Chandler Boot Camps Ignite Your Metabolism!
Are you experiencing metabolic “slow down”? A fat loss plateau is a sure sign of having a slow metabolic rate. Your body needs you to do something! There are a few ways you can boost your metabolism, including attending our Chandler boot camp program and we will cover a few of the most important ones.
First off, you have to realize you have the power to get that slow metabolism kicked up a few notches.
If you’re serious about losing body fat, then a metabolic rate that’s slow will not get you there. There are two main things you can do to put some fire underneath that metabolism of yours.
1) Eat
You read it right…Eat! A slow metabolism can and will increase the more you eat and the more frequently you eat.
Now you can not sit down to a meal of french fries and hot dogs all day and expect to lose weight. But, with a healthy diet in place with moderate amounts of protein, you are on your way to a livelier metabolism.
Spread those meals out over 5-7 smaller feedings throughout the day and you will feel your body firing up that internal furnace called your metabolism.
You see…your body will burn smaller meals similar to how a fire burns wood. Throwing a high calorie meal in your body is like throwing a big oak log on a small fire. It will simply smother the fire out.
On the other hand, if you put several smaller meals in your body throughout the day, it is like putting kindling on a fire….you are providing a quick burning fuel for immediate heat!
Small frequent meals keep your fire (metabolism) burning, whereas big logs (meals) smother out the fire and initiate little heat production. We are looking for maximum heat. By keeping meals small and frequent, you can turn up your heat production many times over.
2) Exercise.
Exercise blasts away calories. No real surprise, I know, but that’s the name of the game. Participating in a Chandler Arizona boot camp is a great way to burn calories.
“More calories out vs. calories in.” That is the basic underlying principle, but there are many other factors that come into play. We will keep this simple.
Exercise, especially challenging interval type exercise, can help keep you burning calories all day long.
You see, muscle is an active tissue. This means you need calories to keep it active. Roughly 40-50 calories per pound of muscle is an estimate on how many calories your body requires per day to sustain it. That might not sound like much, but what if you added 5-10 lbs of lean muscle to your body? Your potential to burn additional calories increases by 2 to 5 hundred every day. That is a lot of extra calories! Especially when that happens naturally from having higher muscle mass levels and no additional activity is required….bonus!
The best way to build calorie burning muscle is with resistance exercise…a.k.a. weight training. You should make it a point to add resistance training to your overall exercise program. Weight training will support your metabolism better than most other activities.
By using moderate to heavy weights, you will have elevated your resting metabolic rate. It is estimated that your resting metabolic rate (RMR) is responsible for roughly 60-70% of your daily energy expenditure. Anything you can do to elevate your RMR will have the greatest net effect on your fat loss efforts. From an exercise view, nothing compares to resistance training as far as impact.
Cardiovascular exercise will also help elevate a slow metabolism. Your body will continue to burn additional calories, sometimes hours after you have finished your workout. The more intense (effort) your workout is, the longer your metabolism will continue burning calories at an accelerated rate.
So hit your resistance training and cardio program with the right intensity and see what happens to your “turtle” like metabolic rate. Expect to see and feel noticeable changes to your metabolic rate after a few weeks. Incorporate some cardiovascular intervals, like fitness boot camp training, to the mix when you are ready and the skies the limit.
Make sure to eat a basic nutrient dense diet with sufficient amounts of protein through out the day. Increasing your meal frequency will bring a slow metabolism back up.
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