Yin to protein's Yang. The two
nutrients should be eaten together.
Both protein and fiber have a beneficial dampening effect on insulin
secretions. It is no accident that professional bodybuilders, the
world's best dieters, capable of reducing body fat percentiles to 5%
while maintaining incredible muscle mass, construct their eating regimen
around protein and fiber.
The best way to eat is to eat often. If you eat 3,000 calories a day the
best way is in five 600-calorie feeding or six 500-calorie feedings
instead of a breakfast containing 400-calories, a lunch of 1000-calories
and a late dinner of 1,600-calories. Avoid calories easily converted
into body fat.
Eat multiple small meals in the 400-600 calorie range comprised
exclusively of foods near impossible for the body to convert into body
fat. Plus, these foods cause the metabolism, the BMR, the body
thermostat to elevate in order to digest them. Optimally you should eat
every three hours: in about the time the nutrients from the previous
meal have dwindled, been expended and exhausted, in about the time the
elevated metabolism is 'settling back down to normal,' eat another small
protein/fiber meal. This reestablishes anabolism, kicks the metabolism
upward once again and gives the body more practice at assimilating and
distributing quality nutrients.
They say practice makes perfect and by eating small, power-packed, tough
to digest meals every three hours, the metabolism is kept elevated,
anabolism is established and maintained and the individual never feels
hungry. A person who is not hungry is far less inclined to binge on
sweets and treats, junk and trash then the crash diet/calorie cutters
who always feel hungry, deprived, listless and lacking energy.
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire