The Men's Fitness Exercise Bible: 101 Best Workouts to Build Muscle, Burn Fat and Sculpt Your Best Body Ever!

The Men's Fitness Exercise Bible: 101 Best Workouts to Build Muscle, Burn Fat and Sculpt Your Best Body Ever!

by Sean Hyson
The Men's Fitness Exercise Bible: 101 Best Workouts to Build Muscle, Burn Fat and Sculpt Your Best Body Ever!

The Men's Fitness Exercise Bible: 101 Best Workouts to Build Muscle, Burn Fat and Sculpt Your Best Body Ever!

by Sean Hyson

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Overview

With The Men’s Fitness Exercise Bible, you will always have time to get in great shape—even if you only have no time at all. You will always have the equipment you need—even if you have no equipment at all. You will never grow bored or stop seeing progress—and your workout will never become routine.

Whether you have access to an upscale gym or just a dumbbell in your garage, whether you’re an elite athlete or a complete beginner, there’s a workout in this book—101 of them, in fact—that will get you bigger, stronger, and leaner. Discover how to accomplish in 8 minutes what most people do in 80—because top exercise pros give you only the most effective and efficient workouts in the world. The Men’s Fitness Exercise Bible gives you:

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780989594028
Publisher: Galvanized Media
Publication date: 12/31/2013
Sold by: SIMON & SCHUSTER
Format: eBook
Pages: 368
Sales rank: 882,578
File size: 42 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Sean Hyson is the Group Training Director for Men’s Fitness and Muscle & Fitness magazines. A Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist (C.S.C.S.), he has been writing about exercise and nutrition for more than a decade. He lives in New York City, and can deadlift 500-plus pounds.

Read an Excerpt

01    THE MEN’S FITNESS FOOD PYRAMID
 
Remember the USDA Food Pyramid? The one that was posted by the lunch line in your grade school cafeteria and taught in health class? The government’s official position on how you should eat to be fit and healthy included recommendations to consume up to 11 servings of pasta,
 
bread, and crackers per day; limit meat and eggs to three servings; and count potatoes as a vegetable.
 
Yeah, don’t eat like that.
 
The Food Pyramid was so misleading and inaccurate that in 2011 it was replaced with the USDA’s MyPlate, an improved but still flawed approach to fighting obesity. To be fair, the government’s nutrition advice is aimed at the average American who desires to be in only average shape (read: not obese). As we assume you picked up this book to be bigger, stronger, more ripped, and healthier than that, you need an entirely different approach.
 
To that end, we’ve created the Men’s Fitness Food Pyramid—an easy visual guide to eating for physique enhancement, performance, and optimal health. See how the pyramid works below and then use it to build a better body.
 
HIT YOUR NUMBERS
As a physique-conscious eater, you need to think in terms of macronutrients as well as calories. Every food you eat gets counted toward a total target amount (in grams) of protein, carbs, and fat, which you can determine by multiplying the numbers in the Men’s Fitness Food Pyramid by your body weight in pounds. Hit these numbers and you’ll hit your goals.
 
With that said, your nutrition doesn’t need to be as precise as target coordinates for a missile attack. You’ll do just fine eyeballing portions of protein, carbs, and fat (which we’ll show you how to do) and keeping a general tally.
 
MAKE ADJUSTMENTS AS NECESSARY
The calorie and macronutrient recommendations here are just a starting point. Every trainee needs to find the proper amounts for his own body. If you’re not losing weight, reduce your carbs gradually, and try experimenting with bumping up your protein and fat intake a bit. If you feel as if you can’t gain weight, you can add more carbs and even more fat, which will increase your calories sharply. For any formulation you make, give it at least a week to take effect before you make any changes.
 
PROTEIN
With protein being the main component of muscle tissue, your intake of it must remain high no matter your goal. To make size gains, you need at least one gram of protein per pound of your body weight to support optimal growth. When dieting, you must create a caloric deficit—but that can cause muscle loss if you end up cutting protein to do it. That’s why we increase protein intake and decrease starchy carbs. To get lean, you may increase your protein to as many as 1.5 grams per pound of body weight; but start lower and increase gradually as you reduce your calories slowly. If you feel like you’re not recovering from training or you’re losing muscle, up the protein fast.
 
The best protein sources are eggs, chicken, fish, lean beef, turkey, quinoa (for vegetarians), and protein powder. A three-ounce portion of lean meat or fish is about the size and thickness of the palm of your hand and contains 20–25 grams of protein, five grams of fat or fewer, and zero carbs.
 
CARBS
All carbohydrates break down into glucose, raising your blood sugar levels faster than any other nutrient. As a result, the pancreas releases insulin to remove surplus sugar from the bloodstream and maintain normal levels. Research, including a study at the University of Washington School of Medicine, has found that exercise—particularly strength training—increases insulin sensitivity in the muscles. So if you’ve just worked out, more of the carbs you eat afterward will be carried by insulin directly to your muscles for replenishment. (Incidentally, this goes for protein too, which is why it’s helpful to consume a mixture of protein and carbs after training—we’ll discuss this more later.) On the other hand, if you’ve been sitting on the couch watching football, those carbs will just get stored around your waist.
 
For this reason, we recommend that most of your carbs come before, during, and shortly after training. It also means that you need to eat fewer carbs when you want to get lean—you need to keep insulin levels low. “If someone is in fat-loss mode,” says John Meadows, C.S.S.N., a nutrition coach and national-level bodybuilder, “I like to limit carbs to pre-, intra-, and post-workout meals, when they’ll go where you want them”—that is, to muscle tissue. For muscle gain, Meadows prefers to add carbs (shakes included) to meals around training time first, before adding them to other meals.
 
Carb foods include potatoes, sweet potatoes, rice, oats, fruits, and vegetables. Fruits should be consumed in their whole-food form and limited to two or three pieces daily (excess fructose, the sugar in fruit, is stored as fat). Green vegetables can be eaten steadily regardless of the goal. Eat one gram of carbohydrate per pound of your body weight when dieting and two grams per pound when you want to put on muscle.
 
A fist-size portion of cooked rice or potatoes is about one cup and gives you 40–45 grams of carbs and negligible protein and fat.
 
FAT
“We need to provide a baseline level of good fats for hormone production,” says Nate Miyaki, C.S.S.N., a nutrition consultant and bodybuilder in San Francisco, CA. Fat, particularly the much-maligned saturated kind, helps in the creation of testosterone, which does everything from getting you big and lean to keeping your “little friend” ready to say hello. Contrary to popular opinion, when dieting, you don’t need to drop your fat intake much, if at all; fat loss comes fastest when carbohydrate intake is reduced. Plus, fat is satiating as well as a good source of energy.
 
Most of your fats should come by way of your protein foods, but avocados, nuts, seeds, and a small amount of oil like coconut and olive oil can be included as well. Aim for 0.4 grams per pound of your body weight daily to start. One tablespoon of any oil is about 15 grams of fat, and one cup of almonds or peanuts has 70 grams of fat. Two tablespoons of nut butter is about the length of your thumb and contains 15–20 grams of fat.
 
WORKOUT NUTRITION
Research hasn’t yet clarified the optimal amount of protein or carbs you should eat around workouts for the maximum benefit. But it is clear that some is better than none, and the presence of both is crucial. A 2006 study in the European Journal of Applied Physiology gave male subjects one of the following to consume after weight training: a 6 percent carbohydrate solution, six grams of amino acids (components of protein), a combination of both, or a placebo. Those drinking the carb-and-aminos shake experienced greater muscle gains than any of the other groups, which the researchers presumed was because the concoction did the most to reduce muscle protein breakdown after training.
 
Meadows recommends taking in 25–50 grams of protein, 25–35 grams of carbs, and 10 grams of fat before training. Afterward, consume another 20–40 grams of protein and 40–80 grams of carbs—you can begin chugging this shake during the workout as well to limit muscle breakdown even further, though this may not be necessary and could upset your stomach. We like to make shakes with whey isolate or hydrolysate as the protein source, and Vitargo or highly branched cyclic dextrin for carbs.
 
If powders and shakes aren’t in your budget, Miyaki says you can go old-school and eat fruit pre- and post-workout. One or two pieces should provide enough carbs to halt muscle breakdown. And a lean three-ounce slice of protein to accompany it is fine.
 
A PERFECT DAY
How to plan your eating to achieve your goals
 
Let’s say you’re a 180 POUND MAN who wants to lose his gut.
 
You could start your diet eating about 2,100 CALORIES DAILY (180 × 12) consisting of 180g PROTEIN, 180g CARBS, and 70g FAT.
 
HERE’S A LOW-STRESS EATING PLAN TO FIT THIS GUY’S BUSY SCHEDULE.
 
BREAKFAST
8 oz black coffee
3 scrambled eggs
1/3 cup unsweetened oatmeal with cinnamon
 
POST-WORKOUT
25g whey protein
1 banana
 
LUNCH
3 oz grilled salmon
Large raw salad w/ 2 tbsp olive oil and vinegar
1 cup sweet potato or white potato (cooked)
 
DINNER
6 oz baked chicken breast
1 cup jasmine rice or potato (cooked)
Steamed broccoli”
 
SNACK
Meal-replacement shake with 50g protein, 25g carbs, 5g fat
 
DESSERT
2 tbsp almond butter mixed with one scoop chocolate casein protein
and water (to make a pudding)
 

Table of Contents

Foreword Dave Zinczenko xiii

Introduction 1

Before We Begin

1 The Men's Fitness Food Pyramid 5

2 How to Warm Up 13

Full Body Workouts

3 Full Gym 25

4 Barbell 49

5 Dumbbells & Kettlebells 55

6 Machines 67

7 Bands 73

8 Suspension Trainer 79

9 Medicine Ball 83

10 Swiss Ball 89

11 Body Weight 93

Body Part Workouts

12 Arms 103

13 Biceps 113

14 Triceps 123

15 Forearms 137

16 Chest 145

17 Shoulders 165

18 Back 185

19 Legs 199

20 Calves 215

21 Butt 223

22 Abs 237

23 Traps 253

Upper & Lower Body Workouts

24 Upper Body 259

25 Lower Body 267

Cardio Workouts

26 Cardio Machines 273

27 Body-Weight Cardio 289

28 Running 297

29 Boxing & MMA 303

Short Workouts

30 Abs in Under 30 Minutes 315

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