Getting shredded the Vince way

1. Follow a specific, pre-set nutrition plan so that you know exactly what you’re supposed to eat and what times and in what amounts. You will be less likely to cheat and more likely to follow your plan. Print it out and post it on your refrigerator.

2. Read labels because you must be precise about your food intake and ensure your food plan matches exactly with what you’re consuming or how in the world can you help yourself?

3. Get your body fat measured and plan to lose 1% of it each week.

4. Tweak, re-evaluate and re-tweak. If you’re not losing, tweak ONE variable for the following week while keeping everything else standardized. Re-evaluate your progress and continue this feed back loop each week.

5. When tweaking a variable in your training, make small changes instead of big ones. For example, add one extra 45-minute cardio session next week if you plateaued, not 3 extra cardio sessions. If you’re doing 2 interval workouts, add a third.

6. Did I say small changes are responsible for big changes? If you’re eating 2 slices of whole wheat bread on meal one, drop it to only 1 slice instead. Dramatic nutrition or cardio changes is unnecessary.

7. Plan to raise your caloric intake one time every five days, minimum. Incorporate the principles you’ll learn at http://www.TreatYourWayThin.com tomorrow.

8. Start doing interval training and build up to at least three 20-minute workouts at 85% intensity.

9. For interval training, rely on the classic and effective 1-minute hard followed by 1-minute easy protocl for a total of 10 intervals.

10. Incorporate steady-state cardio on a empty stomach before breakfast. If you’re on a ultra low-carb diet then this is not necessary however “regular” cardio in a fasted state can help your body to resort to using more fat for fuel.

11. Drink a big black cup of coffee or have an espresso before you do fasted cardio before breakfast.

12. Incorporate muscle-saving supplements like creatine and branch chain amino acids with a liter of water before you do your cardio in a fasted state in the morning.

13. If possible, perform your weights in the evening and perform your cardio in the morning. This requires more dedication but can be very effective in the final 4-weeks before your “deadline.”

14. Train hard with weights and train often. Be prepared to move from 3-days or 4-days of weight training to at least 5-days of weight training a week.

15. During fat loss, the details of the workout are not as important as muscle building. Focus on intensity and finishing the workout knowing you held nothing back.

16. Keep rest periods between 30-60 seconds.

17. Don’t worry on the length of your workouts, even if they last up to 1.5 hours.

18. Don’t plant to eat perfectly without any unplanned cheat, I mean treat meals as you’ll learn tomorrow at http://www.TreatYourWayThin.com

19. Eat as many fibrous vegetables as possible like broccoli, cauliflower, spinach, and/or asparagus to name a few.

20. Eat your first meal earlier than you are currently eating it now. Having your first meal around 6 am and your last meal around 6 pm works the best for the majority of people.

21. Treat your weight training workouts as if you’re trying to build muscle. Keep the weights heavy to keep your muscle mass and maintain your metabolism.

22. Only bring food items that appear on your meal plan into your home.

23. Set a deadline for the day you want to be shredded and ripped.


Source: http://www.vincedelmontefitness.com/

Boosting testosterone

The normal level of testosterone in your bloodstream is between 350 and 1,000 nanograms per deciliter (ng/dl). Like combable hair, those quantities silently start to wane around age 40. You lose about 1 percent a year -- a harmless decline in the short term, but a cause of obesity, brittle bones, muscle loss and impotence by the time you reach your 60s -- if you live that long. Testosterone levels in the low range (a blood serum score below 350 ng/dl) may increase your chances of dying of a heart attack.

It's not just an old man's problem, either. Men in their 30s and 40s also fall prey to low testosterone counts. It's a disorder called hypogonadism, and it can be caused by an undescended testicle, a testicular injury, a pituitary gland disorder or even prescription drugs. It usually goes undiagnosed until a man hits his doctor with a telltale complaint: "I can't get an erection."

"If you have reduced levels of sexual desire, have your testosterone level checked immediately," says Dr. Allen Seftel, a urologist at Case Western Reserve University Hospitals of Cleveland. You can replenish your testosterone stores with injections, gels, pills or patches, but these medical treatments are no panacea: Side effects include acne, high cholesterol, shrunken testicles and liver damage. Further, don't take supplements like DHEA or androstenedione to boost testosterone; they might increase your risks of prostate cancer and heart disease.

"For men with borderline testosterone scores, I advise them to try to raise their levels through exercise and weight loss before going on testosterone therapy," says Dr. Goldberg. And it might pay to start young. "Since your testosterone declines at a steady rate, it's conceivable that raising your hormone levels naturally in your 20s and 30s could help you maintain higher levels later on," he says. Either way, the reward can be a stronger physique and better bedroom sessions than you'd otherwise deserve. Below are 13 tips designed to get your juice up -- safely.

Get Rid of the Flopping Belly

Or you'll grow a pair of fetching breasts to complement it. Carrying excess body fat elevates your estrogen levels, and that may cause your testosterone levels to sink, says Joseph Zmuda, an epidemiologist at the University of Pittsburgh. Louie Anderson is proof enough of this. Two or three extra pounds won't cause this hormonal shift; it really occurs once you're 30 percent over your ideal body weight. "Unfortunately, that's pretty common now," says Dr. Dobs.

But Lose Only One Pound a Week

When you want to trim down quickly, you probably starve yourself while exercising like a madman. One of the many reasons this stops working in your 30s, when your natural testosterone levels start dropping, is pretty simple: Cutting your calorie intake by more than 15 percent makes your brain think you're starving, so it shuts down testosterone production to wait out the famine. "There's no need to reproduce if you're starving," explains Thomas Incledon of Human Performance Specialists in Plantation, Fla. Ironically, this dive in circulating testosterone stops you from burning body fat efficiently, so you're actually thwarting your hard efforts to melt that tire off your gut.

Skip the Atkins Fad

Research suggests that eating a high-protein, low-carbohydrate diet can cramp your testosterone levels. High amounts of dietary protein in your blood can eventually lower the amount of testosterone produced in your testes, says Incledon, who observed this relationship in a Penn State study of 12 healthy, athletic men.

Your protein intake should be about 16 percent of your daily calories, Incledon says. So, if you're the average 170-pound man who eats 2,900 calories a day, you should eat about 140 grams of protein daily, which is about the amount in two chicken breasts and a 6-ounce can of tuna.

Have Morning Sex

German scientists found that simply having an erection causes your circulating testosterone to rise significantly -- and having one in the morning can goose your natural post-dawn testosterone surge. It's a sure bet you'll burn a little fat, too.

Stick With Tough Exercises

To beef up your testosterone levels, the bulk of your workout should involve "compound" weight-lifting exercises that train several large muscle groups, and not just one or two smaller muscles. For example, studies have shown that doing squats, bench presses or back rows increases testosterone more than doing biceps curls or triceps pushdowns, even though the effort may seem the same. This is why doing squats could help you build bigger biceps.

Make Nuts Your Midnight Snack

Nuts are good for your nuts. Research has found that men who ate diets rich in monounsaturated fat -- the kind found in peanuts -- had the highest testosterone levels. "It's not known why this occurs, but some scientists believe that monounsaturated fats have a direct effect on the testes," says Incledon. Nuts, olive oil, canola oil and peanut butter are good sources of monounsaturated fat.

Squeeze Out Five Repetitions per Set

Throwing around 5-pound dumbbells won't help you effect a rise in testosterone. Start off by using a heavy weight that you can lift only five times. That weight is about 85 percent of your one-repetition maximum. A Finnish study found that this workload produced the greatest boosts in testosterone.

Do Three Sets of Each Weight-Lifting Movement

Researchers at Penn State determined that this fosters greater increases in testosterone than just one or two sets. Rest a full minute between sets, so you can regain enough strength to continue lifting at least 70 percent of your one-rep maximum during the second and third sets.

Rest Harder Than You Work Out

If you overtrain -- meaning you don't allow your body to recuperate adequately between training sessions -- your circulating testosterone levels can plunge by as much as 40 percent, according to a study at the University of North Carolina. The symptoms of overtraining are hard to miss: irritability, insomnia, muscle shrinkage, joining the Reform Party. To avoid overtraining, make sure you sleep a full eight hours at night, and never stress the same muscles with weight-lifting movements two days in a row.

Drive Home Sober

To maintain a healthy testosterone count -- and titanium erections -- cut yourself off after three drinks. "Binge drinking will kill your testosterone levels," warns Incledon. Alcohol affects the endocrine system, causing your testes to stop producing the male hormone. That's one reason drinking often causes you to go limp at the moment of truth.

Have a Sandwich at 3 p.m.

As any sensible woman knows, the way to put hair on a man's chest is to fill his stomach. Your body needs a ready supply of calories to make testosterone, so regularly skipping meals or going for long stretches without eating can cause your levels of the hormone to plummet. Then again, that's probably the warden's plan.

Buy the Fried Tortilla Chips

If you want to raise your testosterone score, eat a diet that includes about 30 percent fat, and not much less. Your body needs dietary fat to produce testosterone, so eating like a vegetarian aerobics instructor will cause your testosterone levels to sink drastically. This is bad, unless you actually are a vegetarian aerobics instructor.

Stop Surfing for Porn at 2 a.m.

Sleeping less than seven to eight hours a night can screw up your circadian rhythm. That's why it's no wonder your testosterone levels are higher in the morning after a good night's sleep. So if your work or social schedule keeps you stooped in perpetual jet lag, don't be surprised if you stop craving sex. At least that'll make it easier to stay out of bed.

test.....

Juices



POMEGRANATE JUICE FOR PROSTATE CANCER

How it works: Pomegranate contains a cocktail of chemicals which appear to reduce cell damage and potentially kill off cancer cells, according to scientists at the University of ­California.

They asked 50 men with prostate cancer to have a glass (0.24 litres) of the juice daily. They then kept track of the men’s levels of prostate specific antigen (PSA), a protein linked to prostate cancer.

Usually cancer patients’ levels double in about 15 months, but in patients who drank pomegranate juice it took an average of 54 months for their PSA levels to rise.

Also good for: Fighting heart disease and lowering ‘bad’ LDL cholesterol — antioxidants in pomegranate juice may help reduce the formation of fatty deposits on artery walls. (Antioxidants are compounds which help to destroy free radicals, harmful molecules produced by the body and environment and which are linked to a range of diseases, including cancer.)

It is always best to have fresh juice where ­possible, but if not, go for pasteurised over ­concentrates which can be packed with sugar.

Recommended brand: Rubican Pomegranate Juice Drink, £1.49 per litre from good supermarkets

GRAPEFRUIT JUICEFOR WEIGHT LOSS

How it works: By aiding more efficient metabolism of sugars, it can be a useful aid to weight-loss programmes. A U.S. study looked at the benefits of grapefruit by dividing 100 obese people into three groups: one group was given half a grapefruit before each meal, another had a glass of grapefruit juice, while the remaining third had no grapefruit.

Red grapefruit

After 12 weeks, those eating grapefruit had lost an average of 3.6lb and those drinking grapefruit juice lost an average of 3.3lb. But those in the control group who consumed no grapefruit lost only an average of 0.5lb.

Also good for: Enhances the body’s absorption of coQ10, an energy compound vital to our cells. Boosts the anti-cancer effect of certain drugs (but can adversely interfere with other medication, so check with your doctor first).

Recommended Brand: Prince Grapefruit Juice, £1.39 for 1 Litre, and Tropicana 100pc Squeezed Grapefruit Juice, £1.94 for 1 litre from good supermarkets.

CRANBERRY JUICE FOR URINARY INFECTIONS

How it works: A study conducted this year showed that cranberry juice prevents the growth of the bacteria E.Coli, the most common cause of urinary infections.

Researchers who presented their findings to the American Chemical Society showed that within eight hours of drinking a glass of cranberry juice, the juice could help prevent bacteria from developing into an infection in the urinary tract.

However, contrary to popular belief, the juice will not treat cystitis if the infection has already occurred ­— indeed, because it is acidic it can actually exacerbate the discomfort.

Also good for: Raising the levels of ‘good’ HDL cholesterol through high levels of polyphenols, the antioxidants in the fruit; reducing the risk of gum disease and stomach ulcers (because of anti-bacterial benefits).

Recommended Brand: Ocean Spray Cranberry Classic Juice Drink, £1.17per litre from good supermarkets.

APPLE JUICE FOR ALZHEIMER’S

How it works: Drinking apple juice maintains your levels of a brain chemical called acetylcholine, which is vital for memory and brain health (low levels are linked to Alzheimer’s Disease), according to a U.S. study.

Apple

Although the research was conducted on mice, researchers suggest that two glasses (500ml in total) of apple juice a day could have similar benefits in adults,

Also good for: Aids digestion and healthy bowel function thanks to its high fibre content. Might also help to lower cholesterol.

Recommended Brand: Copella Apple Juice, £1.08 for 330ml from Tesco and other supermarkets.

CHERRY JUICE FOR CRAMP AND GOUT

How it works: Recent studies at Northumbria University have shown that runners who drank the juice of Montmorency cherries — a tart-tasting fruit that is particularly rich in antioxidants — twice a day for five days before the London Marathon recovered much more quickly and experienced less muscle pain than those who didn’t.

In addition, cherry juice can help ease the agony of gout by helping the body to excrete the uric acid linked to the painful joint condition.

Also good for: Drinking a glass of cherry juice a day offers the same health benefits as eating 23 portions of fruit and vegetables, one study found. A 250ml serving of the juice contained more antioxidants than five portions of peas, tomatoes, watermelon, carrots and banana.

Recommended Brand: CherryActive concentrated juice (add water) £14.49 for 473ml from Holland & Barrett, and Vimto Cherry Juice, £1.20 for 725ml from Tesco.

ORANGE JUICE FOR HEART DISEASE

How it works: Orange juice contains an antioxidant called hesperidin, which improves blood vessel function, helping to cut your risk of heart disease.

U.S. researchers found that men who drank 500ml of orange juice (containing 292mg of hesperidin) daily had lower blood pressure than those who took an antioxidant supplement.

Also good for: Preventing kidney stones. It is known that supplements of citrate, a substance found in citrus juices, can help slow the formation of kidney stones, but some people find the acidic nature of the pills hard to tolerate. A daily glass of orange juice produces similar benefits.

Recommended Brand: Tropicana — their Smooth Orange Juice is £1.96 for 1 litre from all good supermarkets.

PINEAPPLE JUICE FOR ARTHRITIS

How it works: The enzyme bromelain, found in the flesh and juice of pineapples, helps the body digest proteins and aids digestion, but also has other major benefits.

Pineapple

When taken on an empty stomach, bromelain acts as an anti-inflammatory agent which has been shown to reduce arthritis joint pain and swelling. One study showed a combination of enzymes including bromelain may be a safe alternative to anti-inflammatory drugs for people with osteoarthritis of the knee.

Also good for: Helps ease symptoms of coughs and colds and thins the blood, although doctors are not yet clear why.

Recommended Brand: Del Monte Pure Gold Pineapple Juice, £1 for 1 litre from Tesco.

ACAI BERRY JUICE FOR CANCER

How it works: Acai juice, which is made from a berry found in South America, has been shown to have very high levels of antioxidants with even more than cranberry, raspberry, blackberry, strawberry or blueberry. Studies by the University of Texas have found that drinking the juice daily can help prevent the development and spread of cancer cells.

Also good for: Aiding weight loss — it stabilises blood sugar levels, so preventing appetite swings.

Recommended Brand: The Berry Company Acai Juice, £1.75 for 330ml from Holland & Barrett.

PURPLE GRAPE JUICE FOR MEMORY LOSS

How it works: A study by psychiatrists at the University of Cincinatti found that a daily drink of the juice improved patients’ memory significantly compared with a placebo. Experts think the grapes provide brain-boosting antioxidants.

Also good for: Lowers cholesterol and can be as effective as a daily aspirin in helping to prevent blood clots. The fruit contains higher levels of disease-fighting antioxidant compounds than red wine and apple juice according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Recommended Brand: Welch’s Purple Grape Juice, £1.80 for 1 litre from supermarkets.

COCONUT WATER FOR EXHAUSTION

How it works: Madonna and Gwyneth Paltrow are among those who drink coconut water (taken from the centre of the fruit; coconut milk is made with the flesh) to speed up recovery after workouts.

Coconut

Enthusiasts have dubbed it ‘nature’s sports drink’ because it contains everything you need — fluid for rehydration, carbohydrates for energy and electrolytes (or body salts) to replace what’s lost through sweat, but with only 46 calories per serving, and no fat.

Also good for: Offsetting hunger pangs by stabilising blood sugar, lowering cholesterol and blood pressure thanks to its antioxidants.

Recommended Brand: VitaCoco 100pc Pure Coconut Water, £1.75 for 330ml from Holland & Barrett.

CARROT JUICE FOR COLORECTAL CANCER

How it works: Researchers at Newcastle University isolated a compound in carrots that has been shown to fight cancer and found that rats fed either the compound, called falcarinol, or raw carrot juice in addition to their normal food had a one-third lower risk of developing colorectal cancer than rats not given the compound.

Falcarinol is a natural pesticide found in carrots that protects the vegetable against fungal diseases — in the human diet, carrots are its only source.

Also good for: Enhancing immunity (thanks to high levels of vitamin C), maintaining (but not improving) quality of vision (rich in vitamin A), aiding digestion (good source of fibre).

Recommended Brand: Eden Organic Carrot Juice, £1.97 for 750ml, Tesco.

TOMATO JUICE FOR SUNBURN

How it works: Researchers have shown that lycopene, the substance that makes tomatoes red, is a great antioxident.

It has been scientifically proven to help protect skin from sun damage, perhaps by neutralising the harmful effects of UV light. In tests, people who ate more tomatoes had 33 per cent more ­protection from sunburn.

 Tomatoes

Also good for: Several studies have shown that a regular consumption of tomatoes — particularly processed, juiced or cooked — is linked to reduced risk of prostate cancer.

Evidence is inconclusive, but Cancer Research UK says: ‘Many doctors believe the current evidence is promising enough to encourage men to eat more tomatoes.’

Recommended Brand: Popular brands include Dawtona Tomato Juice, 66p for 330ml.

BLUEBERRY JUICE FOR DEMENTIA

How it works: Substances in blueberries may help keep the brain healthy, suggested a small study at the University of Cincinatti earlier this year.

Researchers looked at the effect of blueberry juice on memory in adults in their 70s who had age-related memory decline. Those who drank a pint of blueberry juice daily for 12 weeks performed significantly better in memory tests.

Also good for: Stabilising blood sugar levels, preventing food cravings that can lead to weight gain.

Recommended Brand: Pomegreat Blueberry Juice Drink, 99p for 1 litre from most supermarkets.