Weights
Before Cardio: Stop Working Against Yourself
Just because
youre working hard, doesnt mean that youre working smart. I
see it every day. People come into the gym and hop on a treadmill for 30-60 minutes
and then head over to the weights to do their resistance training. Even though
my initial reaction is to walk up and smack them in the back of the head, the
reality in the matter is
How would they know any better? Which is why I thought
this article was so appropriate. After all, for years Ive heard people say
that if you do your cardio first, youll burn more fat during your weight
training. Making your weight training an extension of your cardio.
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Lets
look at why this isnt true and see if we can save some people a little wasted
effort. Well start out by looking at how your body uses the food you consume
for fuel. You may have heard that you will burn more fat if you do your cardio
on an empty stomach. The truth is that you will actually burn more fat during
cardio if you have depleted your body of carbohydrates. You can eat proteins and
dietary fats without affecting the way your body burns fat. In other words, you
could eat some egg whites, chicken breast, or even a protein shake without any
carbs in it, and still burn the same amount of fat during your cardio session
as you would if you did it on an empty stomach. But if you ate an apple or a piece
of bread before your cardio, you wouldnt. When you eat carbohydrates,
your body stores them as glycogen in your liver and waits for your body to use
them as fuel. When performing an aerobic activity, like walking or running on
a treadmill, your body has the option of using glycogen stores or fat stores.
The problem is that your body wont use any fat stores until your glycogen
stores are used up. On the other hand, during anaerobic exercise, like weight
lifting, your body can only use glycogen as fuel. So heres how
it plays out. Studies have shown that it can take as much as 29 minutes of cardio
to burn your glycogen stores. So if you start your workout off with 30 minutes
of cardio, not only did you burn fat for a whopping one minute, but you also depleted
your body of the fuel it needs (glycogen) to do your resistance training. Now,
in order to manufacture glucose (glycogen) during your weight training session,
your body may actually break down muscle tissue to use certain amino acids as
your fuel. You could end up losing muscle instead of gaining. To make
things simple, if you do your weight training first, you can use your glycogen
stores as fuel. Then, when you move over to your cardio, youre right where
you want to be
with depleted glycogen stores, giving your body the opportunity
to burn fat as a fuel source. To learn more on how to use these facts
for your cardio only days, read Use
Nutrition to Boost Your Cardio. This article was brought to
us by our friends at ShapeYou.com
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