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Posts Tagged ‘The Abs Diet’

More About Going Primal – The Primal Blueprint

November 23rd, 2011

Oh to eat like Grok….

In my previous post I talked about a move to following a more paleo/primal eating plan than what P90X plan or The Abs Diet offers.  My wife thinks its a neat concept and supports me, but I think she may think I’m nuts.  But before you pass judgement, I thought I’d share a bit of what I’ve been reading about, who I’ve been talking to about it, their experience, and why I think it may help me achieve my goals.

First, I purchased the book The Primal Blueprint by Mark Sisson.  If you’ve ever done P90x, you’ll recognize Mark as the guy at the end of the videos talking about P90X multi-vitamin, P90X recovery drink, etc.  But more recently, Mark is known for his book on Primal eating and his website, Mark’s Daily Apple.

I have a good friend involved with Crossfit here in Conway who recently went through a Paleo challenge.  I talked to him quite a bit during it about his experience with it, the ups, the downs, etc.  As I started researching more about it I learned that my mentor in Beachbody (Coni) also was now eating via The Primal Blueprint.  And after asking some questions, some more people I knew came out and said they were eating this way too.

I’ve seen the great results it produced for many people.  But more than anything, the #1 thing that convinced me to try it was this:  Everyone who followed it said they felt better than they had in a long time.

That was enough for me to start looking into it.  Plus, taking cues from my own body, I figured it was time I looked into it.

Cues?  What cues, Brent?

Well, for starters….

Even following the P90X plan, I noticed I lost fat well on the Fat Shredder plan.  It sucked for energy, but I always had great losses.  But when I’d go to eating whole grains again (or in larger amounts), I noticed my fat loss stalled.  When I did Insanity and Asylum this year, I noticed the less carbs I took in, the better my fat loss was (with Insanity month 2, I took in only 1.5 carbs a day, with Asylum, typically on 1-1.5).  Plus cutting out dairy I felt MUCH better in Insanity and Asylum.

But when I’d follow the P90X plan allowing for 3 carbs a day, my fat loss would stall.  And that was always frustrating.

The other cue I’m taking is how my body reacts to sugar.  It’s not pretty.  I’ve been eating a bit too much of it recently, but I always…and I repeat, always, feel like utter crap after eating anything with refined sugars.  I can drink a Shakeology with nothing but healthy sugars and feel fine, but one cookie and I feel miserable.  I’ve felt like this all of this year.  More on why this is important to me later (in regards to Primal eating).

So with all of this, the people I’ve talked to, and my own research, I feel like this is a good change for me to make.

You’re probably thinking….”Brent, instead of making this major shift, why not just eat on the Fat Shredder plan?”

Great point!  The problem with Fat Shredder is this:  It is high protein, low fat, low/moderate carb.  Our bodies use to prefer fats as the fat source, but the modern American diet shifted it to being carbs in the form of starches and sugars.  The Fat Shredder plan cannot be followed long term due to how few fats it has in it (albeit healthy fats, hitting only 20% fats and 30% carbs with 50% proteins is tough on the kidneys and energy stores).

When I followed the fat shredder plan, by week 2 I was miserable.  The food was fairly bland, there wasn’t enough energy to push through workouts, and simply hard to manage.  Not to mention that the plan is very strict on what you eat, portions, etc.  It works, don’t get me wrong, but is hardly manageable long term.

But won’t you feel like crap when start Primal eating?

Possibly.  I figure I will during the adjustment phase.  I’m going from eating 40% (or more somedays) of my intake in carbs to eating 100g or less (400 calories, or 20% of my intake roughly will be carbs at most).  I know my body is going to go through an adjustment phase and it is something I am preparing for.

In fact, I’ve already warned my wife that I’ll be a bit grumpy.

But, coming out of it, everyone I’ve talked to said they had more energy by the time the adjustment was done.  Sounds good to me!

So what will I be eating?

Meat and veggies.  Water.  I’ll be cooking with fats, including butter.  I told this to a good friend of ours who LOVES butter, and her response was someone amazed and amused that I’d be considering this move.  After all, I’ve been anti-butter for a while.

My meat will not be just lean cuts either.  I’ll be consuming animal fats.  I’ll be aiming for 100g max carbs, 170g protein, and the rest of my calories in fat.  I’ll be eating meats like bacon, fatty steaks, dark meat poultry, etc.

Now, if you’re a doctor or if you read a lot of modern medicine’s opinion on fat, you’ll probably freak out at this.  Just go read Mark’s site and the book and  you’ll understand why this is not really bad for you.

How much of a change is this for me?

Honestly, its a big change.  Meat is more expensive.  In fact, it’s a lot more expensive than carbs.  So I’m having to purchase in bulk.  If you read Mark’s site, you know he’ll suggest grassfed, organic meats over the mass produced meats you find in supermarkets.  Until I can get some things in place (i.e. a freezer to hold enough meet), I’ll be purchasing from a local meat market which is grain fed but no anti-biotics or growth hormones added to the meats.  My guess is these meats are grass-fed/grain finished.

My goal is to have enough freezer space to by either half or quarter of a cow a year and a whole pig.  I can then supplement with chicken and the occasional chicken or lamb.

I’ll be cutting out dairy almost altogether.  I’ve done this before and felt great.  I will use some in cooking some dishes, so I will not be 100% dairy free, just will not use it that much.  Most of the dairy I prep will be in specialty dishes.

So what about sugar you were talking about earlier?

Great question.  Again, sugar makes me feel like garbage.  Absolute garbage.  I hate the way I feel when I have cows milk and sugar more than anything.

But….I love sweets.  It’s a love-hate relationship.

The one thing I’ve been looking into a lot with Primal eating is how to handle my sweet tooth in the fall while still having some great dishes.  The great thing I have found with Primal eating is that there is a recipe for just about everything I love.  Pumpkin pie?  Yep, a great recipe.  I’ve found cookie recipes, chocolate mouse, etc.  In other words, when I want a desert, I just have to have the stuff on hand to make it.

And it’s not refined, processed sugars.

Even for non-sugar foods, I’ve found recipes to use for entertaining, such as meatballs, Buffalo wings, etc.  So when the Super Bowl rolls around, I’ll be able to have a Primal friendly feast.

So what is the biggest thing I love about this plan?

I find this plan extremely non-restrictive.  The Abs Diet wasn’t restrictive, but it wasn’t this loose.  It still wanted me to avoid fats, focus on grains, etc.  And I lost weight/inches on the plan.  But, I really don’t want to lose much weight, just fat.

Plus, I’m not going to count calories on this plan.  Remember, our Primal ancestors did not have My Fitness Pal to help them track calories.  So the goal is to eat sensibly and then adjust according to my energy needs.  I also plan on experimenting some with Intermittent Fasting to aid in fat loss (and from many people’s experience, muscle growth).  To help with energy during my workouts at first, I’m looking at adding in a BCAA supplement.

So my goal….

I’m hoping that my right shoulder heals enough to start P90X on January 1 when I launch many Beachbody Challenge Groups (more on this later).  I want to move into doing Crossfit as well combined with some additional P90X style workouts, and eat like a caveman.

That’s 2012.

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“The Abs Diet” – Thoughts And Review Prior To Trying It

April 24th, 2011

Another Team Beachbody coach turned me onto this book, and I got it at a steal at Barnes And Nobel’s webite:

The Abs Diet by David Zinczenko (editor-in-chief of “Men’s Health Magazine”).

The great thing about P90X is that it comes with an extremely flexible meal plan.  The only thing lacking from it is a more detailed description of why things work the way they do.

The Abs Diet took the approach of teaching you why the combination of foods you eat matters and gives the explanation behind why it’s “Power 12″ foods can help burn belly fat at a faster rate.

Interestingly enough, a lot of the foods on The Abs Diet “Power 12″ are identical to a lot of the foods in the P90X plan, but the book does point out a few things that you should avoid that appear on the P90x plan.

Likewise, the book allows a cheat meal where P90X suggest against it.

The book also has a light weight exercise routine that you can follow 3-6 days a week.  It incorporates 3 days of strenght training, 2 days of mild cardio, one day of intervals, and ab work 2 days a week.

So, here’s my plan:

I’m going to use this diet (it’s a 6 week diet, but I’m sure I’ll do it longer) and use Beachbody routines.  My goal is to use Turbo Fire for the cardio and either ChaLEAN Extreme or P90X for the lifting.  I’m going to use either Ab Ripper X or Brazil Butt Lift’s Tummy Tuck as the ab routines 2-3 days a week (leaning towards 3, similar to P90X), but going to follow the book’s suggestion of doing abs first and then doing the routine.

I start with this January 2nd.  I’ll be blogging more about my findings here before I start and then quite regularly about progress after.

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Relecting On The Abs Diet, The Start Of Insanity, And More

April 3rd, 2011

So I completed 90 days of P90X using The Abs Diet as a basis for my nutrition.  Here are some of my random thoughts on The Abs Diet:

-  The one thing they are not real good on explaining in the book is how you must adjust your intake to your body composition, especially if you train more than what is in the book.  But, then again, they only want you to focus on what is in the book, so that may have something to do with it.

-  This nutrition is very easy to follow overall.

-  I found it best to use The Abs Diet principles keeping in mind the calorie recommendations from the P90X guide and how to guess portions from the P90X guide.

-  If the P90X nutrition guide is hard for you to follow, this is a great book to buy and follow.

-  I think I’ll buy the cookbook.

Overall, I’m please with how easy The Abs Diet was to follow.  I did find it necessary to blend the two nutrition guides for optimal results though.  The Abs diet workouts are short and not as intense as P90X workouts, nor are they as complete.  But I’m sure they would suffice.  I may do a round of the workouts later this year just for something different, possibly between Thanksgiving and the cruise.

Now….to my next challenge.

Today, I start Insanity.  This is probably the hardest 60 days Beachbody has ever put out.  It’s not meant to be easy.  It is meant to break you down continuously, partly by the difficulty of the routines, and partly from the push that Shaun T wants to give you.

Here’s my focus:

I’m starting at 2400-2500 calories.  I don’t want to lose any weight, only fat.  So I’m going to focus more on protein than what the Insanity guide gives and keep carbs controlled.  If I start bonking more during the routines, I’ll slowly increase carbs in the form of veggies at first.  I’m digging into whether to start higher than that calorie range and just focus on getting rid of the next 5-10 pounds of flab and put 5-10 pounds of muscle on.

So be watching my blog for Insanity results and post.  It’s going to be a rough but fun 63 days!

 

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P90X Day 87 + The Abs Diet – Kenpo X

March 29th, 2011

Going to keep this brief, because I’m about to also write a detailed post on the Shakeology 3 day cleanse.  Today was Kenpo X.  I overslept.  I pushed hard, but my heart rate never caught up with my effort (or my effort was greater in my mind than it was through my body).  Still burned a good amount of calories.

Nutrition was good until supper.  Rainy, cold, dreary weather on a day where I’m brain fried and still have lot to do USUALLY equals a weakness to want to eat out.  And that is what happened.  Didn’t really consume too many calories, but more worried about sodium content.

 

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P90X Day 86 + The Abs Diet – Core Synergistics

March 28th, 2011

I love the Core Synergistics exercise from P90X, but when you have a horrible night of sleep, it can be quite the grueling workout.  Such was the case this morning.  With a 3 year old and a 5 year old joining us overnight, and the 3 year old punching/kicking/crowding me all night, my sleep was neither uninterrupted nor was it restful.

But I pushed play anyways.  Can’t expect anyone else to be accountable for me, so I had to do it.

Nutrition was better today.  If anything, I was under my calorie goal.

I did have to mix things up a bit today.

Pre-workout:  Banana
Post-Workout:  R&R drink
Breakfast – 2 sliced whole wheat bread, 1 slice 2% cheese, 2 eggs scrambled
Snack:  4oz 1% cottage cheese, 10 sun chips
Lunch:  Shakeology
Snack:  1oz cashews
Supper:  Chicken fajitas

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P90X Days 83 & 85 + The Abs Diet – Kenpo X, FOY Yoga

March 27th, 2011

Playing some catch-up here.  Had a fun weekend spending time talking to my friends about fitness, life, and everything else, and just did not get a chance to post.

On Friday was Kenpo X.  Good, solid run through it.  Just under 600 calories burned on that one.  Nutrition was solid until supper lol.

Today was FOY Yoga.  I was a bit tired.  I almost didn’t feel well.  I was REALLY not motivated.  Dang, I was glad I did though.  I instantly felt better after doing it.  And I’ve felt better all day.  My nutrition today has sucked, though, and I won’t even pretend like I was close to where I needed to be on what I ate.

So I won’t review what I ate.

On Wednesday – Friday of this week, I’m doing a Shakeolgoy 3 day cleanse inside of this recovery week.  I’ll be posting more info (again) about the cleanse, it’s objectives, etc.

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P90X Day 82 + The Abs Diet – Ab Ripper X, Legs And Back

March 24th, 2011

Wow…I cannot believe I just completed my last Legs and Back workout for at least 3 months.  So, knowing this was about it, I pushed.  And I pushed.  And 12.5 hours later, I can still feel it in my hammies and my glutes.

That’s strength, that’s balance, that’s coordination, that’s P90X!

Nutrition was good today.  I did some slight re-arranging of my protein shake and took it in the afternoon instead of just before bed.  I had a bad feeling that taking a protein shake that late was not helping (never could give it enough time before I went to sleep, so afraid the calories were not getting used right).

Pre-workout:  banana
Post-workout:  R&R drink
Breakfast:  Shakeology
Snack:  10 Sun Chips, 4oz cottage cheese
Lunch:  Chicken stir fry (brown rice)
Snack:  1oz cashews
Snack:  Protein Shake
Supper:  Spaghetti using Barilla Plus noodles (4g fiber, 10g protein)

 

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P90X Day 81 + The Abs Diet – Fountain Of Youth Yoga

March 23rd, 2011

I think I mention every week of P90X that I love yoga.  Today, no exception.  I always just feel good after it.

I’m still working on improving, though.  I’m far from perfect with this routine.  There are still sections of it that make me want to coward down into a little ball and cry for help.  But you know, that’s the beauty of working on your weak spots and working towards making yourself better.

Nutrition today was spot on.  I did alter my post workout, since Yoga is not “intense.”  So instead of a post workout drink, I added in 2 scrambled eggs to my breakfast.

Pre-workout:  Banana
Breakfast:  “Shake and Eggs” – Shakeology + 2 scrambled eggs
Snack:  4oz 1% cottage cheese, 10 Sun Chips (yes, I realize many people label these as junk, but they are high in unsaturated fats, low saturated fats, high fiber, some protein, and low sugar.  And they taste good).
Lunch:  BBQ chicken over brown rice and some V8
Snack:  1oz Cashews
Supper:  BBQ chicken sandwich, veggies, and a bit less than half a cup of baked beans (wanted a bit more fiber and carb, but loved the protein that came with the beans)
Snack:  Protein shake

 

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P90X Day 80 + The Abs Diet – Ab Ripper X, Back And Biceps

March 22nd, 2011

Today was day 80.  Wow, only 10 days of P90X left.  Hard to believe that I am this far into 2011, much less 80 days into P90X.

Ab Ripper X was a trip.  Did all but 5 reps of Fifer Scissors, and did 43/50 Mason Twist.  Not bad.

I had a major breakthrough with Back and Biceps.  My biggest issue is that I had problems getting a pull-up done after the first set of bicep work.  Today, that wasn’t the case.  I managed 2, although they were ugly.  But hey, 2 is better than none, right?

The elbow was a huge concern coming into the day, but did fine.  My chiropractor said I had some minor alignment issues in the joint and did some adjusting.

Nutrition was good today.  Very good.  I’m enjoying eating more and hopefully will start seeing the results of it by next week.

Pre-workout:  Banana
Post-workout: R&R drink
Breakfast:  Shakeology
Snack:  4 oz 1% cottage cheese, 1.5 oz raisins
Lunch:  6 oz chicken breast tenderloins cooked in olive oil and Italian Dressing and onions, 1 cup brown rice, 8oz V8
Snack:  1 oz cashews
Supper:  Slow cooked BBQ chicken shredded, served open face over whole wheat bun, with sauted squash, onion, and bell pepeprs
Snack:  Protein shake

This should put me at 2410 calories, inside my 2400-2500 goal.

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P90X Day 79 + The Abs Diet – Plyo X

March 21st, 2011

Hey dummy, you’re not eating enough!

That was the revelation I came to this morning while trying to figure out where I stand on P90X.  In fact, I may be severely under-eating and not realizing it.  I started figuring my normal daily intake and I was getting around 1500 calories by supper, which means at least 700 calories to get into one fat burn zone, but most likely not enough to really lose fat for me.

So, today I began the quest of trying to increase my intake.

Here’s how today’s nutrition looked like:

Pre-workout:  banana
Post workout:  R&R drink
Breakfast:  Shakeology
Snack:  4oz cottage cheese, 1.5 oz raising
Lunch:  1 chicken breast, potato salad, V8
Snack:  1oz cashews
Supper:  1 chicken breast, salad, baked beans (1 cup), and around 1 cup steamed veggies
Snack:  Protein shake (for the extra calories needed)

I’m hoping adding back that final protein shake/snack and getting more calories in my day may help quite a bit.

For the Plyo X workout, it went very well.  Actually, I felt like I started a bit slow.  But by the time the end had hit, I don’t think my HR dropped out of the 150′s until the cool down.  Tomorrow I’m going to deal with the elbow and see how it feels lifting and doing pull-ups.  I may be modifying quite a bit.

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