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My apologies! If you clicked the link in the newsletter email and were expecting the latest issue, I accidentally included the link to the previous issue.Click here to go to Issue #62 now!BetterU
News Issue #61
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Why Your Glutes Are Small, Flat and Shapeless It Could Be All In How You STAND!Body position and posture has a HUGE impact on how you look. Get the inside scoop on how something as simple as how you stand could be why your glutes are small and flat (and your back hurts!). |
Smart Cardio For Strength, Mass and Fat-Loss - Guest Article By Charles StaleyCharles shares his time-tested techniques for maximizing the results (and any possible negative impacts) of your cardio training. Learn how SMART cardio can be exactly what you need to get the body you want! |
Secret Training Tip #6451 - Dumbell Whip-Arounds For Explosive Core PowerPlay any sports? Want to improve your performance on the field or in the gym? This simple rotational exercise will build TREMENDOUS explosiveness that will add yards to your golf drives, speed to your throws, and build devastating punching power for combat sports! |
"THE GREAT ABS MISTAKE "He Was Doing One Thousand Crunches and Sit Ups A Day... But Still NO Abs!!!" - Guest Article by Tom VenutoYes, that is a LOT of abdominal work! So how can somebody be doing THAT much abdominal training and STILL get no results? Tom spills the beans and tells you exactly how to AVOID making the very same mistake yourself! |
The Dennis B. Weis Bodybuilding: DVDs - VHS Videos - Magazine SaleDennis Weis (a.k.a. the Yukon Hercules) has been an avid collector of bodybudiling and strength training DVD's, videos and magazines for the past 30+ years. Now he's selling off parts of his collection at around 50% less than what a person would pay on eBay! This is a HUGE collection - if you're interested in seeing what he has to offer and grabbing some dirt-cheap bodybuilding collectors items, click here to see the list now! |
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FREE Fitness Articles For Your Website! Increase your site traffic now! Use the professionally-written fat loss, muscle-building and exercise articles you find in the BetterU News Archive FREE on your website. |
NOTE: All
articles in BetterU News are written by Nick Nilsson -
http://www.fitstep.com/ unless otherwise credited.
Why Your Glutes Are Small, Flat and Shapeless It Could Be All In How You STAND!Body position and posture has a HUGE impact on how you look. Get the inside scoop on how something as simple as how you stand could be why your glutes are small and flat (and your back hurts!). |
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If you're one of the MANY men and women who want larger, firmer, rounder glutes but haven't had much luck in building them, THIS is the article for you. I know it's popular to say "it's not your fault" about almost anything these days...but in this case, it actually COULD be your fault...and you don't even know it!
The glutes are among the biggest muscles in the body because their main function is movement (technically, it's to extend the hip backwards) and movement is VERY important. This backwards extension of the hip is what moves you forward with every step you take. It's what moves your body up when you take a step up on a stair. It's ALSO what helps keep your body upright and stabilized while standing.
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| Don't have a mirror? Another good way to test yourself on this without a mirror is this: stand up right where you are and stand up straight with posture like you're a soldier standing guard. If this feels EXTREMELY weird to you and it's an effort to hold that position for more than a few moments, chances are your body has undergone the structural changes I talked about. |
Eventually, these structural changes in your body will carry over to walking and exercising! Your body will not properly recruit the glute muscles when it comes time to do squatting and lunging movements even if it LOOKS like you're doing them correctly.
The thighs will tend to take over the movement to compensate for the reduction in glute function. The body, quite simply, isn't USED to using the glutes anymore and has a hard time activating them.
This means even when you do direct exercises to work the glutes, your body is unable to properly USE the glutes to perform the exercises!
And when you walk, instead of using the glutes to actively PUSH yourself forward with each step, you'll have a short stride and a more "shuffling" gait (this happens because your leg isn't coming back far enough behind you).
You're using your hip flexors (the muscles on the front of your hips) to bring your leg forward with each step but you're using GRAVITY and momentum (in a way, you're almost falling forward with each step) to keep moving, NOT pushing with your glutes!
SO HOW DO WE FIX IT?
Well, the first BIG step is to be mindful of your posture and how you stand. It's going to be strange at first - you're going to forget yourself and have to constantly be your own "posture police" to keep yourself straight and upright. You might have even to recruit friends and family members to "keep you honest" and remind you when your hips start drifting forward.
We're basically going to be looking to reverse YEARS of "glute-reducing" posture here, so it's something that will take time. The upside is, you will most likely start feeling more confident and looking better almost immediately when you make the effort to stand up straight!
The extra work your glutes are going to get simply by doing what they're supposed to should start helping you increase glute size and firmness rapidly as well.
Abdominal exercises can also help here, by tightening up abs that have gotten overstretched from this "hips-forward" posture. Keeping your abs tight and "in" will help you keep your hips back and in the right position.
Finally, when you're walking, you should focus on actively PUSHING yourself forward with the glutes with each step you take. You'll end up taking longer strides and getting places sooner, which is not a bad thing either.
Bottom line (no pun intended!), we have to RETRAIN your body to use the glutes properly. Now I know it's not a quick fix but it IS an effective fix and can be done with relatively little effort.
Because once your body starts learning how to use the glutes again, you'll have a MUCH easier time developing the glutes that you're looking for!
Changing how you stand won't give you a bigger butt overnight but it WILL set the stage so that the work you ARE doing to improve your glutes will be more effective!
GLUTEUS
TO THE MAXIMUS -
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Find out how you can get this book for FREE!
If you want to build a bigger butt, this book is a MUST HAVE. Check it out here:
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Smart Cardio For Strength, Mass and Fat-Loss - Guest Article By Charles StaleyCharles shares his time-tested techniques for maximizing the results (and any possible negative impacts) of your cardio training. Learn how SMART cardio can be exactly what you need to get the body you want! |
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By
Charles Staley, B.Sc, MSS If youre a typical guy who loves to lift big weights, but considers anything over 3 reps to be "endurance" training, you might not be interested in this article. However, if you can bench press a Buick but get winded when you bend down to tie your shoes, maybe I have an audience. Look, we all do what we LIKE to do, but only the most successful among us find a way to also do what we NEED to do. If you think youre in the latter category, listen up. Ive got a quiver full of fun, challenging, cardio workouts that help you lose fat without losing strength or muscle.
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400s are one of the best fat-loss workouts you can ever do - just look at the physiques of top 400-meter sprinters if you still need convincing! Get on out to your local high school track (if its close to home, walk instead of drive - thatll be your warm-up). Once around is 400 meters. The current mens World record is less than 44 seconds, which will soon strike you as un-Godly as you try your hand at this simple but punitive track & field event! So first time out, go VERY easy for the first 200 meters, and then pick up the pace for the final kick if you still have anything left in the tank. Record your time. After about 4-5 minutes rest, run one more and try to beat your PR. Thats it for the first workout. You can run 400s about twice a week, but start small and increase your reps very gradually. After several months, youll find you can do maybe 5 repeats per workout. |
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Running hills is a fun but intense cardiovascular workout with important strength-enhancing benefits to boot. Best of all, the inclined surface minimizes impact and spares your joints.
Find a moderate slope that tapes you about 10-20 seconds to climb at maximum effort. First time out, limit yourself to 3-5 reps. Gradually increase to 10-12 reps after several weeks. And of course, time every sprint and always seek to beat your PRs!
Recently, Dr. Tabata in Japan conducted a study in which he investigated the benefits of high intensity anaerobic exercise. Tabata discovered that a protocol consisting of 20 seconds of all-out cycling followed by 10 seconds of moderate cycling for a total of four minutes (8 repeats) was just as effective as forty-five minutes of aerobic exercise.
Interestingly, and perhaps surprisingly to some, the Tabata Protocol increases aerobic fitness in addition to its anaerobic benefits. This finding is consistent with my "ladder" paradigm that states that higher intensity training develops a wider spectrum of fitness benefits than lower-intensity exercise.
Clearly, the hallmark of this method is its time-efficiency, but there is a price to pay in pain and sweat - choose your poison!
I realize that most weight-trainers think they own the market on pain-tolerance, but the dot drill makes 20-rep squats look like a trip to Baskin Robbins by comparison. Particularly insidious is the fact that, unlike resistance training, repeated exposures to the dots will not make subsequent exposures any easier.
First conceived by basketball coach Adolph Rupp in the 1940s, and then later popularized by Bigger Faster Stronger Inc. a few decades later, the dot drill is both a remarkable agility, foot strength, and anaerobic conditioning exercise, as well as a superb and easy-to-administer testing tool.
It is unique in that it creates not only a high level of fatigue, but also a high quality of fatigue- fighters in particular will be able to relate to the feeling of panic that ensues when your heart rate soars to about 120% of age-predicted maximum.
The dot drill is a battery of 5 separate drills, performed in rapid succession, with each drill performed six times in a row before proceeding to the next drill (please refer to the diagram as you read the description).
D E
C
A B
The dot drill features (5), five-inch diameter dots orientated
in a pattern similar to the five dots on a pair of dice,
expect that the square is three feet by two
feet. Use a solid surface such as weight room matting,
and tie your shoelaces. Tight.
Begin the drill as follows:
1) First drill: Starting position: your left foot is on A and your right foot on B. Hop forward and touch C with both feet simultaneously, then continue forward so that your left foot lands on D at the same instant your right foot lands on E. (a total of 2 hops). Now go back to the starting position by reversing what you just did (hopping backward). Thats one rep. Repeat for a total of six reps.
2) Second drill: From the starting position, lift your left foot in the air and with right foot only, hop to C, E, D, C, A, and back to B. Thats one rep. Repeat for a total of six reps.
3) Third drill: Repeat the last drill but using the left foot only (hop to C, E, D, C, A, and back to B.) Thats one rep. Repeat for a total of six reps.
4) Fourth drill: Repeat the last drill but using both feet, keeping the feet together- this looks somewhat like a skiing drill. Repeat for a total of six reps.
5) Fifth drill: This is very similar to drill number one, with a slight variation: When you reach the top of the pattern (left foot on D and your right foot on E.), instead of hopping backward to get back to the starting position, you instead jump-spin and land on the same two dots (only now your left foot will be on E and your right foot on D.), facing the opposite direction. Then hop forward and touch C with both feet simultaneously, then continue forward so that your left foot lands on B and your right foot on A. Lastly, jump-spin again to assume the starting position. Thats one rep. Repeat for a total of six reps.
Errors: Subtract .10 seconds for every missed dot from the total time.
Once youve done the drill a few times, youll notice that you cant help but be competitive once you start. Even if you dont feel terribly motivated, youll bust a gut trying to get a good time. Or maybe its just that you want to get it over with. Either way, the dot drill brings out your best (and Im not referring to your last meal).
The five dots of death (as my athletes refer to it) can be used as a warm-up for a strength training session (one drill will bring your heart rate to 100% and will get you sweating big-time), as anaerobic conditioning, and/or as a fantastic foot and calf strengthening tool. One precaution however: I suggest never doing more than 4 repetitions of the dot drill on any given day, and not more than 12 dot drills on any given week.
OK, youve done the dot drill a handful of times and you think youre a stud (or studette) because you finally broke the two minute barrier? According to Bigger Faster Stronger, youll need to break the 60 second barrier to be considered fast (for a complete listing of the BFS dot drill standards, point your browser to http://www.biggerfasterstronger.com).
I live in Phoenix and hot weather is fast approaching. It often becomes tedious to get out there for sprints when the temperature is well over 100 degrees. If youve got a pool, and its never occurred to you that you can use it for exercise because its too small, try this: call around to some pool supply and/or diving shops and find an elastic cord with a nylon waist-belt. You attach the band to one side of the pool, and attach the band to your waist.
Attach the band in such a way that you can just barely reach the other side of the pool through an all-out sprint. Once you touch the other end, relax as the band pulls you back. Then repeat for the desired numbers of reps. This is a brutally tough and effective form of anaerobic exercise that delivers the fat loss goods in spades.
Ive added this last option for those of you who still have a hard time stomaching any "non-lifting" form of cardio. In this case were talking about various forms of snatches - a fast lift where the weight is "snatched" to an overhead position.
Of course, the snatch is one of the two Olympic lifting events, but there are several one-arm variants as well, including the one-arm dumbbell snatch, the kettlebell snatch, and the one-arm barbell snatch. All of these lifts create high levels of cardio-respiratory fatigue, in addition to the obvious speed strength and shoulder-function benefits. On top of that, snatches are actually fun!
One final note - as you begin to initiate some of these cardio workouts, realize that youre significantly increasing the demands on your body. I strongly suggest cutting back on the volume of your weight training exercises to make way for these new workouts.
The simplest way to do this is to cut your sets in half - in other words, if you normally do 4 sets of 8, cut it back to 2 sets of 8 - at least for the first few months. Youll find that this approach will allow you to maintain both your strength and orthopedic health as you begin to address your cardiovascular fitness needs.
Following the suggestions Ive presented here, youll enjoy the health and fat loss benefits of a cardiovascular exercise program, and, who knows, you might even become a former cardio hater!
About The Author
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His colleagues call him an iconoclast, a visionary, a rule-breaker. His clients call him The Secret Weapon for his ability to see what other coaches miss. Charles calls himself a geek who struggled in Phys Ed throughout school. Whatever you call him, Charles methods are ahead of their time and quickly produce serious results. His counter-intuitive approach and self-effacing demeanor have lead to appearances on NBCs The TODAY Show and The CBS Early Show. Currently, Charles competes in Olympic-style weightlifting on the masters circuit, with a 3-year goal of qualifying for the 2009 Masters World Championships. |
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If you've got 15 minutes, 3 times a week, then you've got time to get GREAT results with Charles Staley's "Escalating Density Training" system! Click
here to learn more about EDT
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The Dennis B. Weis Bodybuilding: DVDs - VHS Videos - Magazine SaleDennis Weis (a.k.a. the Yukon Hercules) has been an avid collector of bodybudiling and strength training DVD's, videos and magazines for the past 30+ years. Now he's selling off parts of his collection at around 50% less than what a person would pay on eBay! This is a HUGE collection - if you're interested in seeing what he has to offer and grabbing some dirt-cheap bodybuilding collectors items, click here to see the list now! |
Secret Training Tip #6451 - Dumbell Whip-Arounds For Explosive Core PowerPlay any sports? Want to improve your performance on the field or in the gym? This simple rotational exercise will build TREMENDOUS explosiveness that will add yards to your golf drives, speed to your throws, and build devastating punching power for combat sports! |
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So who DOESN'T want a stronger, more explosive core. Show of hands... I've got a GREAT exercise for you for developing explosive rotational power in the core area. This is EXACTLY what you need for hitting a golf ball further, throwing faster and hitting harder - without rotational power, all you've got is the power in your limbs and that's NOTHING compared to the overall power you can generate with your core. I call this exercise the "Dumbell Whip Around" because that's basically what you're going to do! This is a challenging core rotational exercise - you're going to be swinging the dumbell around ALMOST like you're swinging a discus to throw. The key is this... You're going to use a lot of power and momentum on one side to get the weight moving but, instead of using muscle action on that same side to stop/slow the movement, you'll use the core muscles on your OTHER side to "catch it," then stop it, then whip the dumbell back around to the original start position for another go. Sounds confusing, but you'll see what I mean. Basically, the reason this works so well for building explosive core power is that because the muscles that start the explosive movement don't have to work to SLOW the explosive movement, it teaches them to explode that much more effectively. There's no deceleration hesitation in the core and you can sling the dumbell around at MACH speed.
For this exercise, you'll need one dumbell. Pick it up in your right hand and hold it at your side. Your feet should be set apart a bit - you're going to be generating force through your legs up into the core - and they need to be apart for stability. Swing the dumbell back and around behind your body like you're winding up. Keep your knees bent and midsection tight!
Now whip that dumbell around as explosively and as fast as you can! It's almost like throwing a discus (rotational and explosive movement) like you were trying to sling the dumbell as far away from you as possible. Hold on TIGHT, though, as not everybody has concrete walls in their gym like I do...
Now here's the trick - as you whip the dumbell around, "catch" the dumbell in your other hand and use your OTHER arm/side abs to slow the momentum.
The slowing of momentum should take the dumbell all the way around behind you in the other direction. Now using BOTH hands, whip that dumbell back around the OTHER way to where you started from. Use a powerful push from the left hand and a powerful pull from the right hand (they'll work together on this whip around back to the start position).
Here's the key - the turnaround point. Don't hesitate AT ALL at the change of direction. When you stop the rotation one way IMMEDIATELY and explosively whip that dumbell back around. We're trying to put rotational torque on the core muscles (safely, of course) and that change of direction and momentum is the most important point. So do your reps on one side (about 4 to 6 reps - explosive movements shouldn't be done for more than that or you start hitting the wrong fiber types and losing explosiveness), then switch hands and repeat on the other side...same movement, direction reversed.
Perform the same number of reps on this side as you did on the first side. I like to stick to just 2 or 3 sets of this one. Any more than that and your core will get too fatigued and it won't be "quality" work anymore, which is critical for an explosive rotational core exercise. I HIGHLY recommend checking out the video for this exercise to see exactly how the whip-around is performed. It'll give you an idea of the power and speed you should be using when you do the exercise. Click this link to check it out now: http://www.fitstep.com/Misc/Newsletter-archives/issue61-whip.htm --- If you're interested in more unique ab exercises just like this, I have a bunch more on my Powerful Training Secrets site in the free sample area. http://www.powerfultrainingsecrets.com/info/departments/abdominal-exercises.htm And
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"THE GREAT ABS MISTAKE "He Was Doing One Thousand Crunches and Sit Ups A Day... But Still NO Abs!!!" - Guest Article by Tom VenutoYes, that is a LOT of abdominal work! So how can somebody be doing THAT much abdominal training and STILL get no results? Tom spills the beans and tells you exactly how to AVOID making the very same mistake yourself! |
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By
Tom Venuto, NSCA-CPT, CSCS
One question I received recently REALLY got my attention because a young guy told me he was doing 1,000 crunches and sit ups a day and said he still couldn't see his abdominals. He wrote: "Tom: I have been working out for around a year now and I cannot get my lower abs into any type of shape. I'm starting to see my upper abs a little bit, which is great, but despite doing 900 various crunches, ab roller, and 100 sit-ups four days a week, along with my regular workout on the weights, I still have a tire around my waist. What else can I do?" What did I tell him? Well, I gave him the same answer I've given thousands of people over the years, which is the only true "Secret" to great abs... It takes training to increase strength, build endurance and DEVELOP the abdominals, but to SEE the definition in your abdominals - or any other muscle group for that matter - is almost entirely the result of low body fat levels. This may sound counter-intuitive, but if you can't see your abs, it's not an issue of "muscle development" at all. You simply have too much body fat covering up the ab muscles. The lower abdominal area also happens to be the one place that most people - especially men - store the body fat first.
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Recently, the pendulum has swung the other direction and we've actually started hearing fitness "experts" suggesting that cardio should be kept to a minimum or even avoided completely. That's the way things tend to go in the fitness world - they swing back and forth in trends, from one extreme to another. Lots of cardio or no cardio. I suggest you avoid trend-hopping and pay close attention to what actually works, by people who know what they are talking about (such as bodybuilders, who are the leanest muscular athletes in the world). Doing nothing but cardio is a mistake. But cutting out cardio completely is also a mistake. The truth lies in the middle. Maximum fat burning occurs when you combine cardio training and weight training together. Those who are genetically gifted with above average metabolisms will find that a slight drop in food intake and just a few days a week of cardio will usually do the trick. However, most people who are struggling with fat loss (sometimes referred to as "endomorph" body type) are simply NOT burning enough calories to get the results they want. The answer for them is more activity to burn more calories. |
For health and weight maintenance, I would suggest 3 short cardio workouts per week, about 20-30 minutes per session. But for maximum fat loss, I recommend 4-7 days per week of cardio or other physical activity for 30-45 minutes (based on results), at a moderate pace. You can mix up the type of cardio you do, or choose the type you enjoy the most - stationary cycling, stairclimbing, elliptical machines, aerobic classes and other continuous activities are all excellent fat burners (it doesn't have to be indoors or on a cardio machine).
If time efficiency is a concern for you, you could do 2-3 of those cardio workouts as high intensity interval training and you'll achieve very good results even with briefer workouts. Even as little as 20-25 minutes per session can get great results IF your intensity level is high enough. Remember, seeing your abs is about low body fat. Low body fat is about burning calories and creating a calorie deficit. The calorie deficit is created by increasing the number of calories you burn and or decreasing the amount of calories you take in from food. Increasing intensity is one way to burn more calories in less time.
NOTE: To reach the "ripped" 3.7% body fat level you see in my photos, I do cardio 7 days a week for 30-45 minutes per session, in addition to my 4 weight training workouts per week.
That leads us to nutrition. Many people say that "abdominals are made in the kitchen, not in the gym," and there's a lot of truth to that. You can do thousands of reps of ab work every week, but if your nutrition is not in order, you can forget about getting a great set of 6-pack abs.
I once saw a photo of a man who broke one of the Guiness World Records for sit ups. It was the most paradoxical thing, but this man did not have any abdominal muscle definition. He was not obese or overweight at all, mind you, but he had a small enough layer of body fat that the muscular defintion did not show through. I've never seen a better real life example which demonstrates the basic principle discussed in this article:
You get great abs from reducing your body fat, and you reduce your body fat by creating a caloric deficit through nutrition and metabolism-stimulating and calorie-burning exercise.
I've spent my entire career - through more than 18 years and 28 bodybuilding competitions - studying the science and practicing the art of body fat reduction. I speak from experience and I walk my talk as you can see from my pictures.
If you'd like to learn for yourself, what I've learned about fat burning nutrition and getting your body fat level low enough so that you can finally see a "6 pack rack" of abs, then be sure to take a look at the Burn The Fat, Feed The Muscle program. Thousands of men and women call this their "fat loss bible." For all the details, click