turbulence training

Just Say No to Cardio - the book by Craig Ballantyne

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Great news, Craig just released his first book "Just Say No to Cardio"! Craig's taken the proven concepts of his Turbulence Training program and put it in a book.

I'll be getting a copy soon and putting up a review, but in the mean time I thought I'd let everyone know about this great new release. 

"Just Say No to Cardio" is available for pre-order on Amazon and is quickly making it up to the top of the Exercise and Fitness charts.

 

Chapter 1. The Evolution of Weight Loss
  • The 3 Keys to fat loss.
  • The reason why short, burst workouts work better than traditional so- called "weight loss workouts"
  • A minute-by-minute guide to an Interval Training workout

Chapter 2. The Great Cardio Scam

  • The truth about the Interval Training vs. Cardio debate
  • The dreaded slow cardio-appetite connection
  • 3 Ways to Beat belly fat
  • How to get your FREE GIFT worth $29.95

Chapter 3. Short Burst Exercise˜The Belly Fat Solution

  • The contrast between old, ineffective traditional fat loss programs and the 3-day or 6-day Turbulence Training schedule
  • Why Turbulence Training works so well for women
  • The simple fat burning mistakes men make
  • Why the Turbulence Training Transformation Contest works so well for fat loss

Chapter 4. The Ultimate Home Gym

  • Revealed: The Commercial Gym Myth
  • The truth about calorie counting machines
  • Unique and fun ways to do interval training

Chapter 5. The Turbulence Training Workout

  • How to set up the best fat burning workout
  • The truth about bodybuilding and strength training for fat loss
  • The interval training secrets to burn belly fat

Chapter 6. The Secrets to Great Bodyweight Workouts

  • The most over-rated bodyweight exercise
  • How to set up bodyweight circuits to burn belly fat
  • The truth about crunches and better exercises
  • The ultimate fat burning bodyweight challenge

Chapter 7. Five Simple Nutrition Rules for Fat Burning

  • How to find out what you are truly eating
  • The simplest, most important rule about weight loss diets
  • How often should you cheat
  • How to avoid the cardio confessional
  • The one thing every dieter must do to lose weight

Chapter 8. The Top Five Fat Loss Myths

  • The truth about morning cardio
  • The truth about fat burning zone cardio
  • The truth about supplements and fat burning
  • How to beat paralysis by analysis

Chapter 9. The Forgotten Secret to Fat Loss Success

  • How to create a fat burning world you can live in
  • How to set fat burning goals you can finally achieve
  • The truth about taking measurements

Chapter 10. The Five Step Quick-Start Guide to Burning Belly Fat

    • What to do about cardio
    • What you must do with your workouts to burn fat

 

 

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Fitness Roller Coaster Ride

Welcome to the Fitness Roller Coaster Ride, please enter the ride quickly, secure all lose articles and carry ons and fasten your seat belt tightly. During the ride you will experience ups and downs and a few dreaded plateaus along the way.

And so it goes with weight loss and fitness. There will be days when you hit a personal best and you feel like a million bucks. There will also be days when you just don't feel like going to the gym or the scale goes up and you feel like all the hard work you've put in has been for naught.

Today, I just experienced one of those down moments after my weekly weigh-in. Despite having what I thought was a good week, I didn't lose any weight. I stepped on and off the scale at least 6 times, hoping to see at least 1 pound come off but each time the scale stopped, it still read 194.

Stepping off the scale for the last time I felt dejected and wasn't looking forward to my morning workout at all, what was the point? But even as I wallowed in my self-pity, I knew that going to the gym was exactly what I needed to do. The scale may not show the progress I was expecting, but I know I'm getting back into shape and can feel the tone of my muscles getting firm again.

This is the part of the roller coaster ride where it's almost too easy to get off, when you don't see the progress you expect. But, with a little mental toughness, this is also the point of the ride where you can cinch your seatbelt a little tighter and say to yourself "I'm going to make it through this." And when you do get through it, you'll experience the exhilaration of reaching a new personal best or weight loss goal and the ride will be fun again.

I tightened my seat belt and made it to the gym. The workout wasn't my best, I still was thinking of my weigh-in. But, I still made it to the gym and that's the important thing. I didn't give up and I've re-focused my energies on working hard and eating right. I know that this ride isn't automatic, I have to do my part to pull out of the lows in order to reach new highs.

So this week, my personal roller coaster is starting a new climb. When I weigh-in next week I plan on being higher up that hill than when I started. Between my personal motivation, and that of my family and friends in the Turbulence Training community I have all the support and encouragement I need to reach my next peak.

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Back in the pool

During yesterday's strength training session, I tweaked my knee during dumbbell squats. It just felt like a light pinch over my right knee cap, nothing major but I need to watch it and not over train. Since I tweaked my knee I wanted to try and minimize any impact on it for an interval session today. The obvious choice was to hit the pool and do my intervals in the water.

I really enjoy swimming. Growing up in Miami/Ft.Lauderdale, everyone had a pool in their back yard as well as the gorgeous beaches. Living in Cleveland, I'm right off of Lake Erie so I've been in and around water all my life but it had been quite awhile since I'd spent any time in the water.

It's a humbling experience when you first get back in a pool and try to do laps. When I was younger, I could literally swim all day long but time and inactivity caught up to me. Training for the SEAL Challenge helped me find my swimming grove again and by the time I took the SEAL Challenge, I was back into good swimming condition though I still hadn't reached my ultimate goal of swimming a mile.

Well, it seems swimming is no different from running or weight lifting, if you don't do it for a while you lose that conditioning (was this really unexpected? no, not really) and have to start over.

Even though the swim was harder than I had hoped, I still did decent intervals. I warmed up by swimming freestyle for 3 minutes. That was an achievement itself. I was questioning my ability to do sprints after that light warm up.

After warming up I swam 25M (one length) as fast as I could freestyle and then I'd slowly breast stroke back and rest for a minute or two. I did 6 sets of this routine and WOW was my heart pumping after each sprint.

I may switch to swimming for all my intervals, not only do I feel like I got a great cardio workout, my entire body feels like it got a great, low-impact workout too.

Who knows, by next summer maybe I'll be sporting a Michael Phelps like body from swimming so much!

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