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Strongman with a Tutu



Make It Simple

by the Precision Nutrition Coaching Team 

All day long, all across the web, folks are posting questions about why they’re not losing weight, why they’re not gaining weight, why their body comp isn’t changing. They’re frustrated, confused, and feeling helpless.
But if most of them just made things simple, progress would follow.
What does “make things simple” mean? Isn’t the body, y’know, complicated?
Well, we know that weight loss happens only when the body is in a negative energy balance (in other words, when there are fewer calories coming in than going out). And we know that weight gain happens only when the body is in a positive energy balance (in other words, when there are more calories coming in than going out).
From this knowledge, we can infer two things: 

1. If you aren’t losing… you’re not in a negative energy balance. 
2. If you aren’t gaining… you’re not in a positive energy balance.  

Of course, it does get a bit more complex than this but again, most folks get lost in the details. So let’s keep it simple for now.

Weight loss

Assuming you’re eating PN style, training at least 5 hours per week, and still not losing, the explanation is simple: You’re not losing because, for whatever reason, you’re not in a negative energy balance.
So you must create one. How can you do that? Well, there are three viable ways: 

1. Eat less 
2. Exercise more 
3. Eat less and exercise more  

In the end, it’s pretty simple, no? Typically I recommend the following strategy (again, assuming you’re following PN style eating and training at least 5 hours per week yet have stagnated): 

1. Increase exercise volume to 7 hours per week 
2. If stagnation occurs again, decrease calories 
3. If stagnation occurs again, increase exercise to 9 hours per week 
4. If stagnation occurs again, decrease calories  

Your upper limit of exercise volume may be 10-12 hours per week, so make sure to cap it there while manipulating calories the rest of the way.
 
Weight gain

Assuming you’re eating PN style, training at least 5 hours per week, and still aren’t gaining, the reason is simple: You’re not gaining because, for whatever reason, you’re not in a positive energy balance.
So you must create one. How can you do that? Well, there are three ways: 

1. Eat more 
2. Exercise less 
3. Eat more and exercise less  

(Note: when trying to gain weight, it’s important to maintain your exercise volume at about 4-5 hours per week as you still need a strong stimulus for muscle growth. Judging by the overall health status of the North American population, “Eat lots and don’t exercise at all” doesn’t appear to work very well for making you buff. So don’t take this argument to its logical conclusion.)

I recommend the following strategy (again, assuming you’re following PN style eating and training at least 5 hours per week yet have stagnated): 

1. Increase calorie intake 
2. If stagnation occurs, decrease non-weight training calorie expenditure and make sure your weight training is stimulating growth 
3. If stagnation occurs again, increase calories again and continue to manipulate them as you don’t want your exercise volume to fall too much  

That’s it. Most of the time, it’s just that simple. 

• Eat PN style. And really PN style, not half-assed “Oh, I sometimes eat vegetables.” Follow the Ten Habits. And be compliant. 
• Train at least 5 hours per week using adequate intensity and well chosen workout routines. 
• Follow the steps above as indicated for meeting your goals. 
• Lather, rinse, repeat until ripped and/or huge.  

99.9% of all of the individuals I’ve worked with in my career who have properly followed the steps above have succeeded. Only those with serious medical issues don’t respond. So make sure that during the course of your own transformation, you remember these simple lessons.   And apply them to what you’re learning in the Precision Nutrition System.  Having learned them there’s absolutely no excuse for not getting closer to your goals.

ARTICLE

Strongman with a Tutu
by Stefanie Tropea

 

This is no time for ease and comfort. It is time to dare and endure. —Winston Churchill
 
When I was five, my mother took me to see the “The Nutcracker Suite.”  I was inspired by it; I wanted to be the prima ballerina, which happens to be this week’s nail polish color.  So, Mom signed me up for dance lessons, and I kept at it until I was 23.  I did it all – ballet, tap, jazz, hip-hop, and flamenco.  I knew I was good at it, and I enjoyed that feeling.  I liked performing and being physical.  It was fun to learn the routines, to put together movements, and it was cool to be competitive. 
You have to be strong to be a dancer, just, for example, to jump or to carry another dancer, to make a leap look like you’re suspended in air.  A ballerina needs enormous strength in order to have exquisite control of her movements, movements that go beyond those of everyday life. 
A ballerina and a strongman are very different, but strength is what they have in common.  For obvious reasons, one would think that neither has anything to do with the other.  Certainly a pink tutu only looks good on one of them, but it’s important to be strong no matter who you are or what you want to be.  I have a client about 40-years-old; she refers to herself as an “old lady,”  and she dismisses most exercises.  She won’t do the Turkish Get-Up even without a weight and won’t work with any heavy weight, even though she really could do it.  She says they’re for men.  It’s as if she’s avoiding strength. 
Strength, however, can help everyone.  It’s not just for carrying groceries upstairs or for opening jars.  It prevents injuries and increases one’s confidence.  Strength creates self-awareness and a feeling of presence in one’s own body.  I think it should be a goal for everyone.
Strength isn’t about appearance.  While body builders are not as strong as they look, we in the Punch Gyms are actually stronger than we appear to be.  When one looks at a prima ballerina, one sees grace, fluidity, artistic movement, but it all rests upon her strength.  I believe everything rests on strength. 
Strength comes in different forms — the ballerina and the strongman – and it takes hard work for both.  In rehearsals, a dancer’s toes may bleed, like a strongman’s hands in training.  They both push the limits of what they can do and what they can endure.  That’s how they recreate themselves.  And that’s how they can be extraordinary.  Their strength brings them into another realm, one with dedication and commitment, hard work, and mental strength.  It’s based upon the unique pleasure of trying something very difficult and accomplishing it.  It’s a powerful feeling to break through traditional expectations and do something original.  When I train for strongman, I feel like I’m getting more out of life, to the point where I actually feel bad for others.  Indeed, I even wonder why everyone else isn’t doing it. 
 

Stefanie Tropea is the co-owner and head trainer of Punch Kettlebell Gym in Norwalk, CT.  She can be reached at stef@punchgym.com.  Visit her blog at kettlebellstef.wordpress.com.  Her website is www.punchgym.com/norwalk.

FIT TIP

“Throw out your scale”, says Stefanie Tropea, co-owner of Punch Kettlebell Gym Norwalk. Always go by how your clothes fit and how you feel. When you train, you build muscle and burn fat. Unfortunately, you see the muscle gain on the scale before you see the fat loss in the mirror, which, for many, leads them to believe the training and dieting they’re doing isn’t working. Stay true to your training and focus on how you feel not what the scale says.

STACI PICK

Staci is officially a Lulu Lemon Girl.  Her most recent purchase, a bright yellow jacket, “fits perfectly, is very flattering and serves its purpose so well.”  Check out www.lululemmon.com for workout gear that will surely become your favorite too.

FOOD

It’s Easter Bunny time which means lots of eggs for decorating and hiding…and eating! Don’t forget, eggs are an excellent source of protein and make for a great meal for all of you looking stay fit.  With all the talk of eggs Staci got to thinking of one of her favorite comfort foods and most recent craving, egg salad.  She’s including her “secret” recipe in the hopes that you all will make it a favorite too.

4 Boiled Eggs

1 Teaspoon Dijon Mustard

1 teaspoon Paprika

1 raw carrot - chopped

1 stalk raw celery - chopped

salt and pepper to taste

Mix well and serve over a bed of lettuce

WORKOUT

Looking for a great workout but don’t have the time.  Try this out when you’re in a pinch, it’s quick and we’ll get your heart rate up in no time. 

Perform each routine for 60 seconds resting 1 minute between rounds. 

Round 1

Swings

Super Plank

Racked Squat

Round 2

Cleans

Renegade Row

Jumping Jacks

Look familiar?  It’s two rounds from our new Diva Downloadable workout.