Lose as much BF as possible by March 2, 2008

01yz426

01yz426

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Hello,

I'm getting a late start here but I'm headed on a cruise to the carribean for 7-days in March and I've been slacking on my gym time... I figure that since I know it's going to be hot on the ship I'd better get my ass in gear...

I'm looking at doing something like this, and started last week and still tweaking it a little...

5-smaller meals per day spaced every 3-4hrs apart
1-gallon of water per day (if I can hack it)

Workouts weights: Mon-Wed-Fri
Cardio: All week long, except for Sundays
Working in a circuit type manner: 2-exercises per bodypart with a 8-10 rep range...

As for cardio: I have a friend who competes (female) and she just recently did 3hrs of cardio per day for almost 6-months straight and came in and took the overall and is in the best shape ever...

So, I'm looking at doing the same... I work nights from 8pm to 6:30am so I'm going to be doing my cardio as follows:

7am 1-hr treadmill
4pm 1-hr split between treadmill/stairclimber
12am 1-hr treadmill/bike

I plan on doing this everyday in one variation or another until August but hoping that I'll have better than normal success by March 2, 2008...

Any helpful hints would be more than appreciated... Thanks for reading...
 

Highlanda01602

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Not to put you down or anything, but as you said, she is a pro-bodybuilder. Her body (and CNS) was able to take that beating @ 3 hours a day of cardio.

If are new to cardio, or are coming off a layoff from cardio, you'll only injure yourself if you push it too hard initially. Shin splints can, and will, drop anyone at any given time. At three hours a day, off the bat, you're setting yourself up for them. Your central nervous system will take a serious beating as well @ 3 hours a day, and recovery will not be fun.

A lot of others will also vouch for this method - HIIT (High Intensity Interval Cardio). Essentially sprints, on any sort of exercise that raises your heart rate... treadmill, bike, swimming, even the eliptical.
It would be safer, and arguably more effective for fat loss (rather than mass loss) with HIIT methods. Around 3 times a week works, and you could fill in some off days with some easy yet lengthy cardio.

Just don't kill yourself going nuts all day long.. your body needs to build up to be able to put out that much work. And to effectively do 3 hours a day is some serious athleticism. Take it easy, but work hard at the same time... or there will be nothing left to vacation with!
 
01yz426

01yz426

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Not to put you down or anything, but as you said, she is a pro-bodybuilder. Her body (and CNS) was able to take that beating @ 3 hours a day of cardio.

If are new to cardio, or are coming off a layoff from cardio, you'll only injure yourself if you push it too hard initially. Shin splints can, and will, drop anyone at any given time. At three hours a day, off the bat, you're setting yourself up for them. Your central nervous system will take a serious beating as well @ 3 hours a day, and recovery will not be fun.

A lot of others will also vouch for this method - HIIT (High Intensity Interval Cardio). Essentially sprints, on any sort of exercise that raises your heart rate... treadmill, bike, swimming, even the eliptical.
It would be safer, and arguably more effective for fat loss (rather than mass loss) with HIIT methods. Around 3 times a week works, and you could fill in some off days with some easy yet lengthy cardio.

Just don't kill yourself going nuts all day long.. your body needs to build up to be able to put out that much work. And to effectively do 3 hours a day is some serious athleticism. Take it easy, but work hard at the same time... or there will be nothing left to vacation with!

Ya, I get shin splints now when I play to much basketball so I know how much those can kill a person... I'm already an athletic person, just not a pro at anything... But yes I know this is way overload, and actually have already decided to take it down to 1.5-2hrs of cardio... I realize that by pushing myself to hard to fast will just burn me out... Thanks for your reply...
 
Jim Mills

Jim Mills

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I started the Anabolic Diet on Nov 24th at 187lbs. This morning I was 171lbs.... 16 lbs down with no cardio..... All I did was switch to a full body workout 3 days a week and a full ab workout 1 day a week.... By far I think this is the best diet. You can cut or bulk on it.... Do a google search .... Also get yourself some Lipoderm Ultra once you get your body fat down to where you can start to see your ab's.
 
Neil5585

Neil5585

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When doing weight workouts, a circuit like this works well:

1a - Squat
1b - weighted dips
1c - Deadlift
1d - Chinups
rest 2 minutes

Do that 3-4 times, each lift to failure. 10-12 reps per exercise should work. This should be done with as heavy a weight as possible for those reps, and this SHOULD make you feel sick if done right. This will help you strip off body fat along with the right diet, cardio, and supplements. It should be done a minimum of twice a week, but 3x a week is better.
 

macedaddy

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When doing weight workouts, a circuit like this works well:

1a - Squat
1b - weighted dips
1c - Deadlift
1d - Chinups
rest 2 minutes

Do that 3-4 times, each lift to failure. 10-12 reps per exercise should work. This should be done with as heavy a weight as possible for those reps, and this SHOULD make you feel sick if done right. This will help you strip off body fat along with the right diet, cardio, and supplements. It should be done a minimum of twice a week, but 3x a week is better.
no chest work?
 
Neil5585

Neil5585

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It was just an example. You can do dips so that they're an excellent chest workout.

Also, you could do hammer presses if you want. I just wouldn't be benching unless you have a partner...going to failure and after a failure set of squats and all...
 

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