Warboss Alex
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2005
- Messages
- 4,175
- Reaction score
- 30
'Ere we go.
1. There's no foods that DIRECTLY burn fat persay, but increasing your metabolism through a high protein diet and plenty of green/white tea means you'll be burning more calories and indirectly burning fat through metabolic rate.
In addition, keep your carbs low GI (oats, wholemeal bread, oats, brown rice, oats, wholemeal pasta, oats), restrict the number of simple sugars in your diet and avoid improper food combinations which could lead to adipose deposition, e.g. processed food, junk food etc. I'm not saying cut these out because if I do you'll feel as if you're abstaining and as a result crave them more.
2. Cardio is for fitness and bodyfat control, your sessions should NOT leave you exhausted. Save training to failure and beyond for the weights.
3. Pushups and situps are only a warmup to heavier exercises so no, unless you're some sort of army buff, do not do these to the point of muscle ache (if at all).
Your diet is bad, not enough meals, hardly any protein, and not enough EFAs - you're spot on with the water intake though.
I'd also advise you to take one complete day off per week, preferably a day you're not working.. let your body recharge and recover fully.
And you really have to ask yourself this, you're doing fairly intense cardio (football) 5 nights a week, is jogging really necessary at all? Seems to me like it's your diet which is making/keeping you fat. I'll bet that once you eat properly the football'll lean you down a treat.
My recommendation is to drop the jogging and start eating better. See where you are in 3 months time and make modifications as needed.
1. There's no foods that DIRECTLY burn fat persay, but increasing your metabolism through a high protein diet and plenty of green/white tea means you'll be burning more calories and indirectly burning fat through metabolic rate.
In addition, keep your carbs low GI (oats, wholemeal bread, oats, brown rice, oats, wholemeal pasta, oats), restrict the number of simple sugars in your diet and avoid improper food combinations which could lead to adipose deposition, e.g. processed food, junk food etc. I'm not saying cut these out because if I do you'll feel as if you're abstaining and as a result crave them more.
2. Cardio is for fitness and bodyfat control, your sessions should NOT leave you exhausted. Save training to failure and beyond for the weights.
3. Pushups and situps are only a warmup to heavier exercises so no, unless you're some sort of army buff, do not do these to the point of muscle ache (if at all).
Your diet is bad, not enough meals, hardly any protein, and not enough EFAs - you're spot on with the water intake though.
I'd also advise you to take one complete day off per week, preferably a day you're not working.. let your body recharge and recover fully.
And you really have to ask yourself this, you're doing fairly intense cardio (football) 5 nights a week, is jogging really necessary at all? Seems to me like it's your diet which is making/keeping you fat. I'll bet that once you eat properly the football'll lean you down a treat.
My recommendation is to drop the jogging and start eating better. See where you are in 3 months time and make modifications as needed.