Categories
Weight Loss Exercise

How to Increase Testosterone

Anybody that is trying to gain muscle needs to know how to increase testosterone. Testosterone is a hormone produced by the testes that helps you improve strength and muscle mass quickly as well as making you more aggressive and able to tackle tough situations and workouts. These factors are not always good but any weightlifter is looking forwrd to knowing how to increase testosterone.

How to Increase Testosterone

How to Increase Testosterone

How to Increase Testosterone

ZMA Supplementation – ZMA is a great supplement you should use if you want to know how to increase testosterone, just don’t ask wikipedia about it (they don’t like ZMA) ZMA is actually short for Zinc monomethionine aspartate and Magnesium Aspartate, you can see why the term ZMA took off instead. Anyway there are two parts of this supplement Zinc and Magnesium are helpful for the muscle mass as well as helping oxygenationm of muscle tissue.

Lots of Sleep – Sleep is always critical for getting in good workouts and recoving from past workouts but the fact is that is you do not sleep enough then your testosterone level will drop over time so it is important to keep up your sleep habits

Sex – Well sex seems to be a great motivator for getting that muscle in the first place but since the testes are so critical to creating testosteron then it only stands to reason that sex (hopefully with a partner) will increase your bodies need for testosterone and it will start creating more of it.

NO Alcohol – Drinking is bad, we all may like to do it occasionally but one of the side effects of drinking is that alcohol will inhibit the bodies creation of testosterone (Micky Roarke character in Barfly should have looked for a different fuel) so try to reduce alcohol comnsumption as much as possible.

Be a Meat Eater – It is not the testosterone and other crap that is pumped into the cows that increases our testosterone but instead the meat itself. Some people including Tim Ferris of the 4 hour body swear by huge days of 24 ounces of steak but remember that for protein your body can only assimilate about 3 or 4 onces of protein per meal.

Heavy weights for low reps – In the gym you can do your part to increase your testosterone level by doing heavy weight for low reps so three sets of 5 high weight sets  instead of 2 sets of 25 of low weight sets. I like to mix it up but those low weight sets are not how to increase testosterone.

Big Exercises only – When you are in the gym it is best not to worry about cardio and isolated exercises instead do anything with a huge weight. Squats, Bench press, Deadlifts, and other multijoint exercises. This way you can be in and out of the gym in a short amount of time as well.

There are a few things that you can see from this list. I your are really looking at how to increase testosterone then it really has to come down to stressing your body beyond anything at all normal, and then allowing your body to rest and recuperate. The onld fight or flight mechanism with rest for your recovery pumps up that caveman feel for your body to get stronger and bigger.

There are many reasons and ways of how to increase testosterone any missing ones are up to you to add below.

How to Increase Testosterone

Categories
Weight Loss Exercise

AntiOxidants for sports and fitness


Here is information from eVitamins on the value of Antioxidants for sports

Why do athletes use it?*
Some athletes say that antioxidants help protect the body from free radicals.
What do the advocates say?*
Antioxidants such as vitamin C, vitamin E, CoQ10, glutathione, and alpha lipoic acid are important supplements for everyone, but especially for those who exercise on a regular basis. The rational is that exercise is a highly oxidative process and, as a consequence, produces free radicals from aerobic metabolism. Antioxidant compounds help alleviate this process.

There is conflicting evidence whether the best time to supplement with an antioxidant is before or after a workout.

How much is usually taken by athletes?
Most research has demonstrated that strenuous exercise increases production of harmful substances called free radicals, which can damage muscle tissue and result in inflammation and muscle soreness. Exercising in cities or smoggy areas also increases exposure to free radicals. Antioxidants, including vitamin C and vitamin E, neutralize free radicals before they can damage the body, so antioxidants may aid in exercise recovery. Regular exercise increases the efficiency of the antioxidant defense system, potentially reducing the amount of supplemental antioxidants that might otherwise be needed for protection. However, at least theoretically, supplements of antioxidant vitamins may be beneficial for older or untrained people or athletes who are undertaking an especially vigorous training protocol or athletic event.

Placebo-controlled research, some of it double-blind, has shown that taking 400 to 3,000 mg of vitamin C per day for several days before and after intense exercise may reduce pain and speed up muscle strength recovery.3 4 5 However, taking vitamin C only after such exercise was not effective in another double-blind study.6 While some research has reported that vitamin E supplementation in the amount of 800 to 1,200 IU per day reduces biochemical measures of free-radical activity and muscle damage caused by strenuous exercise,7 8 9 several studies have not found such benefits,and no research has investigated the effect of vitamin E on performance-related measures of strenuous exercise recovery. A combination of 90 mg per day of coenzyme Q10 and a very small amount of vitamin E did not produce any protective effects for marathon runners in one double-blind trial,14 while in another double-blind trial a combination of 50 mg per day of zinc and 3 mg per day of copper significantly reduced evidence of post-exercise free radical activity.15

In most well-controlled studies, exercise performance has not been shown to improve following supplementation with vitamin C, unless a deficiency exists, as might occur in athletes with unhealthy or irrational eating patterns.16 17 Similarly, vitamin E has not benefited exercise performance,18 19 except possibly at high altitudes.

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  • Related Blogs on Alpha Lipoic Acid
Categories
General Weight Loss Tips

Behind the Book – Burn the Fat Feed the Muscle

Tom Venuto’s book Burn the Fat Feed the Muscle, available for digital download, explains in-depth, a non-traditional system for lowering one’s body fat percentage and keeping the fat and weight off permanently. Unlike other aggressive weight loss plans, this book involves no supplements or drugs, time consuming exercises, or large scale cooking of several meals a day. The objective here is to take in the right type of nutrition where you’re not storing or accumulating any additional fat, and you’re providing only your muscle tissue with the necessary proteins to grow. The book Burn the Fat Feed the Muscle can be used in a couple different ways. A lot of hard core, power dieters and those active in the gym can provide some direction and a unique approach that they haven’t seen before. People who have never dieted or put out any real effort to trim down fat or lose weight can benefit because the book Burn the Fat Feed the Muscle provides a better starting point than many.

Readers have said about the book Burn the Fat Feed the Muscle, that the articles included (some of the author’s other writings) are inspiring and provide a whole new look to the idea of developing unstoppable fitness motivation, basic health principles, and combining diet and exercise.

Sacrifice is something most people have come to accept when they get into a program like this, but the book Burn the Fat Feed the Muscle focuses on the methods that let you make sure you’re still enjoying life while staying healthy and thin. I always laugh how some obese people who refuse to diet or exercise often criticize certain weight loss methods by saying “That’s not a healthy diet. ” It’s true, there are some hard-core diets that starve your body and rob you of the important nutrition you need to stay healthy, but the nutritional approach discussed in the book Burn the Fat Feed the Muscle provides all of the necessary variety of the right foods so you can stay healthy.

The book Burn the Fat Feed the Muscle is being commonly regarded as a “must” for anyone who has tried out a lot of the conventional diets, books, and exercise programs, and doesn’t seem to make any headway. When you consider the significant gains that people have been seeing from this, it definitely makes it something worth looking into.

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