Form a fitness plan: It
takes planning and dedication to lose that body
fat.
by Victor Holtreman
Do you have a fitness
goal?
I believe that it
is absolutely essential to have a target or goal when it
comes to improving your physique. It’s such a cliché, but
completely true: If you don’t know what your destination
is, how can you possibly get there?
What finally turned this around in my head was when a neighbor
lent me the book “Body-for-LIFE”, along with the video showing
the transformations of some of the earlier competitors.
It laid out a 12 week plan for losing
weight and getting lean, including setting a realistic
numerical goal as far as how many pounds of fat to
lose.
I stuck with it and in 12 weeks went from 18% body fat to
10%.
That was in the summer of 2000.I worked out consistently for
about a year, always striving for some new goal. It varied from
losing body fat to a reach a certain percentage target to
wanting to get “big” by putting on more muscle.
I was unfortunately sidetracked by intense lower back pain,
which finally required spinal fusion surgery in December 2001.
Once again I had lost focus and was not doing much as far as
working out, although I had the “tools”.
In January (can you say "New Year's resolution"?), one year
after my surgery, I decided it was time to go for it once
again, and I gave myself a target of sub-10% body fat. I
started putting together a plan that would hopefully not only
let me see my abs, but would make me stronger and increase my
General Physical Preparedness (GPP).
Using the concepts outlined here, combined with kettlebell
training, "Power to the People", and martial arts, I was able
to once again hack off the fat... going from 13% body fat to 9%
in just 2 months (visit http://www.last10pounds.com
for the before and after photos).
- Finding your baseline
The first thing you need to do is establish a baseline. You
need to know:
1. Your current overall weight.
2. Your current body fat percentage.
3. Your daily caloric intake.
The first item is easy enough. If you don’t have a scale at
home, I recommend you purchase one. I also recommend that you
keep it out of sight. You don’t want to get into the trap of
weighing yourself on a daily basis. You’ll just drive yourself
crazy. Pick one day a week and the same time of day to weigh
yourself. Personally I do it on Saturday mornings.
The second item is a bit more difficult. You can either have
this measured at the gym, again, weekly. Or you can buy body
fat calipers. I use a cheap Accumeasure model which runs about
$20. I think that’s a better idea because in my opinion the
important thing is to have an accurate relative measurement
that you can do weekly. So it might be off a little from the
measurement someone does at the gym… at least you can measure
your progress accurately, because it’s always you doing the
measuring in the same place. Having different people measure in
different locations can give you a skewed view of how you’re
doing.
- The most important thing most people NEVER do
Keeping track of calories was (for me) the most critical part
of this process (assuming of course, that you are already
exercising regularly). In the beginning of my program I was
frustrated because I felt I was working out very hard and with
intensity, yet I felt that neither my body fat percentage nor
my overall weight were budging.
At first I was frustrated because my weight/body fat would not
budge. That's when I decided to start writing down what I was
eating and discovered I was consuming over 3,000 calories a
day! Granted, I was burning that amount since I was working out
hard, and not gaining weight... but I needed to create a
deficit. I had no idea I was eating that much. I was assuming
that I was actually eating about 2,500 calories per day. In the
following weeks I tracked what I ate and started dropping the
average daily calories first by 500/day, then by another
250/day, until I hit the point where I was losing about 2lbs of
body fat per week at 2200 calories a day. To clarify: I stayed
at the same level for a week, dropped the amount, and stayed at
that level for a week, etc.
I had a couple of weeks in there where the calories got up to
2450, and the fat started to climb again, so I cut back down
again. So let me reiterate: Tracking your calories is critical,
at least until it becomes instinctive, which it will after a
few weeks.
- How to set your goals
I believe that a reasonable goal for fat loss is between one
& two pounds per week. I think that this is doable without
feeling too terribly deprived or hungry, and without overall
strength loss.
You need to know that calculating your lean mass vs fat depends
upon a number of variables including age and height. You could
start totally out of shape in early Spring and be ready for the
beach before Summer is over. It can be done, and the above
schedule is not an aggressive, “lose 5lbs a week” type
schedule. Just a couple of pounds a week of fat loss. Slow and
steady will get you there.
For more information, visit http://www.last10pounds.com
.
About the author:
Victor Holtreman is the author of "The Last 10 Pounds", an
eBook which chronicles how he dropped his body fat from 13% to
9% in 2 months. He is also the author of the http://kettlebell-training.comand a
number of other fitness related sites.
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