Weight Lifting Benefits

Weight Loss Tips - Effective Weight Loss Tips to
Help You Succeed
By Vince DelMonte
While some individuals are strictly interested in
obtaining muscle for aesthetics, for most people,
this isn’t an interest. Instead, you’re
more interested in knowing what health benefits weight
lifting will have for you…
Far too many people overlook the many health and
fitness benefits that weight training has to offer,
and because of this, experience problems down the
road with their body such as decreased bone density,
a slowed metabolic rate, increased stress levels and
other negative consequences that are associated with
constant stress.
Increased Bone Density
Weight lifting, being one of the best weight bearing
exercises you can do, will increase your bone density
and help ward off osteoporosis or stress fractures
in the future.
Many people think running is the best exercise for
increasing bone density, but this isn’t necessarily
true. If the truth is told, running actually promotes
muscle breakdown in the body, while weight lifting,
being an anabolic process, helps to promote the building
of tissues.
Therefore, weight lifting is going to be much better
at preserving your bone mass, not to mention it’s
far less impact than going for an hour run.
Decreased Frequency of Injuries
When you strength train, not only are your muscles
going to get stronger, but you’ll also work
the ligaments and tendons that are connecting bones,
muscles, and other tissues, thus reducing the chance
they become injured when participating in other physical
activities.
If you’ve ever been injured, you know just
how frustrating this can be. In about 80% of all injury
cases, the injury is a direct result of a tendon,
ligament, or muscle not being strong enough when a
stressful force is applied.
Since weight training will really hit all those deep
tendons and ligaments, it’s the best injury
prevention out there.
Reduction of Health Related Risks
Numerous studies have demonstrated that regular weight
training can have a positive effect on health by showing
reductions in the rate of insulin resistance, blood
pressure, diabetes, heart disease, and even cancer.
If you couple a solid weight training program then
with a well-thought out diet, you’ll be putting
your best foot forward at warding off these chronic
problems
Prevention of Fat Gain
The more you weight lift, the higher your metabolism
will be, thus the more food you can eat while maintaining
your weight. If that isn’t good news for your
future and the fight against body fat, I’m not
sure what is.
Now, with all of this said, one big problem many
people run into is the thinking pattern that using
a muscle building program will make you big and bulky.
This is most certainly not the case.
Let’s look at an analogy to gain an understanding
of this.
Pretend you have two teams and each are going to
try and build a house using the exact same building
technique.
One team is given 10,000 bricks to construct this
house, and the second team is given only 1,000 bricks.
Who’s going to build the bigger house?
The choice should be obvious – team one since
they have more bricks to build it with.
Now, think of those bricks as being the calories you
put into your body. Unless you’re supplying
enough calories, you aren’t going to build really
big muscles. This is precisely what makes bodybuilders
look like bodybuilders.
It’s not just about the way they train, but
more about the way they eat (if you’ve ever
had a teenage son in the growing process in your house,
you likely know just how much food must be consumed
when growing at rapid rates).
Whether it’s growing in height during puberty
or trying to build bigger muscles later on, calories
must be supplied for this growth process to take place.
You can’t build a house out of nothing. Likewise,
you can workout all you want, but if those building
blocks – in the form of amino acids, carbohydrates,
and dietary fats are not there, you aren’t going
to see too much muscle growth.
So, don’t get caught thinking that just because
you add weight lifting to your workouts, you’re
going to develop large bulky muscles. If you control
your diet, this simply will not happen.
So, hopefully it is clear now that just because you’re
weight lifting, it does not mean you will end up with
bulky muscles as a result. Many people make this incorrect
assumption – but it really is the diet that
makes all the difference in how this weight lifting
will shape your body.
When you make the decision to work with me using my
6-Pack Ab Quest program, I’ll take you through
the weight lifting and ab techniques that will provide
maximum results with minimal effort on your part (why
spend more time in the gym than you have to?), as
well as provide you with meal plans that are custom
designed to ensure you get the best results from your
training without the muscle bulk – in fact,
the plans are formulated to help you shed the fat
so you look leaner and more defined.
Not choosing to include weight training as part of
your current workout program is without-a-doubt the
biggest mistake you could make as far as your long-term
health and fitness level is concerned. Don’t
let this exercise pass you by any longer.
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About the Author:
Vince DelMonte
is the author of Your Six Pack Quest found at http://www.YourSixPackQuest.com
He specializes in helping chubby guys and gals get
with weight loss tips to get a six pack without gimmicks,
supplements or dieting.
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