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Nutrition


Principles

Nutrition plays at least as much of a role in muscle gain and fat loss as does weight training. It is also arguably the more underappreciated and misunderstood of the two with a huge number of bogus and unhealthy "diets" which can be best compared to get-rich-quick schemes.

The basic principles of nutrition stay the same regardless of your goals, age, sex, or physical condition. The main differences will lie in meal sizes and proportions of different macronutrients in meals. You should always:
  • Have 5 or more small to medium-sized meals throughout the day.
  • Drink lots of plain water throughout the day. 8 cups of water is the minimum.
  • Get at least 25% of your daily calories from protein, with some in every meal.
  • Get 20-40% of your daily calories from carbohydrates.
  • Get 20-40% of your daily calories from fats.
  • Eat minimally processed and cooked foods. Especially, eat a lot of raw vegetables.
  • Avoid meals heavy in carbohydrates and/or fats.
  • Avoid sweets and sugary foods, processed foods, fried foods, junk foods, and alcohol.
Best protein sources are lean meats, poultry, fish, cottage cheese, and eggs. Other dairy products also contain significant amount of protein, but are typically high in sugars as well so they should be limited. Beans, lentils, other legumes, and nuts contain fair amount of protein and should become especially significant sources of protein for vegetarians. One of the very few worthwhile "supplements" is whey protein powder which can help if you are having difficulty getting enough protein from "regular" foods.

Most of your carbohydrate intake should come from fiberous vegetables, fruits, and whole grains. Green veggies such as green beans, broccoli, and spinach are nearly perfect carb sources. Plain oats, brown rice, and other whole grains and legumes are also terrific complex carb sources. Moderate amount of fruits or berries are also great for you.

Avoid processed sources of carbohydrates such as sweets, sugars, breakfast cereals (substitute oats or other plain whole grain in their stead), white breads and pastas, potatoes, and corn (sweet potatoes or yams are an excellent substitute for regular potatoes). Even whole wheat breads should be passed over in favor of plain whole grains like oats or brown rice as much as possible. Dairy, and to a lesser degree fruits, should be limited due to their high sugar content.

Healthy fat sources include nuts, egg yolks, flax seed, fatty fish such as salmon, olive and other plant-based oils (but only if used at room temperature and not heated). Animal and poultry fats are also OK.

Avoid processed fats such as found in most salad dressings and sweets. Also avoid cooking methods that use significant amounts of oils at high temperatures. Healthies ways of cooking vegetables, meats and fish are grilling, broiling, steaming, and others that do not require heating of oils.


How Much To Eat?

While the basic principles will apply for everyone regardless of their goals, the amounts of food you consume and the protein/carbs/fats breakdowns will be different depending on your present physique and your goals. There are two main directions in which you can go: losing fat and building muscle. While it is not impossible to achieve both, especially for beginners, you would do well to pick one or the other for a given period of time and structure your nutrition program accordingly. ("Toning", another popular goal, is really just a combination of losing fat and building muscle. For most people, "toning" nutrition would amount to conservative fat loss nutrition).

Nutrition for losing fat requires slight undereating to lose 1-2 pounds/week. Faster weightloss is unhealthy, causing significant muscle loss (as opposed to fat loss), and shutting down your body's metabolism thus sabotaging your fat loss. Nutrition for muscle gain requires slight overeating to add about 1 pound every 2 or more weeks. Faster weight gain will result only in unwanted fat gain (as opposed to muscle gain).

It is therefore very important to continuously monitor your weight and adjust your caloric intake to stay on course, whether it be towards fat loss or muscle gain. If you are of average build and are not sure what caloric intake to start with, use the Fitness Guide to get suggested diet. This diet should only apply to people with average physiques. It is important that you and your trainer custom-design diet suited specifically for your needs and goals and continuously monitor and adjust it according to your progress. It's also important that you do not immediately jump to your new diet, but instead gradually shift to it over a couple of weeks.

In general, for fat loss diets, get 40% of your calories from proteins, 30% from carbs (mostly in the first half of the day), and 30% from fats. For muscle gain diets, get 30% of your calories from proteins, 40% from carbs, and 30% from fats. As with the total caloric intake, it is important that you and your trainer monitor your progress and make necessary adjustments.


Sample Nutrition Programs:

Daily Nutrition, Fat Loss at 1509 Calories

Daily Nutrition, Fat Loss at 1930 Calories

Daily Nutrition, Fat Loss at 2363 Calories

Daily Nutrition, Muscle Gain at 2820 Calories

Daily Nutrition, Muscle Gain at 3261 Calories


Create Your Own Healthy Meals!

Instead of giving you specific recipes, I'll tell you how to design your own healthy meals. First, consider the following groups of equivalent foods:

Very Lean Protein: Lean Protein: Legumes:
Skinless chicken breast
Tuna and other lean fish
95% lean beef
Egg whites
Whey protein powder
Fat-free cottage cheese
90% lean beef
Ground turkey
Salmon and other fatty fish
4% fat cottage cheese
Whole eggs
Beans, lentils, and peas are a mix of very lean protein and starchy carbs
 
Non-Starchy Carbs: Starchy Carbs: Healthy Fats:
All vegetables other than corn, potatoes, and sweet potatoes Brown rice
Old-fashioned oatmeal
Sweet potatoes
Fruits and berries
Whole-grain bread and pasta
Breakfast cereals (use sparingly)
Olive oil (and other oils)
Avocadoes
Ground flax seed
Flax and fish oil
Dry-roasted nuts and seeds
Natural almond and peanut butter
Egg yolk


Now, given those food groups, here is how you can make up your own healthy meals with following combinations:
  • Very Lean Protein + Non-Starchy Carbs / Starchy Carbs / Legumes + Healthy Fats
  • Lean Protein + Non-Starchy Carbs / Starchy Carbs / Legumes
  • Legumes + Non-Starchy Carbs / Starchy Carbs + Healthy Fats
  • Legumes + Healthy Fats
Include starchy carbs in meals in the first half of the day as well as meals before and after workouts. Include non-starchy carbs and legumes in the second half of the day.

Feel free to substitute or add as many non-starchy vegetables as you wish. These include lettuce, spinach, broccoli, cauliflower, squash, peppers, onions, tomatoes, cucumbers, and virtually any other vegetable besides potatoes and corn. Also, feel free to add calorie-free or low-calorie herbs and spices.

Myths About Nutrition:

1. "Eating so often will make me fat."
Not true. Eating often is the best natural way to boost your metabolism which means your body will be burning fat even when sleeping. Eating as much as you want often will certainly cause you to gain fat, however you will exercise control over how much and what you eat to reach your goals in the fastest possible time.

2. "Eating before bed will make me fat."
Also not true. Once again, your goal is to keep your metabolism up which requires frequent meals. Every night you already don't eat for 8 or more hours. Don't extend this fast period even longer by avoiding evening meals. For the same reason it's important to eat a generous breakfast soon after waking up. Breakfast should be one of the if not the largest meal of the day.

3. "If I eat even less I will get slim even faster!"
Possibly the most dangerous myth: losing weight faster than 1-2 pounds/week is both unhealthy and counter-productive. Your body will enter starvation mode, shutting down your metabolism, and burning muscle while preserving fat. The slower your weight loss is, the more likely you are to succeed in the long run.

4. "For Only $99 You Can Have The Magic Pill That Will Make You Slim And Muscular."
There is no magic pill. The multi-billion dollar supplement industry is barely regulated which allows it to make such unsubstantiated claims. There are very few legal, proven and safe supplements and none of them will give you results even remotely approaching the ludicrous ad claims. Plain whey protein powder is perhaps the most useful of them.

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