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it just doesnt happen.
marielamuneka
post Apr 12 2008, 01:26 AM
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drama is so intising i might just bite a mothaf**ka like tyson
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I take kick boxing.. and i exersize regularly and i eat sorta healthy i mean im not a vegetarian but i dont eat like a pig.
I dont drink soda, maybe just once a month? so rarely. I drink Aloe Vera Drink it comes in some green long ass bottle(to give me energy, healthy-on-the-inside) And i cant seem to take off my belly fat. I have i dont know 5 pounds maybe? may not seem like alot but it irritates me i wanna make it flatter.. what can i do? i dont seem to sweat..either. [the only time i really ever recall sweating was when i made love with my boyfriend..and that lasted less time than my daily exersize routine!]

my exersizes daily include:

QUOTE
Running on the tredmill(30 minutes)
Walking on the tredmill (15 minutes)

do situps(at least 150)
crunches(30-50)
stretches(10 minutes-25minutes)

and of course kick boxing.(2-3 times a week).



I mean i've lost weight in my face, thighs, but not my stomach!!
 
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Reidar
post Apr 20 2008, 02:36 PM
Post #51


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QUOTE(eeonz @ Apr 20 2008, 05:47 AM) *
8 times a week is definetly not the norm though. Possible at the elite level perhaps, with all the associated scientific back up they've got, but i wouldn't think about doing it on my own as it were.
Whats your usual post workout nutrition reidar?


Not the norm, but it serves to illustrate that it's not so much about the muscles themselves as it is the central nervous system, since most should not be training to muscle failure anyways. This is a beginner routine that has the lifter squatting every other day.

Post-lifting, I drink a shake consisting of whey protein, dextrose, maltodextrin, and salt. Post-cardio is a more lenient period, so I eat as usual.
 
illriginal
post Apr 20 2008, 03:16 PM
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QUOTE(Reidar @ Apr 20 2008, 03:36 PM) *
Not the norm, but it serves to illustrate that it's not so much about the muscles themselves as it is the central nervous system, since most should not be training to muscle failure anyways. This is a beginner routine that has the lifter squatting every other day.

Post-lifting, I drink a shake consisting of whey protein, dextrose, maltodextrin, and salt. Post-cardio is a more lenient period, so I eat as usual.

Wait... why salt?...
 
Reidar
post Apr 20 2008, 03:39 PM
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The binding site for glucose has a low affinity. However, because of the electrochemical gradient, sodium enters a binding site reserved for it on the protein, which alters the protein's shape (allosteric reaction) so that sodium can now be bound and transported into the cell. Therefore, salt increases glucose absorption and water uptake across the luminal membrane.
 
illriginal
post Apr 21 2008, 11:49 AM
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QUOTE(Reidar @ Apr 20 2008, 04:39 PM) *
The binding site for glucose has a low affinity. However, because of the electrochemical gradient, sodium enters a binding site reserved for it on the protein, which alters the protein's shape (allosteric reaction) so that sodium can now be bound and transported into the cell. Therefore, salt increases glucose absorption and water uptake across the luminal membrane.

Holy shit... I never knew that. Thanks Reidar. How would you have sodium though?... Pill form? Spoon or two of salt into protein shake? Salt seasoned onto your food later?
 
eeonz
post Apr 21 2008, 01:12 PM
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I'm guessing its already in the protein shake?
 
Reidar
post Apr 21 2008, 02:53 PM
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Just add a pinch or two of table salt to your shake.
 
illriginal
post Apr 21 2008, 03:01 PM
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QUOTE(Reidar @ Apr 21 2008, 03:53 PM) *
Just add a pinch or two of table salt to your shake.

Thanks a lot man. I wonder if that little change would make a good difference within a year. I'm gonna start adding salt in the beginning of next month. Maybe the gains will stick even better :D
 
Reidar
post Apr 21 2008, 03:08 PM
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It's not a matter of night and day, but these minute details add up.

Here's a more thorough version of it.
 
illriginal
post Apr 21 2008, 04:01 PM
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QUOTE(Reidar @ Apr 21 2008, 04:08 PM) *
It's not a matter of night and day, but these minute details add up.

Here's a more thorough version of it.

Thanks a lot for the knowledge, Reidar. God bless!
 
nishikigoi
post Apr 22 2008, 11:08 PM
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QUOTE(Reidar @ Apr 20 2008, 12:36 PM) *
Not the norm, but it serves to illustrate that it's not so much about the muscles themselves as it is the central nervous system, since most should not be training to muscle failure anyways. This is a beginner routine that has the lifter squatting every other day.

Post-lifting, I drink a shake consisting of whey protein, dextrose, maltodextrin, and salt. Post-cardio is a more lenient period, so I eat as usual.


Lol, sorry that just sounds gross to me. Nutritionally, I'm sure it's sound. But.. blink.gif

How exactly does it have to do with the central nervous system? I don't doubt that it does, but just a question.
 
Reidar
post Apr 22 2008, 11:31 PM
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I've long passed the point where I cared about taste, but, for the record, dextrose is sugar. It tastes like a milkshake.

The central nervous system takes on the directive of muscle maintenance. Each neuron, and its attached muscle cells, make up a unit. The more work you ask the muscle to do, the more units the central nervous system recruits to perform. When this system suffers, the ability of your muscles to carry out their orders diminishes.

Powerlifters don't train to muscle failure for this exact reason. Exhausting the CNS is counterproductive to strength gains. Professor Vladimir Zatsiorsky, a Soviet strength expert, summed up this notion by saying that an athlete must “do as much work as possible while being as fresh as possible.”

Bodybuilding is an entirely different matter, which is why beginning trainees should not be doing bodybuilding routines until they have several years of strength training under their belt.

This applies to both sexes of all fitness levels, not just elite strength athletes.
 
superstitious
post Apr 22 2008, 11:39 PM
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QUOTE(Reidar @ Apr 12 2008, 02:40 PM) *
> Don't do sit-ups. They place emphasis on the psoas muscles, not the abdominals. As the back begins to arch, the vertebral column surrounding the psoas attachment grind together, which can lead to chronic back pain as a result of disk degeneration.

What do you suggest for abdominal toning?
 
Reidar
post Apr 22 2008, 11:50 PM
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Tone, or tonus, is just a measure of ionic flow across the muscle cell membranes.

Good abdominal movements are strict crunches, Janda sit-ups, and full-contact twists. However, resistance training will not burn fat. That's where cardio and diet come in.
 

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