Why
Weight Training Helps You Burn Fat
and Lose Weight

Adding
weight training to a cardiovascular routine practically guarantees slimming
results. Here's why:
First, it speeds up your metabolism of fat. By this, I indirectly
mean that your body becomes more efficient at burning calories. Picture
two cars in a race. Car A is small in frame, but it has a huge engine.
Car B is very large and heavy and has a very small engine. Which one do
you think will go ten miles in the shortest amount of time? Your muscle
mass is your engine, and the larger it is in proportion to your frame,
the more efficient a machine you become.
When you build muscle mass, your muscles actually gobble up calories from
your food in order to maintain themselves. This leaves fewer excess calories
lying around, turning into fat. In fact, if you lower your calorie intake
just a little bit, your new muscle mass will eat up some of your body
fat. There's a delicate balance that you need to strike here, though,
because if you cut your caloric intake too dramatically, your muscles
will shrink and your body might feel threatened by starvation and begin
to store extra fat, as a precaution.
Weight training increases your heart rate. Yes, it is basically an
anaerobic exercise, not designed for fat-burning the way cardiovascular
exercises are, but between sets, your heart rate remains up, and you actually
are getting a bit of the aerobic effect throughout your circuit.
The best way to take advantage of this is to use a light to medium amount
of weight and do a lot of repetitions (for example, three sets of fifteen).
You should feel your muscles burning, though, and the last three or four
reps should be difficult to do. If you breeze through it, you may get
the aerobic effect, but you won't increase your muscle mass sufficiently.
If you warm up and cool down, you'll have an increased heart rate for
an entire hour or longer.
People who lift weights generally sleep more restfully than people
who don't. A correlation has been shown between insomnia and weight
gain, with many possible explanations. The most logical is probably that
the body repairs and restores itself during restful periods. When it is
deprived of these sojourns, its fat-metabolizing mechanisms must work
in a less-than-optimal state. Well-rested organs are better equipped to
take care of business. If you don't sleep well, the best way to change
that is to begin weight training.
Building strength makes it possible for a person to increase physical
ability. This is why athletes spend so much time in the gym. If a
tennis player trained by simply doing drills and playing the game, she
might improve her agility, but she wouldn't add much oomph to her serve
without strengthening her shoulders, arms, legs and torso muscles. With
that extra muscle power, she can hit the ball harder and play more explosively,
ultimately burning more calories while she plays. She is also less likely
to sustain an injury which would put her on the sofa for two weeks. See
the connection?
Women are often hesitant about weight training, especially when their
goal is to lose weight. "Why add bulk to bulk?" they wonder.
Contrary to what many assume, a heavy woman will not become bigger
if she lifts weights. As a matter of fact, as the muscles
become denser, containing less marbleized fat, she appears smaller.
Women also do not become masculine-looking when they build muscle
mass. If anything, they develop a more symmetrical, feminine shape. Women
don't have the hormonal make-up that men have and therefore aren't able
to build as much muscle mass. Only with steroids and fanatically intense
training can a woman develop a manly body.
When you begin weight training, stay off the scale for a while, but
get out the tape measure. Measure your waist and hips every two weeks
and keep a log. Your weight may stay the same for a month or two (or longer),
but you will almost certainly lose some girth within that time frame.
And isn't that what you really want?
While
you're at it, you may want to get out the J Crew catalogs, because you'll
need some new clothes soon!
Learn more about permanent fat
loss through sensible fitness
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