To Supplement Or Not To Supplement; That Is The
Question by Hamoon Arbabi
Some fitness adherents are
supplement crazy and spend money like a Vegas drunk with a big
roll trying to impress girls he barely knows. I
know lots of folks who admit to spending hundreds of bucks each
month on the newest, latest dietary or supplement craze. A
subtler shade of this same affliction is the cutting-edge Elite
who also purchase lots of supplements and spend lots of
disposable income on nutritional supplements of some type or
another, the newer the better for this crew. Both ends of the
fitness feeding chain are seduced by supplements that promise
everything and deliver very little. There is something
intrinsic and rooted deep in the human psyche that eternally
searches for a miracle pill, potion, compound, substance or
procedure that will do one of three things: make you
lean, make you muscular and make
you look and feel decades younger than your actual chronologic
age.
Apparently there is no finite number of times you can get
burned before you wise up and quit looking. If a magical pill
or potion existed that delivered the mail on any of these three
counts, believe me, you’d hear all about it all the time. Since
the days of Ponce de’ Leon stumbling around the malaria-ridden
Florida everglades looking for the Fountain of Youth, people
have sought physical shortcuts through chemistry to eliminate
the gut-busting physical effort and fierce disciplined denial
required to self-administer a successful physical renovation.
John Parrillo, my nutritional Guru, always says that the
regimented use of regular food, the kind you purchase off the
shelf in the grocery store, will get you 80-85% of the “way
there,” there being a significant increase in muscle mass and a
dramatically decreased body fat percentile. Obtain the twin
titan attributes: more muscle/less body fat, and guess what?
You’ll look decades younger than your chronological reality so
number three is a free bonus when you become leaner and more
muscular.
Supplement makers and exercise equipment makers, who proclaim
extraordinary results that defy rational expectations, play to
people’s eternal demand for some blasted substance or another
to magically allow the acquisition of a fat-free muscular body.
Would it not be great to pop a pill and make it all go away?
Unfortunately this defies reality, and a reality check reveals
that nutritional supplements are vastly overrated. Supplements
are meant to supplement not replace regular foods. Steer clear
of anyone who tells you how easy the physical transformation
process can be made by the use of their product or system. Read
the small print: most of these miracle products and systems
shown on TV infomercials are all forced to run legal
disclaimers--you’ll see it flash by along the bottom, too
speedy to really read--they all basically say the same thing:
"results are not ordinary and for dramatic results a sensible
calorie-restrictive diet plan and a vigorous exercise plan need
also be followed."
Put another way, if you had it together and went on a sensible,
calories-restrictive diet and got your rear end in gear and
exercised intensely, you’d make just as much progress with or
without the miracle product. If you dieted properly using foods
purchased from the local food mart and start hitting cardio and
lifting with requisite ferocity, the magic beans the witch sold
you are superfluous. Save your money; get food selections under
control, multiple meals are a must, meal timing is important,
overall food volume and content need to be squared away. Nail
it down on all levels and you’ll get 90% of the way "there" in
eight weeks. No hype, just plain fact, based on decades of
widespread empirical date gathered in the athletic trenches. We
know what works when it comes to triggering a physical
transformation -– but the price of admission is high and most
folks have neither the inclination nor pain-tolerance to close
the deal.
More confirmation of the basic truths came while reading Rehan
Jalali’s Six Pack Diet Plan. Rehan has a great grasp of the
cold realities imposed by science and biology and logic,
especially where nutritional products are considered. Results
that fitness hucksters ascribe to their products are
biologically, physiologically and scientifically impossible!
With every page I turned, my science knowledge base was
clarified and mostly reaffirmed by Rehan. Correctly used
supplements (the right ones taken at the right time in the
right amount) can add 10-15% to the final finished physical
product. Nothing wrong with that! But let's try and get as
close as we can to the goal before we start spending big bucks
on supplements. The first order of business is getting control
of the eating schedule. Makes perfect sense to spread out the
day’s calories, more feedings per day lessens the digestive
burden. Clean up the food selections and try and match calories
needed to exercise expenditure. Once you are training
consistently and once you are using a multiple-meal eating
schedule (and making good selections) the addition of core
supplements will be timely and appropriate and likely blast you
through to the next level.
The most basic nutritional supplement for all hardcore weight
trainers is supplemental protein in powder form. Purchase a tub
for $30 to $40; take the money out of your grocery money with
all the dough you save by not buying ice cream, pie, frozen
pizzas or candy. If you weight train as hard as you’re supposed
to, consuming a protein-rich liquid shake immediately after an
intense session will actually accelerate results and speed up
the recovery process. Every Purposefully Primitive weight
trainer must have a canister or tub of protein powder on hand.
The price per serving has plummeted, the potency has
skyrocketed and it makes so much sense to supplement with
amino-rich protein powder -– so easy to prepare and tasty.
Mixing a fine-tasting protein shake with cold water is easy and
within 30-seconds you are drinking a pre-digested concoction
that delivers 35 to 45 grams of high biologic whey protein with
scant 4-8 carbohydrate grams and no sugar or fat. Protein
powder is the number one indispensable single supplement for
the serious and savage weight trainer. On the other hand if you
just loaf through your sporadic training protein
supplementation would be a total waste of money. Vitamin and
mineral tablets are also advisable; my other core supplement is
the "sport nutrition bar" in all its various guises. I love the
portability of bars in a wrapper. I can stash them anywhere:
glove compartment, gym bag, desk drawer, file cabinet, boat,
what have you. That way, anytime I get hungry, at the very
least I can grab a bar and consume a product that, on average,
provides 20 grams of protein, 40 grams of carbs, 5 to 15 grams
of sugar and 3 to 5 grams of fat. Nice statistics for a 70 gram
bar. With 250 clean calories, a bar (or two) makes an excellent
meal-in-a-pinch. I buy them by the box.
Taste has gotten so much better over the years! There are so
many varieties of bars available that there is no reason not to
be able to find a taste that appeals to you. I eat 2-3 bars
every day and more if I’m in the deep woods or out walking
around. I love my sport nutrition bars. I could recommend also
recommend creatine monohydrate for competitive athletes. Ditto
for beef liver amino acid tabs; these are great for women
subject to iron deficiency anemia. Supplements are meant to
supplement not supplant. Square away the food basics and make a
commitment to bust your butt in the gym. Buy some whey protein
and a box or two of bars. Settle in for the long haul.
About the Author: Hamoon Arbabi - For more information
about Whey proteins, Multivitamins, Antioxidants and Creatines
go to: http://homebusiness.nexuswebs.net/wheyprotein.htm
Source: www.isnare.com
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