Want to lose body fat quickly and keep it off? Stop following those mainstream fitness workouts designed for your granny. Real fat loss training should build calluses on your hands. Here are eight rules for effective fat loss training, plus a sample workout plan that puts them all into action.
Here are the 8 Rules for Fat Loss Training
Yes, this is a training article, but nutrition is the single most important thing for fat loss. If you're serious about stripping off body fat, you must make time for grocery shopping, cooking, meal prep, doing dishes, and keeping a food journal. If you don't have time for this, make time. Cut down on time wasters like social media, web surfing, playing on your cell phone, or TV.
If you truly have eliminated every possible time waster and are still pressed for time, train less to have the time to take care of your nutrition. That's right, train less! For example, in my fat loss programs, I have Tuesdays and Saturdays as shopping/meal prep days. You can still train on these days, but if you're truly pressed for time, sacrifice your training on these days to take care of your top priority for fat loss – your nutrition.
As far as what to eat, there's no rule that says you have to perfectly follow a particular diet. You probably already what foods are getting you into trouble. However, certain aspects of certain diets are worth emulating. For instance, you can take aspects of the paleo diet (natural, single-ingredient foods, meats, fish, whole eggs and vegetables) without unnecessarily restricting other foods that are not paleo but still support your training goals, like quality supplements such as fish oils, BCAA's, protein, peri-workout nutrition and some starchy carbs such as rice).
Regardless of your goals, effective training starts with picking the right exercises. The best exercises for fat loss are the best exercises for almost any goal. The big, hard compound movements are the ones you should be doing.
While most people understand that getting stronger is important for building muscle and enhancing performance, its relevance for fat loss is often overlooked. When your goal is fat loss, you want to burn as much fuel as possible. To do this, you want your body to be as fuel inefficient as possible. One of the huge problems with cardio for fat loss is that the more you do, the better you get at it and thus the more fuel efficient you become. With resistance training the opposite is true. The better you get at strength training, the more weight you can lift and the more it takes out of you. Spending some of your training time getting stronger allows you to do all your other forms of training (e.g., metabolic resistance training, conditioning) at a higher/faster level and this makes them even more effective for getting rid of unwanted body fat.
Virtually everyone trying to lose body fat should gain some muscle. Most people know this, but it bears repeating again and again. Even a few extra pounds of lean muscle means a lot more calories burned each day.
Years ago exercise scientists told us to do long, slow cardio in order to burn fat. However, this answer was a response to the wrong question. Fat loss training isn't about what burns the most amount of fat during a training session, it's about what burns the most amount of fat in a 24 hour period. Short, high-intensity exercise creates an oxygen debt (known in geekspeak as E.P.O.C., or excess post-exercise oxygen consumption) and this results in a metabolic boost long after the training session is over.
When designing a weekly plan for your training, consider how different styles of training affect different systems and thus affect recovery. For example:
Allow for some "space" between different types of stressors. For example, if you stress something one day, do a lighter session or work a different type of stress the next day. The sample plan at the end will show you how to program this.
As with any goal, following an effective program will only work for so long before you hit a plateau. Too often people trying to lose body fat just use intense metabolic resistance training and HITT (high intensity interval training). While these are excellent, they won't work forever. With fat loss programs, switch as needed to different strategies such as the following:
The trick is to not only periodize your training, but to periodize your diet, too. When some people try a lower-volume strength training program, they find they gain fat. This isn't because of the training. Obviously, strength training doesn't cause fat gain. However, if you switch from higher volume training (think typical fat loss metabolic stuff) to a lower volume training (think powerlifting program) and don't drop down your carbs and total calories, you'll gain fat.
We're made to be outdoors. While it's not always practical to haul a whole barbell set outside or train at Muscle Beach, look to do something physical outside. Run sprints at the track, find a hill and do sprints, push a Prowler or pull a sled. Grab a sledgehammer and try to beat an old tire to a pulp. Also, consider bringing minimal equipment like kettlebells to a park and having an outdoor session. Or, do what I do, which is train with barbells in my basement gym and then do farmer's walks up and down the sidewalks of my neighborhood. Also, doing some other activities such as sports or outdoor recreation is great to not only burn a few extra calories, but also to have fun, reduce stress, and enjoy the benefits of the finely conditioned machine you're building in the gym.
Do what you need to do to get warm and ready. Foam rollers, dynamic mobility, and corrective exercises are all fine here, but don't get carried away with these. Five to ten minutes should be fine for most, unless you're a real mess. Including a few short sprints, jumps, or medicine ball throws to excite your nervous system is also a good idea.
Exercise | Sets | Reps | Rest | |
---|---|---|---|---|
A | Deadlift (regular or rack) | 2-3 | 3-5 | 2-3 min. |
B1 | Dip or Close-Grip Bench Press | 5 | 3-5 | 1 min. |
B2 | Weighted Chin-Up | 5 | 3-5 | 1 min. |
C | Farmer's Walk * | 2-4 | 30 yd. | 2-3 min. |
* Farmer's Walk — Use farmer's walk implements or heavy dumbbells.
Alactate means you're using the ATP-CP energy system that doesn't produce lactic acid. This consists of short, intense work that won't cause a burn. Do this later on in the same day after your weight workout. Sample options (choose 1):
Cross-Field Tempo Runs (Do these if time permits, otherwise, prioritize the meal prep).
How to do them: Find a soccer field. Starting in one corner, sprint diagonally across the field at about 75% of your max speed to the opposite corner. When you get there, walk across the width of the field to the corner on the other side. That is one set, repeat for 8-15 sets. This will help improve your conditioning while facilitating recovery so you're ready for the next day's hard training. If you don't live in Brazil where there are soccer pitches everywhere, improvise. A park will do. Pick two trees instead of corners.
Exercise | Sets | Reps | Rest | |
---|---|---|---|---|
A1 | Dumbbell Bench Press or Weighted Push-Up | 3-5 | 8-10 | 45 sec. |
A2 | Kettlebell Swing | 3-5 | 8-10 | 45 sec. |
A3 | 1-Arm Dumbbell Row | 3-5 | 8-10 | 45 sec. |
A4 | Prowler Push or Heavy Sled Pull * | 3-5 | 30-40 yd. | 45-60 sec. |
* Prowler Push or Heavy Sled Pull — if you don't have a Prowler or sled, do walking lunges for 20 yards
Lactate means you're using an energy system that produces lactic acid. It consists of longer exercise that will create a burn. Do this later on in the same day after your weight workout. Sample options (choose 1):
Tempo runs (same as Tuesday) or 30-60 minute brisk walk.
Exercise | Sets | Reps | Rest | |
---|---|---|---|---|
A1 | Front or Back Squat | 4-5 | 3-5 | 1 min. |
A2 | Pull-Up (Neutral-Grip or Pronated) | 4-5 | 3-5 | 1 min. |
A3 | Clean and Press | 4-5 | 3-5 | 1 min. |
Alactate Conditioning Same idea as what you followed Monday, but you can use a different option than you did the previous time. For example, if you did 40-60 meter sprints on Monday, do Prowler pushes, stadium sprints, or sledgehammer.
You get to pick your poison today:
Grab some friends and load up your trucks with whatever training gear you have: sleds, Prowlers, sledgehammers, big tires, kettlebells, farmer's walk implements, etc., and head to a park or field. If you do this only occasionally, you can plan things on the fly. If you're doing this regularly, write-up a program based on these guidelines:
Exercise | Sets | Reps | Rest | |
---|---|---|---|---|
A1 | Standing Dumbbell Press | 3 | 8-10 | 10 sec. |
A2 | Side Dumbbell Raise | 3 | 12-15 | 90 sec. |
B1 | Barbell or Dumbbell Curl * | 3 | 8-10 | 10 sec. |
B2 | Dumbbell Hammer Curl | 3 | 8-10 | 10 sec. |
B3 | Barbell or Dumbbell Curl | 3 | 8-10 | 2 min. |
C1 | EZ Bar Skull Crusher with Pull-Over * | 3 | 8-10 | 10 sec. |
C2 | Weighted Close-Grip Push-Up | 3 | 8-10 | 10 sec. |
C3 | EZ Bar Skull Crushers with Pull-Over | 3 | 8-10 | 2 min. |
D | Standing Calf Raise | 3-5 | 8-10 | 90 sec. |
E | Suspension Strap Fallout | 3 | 8-10 | 60 sec. |
* These tri-sets are based on Charles Poliquin's method. The third exercise in the tri-set is a return to the first exercise, only you use less weight when you come back to that exercise.
A brisk walk or leisurely bike ride.
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