
- Get Educated!! - learn all that you can about the
synergistic affect of correct training, improved recovery
and optimum nutrition for results. Read texts by reliable,
and involved, sources. Listen to trust worthy anecdotal
advice and then formulate your own individual program, which
should evolve and progress as you do.
- Eat frequent quality meals - in order to deliver
the required amounts of quality nutrients needed to keep
the body growing (anabolic) and healthy. Overloading by
eating less frequent meals stresses the digestive system
and jeopardises nutrient uptake. Remember that everything
that you eat is important, so you want to absorb it.
- Ensure that your protein intake is adequate -
when trying to maximise your potential physique you may
need to side with "real-world" results rather
than with "science-backed" government recommendations.
There have been studies to support the ongoing claims of
athletes that raising protein intake = increased lean muscle
tissue.
- Eat real food!- supplements are just that! They
should augment a healthy eating plan that provides the majority
of micro and macro-nutrients. Supplements are a convenient
addition to the diet in order to supply any deficit not
met by your food intake. By relying on supplements you will
miss out on vital constituents of a healthy diet - including
fibre, phytonutrients and variety.
- Concentrate on unrefined carbohydrates - High intakes
of refined and processed foods is common in our modern western
diet. This greatly reduces our intake of vital nutrients,
the majority of which are removed during processing. As
hard training athletes we require all the nutrients that
we can get, especially from our daily food intake. Eat more
whole-foods rather than white rice, white bread and packet
foods.
- Eat plenty of fibrous carbohydrates - high fibrous
vegetables not only deliver important fibre but also vitamins
and minerals. Eat a variety as an accompaniment to meals
and as a snack throughout the day, rather than sweets and
biscuits!
- Minimise your simple carbohydrate intake - Sugars
have no place in a healthy diet. They suppress the immune
system, act as a stimulant stressing the adrenal glands
and cause an ensuing cortisol response (which is catabolic
to muscle tissue), as well as secreting excess insulin that
can lead to fat accumulation as well as many other problems.
- Keep your resistance workouts short and intense -
The purpose of your workouts are to stimulate muscle which
in-turn, when given the right nutrients and rest, repairs
and grows to compensate for the ongoing stress it receives.
Overlong workout periods will result in amino acids being
utilised as an energy source, and these will come from catabolised
muscle - a loss of muscle tissue is detrimental to your
goal. Within these workouts include some functional movements
to improve the efficiency of "the core" stabiliser
muscles. This may be best performed using the Swiss ball,
which improves posture and functional movement.
- Use quality and relevant supplements as required -
Intense training raises the body's demands for nutrients
for repair and growth, as well as the nutrients required
for the metabolism of the increased food intake. Extra nutrients
are also required to boost the immune system, which is suppressed
by intense exercise, and to act as anti-oxidants for the
increased free-radical damage caused by exercise. In addition
there are the array of supplements that are specifically
marketed for muscle building, fat loss and performance enhancement.
- Employ me as your Trainer/Nutritionist!!
There are many more tips to enhance your training and results
but if you follow tip number 1 (or number 10!) you will start
to put all the pieces of the complex puzzle together, maybe
the most important one of all is CONSISTENCY.
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