losing weight... but not the tummy!
akmcfarland
Posts: 7
i need help! i am doing great eating smaller portions, all healthy stuff! my calories usually equal out to 900 -1100 cal a day depending on if i go on an evening run. i am doing the 30 Day Shred and a 10 minuet abs workout along with about 30 minuets of walking a day. I am seeing some great drops on the scale, but not in the tummy... if you have any advice it would be greatly appreciated!
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Replies
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bump0
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Hi
I highly recommend this ab workout:
http://www.amazon.com/Workout-One-One-Training-Jackie/dp/B0015D20FY
Its very hard at first, but after 4-5 days a week for a month I've gotten results. The lower abs are of course more difficult to lose, but I can see lines by my hip bones now and the upper abs look awesome!
-Kate0 -
bump.0
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MORE RUNNING LESS AB WORK OUTS YOU ALREADY HAVE MUSCLE UNDER THAT TUMMY FAT AND KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK.0
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You will just have to keep working at it until your body starts digging into belly fat. You can't spot reduce or target burn. I have been at this since November of last year. I thinned out everywhere - all over except my belly. I have started weight lifting/resistance training with heavier weights (no 3 pound-ers here!) and since I started this my belly fat is going away. My body fat calipers have went from 20mm down to 16mm (I just dropped 2.2lbs in the last 2 days but haven't checked the calipers yet).
Unfortunately this is where most of us store our fat and will be the last to go.
You might want to start eating more. Eat at least your BMR (under Tools here). This is what your body requires just to function (organs and systems). If you don't eat at least this it will affect your health and stall your weight loss (your body thinks it's starving and will try and protect your fat reserves and dig into your lean muscle mass and you will lose more of this than fat mass. This is what makes your metabolism. As you get closer to your goal weight this will become more important.
Working With Your Body - The Basic Strategy
By John P. Hussman, Ph.D.
All rights reserved and actively enforced.
The goal of this site is to help you to transform your physique by walking you step-by-step through everything you need to know about exercise physiology and nutrition. I know that a lot of you have “tried everything,” and because there are so many approaches that have failed you, there's a real risk that you'll quit again and again if you don't see results immediately, or if you don't fully understand why your fitness program should work. Worse, there may be some missing pieces in your program, which could lead to slow progress even though you're hard at work. My hope is that this information will help you to stay on track - to turn effort into results - and to reach your goal.
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Every change you throw at your body triggers a response. The problem with many diet and exercise programs is that they can accidentally encourage your body to defend fat, shed muscle, increase appetite and even lower its metabolism. The key to fast results is to know exactly which actions will cause your body to adapt by becoming fitter.
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Look. You're not a special case. Even if you had the fat gene (common among Pima Indians but rare otherwise), you'd only be burning 50-60 calories a day less than anybody else. Even if you've been diagnosed with a metabolic difficulty such as diabetes or hypothyroidism, you can still be successful with proper medical support. Most probably, other approaches failed you either because they were missing important pieces, focused on the wrong things, or produced results so slowly that you just gave up. What you need most is good information. You're in the right place.
The law of unintended consequences
Your body is an amazing feedback system aimed at balance and survival. Humans are at the top of the food chain because they are able to adapt to their environment. Every action produces a reaction. Every change in its environment triggers a survival response. It's important to keep that in mind when you plan your fitness program. If you treat your body as an enemy to be conquered, you'll produce unintended results.
For example, if you severely cut off the supply of food to your body, it will defend itself by slowing down its metabolism to survive starvation. The body will shed muscle mass the same way that you would throw cargo from a plane that was low on fuel, and it will reduce its thyroid activity to conserve energy. The body will also actually defend its fat stores. In anorexia, muscle loss can be so profound that fat as a percentage of body weight actually rises. Extreme carbohydrate restriction also causes muscle loss, dehydration, and slower metabolism, which is why even successful Atkins dieters can have a significant rebound in weight after they stop the diet (don't worry – the advice on this site will prevent that from happening).
As another example, if you put your body under stress through overexertion and lack of sleep, it will respond by slowing down, reducing muscle growth, and increasing your appetite for junk food, carbohydrates and fat. If you feed your body excessive amounts of sugar and quickly digested carbohydrates, and it will shut off its ability to burn fat until those sugars are taken out of the bloodstream.
This website will show you how to work with your body to quickly produce the changes you want. In order to do that, you need to take actions that push your body to adapt – to build strength, burn fat, and increase fitness. You need a training program, not an exercise routine. You need a nutrition plan, not a diet. You need a challenge, not a few good habits you usually try to follow except when you don't.
Setting the right goal
John Dewey once said that a problem well-stated is half-solved. If you want to reach your goal, you have to define it correctly. See, a lot of people say “I want to lose weight.” Well, if losing weight is your goal, go on a no-carb diet. You'll lose a lot of weight – some of it will be fat, a lot of it will be water, and a dangerous amount will be muscle tissue. You'll lose weight quickly, but you'll slow your metabolism and gain fat more quickly once you go off the diet. Trust me on this. I've been there, done that.
The problem is that you've set the wrong goal. If you want to look better, have more energy and enjoy better health, the goal is not simply to “lose weight.” The goal is to improve your fitness level and body composition. That means losing fat, improving your aerobic capacity, training your strength and defending your muscle tissue. You can't do that with a no-carb diet. You will do it using the approach you'll learn on this website. Trust me on this one too. I know what it's like to feel fat, tired and helplessly out of shape. The whole point of this site is to help others avoid that, by sharing lessons that I had to learn the hard way.
Ready to change?
Right this minute, your body is the way it is because it has adapted to the lifestyle you've thrown at it, in an attempt to survive. Ever seen the directory at the mall with the little red arrow that says “you are here”? Well, fitness is the same way. You are here. You can't start anywhere else. So be kind to yourself. Don't beat yourself up. Don't worry about how much there is to do. Change your self-talk from “My body is my enemy” to “My body is my partner.” Accept where you are right now as the starting point, and start moving.
Changing your body requires more than just “going on a diet” for a few weeks. If you want to change your body, you have to make some changes to your lifestyle (which requires some discipline, but isn't as hard as it sounds). If you create the right environment, your body will adapt to it by becoming leaner, stronger, and more energetic. You can do this.
http://www.hussmanfitness.org/html/TPAdaptation.html
(intense cardio and severe calorie restriction will cause more muscle mass loss than fat loss. Your body treats both as stress).0 -
Belly fat is the hardest to get rid of and you may not notice a difference until you're closer toward the end! Are you taking measurements? I just took my measurements and I've lost 2 inches in my waist that I didn't even recognize!0
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Unfortunately you can't really target fat loss. Just keep up the cardio and eventually your body will need to burn the fat from the tummy area. Strength training is also supposed to help because repairing muscle tissue burns calories.
For me it has totally been "the first place you put it on is the last place to lose it" syndrome. My thighs are the first place to chunk up and even though I'm at a fairly happy weight now, they haven't lost much in inches.0 -
Just remember you can not spot reduce and flat bellies are made in the kitchen not the gym, you won't see any abs no matter what if their is still fat over them just need to decrease the body fat %. I am also working on this and yes it is hard. I can feel my abs under the fat but cannot see them.0
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Unfortunately you can't really target fat loss. Just keep up the cardio and eventually your body will need to burn the fat from the tummy area. Strength training is also supposed to help because repairing muscle tissue burns calories.
For me it has totally been "the first place you put it on is the last place to lose it" syndrome. My thighs are the first place to chunk up and even though I'm at a fairly happy weight now, they haven't lost much in inches.
This is true. I have heard this before (I think it was Jillian Michaels)0 -
hahaha yeah i can feel em under there so i know its like waiting for christmas morning and unwrapping a much anticipated gift i will surly keep up the cardio! lol and what is Bump? i have committed to a lifestyle change and have been at it about a month, my husband said that he sees my shirts fitting better so thats a good start! anything worth having is worth working for! thanks for your support and motivation!0
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Oh... I am right there with you!! I've been at this since September and while everything is getting smaller, I'm still proportionately larger in the middle. I'm only 5 feet tall, so that's where most of it went And I know that will probably be the last place for it to go. We just have to keep on going! Combine strength training with your cardio, and make sure you net ~1200 calories every day (ie. eat back enough exercise calories to get yourself back to 1200 net.)
It's great to know that other people are in the same boat as me! We can fight the tummy flab together! :flowerforyou:0 -
I saw Bob Harper from the Biggest Loser address this same topic one day and he said you need to do Mountain Climbers to target the ab area.0
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