Monday, July 13, 2015

Complexes: A Killer Way To Torch Calories

Complexes: A Killer Way To Torch Calories

Original Post By: GirlsGoneStrong.com
My last several of weeks have been packed full of amazing things. There was the Women’s Fitness Summit in Kansas City, then packing up and heading to Salt Lake City where I will stay for the remainder of the year.
I landed in Utah, and spent exactly 24 hours there before I turned around and took off for a five-day camping and mountain biking trip. I’ve packed, unpacked, repacked, and shipped so many items that I am still uncertain which part of the country some of my belongings are in.
Even with the welcomed chaos, I still wanted to get my workouts in, but I have been seriously crunched for time. While I typically like to spend about 60 – 90 minutes at the gym, working out (and socializing), this has not been an option the last few weeks for me.
I needed to get in, get a full body workout done, and get out.
This is the perfect time for a complex!
A complex, whether it be with a barbell, kettlebell, dumbbell, or even your own bodyweight, is a fantastic way to burn some serious calories and lose body fat, (assuming that your nutrition is on point!)

Complexes: Barbell, Kettlebell, Dumbbell, or Bodyweight


Lunging variations are fantastic exercises for complex work.
Lunging variations are fantastic exercises for complex work.
Why, When, and How?
A complex is, paradoxically, very simple 
It’s typically about 3 – 6 exercises strung together, done for around 6 – 10 reps each, for a total of 3 – 6 times through. You complete all reps for each exercise before moving on to the next one.
They can be done using a barbell, kettlebell(s), dumbbell(s), or your own bodyweight. If you are using weights, you will complete all reps of each exercise before setting the weight down.
It’s a fantastic way to incorporate resistance training and conditioning in a limited amount of time. Often, people hear about a short workout, and they scoff. “Pffffft. Short workout? How effective could that be?
Don’t let the short workout fool you – complexes are challenging.
They are extremely effective for torching calories, and the best part is that they are fun! They are a great way to spice up your workouts, try something new, and challenge your body in a different way.
You can do a lighter complex as a finisher at the end of your regular training session, or you can go a bit heavier and use a complex as your main workout.
When setting up a complex, keep it simple. The basics work.
You don’t need to waste time trying to think up a bunch of new-fangled moves. Just alternate between lower body and upper body movements, and if you can get a push, a pull, a hinge, and a knee-dominant movement in there, even better.

JCK Side Plank
Bodyweight complexes are great for traveling. You can do this in your hotel room!
Weight Selection
When doing a barbell, kettlebell, or dumbbell complex, remember that your weight selection should be based on whichever is the hardest movement for you.
For example, if your barbell complex is a deadlift, bent over row, overhead press, and back squat, most people will need to gauge their weight selection based on the overhead press, because that is likely going to be the hardest movement of the four exercises for them, and you’ll be using the same weight for all of the movements.
It’s always better to select a weight that you realize is a bit too light, then to sacrifice form to struggle with a weight that turns out to be too heavy.
If you significantly undershoot, no biggie – treat it as a warm-up and increase weight a bit next time around.
Also, it’s always a good idea to do a warm-up using a lighter weight before you really get going. If I’m doing a barbell complex, I always run through it once with just the bar before loading plates on.
A good general rule to start with is:
Heavier weight = more sets = less reps
Lighter weight = less sets = more reps
Let’s Get Moving!
To jump start your imagination, you can check out these three complexes that are my Go-To’s when I’m short on time, or I simply want to do something different.
If you are a visual person, you can check out the video demo. The barbell complex is shown first, and then the dumbbell workout, followed by the bodyweight complex.
Barbell complex:
Complete 6 – 8 reps of each movement before putting the barbell down. Rest for 2-3 minutes. Shoot for 3 – 5 times through the complex.
  • Romanian Deadlift
  • Bent Over Row
  • Overhead Press
  • Front Loaded, Reverse Lunges
Dumbbell complex:
Complete 6 – 8 reps of each movement before putting the weights down. Rest for 2-3 minutes. Shoot for 3 – 5 times through the complex.
  • Squat
  • Biceps Curl into Overhead Press
  • Lateral Lunges
  • Rows
Bodyweight complex with a bench:
Since this is a bodyweight complex, you can probably get away with doing significantly higher reps, and cutting rest time down a bit.
Complete 10 – 12 reps of each movement. Rest for 1-2 minutes. Shoot for 3 – 5 times through the complex 
  • Step-up Into Reverse Lunge
  • Pushup into Side Plank
  • Single Leg Elevated Hip Thrust 
Complexes can be super effective for fat loss (if you’re eating right), and a new, fun challenge! Give them a try and post your time in the comments section!

Thursday, July 9, 2015

Got Cravings? You Won't Anymore...

By Jade Teta

So you are 10 days into your diet.  You made it through the first weekend with flying colors and you even lost 5 pounds and several inches. You are kicking ass.

But Wednesday morning you wake up feeling tired.  For some reason you were tossing and turning last night. You had a near miss with a birthday cake for your kids, but avoided eating it….barely.

As the day goes on you are starting to get that eerily familiar feeling.  Something is off.  Last week you were on a high and could care less about food or sweets.  Today those urges that are normally with you are back with a vengeance. 

You fight it of course.  You resist the candy jar at work.  You have a run in with another birthday cake brought in for a coworker’s birthday.  You make it again, but this time you dipped your finger in for a little taste of the icing. You could feel the salivation in the back of your throat. You wanted it sooooo bad, but you held yourself back.

Finally you get home and make dinner. You eat and settle on to the couch for a little TV. There has been a pint of ice cream in your freezer for 10 days and it has not said a word to you. But now it is calling to you. 

You pull it out, look at it and quickly put it back before returning to the couch.  Within 3 minutes you are back. This time with spoon in hand. 

You tell yourself “just one bite,” but deep down you know it is going to be “just one pint.”  And there it goes…….BOOM!!!..........diet over and the flood gates open.  By the time the night is over you go through that pint of ice cream, a half jar of peanut butter, two small bags of potato chips and half a block of cheese.

You then slowly crawl into your bed stuffed and defeated.  And in the back of your mind you are thinking about how good the frozen waffles you have for the kids is going to be in the morning.

Can you relate to this story?  Of course you can.  It happens to all of us.  The question is why?

Is it Willpower or Cravings?

Talk to most people and they will tell you your willpower failed.  You should have been stronger and more disciplined.  You need to try harder next time.

Something does not sit right with you though.  If you lack willpower how is it that you can work a high demands sales job, be a single mom and keep the house spotless?

The truth is you have willpower, but you also have cravings.  Cravings are willpowers kryptonite. When cravings hit you don’t stand a chance.  That is because cravings are both chemical and habitual. 

If humans were a computer, cravings would be like a computer virus that takes over and causes your software to crash.  The only way to get rid of them is to run some anti-viral software.

There is a dual approach to this:
  1. attack habits
  2. attack brain chemistry and hormones.
Brain Chemistry & Hormones

Since habits take time to change we will deal with that separately. Let’s talk the biochemistry of cravings in this email.

Cravings are triggered by many factors, but the most uncontrollable urges come from the perfect storm of an imbalance of cortisol, blood sugar and the combination of dopamine (pleasure seeking) and adrenaline (anxious stimulation).  

Try to get in touch with the way your body feels during a craving.  What you will feel is a strong sense of want/desire and a barely perceptible state of anxiety. So how do you combat this?

What if you could immediately lower cortisol and balance dopamine with relaxing serotonin while at the same time balancing blood sugar?  You can if you know what you are doing. 

Here is how: 

You feel a craving coming on?  Use whey protein as your starting point.  Research shows it lowers cortisol and raises serotonin.  The amino acids can also be used to slowly be made into glucose giving the brain a slow steady rise in energy.  It is a one, two and uppercut punch.

So you drink that. But, not just any protein will do.  It has to be something that tastes good and resembles something your brain has associated with pleasure.  If you add ice, certain viscous fibers and a thick liquid like unsweet almond milk, it is starting to look like a milkshake. This is a priming signal to your brain that satisfaction is coming. 

Now you need that extra kick that has that satisfaction in terms of taste.  You need chocolate.  Well, cocoa to be exact.  That’s chocolates no fat, low carb base.  It is almost universally enjoyed and it raises brain chemicals like PEA and anadamide, which give direct pleasure. Yum, now you are set. 

Final point……..eat this BEFORE the craving hits if possible.  It will work when the craving is right on you, but it will work even better if you can stop it before it starts.

At the ME clinic we have a program called the “craving diet.”  It is specifically for those trapped by cravings.  It is a pretty simple approach.  It works like this

  • Make a note of when your cravings typically hit.
  • Substitute a strategic whey and cocoa “milkshake” for the meal before this craving occurs.
  • Use cocoa at least two other times a day preferably between or after other meals.


Boom!! Cravings crushed.