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Let's get the upcoming week ladies #kkwellnessandconsulting #nopainnogain #trainsmart #coach #47justanumba #preppinforlife
REBOUND OR REVERSE -WHAT IS IT GOING TO BE?
By:
Kelly Killen
The goal of pre-contest dieting is to lose as much fat as possible, while keeping as much lean mass. Most competitors achieve this look by embarking on a highly restricted eating and exercise plan that starts 8 to 20 weeks before the competition. As the macro nutrient balance shifts toward high protein, moderate carbs and low fat, the competitor’s body begins to shed both fat and water. As the intensity of the pre-contest diet increases, many competitors turn their thoughts to the foods they can’t have during their contest preparation. Their minds often become consumed with eating all the fattening and sugar laden foods they have deprived themselves of for the previous several months. It is only natural that you want what you can’t have and those “no” foods become something people dream about, literally. Food Porn and the Food Network become the new past time. Most athletes want to celebrate, or simply reward months of sacrifice with a feast right after the competition; this is understandable. Here in lies the problem, not only do they allow them the self-induced feeling of it being “okay” to indulge repeatedly, you will hear many people in their lives telling them, “You’ve worked so hard, you deserve it. Go for it; enjoy yourself”. Some will take their indulgence a step further and immediately follow a regimen of nutrient void foods for an extended period of time. This type of competitor may also stop taking the fat burners that helped get through the twice daily cardio workouts - which I don’t personally recommend, but I know it’s a reality. When you combine these radical changes in eating habits along with cutting back or completely eliminating your cardio workouts, and decreasing the intensity of your weight training sessions, you are creating the perfect storm. Such an abrupt change in eating patterns and workout schedules will shock the body and cause a rebound effect.
Bodybuilding to ALL should be a lifestyle. The brutal rigors of extreme contest dieting often result in an unbalanced approach to your nutritional plan. Bodybuilding and figure competition are imbalanced and extreme, and often don’t epitomize healthy living as you get closer to a show date. It’s helpful to follow a gradual show preparation process by planning to enter a competition at a good reset weight. Be emotionally prepared to handle the food cravings and focus on maintaining a healthy reset weight after your competition. As a coach, I assess my clients both emotionally and physically, and unless they have a great relationship with whole foods and the lifestyle, I will not take them on as a client to compete.
Studies in the October issue of Behavioral Neuroscience show that when animals are stressed, deprived and exposed to tempting food, they will overeat, with different degrees of interaction. This is similar to a competitor on the day of the show with feasts of sugary foods back stage. This results in what is known as “dieters rebound” or “The Yo-Yo Effect.” What this means is that given a choice between eating nutritious food versus “junk food,” it is likely that we will overeat the junk food. This results in nonproductive calories that further trigger our bodies craving of additional food to provide sedation of our need for protein and other nutrients. When you binge after a competition, it affects your hormonal system and this can bring about changes in your insulin, thyroid, and serotonin levels. Insulin is affected due to the high levels of carbohydrates available. Elevated insulin levels will trigger your pancreas to make more and more insulin. This results in a slower and slower metabolism.
Eating more food post-competition is necessary and needs to be done systematically, but it depends on the food. All food is NOT created equal. You may not feel like eating more protein, good fats, complex carbohydrates, and more vegetables, but that is exactly what your body will need to recover from the rigors of contest preparation. In many cases, however, individuals turn to extremely high starch-laden foods and/or empty calorie foods such as candy and processed foods. Studies have also shown that individuals who are overweight and are given additional protein in their diet tend to crave less food over all- keep the protein and complex carbs in steadily post show, in addition slowly and systematically introducing a well-rounded profile of nutrient dense whole foods.
The key to successfully competing and healthy reversing is not what you do in the days leading up to the show; it’s what you are doing daily 365 days out of the year to support your health. Train in a safe and effective way, give your body time to recover and build, eat whole foods with the 80/20 format, and live the lifestyle all year round. This can be achieved with the help of a coach that not only needs to be hired to dial you in, but even more importantly, needs to be your accountability partner in the improvement season. If you have not been given a plan for post competition in the weeks leading up to your competition, and this has not been discussed throughout your prep, then you should discussing this with your coach.
So, what is it going to be? Are you going to be a female competitor that returns to eating simple sugars and reducing your time in the gym dramatically, to then wake up 20 pounds heavier from your stage weight in 2 months, or are you going to seek out the help and support to achieve a balance and regulate your body through adhering to a proper nutrition pan year-round?
I provide this service to female competitors who lose the balance and the control with regards to food. I work with my clients to develop a plan for healthy relationships regarding food. It’s a serious problem in the bodybuilding world and without being addressed it can have catastrophic consequences on your health, metabolism and body weight. This is a critical step to insure that you have an exit strategy in place to follow a healthy post-competition lifestyle.
For coaching services view my website at www.kkwellnessconsulting.com
This was changed to reflect the intent of the article to support clients and competitors, not to put any focus on other coaches. My priority is my message and my clients.
REBOUND OR REVERSE -WHAT IS IT GOING TO BE?
By:
Kelly Killen
The goal of pre-contest dieting is to lose as much fat as possible, while keeping as much lean mass. Most competitors achieve this look by embarking on a highly restricted eating and exercise plan that starts 8 to 20 weeks before the competition. As the macro nutrient balance shifts toward high protein, moderate carbs and low fat, the competitor’s body begins to shed both fat and water. As the intensity of the pre-contest diet increases, many competitors turn their thoughts to the foods they can’t have during their contest preparation. Their minds often become consumed with eating all the fattening and sugar laden foods they have deprived themselves of for the previous several months. It is only natural that you want what you can’t have and those “no” foods become something people dream about, literally. Food Porn and the Food Network become the new past time. Most athletes want to celebrate, or simply reward months of sacrifice with a feast right after the competition; this is understandable. Here in lies the problem, not only do they allow them the self-induced feeling of it being “okay” to indulge repeatedly, you will hear many people in their lives telling them, “You’ve worked so hard, you deserve it. Go for it; enjoy yourself”. Some will take their indulgence a step further and immediately follow a regimen of nutrient void foods for an extended period of time. This type of competitor may also stop taking the fat burners that helped get through the twice daily cardio workouts - which I don’t personally recommend, but I know it’s a reality. When you combine these radical changes in eating habits along with cutting back or completely eliminating your cardio workouts, and decreasing the intensity of your weight training sessions, you are creating the perfect storm. Such an abrupt change in eating patterns and workout schedules will shock the body and cause a rebound effect.
Bodybuilding to ALL should be a lifestyle. The brutal rigors of extreme contest dieting often result in an unbalanced approach to your nutritional plan. Bodybuilding and figure competition are imbalanced and extreme, and often don’t epitomize healthy living as you get closer to a show date. It’s helpful to follow a gradual show preparation process by planning to enter a competition at a good reset weight. Be emotionally prepared to handle the food cravings and focus on maintaining a healthy reset weight after your competition. As a coach, I assess my clients both emotionally and physically, and unless they have a great relationship with whole foods and the lifestyle, I will not take them on as a client to compete.
Studies in the October issue of Behavioral Neuroscience show that when animals are stressed, deprived and exposed to tempting food, they will overeat, with different degrees of interaction. This is similar to a competitor on the day of the show with feasts of sugary foods back stage. This results in what is known as "dieters rebound" or "The Yo-Yo Effect." What this means is that given a choice between eating nutritious food versus "junk food," it is likely that we will overeat the junk food. This results in nonproductive calories that further trigger our bodies craving of additional food to provide sedation of our need for protein and other nutrients. When you binge after a competition, it affects your hormonal system and this can bring about changes in your insulin, thyroid, and serotonin levels. Insulin is affected due to the high levels of carbohydrates available. Elevated insulin levels will trigger your pancreas to make more and more insulin. This results in a slower and slower metabolism.
Eating more food post-competition is necessary and needs to be done systematically, but it depends on the food. All food is NOT created equal. You may not feel like eating more protein, good fats, complex carbohydrates, and more vegetables, but that is exactly what your body will need to recover from the rigors of contest preparation. In many cases, however, individuals turn to extremely high starch-laden foods and/or empty calorie foods such as candy and processed foods. Studies have also shown that individuals who are overweight and are given additional protein in their diet tend to crave less food over all- keep the protein and complex carbs in steadily post show, in addition slowly and systematically introducing a well-rounded profile of nutrient dense whole foods.
The key to successfully competing and healthy reversing is not what you do in the days leading up to the show; it’s what you are doing daily 365 days out of the year to support your health. Train in a safe and effective way, give your body time to recover and build, eat whole foods with the 80/20 format, and live the lifestyle all year round. This can be achieved with the help of a coach that not only needs to be hired to dial you in, but even more importantly, needs to be your accountability partner in the improvement season. If you have not been given a plan for post competition in the weeks leading up to your competition, and this has not been discussed throughout your prep, then you should discussing this with your coach.
So, what is it going to be? Are you going to be a female competitor that returns to eating simple sugars and reducing your time in the gym dramatically, to then wake up 20 pounds heavier from your stage weight in 2 months, or are you going to seek out the help and support to achieve a balance and regulate your body through adhering to a proper nutrition pan year-round?
I provide this service to female competitors who lose the balance and the control with regards to food. I work with my clients to develop a plan for healthy relationships regarding food. It’s a serious problem in the bodybuilding world and without being addressed it can have catastrophic consequences on your health, metabolism and body weight. This is a critical step to insure that you have an exit strategy in place to follow a healthy post-competition lifestyle.
For coaching services view my website at www.kkwellnessconsulting.com
Selfless gym pic doing ME today - cardio arms stretching meditation - feel great #preppin4life #wellness #coachinglife #coachbreak#doingmenow #balance#peace#fitafter45 (at Home Sweet Home Gym)
Allow kkwellness to transform you and change your life #preppin4life #coaching #wellness #weightloss #challenge #fitfam
“ I WANT A SIX PACK FOR THE SUMMER” by Kelly Killen, Certified Wellness Coach
I hear this relentlessly about this time of year. I WANT A SIX PACK! 80% of what you see in the mirror is based off what you are eating. Doing hours of crunches will help to build and maintain your abdominal muscles and core conditioning, but will do ZERO for the fat that is covering your stomach. Remember, especially for a woman’s waist line -excess cause’s distress – i.e. blocky and expanded as a result of excessive weight bearing abdominal work. This is why spot reduction does not work. Our body does not pick and choose where we store fat. Genetically we are all predetermined to hold fat in certain areas. Some people hold most of their fat in their lower halves others in their guts. Woman who tend to carry it all around the middle with have great legs and glutes, but the 6 pack may take an extra effort. If you are on a regular moderate weight training program each week in the gym, you are already incorporating your abdominal muscles for many other movements you are doing.
Let’s say your 25% body fat and your goal is to lose your muffin top. If you combine basic weight training, cardio and start tracking your calories your body will sense this and begin to bring that body fat number down lower. After consistency, and some weeks, you may be 20% body fat. You just lost 5%, which is a huge amount of body fat off your frame. That is when you will begin to see a difference in your physique. Will your muffin top be gone? Maybe it depends on your genetic makeup, but if it isn’t you might have to keep trying to bring your body fat lower. You may need to get down to 15% in order for you to be happy with what you see. That is based on you and your genetics. My point is, it’s all dependent on where your body stores and how much in that one area. The bottom line is spot reduction doesn’t exist because our body will only lose fat from all over our bodies not from a single area. If you really want to focus on seeing your six pack maybe you should focus more on what you’re eating, your caloric expenditure vs intake as opposed to how many hours of sit-ups you are doing. Lastly, consistency and patience. Many are convinced they have really tried forever, but I guarantee that if you were followed by a hidden camera for a considerable amount of time behaviors and patterns would emerge to determine your road blocks. A handful of almonds here and few drinks a week there, you get the idea.
Consistency, Lifestyle, Balance, 80/20, It Works if You Work It, Preppin’ for Life
Coach K
OBESITY WAKE UP
Written by Kelly Killen, Certified Wellness Coach and Licensed Board of Medicine Behavior Analyst
January 20, 2016
Fact: 1/3 of women and 1/4 Men in U.S. are on a diet
Fact: More than 60 billion is spent on weight loss products - looking for a superficial answer and the answer is already inside you.
As Americans we are over fed, but starving to death – we are starving for proper nutrients.
It's not what you're eating, it's what's eating you & why are you eating!
We've been programmed for millennia to store food and store fat as a species. Usually an extra 10 pounds.
We are not eating food we are eating food like products that are causing us addiction.
What are we putting in our bodies? Processed foods, Alcohol & self-sabotage -thoughts.
Are bodies were not designed to be indoors working at desks - we need to exercise!
Number one reason for obesity is addiction.
MSG causes fat to store in body - MSG is in 80% of processed foods.
70 studies done on aspartame were funded by fitness industry – it shows a direct correlation with causing carbohydrate cravings. Hence diet soda drinkers get fatter.
Simple Carbohydrates are dead foods. When we get into a real nutrition regimen of whole foods, we don't have to think about "diet “again.
Don't think about dieting think about ADDING – Instead of saying “I want that, but I can't have it”, instead say "I CAN have it, but I don't want it".
Hormonal chaos happens when we don't eat whole foods.
Add in a volumes of whole foods and there is little to no measuring once you're at a maintenance weight.
When you crowd yourself with the good stuff, then the bad stuff just goes away.
To begin behavior change, try something that’s proven like visualization, to include writing things down. This accesses the sub conscience - you program it. Journaling and meditation are powerful to unlock your full potential and intent. You're feeding your sub conscience! Make the image - look at the picture and look through it.
Whatever you hold in your mind on a consistent basis is exactly what you will experience in your life!
Anthony Robins