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The importance of scheduled meals and not under eating.

THIS. IS. SERIOUS.

A couple of very important points of discourse on the subject of under eating, or as I prefer to think of it, "under fueling".

If you are training for improved performance in sports and / or a change in body condition, it is crucial to exceed your minimum requirements in total energy and protein intake.

Under eating will not cut it.

You cannot facilitate the changes in body condition you are trying to produce without providing the necessary resources. You cannot starve yourself into strong, healthy, athletic shape. You just can't.

This is a double edged sword though, as attempting to under fuel often results in involuntary over eating later on.

This is an easy situation to fall into, but fortunately just as easy to avoid or to rectify. Simply, by setting a meal schedule as best suits you in order to ensure that your energy and other nutritional requirements are met. Your psychological needs are of no less significant importance here, as well. Set a schedule, have a plan to meet and exceed your minimum requirements, and stick to it. Set the alarm on your phone to remind you when it is time to eat, if necessary.

No more working through lunch or skipping meals for other reasons.
You need to eat, god dammit.

Having a meal schedule and especially as part of a larger plan to meet some appropriate total energy and macronutrient intake targets also means that you are more mindful of how much and what you are eating, as well. As much as I do believe habitual under eating is a serious and widespread problem, at the same time there are no shortage of people who are under the assumption that they are "probably not eating enough" who are actually massively over feeding.

Regardless, having a schedule, appropriate targets, a plan and the intention of sticking to that plan as consistently as possible will solve either problem and many others as well.

Under eating due to restriction of food choices.

A second cause of under eating can be restriction of food choices. Too often, proponents of certain diets advocate the exclusion of various food choices which can be advantageous in meeting both your micronutritional and total energy requirements. Even so called "empty" calories from more indulgent choices of foods are not inherently bad if they prevent you from falling short of your energy requirements where you would be likely to otherwise.

Nutritious foods such as cereals, breads and other grain based foods do provide significant micronutritional resources as well as valuable energy. There is no need to restrict or eliminate intake of these foods, other than as necessary to manage a medical condition that you actually have. Not a medical condition that may hypothetically exist according to alternative health bloggers, not even one that someone told you their cousin suffers from, or whatever else. Unless you have been advised to do so by your doctor or dietitian to manage a diagnosed condition that you actually have, there is no need to cut out grains or anything else that you enjoy and can utilise as a source of energy and other resources to meet your requirements.

Now, usually when there's a debate on this matter... the argument is that people can just meet their energy or micronutritional requirements from other foods, instead. This is true. Will they, though? For many people who find the "other", suggested foods less enjoyable or less appealing, they simply won't eat enough of them. Rather, they just end up not eating anywhere near enough in total, due to having cut out the foods that suit them best for no good reason whatsoever other than bad advice and pressure to conform from people who lack the basic empathy to understand that different people will prefer different foods and that is ok.

Any advice that suggests, advocates or inadvertently results in habitual under eating is terrible and potentially harmful advice.

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Lean Green and Healthy: Weight loss cures and snake oil salesmen.

Lean Green and Healthy: Weight loss cures and snake oil salesmen.:

Well this morning I had a run in with a fellow on the internet over his promotion of supplements for weight loss. He was posting in a group and his advertisement for his magical product encouraged people to lose weight by mixing his potion with milk, peanut butter and butterscotch pudding mix!  His other recipe included Oreo cookies and Jello flavoured puddingmix. Mmm sounds like a balanced nutritional meal to me! (not!) Not
surprisingly I got a little hot under the collar about this latest dietary scam and decided it was time to talk about weight loss supplements. 

Click the link to read the full entry  on the Lean Green & Healthy blog.
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Low Cost, Effective Home Training Routine, Part Two

This is part two of the Low Cost Home Training Program I posted up just before. I made the videos last summer and thought some new people might like to give it a try. These are serious routines and you will see good results if you do each of them twice weekly with suitable eating habits.

Here's the Pulling routine. The other one was the Pushing routine, remember?


Routine Description:


Warm Up: TRX Reverse Flies and Front Raises

I did 3 sets of 20 (10 reps of each movement) just as a nice warm up for the shoulders and upper back muscles.

TRX Hanging Row:


In the gym I’d probably be doing a cable row, machine row, even a dumbbell row… any type of horizontal pulling movement. Here I’ve gone for the TRX variation, and I’m leaning back as far as possible so that I’m pulling as much of my body weight as I can.
I managed 4 sets of 16 reps here, you should aim for 10 - 12 reps.

Resistance Band One Arm Reverse Flies

Here I’m trying to replicate a Reverse Cable Fly that I might do in the gym. In my program we’d call this a Precision Movement trying to target the rear deltoid muscle specifically.
Do 4 sets of 12 to 16 reps.

Resistance Band Upright Row


Usually I’d do this with a barbell in the gym, but a resistance band will suffice at home or on holiday. We want to be pulling our elbows straight up into the air, and our hands to about middle-of-the-chest height.
4 sets of 10 - 12 reps again here.

Pull Ups / Chin Ups


Vertical Pulling movement. Self explanatory! These are tough though, so don't be too upset if you can't manage them as a beginner.

Resistance Band Reverse Flies


Again. This is probably over kill having already done a TRX version and a single arm version, but I wanted to show a few different options.

Resistance Band Bicep Curls


Squeeze those biceps at the top and release slowly.
4 sets of 12 - 16 reps.


Not shown in the video, but do these too.Google them if you have to.


Hip Thrust / Glute Bridge 4 x 20 reps.
Hip Rotation aka Clam Shell Exercise, or Fire Hydrant Exercise 4 x 20 reps each side.
Hip Abduction aka Laying Side Leg Raise 4 x 20 reps each side.
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Low Cost, Effective Home Training Routine, Part One

I shot these videos last summer and thought I'd share them again for all the people looking to get into shape as part of their New Years Resolutions.

Now, it's like I talk about all the time. If you actually want results you need to train productively, not just "burn calories". Resistance training really is the key, but weights are expensive! On a budget, some resistance bands and a suspension trainer are a great option to train seriously at home.

Today's routine is based on pushing movements, and accessory exercises that compliment them.


Routine Description:


Warm Up: Resistance Band One Arm Flies

I usually start this routine with Pec Dec in the gym. A dumbbell or cable fly is a similar movement, and the resistance band fly is the option we’ll use with the home routine. If you had two sets of the same bands (and really they’re not very expensive, so that’s worth thinking about) you could do both sides together… or one at a time like I am doing here. I’m adding a little extra shoulder rotation to the end of the movement here which I feel gives me just that little extra bit of contraction in the pectorals.
Do 3 sets of 12 - 16 reps of these.

Horizontal Push: Push Ups

We could do a Chest Press with the Resistance Bands, but I feel like Push Ups are as good an option as any. You can see I start with a beginners version, leaning against the railing… and then I do a more advanced version with my feet elevated. If you have the TRX and are really looking for an advanced option you can have your feet in the straps which means a lot of extra work to stabalise yourself.
Do 4 sets of 10 to 12 reps.

Various Squats

I think the TRX Squats are a really good method to learn good, deep squatting technique. You can lean back into the squat a little and you have the handles to hang on to for balance, and you can squat nice and deep. Once that’s too easy, try either the one legged (pistol) squat or the one legged lunge. These damn near killed me. You can see some discrepancy with my form from one side to the other as well… if only I’d had a coach there to point that out at the time!
4 sets of as many as you can manage!

Resistance Band Front Raise

Coming back to upper body, and this is a nice one to target the shoulders. Anterior Deltoid muscle in particular.
Do 2 x 12 - 16 reps.

Resistance Band Side Lateral Raise

Shoulders again, this time trying to hit the Lateral (or middle if you prefer) Deltoid. With both this and the above exercise, try to have a little pause at the top of the movement, and then return slowly to the starting position.
Do 3 x 12 - 16 reps.

Vertical Push: Resistance Band Shoulder Press

Much like performing a Dumbbell Shoulder Press in the gym, but with the Resistance Bands instead.
Do 3 x 10 - 12 reps.

Resistance Band Overhead Tricep Extension

Self explanatory, isn’t it? You could do a variation on Cable Kickbacks here as well, which I quite like.
Do 3 x 12 - 16 reps.

Here's the link to the next routine.
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Masterpost: All detoxes are a scam.

I decided a "master post" is where I dump EVERY link I can find addressing a particular source of nonsense, quackery, pseudoscience or scammery. In this case, "detoxing".

Here it comes, hold on to your hats.

First though, you may well ask "if all these things are scams, how do they get away with selling them?" well you may be sorry that you asked. Here's a great video that explains it.

You want more links explaining why "detox" is junk science? You got it.

A few updates, as if we didn't know these products were bad enough already:

And another video for good measure.

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