
Why is Craig
Ballantyne Telling His
Readers to Go Against
Conventional Thinking
For True Fat Loss
Results?
Special
Article by the Author of TURBULENCE
TRAINING -- Craig Ballantyne
--
By: Craig Ballantyne, CSCS,
MS Turbulence Training for Fat
Loss
You know who is your worst
enemy in the fight against fat?
Well-meaning fitness
professionals that don't want to make you feel bad for
being lazy and eating crap. That's who.
They write articles about how
"diets are bad", how you can lift soup cans and get fitness
model arms, and how you should exercise in the nice and easy
"fat burning zone" to get results. Basically, they give you
what want to hear - plenty of excuses for avoiding hard
exercise and strict nutrition (the real keys to fat
loss).
But I don't. You'll get no
such excuses from me.
Here's the real deal on fat
loss. You have to work hard in your workouts and even harder on
your nutrition if you want results. Or you can take the
politically-correct easy way out and have the same body in 3,
6, and even 12 months from now.
Love me or hate me, I promise
you results. Let's take a look at why the PC-solutions don't
work...
Q: I've been told to
exercise in my "fat burning zone". What's the best cardio
method for weight loss.
Answer: Cardio is not
the only solution.
Clearly it adds to the energy
deficit and overall calorie balance that favors fat
loss.
BUT it's not the "be all
& end all" of fat loss success - and that is anecdotally
supported by the number of overweight distance
runners.
I almost never recommend
long, slow cardio...simply because no one I train or consult
with has the time for this, and it doesn't work any better than
shorter, less frequent, more intense interval training
sessions.
Five or six days of 45-minute
cardio sessions in my fat-burning zone? Yeah right, like anyone
has time for that.
If I told you that you could
get the same results (or better, as recent research suggests)
in three 20-minute interval sessions each week as you could
from three or five 45-minute slower cardio sessions each week,
which would you choose?
Yes, intervals feel about
10x's harder than regular, slow, boring cardio. And yes, you
won't be able to read your people magazine when doing
intervals. And you might breath a little heavy. So if you're
worried about sweating, than maybe fat loss isn't for
you.
But if you don't mind going
against the crowd, intervals are worth every second for the
superior results.
Q: Should men and
women train differently for fat loss?
Answer: Nope. Next
question.
Seriously, the answer is no,
but just to add to that, men and women don't have that many
differences when it comes to fat loss, so they both do well
with the Turbulence Training style workouts.
Now here's one reason why TT
may actually work better for women than men...
More women tend to start
Turbulence Training after having spent months or years using
slow cardio and light (if any) weights. And selfishly, I could
not be any happier - because when these dedicated women start
using the shorter, more intense strength and interval sessions
they make rapid progress and make me look like a
genius.
The accolades come pouring
in...I have dozens of testimonials from women thanking me for
saving them TIME while helping them finally breakthrough
stubborn fat loss plateaus (and eliminating the pain from their
overuse injuries that occurred due to high volumes of cardio).
Their words make me feel like a million bucks because the TT
workouts are making these women feel like a million
bucks.
That being said, I sometimes
make small changes in TT workouts to adapt to a woman's
pre-conceived notions about strength training. Some women are
very hesitant to lift weights. But you and I know that is
necessary for bodysculpting, fat loss, and health benefits such
as building bones.
So what I do is sub a few
(not all!) of the weight exercises out and replace them with
equal intensity bodyweight exercises. Some bodyweight exercises
can be classified as traditional strength exercises (i.e. for a
woman that can only do 5 full pushups, the pushup exercise is
almost a max strength exercise). But women "mentally" deal with
this type of strength training better than putting a dumbbell
in their hands.
On the other hand, some
bodyweight exercises provide more of an interval training
effect (i.e. bodyweight squats). Either way, bodyweight
exercises can put turbulence (i.e. "stress") on the muscle and
boost metabolism and help female clients get the results they
want and deserve.
Q: What
differentiates Turbulence Training from other
programs?
Answer: That's a
tough question to answer, as there are other systems out there
that give impressive results in an acceptable time
frame.
I will say this however, I am
extremely dedicated to Turbulence Training and the entire "fat
loss" cause.
One of the factors behind my
dedication is that I find the general concept of fat loss to be
so simple, and yet millions and millions of people around the
world have an incredibly difficult time achieving their
goals.
I want to give them every
possible resource available to them to help them
succeed.
So I am constantly tinkering
with new workouts, exercises, and interval methods, and
interviewing other trainers and nutritional experts for every
single little fat burning advantage I can find. And that comes
through in what I offer to the readers of my newsletters and
clients that use my programs.
I said in a past newsletter
that "Fat loss is easy, once you realize how hard it is." You
have to respect that it's not
something you put on "auto-pilot". Taking the stairs at work
instead of the elevator, parking 100 extra feet away from the
door, and subbing 1% milk for 2% milk is not going to help you
lose 13 pounds of fat in a year like the politically correct
articles suggest.
You need a
politically-incorrect plan to eat right 90% of the time (i.e.
saying "no" when an office-mate brings in doughnuts) and you
have to have the best workout plan available to you if you want
to get the most results in the least amount of time.
And then you still have to
have a plan to help you stick to those plans - and that should
involve a social support group. There are many tricks and tips
to success, so you always have to keep learning and trying to
improve. And that's what I help with in my programs and
newsletters.
Click here =>
Turbulence Training
Craig Ballantyne
Author, Turbulence Training

About the
Author:
Craig Ballantyne is
a Certified Strength & Conditioning
Specialist and writes for Men's Health,
Men's Fitness, Maximum Fitness, Muscle
and Fitness Hers, and Oxygen magazines.
His trademarked Turbulence Training fat
loss workouts have been featured
multiple times in Men’s Fitness and
Maximum Fitness magazines, and have
helped thousands of men and women around
the world lose fat, gain muscle, and get
lean in less than 45 minutes three times
per week. For more information on the
Turbulence Training workouts that will
help you burn fat without long, slow
cardio sessions or fancy equipment,
visit www.TurbulenceTraining.com
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