Introduction
After 18 years in the fitness business, "How do I get great abs"
is still BY FAR the most frequently asked question I receive out of the
30,000+ emails that come into my office every month. No doubt, it's
because abs are the one body part that most people are the most
frustrated with. Although their questions are often phrased differently
and each person's situation seems unique, my answer to "how do I get
great abs" is almost always the same and you're about to hear it...
"1,000 Sit-Ups And Crunches A Day and Still No Abs!"
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.
There's a Scientific Reason Why Your
Lower Ab Flab Is The Last Place To Go:
Most
people don't have their fat distributed evenly throughout their bodies.
Each of us inherits a genetically determined and hormonally-influenced
pattern of fat storage just as we inherit our eye or hair color. In
other words, the fat seems to "stick" to certain areas more than
others.
There's
a scientific reason for this. Your fat cells are not just inert
"storage tanks" for excess fuel. They are actually endocrine glands
which send and receive signals from the rest of the body. You could say
that your fat cells "talk to your body" and your body "talks to your
fat cells." This occurs through a hormone and receptor system.
For
body fat loss to occur, you must first get the fat cell (adipocyte) to
release the fat into the bloodstream. THEN, the free fatty acids must
be delivered to the working muscles where they are burned for energy.
For
fat to be released, the hormone adrenaline (epinephrine) must be
secreted and send a signal to your fat cells. Your fat cells receive
this hormonal signal via adrenaline receptors called adrenoreceptors.
Fat
cells have Beta 1 (B1) and Alpha 2 (A2) receptors. B1 receptors are the
good guys. They activate hormone sensitive lipase, the enzyme that
breaks down the fat and allows it to be released into the bloodstream
to be burned. A2 receptors are the bad guys. They block the
fat-releasing enzymes in the fat cell and encourage body fat formation.
How Body Fat Storage Patterns Affect You
And Keep Your Abs From Showing
What's
the point of all the physiology? Well, it turns out that in men, the
lower abdominal region has a higher concentration of A2 receptors, so
this gives us one possible explanation of why the lower abdominal
region is often the first place the fat goes when you gain it, and the
last place it comes off when you're losing it. (Incidentally, the fat
in women's hips and thighs is also higher in A2 receptors). This
situation is dictated by genetics and by the hormonal and enzymatic
pathways we discussed.
Think
of ab fat like the deep end of the swimming pool. No matter how much
you protest, there is no way you can drain the deep end before the
shallow end. However, don't let this discourage you. Lower ab fat WILL
come off, it will simply be the last place to come off. First place on
- last place off.
This
helps to explain why abdominal exercises have little impact on body fat
loss. It's a huge mistake to think that hundreds or thousands of reps
of ab exercises will remove lower abdominal fat, except to the degree
that it burns calories and contributes to the calorie deficit. What
removes the fat - all over your body - is a calorie deficit and that
comes from decreasing food intake, increasing activity, or a
combination of both.
What
I suggested to this young man was cutting back the ab training,
spending the time he was wasting on excess ab exercises for more
intense, calorie-burning cardio and weight training for the rest of the
body. I also suggested he do an accounting of his food intake, get his
nutrition in order and decrease his calories slightly if necessary.
As it turned out, his diet was a mess, and as nutrition experts like to say, "You can't out-train a lousy diet."
It's
a monumental error to think that 1,000 reps of ab work a day will make
your abs finally "pop" when your diet is a disaster and that's leading
to fat storage. It's not that ab exercises aren't important. But all
the ab exercises in the world won't help as long as you still have body
fat covering the muscles. You can't "spot reduce" with abdominal
exercise and YOU CAN'T SEE YOUR ABS THROUGH A LAYER OF BODY FAT!
Make
sure to keep an eye on your inbox because in part two of this e-mail
series, I'll reveal my championship-winning ab workout routine, and my
secret for how to use cardio for MAXIMUM fat burning.
Train hard and expect success,
Tom Venuto, NSCA-CPT, CSCS
Fat Loss Coach
www.BurnTheFat.com
P.S. If you would like to finally see your abs by burning bodyfat using my best-selling fat loss program, check out: www.BurnTheFat.com
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