Struggling With Under Fueling? 3 Ways to Kick-Start Your Journey to Recovery As a Female Athlete
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3 High Protein Lunch Recipes You Can Meal Prep
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Struggling With Meal Prepping? 5 Tips to Prep Your Meals as a Busy Female Athlete
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Fatigue is the most important part – the last two to three reps should be very hard. To keep your muscles guessing, mixing high reps and low reps, either in the same or different workouts, is a great way to stimulate muscle growth and prevent boredom. This is where periodization comes into play.
The concept of periodization is based on the fact that the body will adapt to an outside stimuli. Once this adaptation occurs, a stronger or different stimulus needs to be imposed for further adaptation to take place. So basically periodization is just setting up an organized plan consisting of macrocycles and microcycles, to designate when you will change the amount of weight or reps you are lifting.
The next factor to look at is the progressive overload principle. This states that a muscle is less likely to hypertrophy to its fullest unless ALL its muscle fibers are exhausted. That being said, it is just as possible to get the muscle gain you are looking for by lifting weights with a high amount of reps as long as you are working your muscles to total fatigue.
If you eat sporadically or too far apart, your body is going to start holding onto the food it already has instead of utilizing it accordingly. This is extra important if you are also working out that day. You need to make sure you eat a high carb, moderate protein pre-workout snack/meal and a high carb, moderate protein and fat (yes, not just protein!) post-workout snack/meal within 30-60 min follow your workout.
This ensures fuel for max performance during your workout (better performance=more gains) and ensures max muscle synthesis in the recovery phase. If you don’t, you’re really missing a big window of opportunity to build mass because you’re not giving your muscles the nutrients they need to rebuild/repair your muscles.
The best way to make sure you are eating enough is to eat a balanced meal every two-three hours throughout your day.
A lot of people are not aware of the important of carbohydrates and they role they play in muscle development. Carbohydrates actually make up a large portion of your muscle and is your body’s primary fuel source. Carbs are the first thing to get depleted during a hard workout and if not replenished, will make building muscle near impossible.
If you are trying to optimize your diet for muscle gain and fat loss it is important to know how to integrate carbohydrates the right way into your diet:
Not sure to apply all this to your diet? Be sure to read – Fuel Your Body Right: How to Accurately Calculate Your Energy Needs.
Everyone’s needs are different, and require a customized plan based on their unique situation and goals. This is what The Sustainable Sports Nutrition Academy provides! This comprehensive program is a result of my 10+ years of experience of supporting athletes, all in one step-by-step program, that provides a sustainable approach that’s based on science.
Contact me any time to schedule a free 15-minute consultation, so we can discuss your particular situation and goals.