Under Armour SALE!!!

Posted: February 8, 2012 in Fitness Freaks

Hey everyone.

Sorry i’ve been out of action over the last few weeks, ive been away on holidays. As of today im going to be starting back, updating my blog regularly so be sure to check back soon! To make up for my long awaited post, i am bringing you a really, REALLY good deal!

While ive been away i got into contact with an agent for Under Armour. If your from Australia you may not have heard of it, but if your from overseas, you will know about it. Under Armour is just beginning to make its name here in Australia and so NOW is the time to be getting in on the gossip! Today im bringing you not only Under Armour, but 70% OFF RRP on their range! Feel free to get some for yourself or your own business. Buy 1, 2, 3, 50, 1000 its completely up to you! These garments are really, REALLY comfortable and awesome to workout in! you can get them custom designed if needed with your own business logo or even as promotional shirts for events you may be participating in such as Tough Mudder which is coming up soon! Whatever the occasion be sure to check out the links on the flyer below for some truly amazing savings!

Cow’s Milk is the Perfect Food for Baby Calves
But Many Doctors Agree:
It is Not Healthy for Humans
by Michael Dye


People who have been taught that cow’s milk is the “perfect food” may be shocked to hear many prominent medical doctors are now saying dairy consumption is a contributing factor in nearly two dozen diseases of children and adults.

Doctors say cow’s milk can lead to iron deficiency anemia, allergies, diarrhea, heart disease, colic, cramps, gastrointestinal bleeding, sinusitis, skin rashes, acne, increased frequency of colds and flus, arthritis, diabetes, ear infections, osteoporosis, asthma, autoimmune diseases, and more, possibly even lung cancer, multiple sclerosis and non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

In American society, one of the most sacred of all sacred cows is the milk of the cow itself. Cow’s milk is more American than apple pie, but that’s because apple pie doesn’t have Congressional lobbyists and a multi-million dollar advertising budget. Most parents wouldn’t think of raising their children without the benefit of cow’s milk to help their little bones to grow big and strong. Its silky, white texture is the very epitome of our concept of wholesome purity.

Our “nutritional education” in school (funded in part by the dairy industry) taught us that dairy products are one of the four basic food groups we all need for proper nutrition. And with more than 60 of the most powerful Congressional leaders in Washington receiving campaign contributions from the National Dairy Council, we can be assured that dairy products are well-entrenched as a major staple of our government-sponsored school lunch programs.

Cow’s milk is promoted as the “perfect food” for humans, and especially for our children. This advertising has put such a strong emphasis on the health of our children that some people view milk commercials as more of a public service announcement than an attempt to sell a product. These ads have told us “Milk is a Natural,” “Everybody Needs Milk,” “Milk is the Perfect Food,” etc. This advertising has served its purpose well because the average American consumes 375 pounds of dairy products a year. One out of every seven dollars spent on groceries in the U.S. goes to buy dairy products.

But to gauge the full impact of this promotion, we must consider more than just the dollar amount spent on dairy products. We must also consider the impact this massive advertising, promotion, lobbying, “nutritional education” and public relations effort has had by creating a widely-held perception of cow’s milk as a very wholesome and healthy product. This promotion has been so effective that it is common for even people who give up meat to still feel that they should continue consuming dairy products to ensure they receive sufficient protein or calcium. People buy cow’s milk for their families based on the premise that this product provides essential nutrition, helps to build a healthy body, and that indeed, their precious health may be in jeopardy if they do not drink milk.

If this is the premise on which Americans spend an incredible chunk of their grocery bill to provide for the health and nutrition of their loved ones, we need to further examine this premise.

Despite what the dairy industry has led us to believe, many medical doctors and nutritionists are now saying that cow’s milk is not healthy for human consumption, and that it can lead to many serious diseases. When you look at the credentials of the doctors making these statements, it would be hard for the dairy industry to accuse these physicians of being on the lunatic fringe of the medical world.

Frank Oski, M.D., author of Don’t Drink Your Milk! is the Director of the Department of Pediatrics of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and Physician-in-Chief of the Johns Hopkins Children’s Center. He is the author, co-author, editor or co-editor of 19 medical textbooks and has written 290 medical manuscripts.

In the first chapter of his book, Dr. Oski states, “The fact is: the drinking of cow milk has been linked to iron-deficiency anemia in infants and children; it has been named as the cause of cramps and diarrhea in much of the world’s population, and the cause of multiple forms of allergy as well; and the possibility has been raised that it may play a central role in the origins of atherosclerosis and heart attacks.”

Dr. Oski comments, “Being against cow milk is equated with being un-American,” but still he notes, “Among physicians, so much concern has been voiced about the potential hazards of cow milk that the Committee on Nutrition of the prestigious American Academy of Pediatrics, the institutional voice of practicing pediatricians, released a report entitled, “Should Milk Drinking by Children Be Discouraged?’ Although the Academy’s answer to this question has (as of this writing) been a qualified ‘maybe,’ the fact that the question was raised at all is testimony to the growing concern about this product, which for so long was viewed as sacred as the proverbial goodness of mother and apple pie.”

Another outspoken critic of cow’s milk is Dr. William Ellis, a retired osteopathic physician and surgeon in Arlington, Texas, who has researched the effects of dairy products for 42 years. Dr. Ellis is listed in Marquis’ Who’s Who in the East, Leaders of American Science, the Dictionary of International Biography and Two Thousand Men of Achievement. Dr. Ellis says dairy products are “simply no good for humans… There is overwhelming evidence that milk and milk products are harmful to many people, both adults and infants. Milk is a contributing factor in constipation, chronic fatigue, arthritis, headaches, muscle cramps, obesity, allergies and heart problems.”

In Washington D.C. based pediatrician Dr. Russell Bunai was asked what single change in the American diet would produce the greatest health benefit, his answer was, “Eliminating dairy products.”

Dr. Christiane Northrup, a gynecologist in Yarmouth, Maine, states, “Dairy is a tremendous mucus producer and a burden on the respiratory, digestive and immune systems.” Dr. Northrup says when patients “eliminate dairy products for an extended period and eat a balanced diet, they suffer less from colds and sinus infections.”

Dr. Oski’s book includes a letter written by Dr. J. Dan Baggett, a pediatrician in Alabama who describes his experience after six years of recommending that all his patients eliminate cow’s milk from their diets. He writes, “In general, they cooperate much better than I had earlier anticipated except for the pre-teenagers and teenagers.” Dr. Baggett’s letter, states in part:

“During the years 1963 through 1967, I referred an average of four appendectomy cases per year. During the past five and a half years, I have referred only two patients for appendectomy, the last one being three years ago. Both of these children were professed milk guzzlers.

I do not have a single patient with active asthma. In fact, I have nearly forgotten how to prescribe for them.

Perhaps the most significant thing I have learned is that Group A beta-hemolytic streptococcus germ will not, under ordinary circumstances, establish an infection in a child kept on an absolutely no-milk-protein dietary regimen. I have been aware of this for the past two and a half years and, so far, there have been no exceptions. Any time a patient of mine is found to have streptococcal pharyngitis or pyoderma, we can establish by history that he has ingested milk protein within five days prior to onset of symptoms or signs bringing him to the office.

I now admit an average of 12-14 patients per year to the hospital. Their average hospital stay is three days. Between 1963 and 1967, I admitted an average of 100+ patients to the hospital per year. Their average stay was five days.”

So how can all these medical statements be explained in light of what we have been taught all of our life about milk? Remember “Milk is the Perfect Food”… “Milk is a Natural”… “Everybody Needs Milk.” Are we talking about the same food here?

Perhaps we are not. It would appear that promoters of cow’s milk are creating advertising statements that are meant to appeal on a subconscious level to our positive feelings and experiences with human breast milk. All mammals, including humans, are intended to be nourished during infancy by milk from their mother. Part of the very definition of a mammal is that the female of the species has milk-producing glands in her breasts which provide nourishment for her young. Each species of mammal produces its unique type of milk designed specifically to strengthen the immune system and provide nourishment for their babies, which are weaned after their birth weight has approximately tripled.

So, absolutely yes, “milk is a natural”… in the proper context. It is perfectly natural for infant mammals, including humans, to be nourished exclusively by milk from their mother’s breasts. So if we are talking about human breast milk for babies, yes, “milk is the perfect food.” And yes, during infancy when we have no teeth for eating solid food, and as we need to strengthen our immune system, “everybody needs milk.”

I have just quoted three of the most popular advertising slogans of the dairy industry and they are undisputably as true as any words that could be spoken on the subject of nutrition… if they are applied to a baby’s need for human breast milk. In fact, not one of the doctors I have quoted in describing the terrible problems caused by cow’s milk would disagree that milk is a natural, milk is the perfect food or that everybody needs milk, in this context.
But whoa.

The dairy industry has begun with these three statements that we all know are true about a baby’s need for human breast milk, and twisted them out of context to apply them to a completely different product they are selling. And the sad result is that most Americans still think these noble statements about our babies needing to suckle their mother’s breast milk are true when applied to the advertising claim that humans of all ages need to buy and drink cow’s milk.

So, in an effort to undo the damage caused by this manipulation, let us consider the differences in human breast milk versus cow’s milk, and further examine the physical problems caused by humans trying to subsist on the milk of another species well past the age when any mammal should be drinking any milk.

A good place to start in analyzing the distinction between milk of different species is to begin to understand how nature works. As Dr. Oski explains in Don’t Drink Your Milk! “The milk of each species appears to have been specifically designed to protect the young of that species. Cross-feeding does not work. Heating, sterilization, or modification of the milk in any way destroys the protection.”

So, how much of a difference is there between a human baby drinking the milk of its mother versus drinking the milk of a cow? Dr. Oski cites a “study of over twenty thousand infants conducted in Chicago as far back as the 1930s… The overall death rate for the babies raised on human milk was 1.5 deaths per 1,000 infants while the death rate in the babies fed cow milk was 84.7 per 1,000 during the first nine months of life. The death rate from gastrointestinal infections was forty times higher in the non-breast-fed infants, while the death rate from respiratory infections was 120 times higher. An earlier analysis involving infants in eight American cities showed similar results. Infants fed on cow milk had a twenty times greater chance of dying during the first six months of life.”

Dr. Michael Taylor, a Chiropractic Physician, doctoral candidate to become a Doctor of Nutrition and fellow of the American Academy of Orthomolecular Medicine, agrees, stating, “It is a dietary error to cross species to get milk from another animal.” He notes there is a tremendous difference between human babies and baby calves, and a corresponding difference between the milk that is intended to nourish human babies and baby calves. In an interview on “Let’s Eat,” a Seventh-day Adventist television program, Dr. Taylor notes that human infants take about 180 days to double their birth weight, and that human milk is 5 to 7 percent protein. Calves require only 45 days to double their birth weight and cow’s milk is 15 percent protein.
In addition to the difference in the amount of protein in these two different types of milk, there are also major differences in the composition of this protein. The primary type of protein in cow’s milk is casein. Cow’s milk has 20 times as much casein as human milk, which makes the protein from cow’s milk difficult or impossible for humans to assimilate, according to Dr. John R. Christopher, N.D., M.H.

Protein composes 15 percent of the human body and when this protein cannot be properly broken down, it weakens the immune system, causing allergies and many other problems. Allergies caused by cow’s milk are extremely common. In fact, Dr. Taylor states that when a single food can be isolated as the cause of an allergy, 60 percent of the time, that food is cow’s milk. Dr. Ellis notes that symptoms of this allergic reaction to cow’s milk in infants can include asthma, nasal congestion, skin rash, chest infections, irritability and fatigue.

Dr. Oski’s book cites evidence from Dr. Joyce Gryboski, director of the Pediatric Gastrointestinal Clinic at Yale University School of Medicine, who states “they see at least one child a week who is referred for evaluation of chronic diarrhea and proves to have nothing more than an allergy to cow milk.”

Another reason many people suffer various symptoms of disease from drinking milk is that, according to Dr. Oski, the majority of the world’s adult population is “lactose intolerant,” meaning they cannot digest lactose, the sugar in milk (cow’s milk and human milk). An enzyme known as lactase is required to digest lactose, and Dr. Oski states that “between the age of one and a half and four years most individuals gradually lose the lactase activity in their small intestine. This appears to be a normal process that accompanies maturation…. Most people do it. All animals do it. It reflects the fact that nature never intended lactose-containing foods, such as milk, to be consumed after the normal weaning period.”

In fact, so many people have bad reactions to drinking cow’s milk that in 1974 the Federal Trade Commission felt compelled to take legal action against advertising claims made by the California Milk Producers.
The ads claimed “Everybody Needs Milk.” The FTC prosecuted the milk producers for “false, misleading and deceptive” advertising. The FTC complaint cited the high incidence of lactose intolerance, allergies caused by cow’s milk and the increased risk of heart disease. The FTC won and the milk producers had to come up with a new slogan for their ads: “Milk Has Something for Everybody.”

One medical researcher, Dr. Kevin McGrady, commented, “Milk has something for everybody all right — higher blood cholesterol, and increased risk of heart disease and stroke.”

Three reasons cited by medical researchers that dairy products contribute to heart disease are their high content of cholesterol and fat, along with an enzyme in cow’s milk called xanthine oxidase (XO). This enzyme, which creates problems only when milk is homogenized, causes heart disease by damaging arteries. Explaining the significance of XO, Dr. Ellis cites research by Dr. Kurt Oster, Chief of Cardiology at Park City Hospital in Bridgeport, Connecticut:

From 1971 to 1974, we studied 75 patients with angina pectoris (chest pain due to heart disease) and arteriosclerosis (hardening of the arteries). All the patients were taken off milk and given folic acid (a B-vitamin) and ascorbic acid (vitamin C), both of which combat the action of XO. The results were dramatic. Chest pains decreased, symptoms lessened, and each of those patients is doing great today.”

Dr. Oster’s article states that Dr. Kurt Esselbacher, Chairman of the Department of the Harvard Medical School, was in full agreement. Dr. Esselbacher writes: “Homogenized milk, because of its XO content, is one of the major causes of heart disease in the U.S.”

Dr. Oski warns, “The consumption of cow milk from an early age may have life-long consequences… One pathologist has reviewed the heart vessels of over 1,500 children and adolescents who had died as a result of accidents…. These children and adolescents had not died as a result of disease, yet many of them showed signs of diseased arteries in the heart…. The majority of children with normal blood vessels had been breast-fed; the majority of children with diseased vessels had been fed cow milk or cow milk based formulas. It is therefore reasonable to conclude that the differences between human milk and cow milk were responsible for the early changes in the coronary arteries.”

But don’t we need to drink milk to get calcium? No. The best way to add calcium to your diet is to eat more fresh green vegetables. Cow’s milk is high in calcium, but Dr. Ellis explains, the problem is that it is in a form that cannot be assimilated very well by humans. Dr. Ellis states, “Thousands and thousands of blood tests I’ve conducted show that people who drink 3 or 4 glasses of milk a day invariably had the lowest levels of blood calcium.”

Dr. Ellis adds, “Low levels of blood calcium correspond with irritability and headaches. In addition, the low calcium level in milk-drinkers also explains why milk-drinkers are prone to have muscle spasms and cramps. Since calcium is necessary for muscles to relax, a lack of calcium causes muscle cramps, etc.”
One of the most serious problems caused by a calcium deficiency is osteoporosis, a condition characterized by the loss of 50 to 75 percent of the person’s original bone material. In the U.S., 25 percent of 65-year-old women suffer from osteoporosis. Their bones become brittle and easily broken. They can crack a rib from something as minor as a sneeze.

Our pervasive dairy advertising has led to one of the most commonly held, and solidly disproved, fallacies about bones, which is that the best way to build strong bones is to increase calcium consumption by drinking plenty of milk. Actually, the consensus among leading medical researchers is that the best way for most people to increase their calcium level and strengthen their bones is to reduce their protein intake, and specifically to reduce consumption of animal products. Research has conclusively shown we can do more to increase the calcium level in our bones by reducing protein intake than by increasing calcium intake. The reason is that animal products and other sources of high protein are very acidic, and the blood stream must balance this acidic condition by absorbing alkaline minerals such as calcium from the bone structure. Thus, numerous studies, including those published in the Aug. 22, 1984 Medical Tribune and the March 1983 Journal of Clinical Nutrition, have found that vegetarians have much stronger bones than meat-eaters. Indeed, the Journal of Clinical Nutrition article found that by age 65, meat-eaters had five to six times as much measurable bone loss as vegetarians.

Speaking of minerals, another serious problem caused by consumption of cow’s milk is iron-deficiency anemia. Dr. Oski notes that 15 to 20 percent of children under age 2 in the U.S. suffer from iron-deficiency anemia. Cow’s milk contributes to this condition in two ways.

First, he notes that cow’s milk is extremely low in iron, containing less than 1 milligram of iron per quart. Because of this, he writes that it is estimated that a 1- year-old would need to drink 24 quarts of cow’s milk a day to meet his iron requirements, which would be impossible. He states many infants may drink from one to two quarts of cow’s milk a day, which satisfies their hunger to the point that they do no have the appetite to consume enough of other foods that do have a high iron content.
The second way that cow’s milk leads to iron-deficiency anemia in many infants is a form of gastrointestinal bleeding caused by increased mucus and diarrhea associated with dairy consumption. “It is estimated that half the iron-deficiency in infants in the United States is primarily the result of this form of cow milk induced gastrointestinal bleeding,” Dr. Oski writes. “Mucus is frequent and some stools contain obvious traces of bright red blood… The diarrhea impairs the infant’s ability to retain nutrients from his feedings. In addition, the changes produced in the gastrointestinal tract by the allergic reaction result in seepage of the child’s own blood into the gut. This loss of plasma and red cells leads to a lowering of the infant’s blood protein level and to the development of anemia.”

The mucus created by dairy products causes other problems as well. It is well-known that dairy products cause excessive mucus in the lungs, sinuses and intestines. Dr. Ellis notes this excess mucus in the breathing passages contributes to many respiratory problems and that mucus hardens to form a coating on the inner wall of the intestines that leads to poor absorption of nutrients, which can cause chronic fatigue. This mucus also causes constipation, which can lead to many other problems.

Two very common problems with infants are colic and ear infections, both of which can be caused by cow’s milk. Medical studies have found cow’s milk can contribute to these problems either directly, when the infant drinks cow’s milk, or indirectly, when the infant breast feeds from a mother who has been consuming dairy products.

Colic, suffered by one out of every five infants in the U.S., is characterized by severe stomach cramps. The July/August 1994 issue of Natural Health reports, “When a mother eats dairy products, milk proteins pass into her breast milk and end up in the baby’s blood; some studies have found that cow’s milk proteins (from milk drunk by the mother) might trigger colick-like symptoms in infants fed only human milk and no cow’s milk.”
Concerning ear infections, Dr. Northrup states, “You just don’t see this painful condition among infants and children who aren’t getting cow’s milk into their systems.”

The Natural Health article also notes, “Removing dairy from the diet has been shown to shrink enlarged tonsils and adenoids, indicating relief for the immune system. Similarly, doctors experimenting with dairy-free diets often report a marked reduction in colds, flus, sinusitis and ear infections.”

Another common problem for children is the bellyache. Dr. Oski states in his book that up to 10 percent of all children in this country suffer from a syndrome known as “recurrent abdominal pain of childhood.” He says studies performed in Boston and San Francisco each concluded “that about one-third of such children had their symptoms on the basis of lactose intolerance. The simple solution was to remove all milk and milk-containing foods from the diet and watch for signs of improvement.”

The Natural Health article also notes that antigens in cow’s milk may contribute to arthritis and osteoarthritis. “When antibody-antigen complexes (resulting from an immune response) are deposited in the joints, pain, swelling, redness and stiffness result; these complexes increase in arthritic people who eat dairy products, and the pain fades rapidly after patients eliminate dairy products from their diets. In a study published in Scandinavian Journal of Rheumatology, when people with rheumatoid arthritis fasted on water, fruit and vegetable juices, and tea for seven to ten days, their joint pain and stiffness were greatly reduced. When they ate a lacto-ovo-vegetarian diet (including only milk and eggs as animal foods), the symptoms became aggravated and they remained ill.”

A 1992 report in The New England Journal of Medicine also notes that cow’s milk can contribute to juvenile diabetes and autoimmune diseases by impairing the ability of the pancreas to produce insulin.

The Natural Health article also states a 1989 study published in Nutrition and Cancer found a link between consumption of cow’s milk and butter with the risk of developing non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, a cancer of the immune system. The article adds, “High levels of the cow’s milk protein beta-lactoglobulin have also been found in the blood of lung cancer patients, suggesting a link with this cancer as well.”
Dr. Oski’s book also cites studies by two scientists from the University of Michigan who have conducted extensive research on factors associated with multiple sclerosis. There is an unusual geographic distribution of MS victims in the U.S. and throughout the world, which has baffled medical researchers for decades. This distribution of MS victims has no correlation to wealth, education or quality of medical care. Dr. Oski notes the Michigan scientists found in this pattern in the U.S. and 21 other countries, “the only significant link was between multiple sclerosis and average milk consumption.”

Dr. Oski’s book even cites a possible link between excessive consumption of cow’s milk and juvenile delinquency, based on a study conducted in Tacoma, Wash. Dr. Oski writes, “When the diets of young criminals were contrasted with those of adolescents from a similar background, it was found that the juvenile delinquents consumed almost ten times the amount of milk that was drunk by the control group. The juvenile offenders ate less fruit, nuts and vegetables.”

When a reasonable person considers all this evidence, it would be difficult to still believe cow’s milk is healthy for human consumption. So, what do we drink instead? Dr. Oski partly answers this question by writing, “For the newborn infant, there are two obvious alternatives — the right and left breast of the healthy mother.”

After a child is weaned, there is no reason to drink any milk. We shouldn’t drink any liquid with our meals because this dilutes our digestive fluids. When we are thirsty, we should drink distilled water. Or, if you want to drink something nutritional between meals, the best choice is freshly-extracted vegetable juice.

When accepted as truth by large numbers of people without investigation, a false myth can cause profound cultural change. Consider the vast numbers of people who have been seduced into drinking milk as a staple thinking one thing when the opposite is actually true. The dairy industry is well aware of the damage to health caused by consuming processed cow’s milk derived from animals that are neither well or fed correctly. We are what we eat eats. So what corporations often do to protect their bottom line is claim the opposite of truth as fact and then make this claim to fame their crowning marketing virtue.

Most people have heard of muscle memory. When a person starts lifting weights after a lay off, it’s much easier for them to return to their previous levels of size and strength than it was to get there the first time around. It also takes less time. Therefore the muscle fibers must obviously “remember” their former state.

Muscle fibers do not remember anything. Muscle fibers do not have a separate independent “mind” of their own. All memory is retrieved from inside the brain which commands all action and response. Like everything else on this planet muscle fibers simply adapt to the environment in which they are exposed to or bathed in. If they are forced to contract with a specific load causing stress, disruption and microfilament damage, they will adapt and remodel provided the conditions required for such adaptations are met. If there is insufficient or no load they will return to their former state and continue wasting in the absence of sufficient stimulation. What we don’t use we lose. It’s called disuse atrophy.

Here’s the reason why progress is made more quickly the second, third or whatever time around, provided ones current state of health does not act as a biochemical hindrance. Our brains have the capacity to store data and skills learned from the past in the form of emotion and memory. The portion of the brain associated with memory includes the cortex of the frontal, parietal, occipital and temporal lobes, parts of the limbic system including the hippocampus and amygdaloid nucleus, and the diencephalon.

Think of the first time you learned to ride a bike. Once the ability to balance a bicycle in motion is acquired and stored in our neurons it is never lost. There might be an initial wobbly period if we hop on a bike 20 years after our last ride, but the brain, not the muscle fibers that perform the work, will kick in and command the body to fulfill the desired request using whatever systems and muscle fibers are required provided they are functional and in good working order. The information stored as memory is drawn from deep inside the brain which then controls and commands everything else, including voluntary skeletal muscle fibers.

The education, knowledge and information we acquire originally when we first start training is never lost. After a lay off no time is wasted developing a relationship with the equipment. Like our first dinner date compared to 20 years of marriage, we don’t experience the same initial stages of bumbling, shyness, formality and integration each time we sit down for dinner. After 6 months to 2 years of training for the first time, most of us develop an understanding of exercise training gained only by experience. We learn how to train. We get the feel of it. We learn how we respond individually to free weights, machines, cables, pulleys, weight stacks, sets and reps on so on. It’s called a learning curve and it;s a one time deal. If we knew what we now know when we first started, we would have saved ourselves both time and energy. In other words muscle memory is simply the retrieval of information previously learned and applied with greater efficiency.

Physiologists know that any skeletal muscle activity that is learned can become essentially automatic with practice. Muscle memory is therefore a common term for neuromuscular facilitation, which is the process of the neuromuscular system memorizing motor skills. We know that repetition is the mother of skill and that practice makes permanent. After repeating the same movement over and over again, the movement seemingly becomes second nature. It’s like we’re not paying attention but of course it’s all coming from the same region of the brain that controls everything.

It is now well known that the effects of nutrition and training significantly influence genetic expression. The longer we carry muscle mass or excess fat the more the body learns from that reality or physical state and recognizes it as “normal”. This is known as the set-point theory. Our physical and mental state influence precise neurological, immunological and hormonal feedback loops that in turn influence our state. The longer we sustain a certain state the more likely the body will maintain that state, however, there are other forces outside of ourselves to contend with, such as oxidation, glycation, gravity and entropy. Left unattended all lean functional mass slowly slips away because as a whole, life as we know it is primarily catabolic.

A recent theory known as multi-nucleation might also be related to the phenomenon of muscle memory. Resistance training is known to create higher numbers of nuclei in muscle fibers. These nuclei may be retained even during non-use so that when skeletal muscle is once again exposed to resistance exercise and optimum nutrition, new protein synthesis can occur at an accelerated rate.

The next time you lift a weight ask yourself this, “Who’s lifting the weight?”. The answer is always the same. Put your mind in your muscle and your muscle in your mind. When the two become one you have now achieved something few people will ever experience.

I am after a client to train for an 8 week weight loss competition. Criteria for this place are:

MALE
100KG +
aged 18-25
Live in/near Richmond, Victoria, Australia

Yes, thats it! If you match this criteria, shoot me an email and tell me about yourself. This place does come at a price.

trent.bulm.91@hotmail.com

All you need to do is write a 500 word email to tell me about yourself:

Why should i chose you?
Why are you so motivated to say goodbye to the kilos?
Why havn’t you been able to lose the kilos before?
What would you do if you win?
How would you feel if you lose 30KG+ in 8 weeks?

I have been personal training for over 2 years now at Genesis in Richmond and this is where i will be training you.

What is included in training with me?
Gym membership for the 8 weeks
Unlimited personal training for the 8 weeks
Ongoing support and motivation
Nutritional support and help
And best of all, GUARANTEED weight loss!!

If your bursting with spirit and wanting to give it a shot, send me an email with the above criteria and you will go into a list of applicants who will also be applying for the place. There is ONLY ONE PLACE for this opportunity so please don’t miss it!! This is a once off personal training promotion.

I look forward to hearing from all of your keen responses.

Regards,
Trent B.

There are races of people who are all slim, who are stronger and faster than us. They all have straight teeth and perfect eyesight. Arthritis, diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, stroke, depression, schizophrenia and cancer are absolute rarities for them. These people are the last 84 tribes of hunter-gatherers in the world. They share a secret that is over 2 million years old. Their secret is their diet- a diet that has changed little from that of the first humans 2 million years ago, and their predecessors up to 7 million years ago. Theirs is the diet that man evolved on, the diet that is coded for in our genes. It has some major differences to the diet of “civilization”. You are in for a few big surprises.

The diet is usually referred to as the “Paleolithic Diet” referring to the Paleolithic or Stone Age era. It is also referred to as the “Stone Age Diet”, “Cave Man Diet” or the “Hunter-Gatherer Diet”. More romantic souls like to think of it as the diet that was eaten in the “Garden of Eden” and they are correct in thinking so.

The basic principles of the Paleolithic Diet are so simple that most high school students can understand them. Within 15 minutes from now you will grasp the major elements. At the technical level, Paleolithic Diet Theory has a depth and breadth that is unmatched by all other dietary theories. Paleolithic Diet Theory presents a fully integrated, holistic, comprehensive dietary theory combining the best features of all other dietary theories, eliminating the worst features and simplifying it all.

All major dietary components are covered- (i.e. vitamins, fats, protein, fats, carbohydrates, antioxidants and phytosterols etc). This is for the simple reason that it is the only diet that is coded for in our genes- it contains only those foods that were “on the table” during our long evolution, and discards those which were not. Have you ever wondered why almost everybody feels the need to take vitamin supplementsat times, or why so many people feel the need to “detoxify” their system? There are very real reasons for this that you will soon understand. Now, come with me, I’d like to share the secret with you…

Basics Of The Paleolithic Diet…

For millions of years, humans and their relatives have eaten meat, fish, fowl and the leaves, roots and fruits of many plants. One big obstacle to getting more calories from the environment is the fact that many plants are inedible. Grains, beans and potatoes are full of energy but all are inedible in the raw state as they contain many toxins. There is no doubt about that- please don’t try to eat them raw, they can make you very sick.

Around 10,000 years ago, an enormous breakthrough was made- a breakthrough that was to change the course of history, and our diet, forever. This breakthrough was the discovery that cooking these foods made them edible- the heat destroyed enough toxins to render them edible. Grains include wheat, corn, barley, rice, sorghum, millet and oats. Grain based foods also include products such as flour, bread, noodles and pasta. These foods entered the menu of New Stone Age (Neolithic) man, and Paleolithic diet buffs often refer to them as Neolithic foods.

The cooking of grains, beans and potatoes had an enormous effect on our food intake- perhaps doubling the number of calories that we could obtain from the plant foods in our environment. Other advantages were soon obvious with these foods:

· they could store for long periods (refrigeration of course being unavailable in those days)

· they were dense in calories- ie a small weight contains a lot of calories, enabling easy transport

· the food was also the seed of the plant- later allowing ready farming of the species

These advantages made it much easier to store and transport food. We could more easily store food for winter, and for nomads and travelers to carry supplies. Food storage also enabled surpluses to be stored, and this in turn made it possible to free some people from food gathering to become specialists in other activities, such as builders, warriors and rulers. This in turn set us on the course to modern day civilization. Despite these advantages, our genes were never developed with grains, beans and potatoes and were not in tune with them, and still are not. Man soon improved further on these advances- by farming plants and animals.

Instead of being able to eat only a fraction of the animal and plant life in an area, farming allows us to fill a particular area with a large number of edible plants and animals. This in turn increases the number of calories that we can obtain from an area by some 10 to 100 fold or more. Then followed the harnessing of dairy products, which allow man to obtain far more calories from the animal over its lifetime than if it were simply slaughtered for meat. Dairy products are interesting as they combine a variety of components- some of which our genes were ready for and some not. Whist cows milk is ideal for calves, there are several very important differences between it and human milk. For example, the brain of a calf is only a tiny fraction of its body weight whereas humans have very big brains. Not surprisingly, cows milk is low in critical nutrients for brain development, particularly omeg 3 fats.

Paleolithic Diet buffs refer to the new foods as Neolithic foods and the old as Paleolithic Diet foods. In simple terms we see Neolithic as bad and Paleolithic as good. Since then, some other substances have entered the diet- particularly salt and sugar, and more recently a litany of chemicals including firstly caffeine then all other additives, colourings, preservatives, pesticides etc.

Grains, Beans and Potatoes (GBP) share the following characteristics:

· They are all toxic when raw- there is no doubt about this- it is a fact that no competent source would dispute- they can be extremely dangerous and it is important never to eat them raw or undercooked. These toxins include enzyme blockers, lectins and other types.

 · Cooking destroys most but not all of the toxins. Insufficient cooking can lead to sickness such as acute gastroenteritis.

· They are all rich sources of carbohydrate, and once cooked this is often rapidly digestible-giving a high glycemic index (sugar spike).

· They are extremely poor sources of vitamins (particularly vitamins A, B-group, folic acid and C), minerals, antioxidants and phytosterols.

Therefore diets high in grains beans and potatoes (GBP):

· Contain toxins in small amounts

· Have a high glycemic index (ie have a similar effect to raw sugar on blood glucose levels)

· Are low in many vitamins, minerals, antioxidants and phytosterols- ie they are the original “empty calories”

· Have problems caused by the GBP displacing other foods

As grains, beans and potatoes form such a large proportion of the modern diet, you can now understand why it is so common for people to feel they need supplements or that they need to detoxify (ie that they have toxins in their system)- indeed both feelings are absolutely correct. Unfortunately, we don’t necessarily realize which supplements we need, and ironically when people go on detoxification diets they unfortunately often consume even more Neolithic foods (eg soy beans) and therefore more toxins than usual (perhaps they sometimes benefit from a change in toxins).

The essentials of the Paleolithic Diet are:

Eat none of the following:

· Grains- including bread, pasta, noodles

· Beans- including string beans, kidney beans, lentils, peanuts, snow-peas and peas

· Potatoes

· Dairy products

· Sugar

· Salt

Eat the following:

· Meat, chicken and fish

· Eggs

· Fruit

· Vegetables (especially root vegetables, but definitely not including potatoes or sweet potatoes)

· Nuts, eg. walnuts, brazil nuts, macadamia, almond. Do not eat peanuts (a bean) or cashews (a family of their own)

· Berries- strawberries, blueberries, raspberries etc.

 Try to increase your intake of:

· Root vegetables- carrots, turnips, parsnips, rutabagas, Swedes

· Organ meats- liver and kidneys (I accept that many people find these unpalatable and won’t eat them)

Expect some minor tuning problems- don’t worry, you can deal with them:

· It will take some time for your body to adjust to the changes after all these years. There is a huge surge in your vitamin intake. There is a huge decrease in your toxin intake.

If you would like any more information on what to eat, here is a list of foods/recipies that you can look at to get started.

For any more information – You can read the rest of this article here. Alternatevly, click here for a simplified version of what this diet is all about. Enjoy!

I Think This Is All That Needs To Be Said…Enjoy!

Today everyone, and i mean literally EVERYONE is seeking the best new and innovative ideas on how to lose fat FAST! Diets these days range from the Acai Berry diet (Thanks Shane Warne) to other more ritual diets such as Breatharianism. (If you’ve never heard of this before, check it out! – What a load of crap!) But in more recent years you most likely would have heard of meal replacements. This is not really a ‘Diet’ as such however, it does hinder on projecting your diet into a more ‘healthy’ way.

First, lets look at the Pros Vs. Cons of taking Meal Replacements…

Pro’s:

  • Single-serve pre-packaged portions make it easy to keep on track
  • You know exactly how many kilojoules/calories you’ve consumed
  • There’s no choice so you have no opportunity to stray
  • They are quick and convenient making them easy to use at work
  • They keep you out of the kitchen (or fast food court) and away from temptation.

Cons:

  • They don’t teach you how to make healthy choices from real food which confronts you every day
  • They don’t help you to learn the kilojoule/calorie content of a normal diet
  • Many are sweet tasting, encouraging a ‘sweet tooth’
  • They can pall after a while – there are only so many “chocolate or vanilla shakes” you can take
  • They can be expensive.

All-in-all, apart from the lacking in knowledge or ‘healthier’ options, anyone may think that it is definately a great alternative to start off on. Whilst takers start on these meal replacements they can also take the time to learn about nutritious foods to implement in place of the shakes later on.

I agree, if this is something you can keep by then i urge you to go down to the shops before finishing the next sentence and get yourself some! HOWEVER if you are just looking for an easy option to lose weight, like 99.9% of the obese/morbidly obese population are, then i am telling you now, you will fail.

I tell my clients: If your in this for the long run, im willing to teach you everything you need to know about how to lose weight and keep it off along the track. BUT if you are just looking for a quick ‘fix’ and you want to go on the ‘most strict’ diet to lose weight by the end of the week, then ill tell you to go home now. At some point, when you realise that its impossible to gradually lower your body fat, you will be doing the same.

Think of it this way: If you could call on the most reputible business for a product that will garentee weight loss in terms of FAT, then why is the Population getting heavier? All that these companies want, is YOUR money, in THEIR pockets. The supplement industry on its own is worth over 59.5 BILLION dollars! (YES! Thats Australian Dollars!) If your looking for weight loss, why enter a market with such an outstanding profit? Something i can garentee you is if you train with me, or someone alike (Reputable Fitness Professional) then we CAN garentee you on-going weight loss. What would you pay to lose the dreaded kilo’s and gain confidence to wear things youd never imagined? I WILL get you there!

After looking around the Celebrity Slim website i came accross the ‘Ask A Celebrity Slim Staff Member’ page. I was astounded at what questions were being asked!

  • What, other than water can i drink?
  • HELP! Im allergic to nuts but need to snack.

People who ask these sort of questions are the ones who NEED either Personal Trainers or a pretty damn good, convincing, nutritionalist! Its these sort of people who really need the extra help in ensuring that they get what they want.

What Are Meal Replacements Made From:

Generally they’re made from non-fat milk powder with added vitamins and minerals. Some have a little fibre (psyllium or guar) added so you don’t get constipated and also feel fuller. Some have a probiotic, omega-3 or soy protein present so they sound more impressive too! – Think of them as a milk drink combined with a vitamin pill…

Really, theyre made in the most cheap way imaginable and sold and the most expensive price imaginable. Although a few dollars per serving doesnt seem like much, all it is is some processed and refined powder with a few (In miniscule amounts normally) Vitamins/Minerals. These would cost manufactuers a few cents (If that) to produce and theyre sold at around 500% Profit! – Thats PER SERVE!

 

Conclusion:

The problem is, people just want other options or alternatives that are quick, convenient and easy. They move from one product to the next. They avoid exercise and the burning desire to succeed through reality. If losing the kilos is what you REALLY want, you will succeed. (IF you keep at it) Dont feed your money into the Supplement industry like millions of others are, invest in something that will garentee results! Fitness Professionals. We work, live, breathe and succeed in the area of weight loss, so why wait. Make it your new years resolution and bite the dust. You WILL thank me and you WILL never look back.

Check out this link if your having some troubles in the supermarket:

http://daa.asn.au/hesy/

The purpose of this article to help separate steroid facts from the government propoganda and exaggerations. My purpose in this thread is not to be pro or against steroids, but to be unbiased looking at it from my own experience and what the research says on the issue. I will talk about the various symptoms of steroid use and whether it’s actually a myth, fact, or possible. Possible means it is either happening in susceptible people or there is lack of scientific research to prove it as a fact. Also note this article is for steroid users taking high doses of steroids and not those who are taking testosterone prescribed through doctor to maintain healthy testosterone levels for HRT (hormone replacement therapy).

– Steroids cause BPH (Benign Prostate Hyperplasia)

Possible. BPH is enlargement of the prostate, that usually effects only older men. But, if you use steroids for years, then BPH will probably affect you. Getting BPH from steroids, would depend on how susceptible you are and how long you have used Steroids. Many users of steroids notice a enlarging of their prostate after a while on cycle, making it slighlty more difficult to urinate. There is controversy over what really causes BPH naturally in men, but DHT is thought to be just one possible component. DHT is converted from testosterone in the body and is 3.5 times more androgenic than testosterone. DHT is what gives men their masculinizing sex effects on the body. All androgenic steroids stimulate the same receptors on the prostate (to various degrees called the androgenic to anabolic ratio) in the same way DHT does.

Another mechanism by which BPH might be caused from steroid use, is due to low testosterone levels post cycle. Low testosterone levels and high estrogen, like as seen with post cycle and hypo gonadal men, can actually cause BPH. Many men have had a reduction in BPH when they were treated clinically with testosterone replacement therapy for low testosterone. The prostate usually shrinks back eventually after a steroid cycle, once your testosterone levels get back to normal, but over time I would think this may lead to a more permanent enlargement effect.

– Steroids increase risk of prostate cancer

Myth. For years doctors thought testosterone (steroids) caused prostate cancer itself by “awakening” a slow hidden growing cancer. This is why men who went on HRT (hormone replacement therapy), would get a PSA test to assess their risk for prostate cancer. As time goes on more and more studies are showing prostate cancer is not due to testosterone levels at all and therefore steroid use wouldn’t have any correlation with prostate cancer. This makes logocial sense to me, since younger men would be getting prostate cancer due to the high testosterone levels. It’s also worth to note, that the prostate holds up to 600 times the level of carcinogens as the rest of the body. I believe the risk of Prostate cancer is mainly caused bytoxins and other genetic factors. This is why it was shown in recent studies, that men who ejaculated more frequently in the 20′s, had less likely chance of prostate cancer later in life. Ejaculation helps the flushing of the prostate from cancer from these toxins. Some research studies are also showing increased risk of prostate cancer based on genetics, race, diets, and environmental factors.

– Steroids cause Roid Rage

Myth, This is an absolute myth. Roid rage is seen as a condition 360 degree change in personality causing an uncontrollable psychotic anger state. Most studies have disproven the idea of what people consider roid rage. Now there are studies that show a slight more aggression or confidence, but its not going to turn a calm person into an angry psychotic person where they lose all rationale for no reason.

– Steroids shrink your Penis

Myth, Absolutely false. This myth is spread probably from confusion in the fact that your testicles shrink on cycle, due to your testosterone production shutting down temporarily.

– Steroids cause excessive hair growth and very deep voice

Possible. This will depend on how naturally hairy and deep your voice is before your steroid cycle. You may notice more and faster hair growth rate while on cycle. Your voice may get deeper from steroid use long term. It all depends on your genetics, as many steroid users have a higher pitched voice and still lack of natural body hair, even despite frequent steroid use.

– Steroids increase hair loss

Possible. Once again this will depend on your genetics before your cycle. If you have thick hair and aren’t destined to go bald in your life, then you will lose very little hair during cycle.

– Steroids cause hallucinations and delusions

Myth. Steroids are not a mind altering drug and do not cause roid rage or any other kind of psychotic behaviour, like hallucinations.

– Steroids cause high blood pressure

Possible. Steroids due to increased water retention and stimulation on the heart, cause increase in blood pressure. If you have borderline blood pressure it may become high blood pressure during cycle.

– Steroids cause diabetes

Possible. Steroids are known to cause high glucose levels and reduced insulin sensitivity. Using that logic, long term use of steroids possibly could increase risk of diabetes, especially in those who are genetically susceptible to the diabetic gene.

– Steroids cause cataracts

Possible. I think this claim from the fact that diabetics get higher chance of cataracts and steroids increase glucose levels. I don’t think there is any scientific evidence to know what role steroids play in causing cataracts.

– Steroids cause impotence

Possible. This is very common side effect and may happen during or after a cycle. If you are using testosterone, then impotence will probably only happen post cycle, as your body tries to recuperate it’s natural testosterone levels. If you are using a steroid other than testosterone, you may experience it during and after your steroid cycle since your body won’t have testosterone in it because it’s shutting down it’s testosterone production. Even though your replacing one androgenic steroid (dht and testosterone) for a different artificial one, it won’t have the same sexual and libido effects as DHT and testosterone does.

– Steroids cause depression

Possible. It would depend on the type of steroids, what your mental condition was before steroid use, and if you are on or just getting off a steroid cycle. Many users might experience depression post cycle, due to the low testosterone levels.

– Steroids are addictive

Possible. When a person gets off steroids they may be depressed and feel weaker and less energetic than while they were on. This leads to you often wanting to start another steroid cycle and when that is done do another and then another. Most people do not just do one steroid cycle and quit forever.

– Steroids increase risk of liver cancer

Fact. Oral methlyated steroids are certainly proven to be carcinogenic (cancer causing) to the liver. They are methylated so they can bypass the liver the first time. However, many steroid users don’t use oral steroids, but inject them. Injecting them is much safer for the liver.

– Steroids increase stress on your kidneys

Fact. Steroids cause you to retain more sodium and water and increase blood pressure. This results in more stress on the kidneys, especially if you let your blood pressure get too high or don’t drink enough water.

– Steroids lower sperm count

Fact Anytime you take in extra endogenous (outside body) steroids, your natural testosterone and sperm production shut down. Once you get off your steroid cycle, your testicles should awaken and start making sperm and testosterone again. This has made testosterone a viable birth control option and has even been considered in the medical community as male birth control.

– Steroids cause permanent damage to natural testosterone production

Possible. Recovery of your testosterone depends on your personal genetics. Some individuals have problems recovering their testosterone levels, even after their first short cycle. Some have to go months using clomid ( a common post cycle ancilliary) or even inject HCG to jumpstart the testicles. On the other hand, many can do multiple cycles in a row and recover fully their natural testosterone production between each cycle. THe more cycles you do, the more likely you may lead to some long term damage on your natural testosterone production.

– Steroids shorten your life

Possible. There is some research in rats, showing those injected with testosterone didn’t live as long. Testosterone may also be why men don’t live as long as women. Steroids certainly won’t increase your lifespan, but there isn’t evidence that a few steroid cycles will significantly shorten a person’s life either. If one were to abuse it for many years, than I imagine it probably will shorten your lifespan at least a little.

– Steroids lower your HDG (good cholesterol)

Fact. Most steroid users will notice a drop in HDL cholesterol. They also may notice a lowering of LDL and total cholesterol because the liver is under more strain and tends to produce less cholesterol.

– Steroids enlarge your heart

Possible. There is some research that shows that steroid users may have more risk for enlarged or thickening of the walls in the heart. There is controversy over those studies and there isn’t much evidence either way.

– Steroids cause sleep apnea

Possible. Some people may experience sleep apnea while on cycle. This may be caused due to the weight gain and higher blood pressure, while on Steroids.

– Steroids make it harder to gain muscle naturally

Possible. It would depend on how much you used steroids and other factors. If you gained 20 lbs of muscle off a recent steroid cycle and kept it, yes it will be harder to gain muscle naturally on top of that new muscle. On the other hand, if you damaged your testosterone levels from steroid abuse long term, yes it will be harder to gain muscle naturally in the future. If you lose your muscle gains, it may be easier to gain that muscle back naturally because you will have stretched your fascia tissue. Many bodybuilders believe muscle memory is mainly caused by the stretching of fascia tissue in the muscles. Therefore former steroid users may have a easier time reaching more muscle mass, even if they lost their steroid gains because of the muscle memory factor.

– Steroids damage tendons

Fact. There is some research that indicates steroids are damaging to the tendons. To make matters worse, the large increases in strength and weight gain on cycle can cause greater risk of injury on tendons. Usually are tendons don’t have enough time to adjust to the these gains.

– Steroids cause bone loss

Myth. This is confusing anabolic steroids with another form of steroids called Glucocorticoids, which is used for other medical conditions and has very different effects on the body. Anabolic steroids actually have been prescribed in the past for bone marrow stimulation and treating osteoporosis.

– Steroids cause gynecomastia (“Man boobs”)

Possible. Many boys get gynecomastia during puberty. Usually it is lumps of breast tissue underneath the tissue. Steroids can possibly cause or aggrivate it either during a high dose Testosterone cycle, when estrogen levels get too high. It can also happen possibly with Trenebolone, which aggravates gyno through another mechanism in the body, prolactin. Another common way it can happen is post cycle, when your testosterone levels are low but your estrogen levels may be high. This imbalance creates a big risk for gyno to develop. That is one reason why it is important for fast recovery post cycle using anti-estrogen ancillaries like clomid to boost testosterone production and lower estrogen levels.

– Steroids increase acne

Possible. This will depend on how susceptible you are to acne before your cycle. Many show more cystic acne in the face and on their back and chest during cycle. If you are already susceptible to acne, it may increase to extreme levels causing painful acne cysts on the back, chest, or face.

– Steroids cause heart attacks or stroke

Possible. I see absolutely no evidence that in the short term, it would cause this in healthy individuals. However, long term use for decades may increase risk of stroke and heart attack due to the negative effects steroids have on your HDLs, blood pressure, and other possible negative effects of your heart health.

Conclusions:

This should help clear up the myths about steroids. We will learn more about its effect on performance and health effects as time goes on and more studies are done.

Foods For Muscle Growth!

Posted: December 29, 2011 in Fitness Freaks

Best Foods for Muscle Growth

To build muscle you essentially need two things, a tailored exercise program and a diet to suit. In this article we will discuss foods for muscle growth and in particular what nutrients are required to assist the muscle building process.

In brief, think of food as fuel, not all fuel is created quality. For best results you want to ensure you’re consuming the best quality fuel to ensure maximum performance.

To understand what types of foods you should be eating, it helps if you first understand what nutrients (components of food) are required in the in the muscle building process and in particular the important role of good fats, antioxidants, complex carbohydrates, water and the ever so important protein.

Good Fats
Not all fats are bad as once thought, today there is good evidence supporting the need for fats in our diet, however the type of fat is important.

Monounsaturated and omega 3 fatty acids (good fats) are most famous for reducing your risk associated with cardiovascular disease, however more recently have also been shown to aid muscle growth by reducing inflammation and enhancing insulin sensitivity (insulin is an important hormone for muscle growth). Additionally people who consume a high amount of good fats in their diet also report having more energy and a better overall feeling of wellbeing.

The best way to obtain Monounsaturated fatty acids in your diet is to cook with either virgin olive oil or canola oil and regularly consumed foods such as avocado and nuts.

The best sources of omega 3 fatty acids are found in cold water seafood such as salmon, sardines, tuna and herring. The advantage of seafood is that it contains large amounts of omega 3’s but also provides it in a form that is readily absorbed and utilised by the body. Vegetarian sources of omega 3 are found in ground flax seeds, flaxseed oil, green algae and dark green leafy vegetables. The disadvantage of vegetarian based omega 3’s is that it needs to be modified within the body before it can be effectively utilised. This doesn’t mean vegetarian sources aren’t good, a combination of both works best, but vegetarians may need to consume more to have the same effect.

Fish oil capsules are a very efficient way to top up your omega 3 fat intake. A good tip is to look for those that have a high amount of EPA and DHA on the ingredients list as these are the nutrients you need.

Foods for muscle growth tip – You need to get fat (in your diet), so regularly consume oily seafood, flaxseed, nuts and vegetables. Avoid all other animal fats (including full cream dairy) and consider a fish oil supplement.

Antioxidants
Heavy training causes Exercise Induced Oxidative Muscle Damage (EIOMD). Oxidative muscle damage slows down muscle growth and actually speeds up the aging process. Antioxidants counteract this oxidative process (hence the name anti-oxidants) and therefore assist muscles to grow and recovery. Eating a variety of fruits and vegetables daily will provide you with antioxidants although if you are training excessively, then you may also want to consider supplementing with a quality multivitamin.

Foods for muscle growth tip – Training hard puts stress on your body so consume lots of fruits and vegetables to help you recovery. Variety is the key, meat and 3 veg doesn’t cut it!

Water
Drinking plenty of water will aid digestion and the overall function of the muscle tissue. Muscle tissue is made up of 70 to 80 percent water and 25 percent protein, therefore staying hydrated plays an important role in allowing you to maximize your training efforts, which then has implications for muscle growth and recovery.

Foods for muscle growth tip – Your muscles are made up of predominantly water, don’t let them get thirsty, a water bottle is your biceps best friend.

Complex Carbohydrates
Carbohydrates provide the most important energy source for muscles during exercise. Heavy exercise like weight training on a low carbohydrate diet will lead to post workout muscle breakdown and therefore it’s important to ensure your diet contains plenty of complex carbohydrates.

Quality complex carbohydrates include: fruits, vegetables, potatoes, rice and pasta, which will also help maintain blood sugar levels and keep your energy levels more consistent throughout the day. Different types of carbohydrates should be consumed according to your training goals and training times.

Foods for muscle growth tip – You can’t train without fuel and complex carbohydrates are the best fuel, however quality and timing is important.

Protein
Protein is the most important (although not the only) nutrient required for muscle growth. It is very hard if not impossible to grow muscle without eating protein rich foods. Whilst it is widely accepted that protein is an important food for muscle growth, there are also a lot of misconceptions about protein and in particular how much protein we require and the best protein foods to be eating.

 Here is a table with a list of high protein foods for you Muscle Heads:

Food Source

Protein Content

 Beef (average of all sources, lean)
Raw 100g

21g

Cooked 100g (130g raw)

27g

 Steak (average of all cuts, lean)
Small 120g

25g

Medium 150g

37g

Large 220g

54g

Extra large 300g

74g

 T-bone (with bone)
Medium 250g

55g

Large 350g

77g

 Mince
Beef mince (regular) 100g

17g

Beef mince (lean) 100g

20g

 Chicken
Chicken (lean) 100g

28g

Chicken (with skin) 100g

25g

 Pork
Pork (lean cooked) 100g

23g

Bacon (3 medium slices)

6g

Ham (average 2 slices)

8g

 Game Meat
Kangaroo 100g

21g

Fish (average of all types)
Small serve 100g

25g

Medium serve 150g

38g

Large serve 200g

50g

Seafood (prawns, crab, mussels, oysters etc) 100g

17g

Salmon (100g can) 80g drained

17g

Tuna (100g can) 75g drained

20g

Eggs
1 egg

6g

Eggs scrambled (2 eggs with milk)

13g

Milk
Full cream (1 cup) 250ml

8.5g

Low fat (1 cup) 250ml

10g

Soy Milk (1 cup) 250ml

5.5g

Yoghurt
Natural 200g

8g

Low fat 200g

10g

Cheese
Cheddar 30g

7.5g

Cottage 30g

4.0g

Ricotta 30g

2.5g

Bread
White (1 slice) 30g

2.5g

Brown (1 slice) 30g

3.5g

Wholemeal (1 slice) 30g

6.0g

Rye bread (1 slice) 30g

3.0g

Multigrain (1 slice) 30g

3.0g

Soy and linseed (1 slice) 30g

4.5g

Rice, Barley and Pasta
Rice, white (cooked,1 cup) 150g

4g

Rice, brown (cooked ,1 cup) 150g

5g

Barley (raw) 100g

8g

Spaghetti/ Macaroni / Fettuccine (cooked, 1 cup) 150g

7.5g

Cereal
Weetbix (2 biscuits) 30g

4g

Sultana bran (1cup) 48g

4.5g

Nutrigrain (1 cup) 40g

9g

Muesli (untoasted, 1/2 cup) 45g

5g

Rolled oats (raw, 1/4 cup) 30g

0.5g

Nuts and Seeds
Almonds (25-30 nuts) 30g

6g

Cashews (12-16 nuts) 30g

6g

Pine nuts / macadamia 30g

4g

Peanuts 30g

7g

Linseed (2 tbsp) 25g

8g

Pumpkin seeds (3tbsp) 30g

7g

Lentils, Beans and Peas
Lentils (raw) 100g

29g

Chickpeas (raw) 100g

20g

Soy beans (cooked, 1/2 cup) 100g

16g

Baked beans (1/2 large can) 210g

9.5g

Baked beans (large can) 420g

19g

Bean salad (1/2 cup) 120g

12g

Fruits and Vegetables
Fruit, per serve

0.5 – 2.0 g

Mixed vegetables (frozen 1/2 cup)

2.5g

Side salad (average)

0.5g

Brussel Sprouts (4-5 medium) 120g

4g

Peas, fresh (3/4 Cup) 100g

5.5g

Potato (medium)

3g

Tufu and Tempeh
Tofu (firm, raw) 100g

12g

Tempeh (1 piece) 85g

16g

Miso (1/2 cup) 140g

16g

Arnold is probably the most famous bodybuilder of all time, he won Mr. Olympia
seven times (1970-1975, 1980) and brought bodybuilding into the national spotlight
in the movie “Pumpin Iron”. 

Arnold’s Top Form Measurements

Arms 22 inches
Chest 57 inches
Waist 34 inches
Thighes 28.5 inches
Calves 20 inches
Weight 235 pounds
Height 6’2″

Arnold was from the old “No Pain No Gain” school of bodybuilding and his
routines consisted of high sets and reps, mostly not to failure. He trained
each muscle group three times each week (except calves, forearms & abs
which he trained every day), using a six day split routine.

There was very little rest between sets, and he usually increased weight each
and every set. Although he experimented with high reps at times, he usually
preferred a rep range of about 6 to 10.

The following is a typical Arnold routine, but be aware that Arnold’s routine
changed constantly. At times he trained twice a day, while at other times
once a day was enough. There were periods when he did lots supersets
and giant sets. Arnold tried every thing, and picked what worked best for
him at that particular time. By mixing things up he challenged his strength
and endurance and the training variety helped keep him fresh and motivated!

Remember this is a very advanced bodybuilding routine and should not be used
by beginners or intermediates, and even advanced bodybuilder’s should only
take what they think will work best for them and adapt it to their own
bodybuilding philosophy.

Arnold’s Routine

Mon, Wed, Fri

Chest:
Bench press 5 x 6-10
Flat bench flyes 5 x 6-10
Incline bench press 6 x 6-10
Cable crossovers 6 x 10-12
Dips (body weight) 5 x failure
Dumbell pullovers 5 x 10-12.

Back:
Wide-grip chins (to front) 6 x failure
T-bar rows 5 x 6-10
Seated pulley rows 6 x 6-10
One-arm dumbell rows 5 x 6-10
Straight-leg deadlifts 6 x 15

Legs:
Squats 6 x 8-12
Leg press 6 x 8-12
Leg extensions 6 x 12-15
Leg curls 6 x 10-12
Barbell lunges 5 x 15

Calves:
Standing calf raises 10 x 10
Seated calf raises 8 x 15
Oneplegged calf raises (holding dumbells) 6×12

Forearms:
Wrist curls (forearms on knees) – 4 sets, 10 reps
Reverse barbell curls – 4 sets, 8 reps
Wright roller machine – to failure

Abs:
½ hour of a variety of nonspecific abdominal exercises, done virtually nonstop.

Tues, Thurs, Sat

Biceps:
Barbell curls 6 x 6-10
Seated dumbell curls 6 x 6-10
Dumbell concentration curls 6 x 6-10

Triceps:
Close-grip bench presses 6 x 6-10
Pushdowns 6 x 6-10
French press (barbell) 6 x 6-10
One-arm triceps extensions (dumbell) 6 x 6-10

Shoulders:
Seated barbell presses 6 x 6-10
Lateral raises (standing) 6 x 6-10
Rear-delt lateral raises 5 x 6-10
Cable lateral raises 5 x 10-12

Calves , Forearms & Abs:
Same as Monday, Wednesday, Friday workout