By Tom Venuto
Author
of Burn the Fat, Feed the Muscle
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In part one, I described the
growing obsession many people have with eating only the purest,
healthiest foods, aka clean eating. Youd
think that nothing but good would come from that, but some
experts today dislike the concept of clean foods because it
implies a dichotomy where other foods, by default, are dirty
or forbidden - as in, you can never, ever eat them again (imagine
life without chocolate, or pizza
or beer! you guys).
Some physicians and psychologists
even believe that if taken to an extreme, a fixation on healthy
food qualifies as a new eating disorder called orthorexia.
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Personally, I have no issues with
the phrase clean eating. Even if you choose to eat clean
nearly 100% of the time, I dont see how that qualifies as
a psychological disorder of any kind (I reckon people who eat at
McDonalds every day are the ones who need a shrink).
However, I also think you would agree
that any behavior - washing your hands, cleaning your house, or
even exercise or eating health food - can become obsessive-compulsive
and dysfunctional if it takes over your life or is taken to an extreme.
In the case of diet and exercise, it could also lead to or overlap
with anorexia.
Its debatable whether orthorexia
is a distinct eating disorder, but Im not against using the
word to help classify a specific type of obsessive-compulsive behavior.
I think its real.
The truth is that many people are
quite enthusiastic in defending or preaching
about - their dietary beliefs: no meat, no grains, no dairy, only
organic, only raw, only what God made, and on and on the rigid all-or-nothing
rules go.
What people choose to eat is often
so sacred to them, it makes for tricky business when youre
a nutrition educator. Sometimes I dont feel like telling anyone
what to eat, but simply setting a personal example and showing people
how I do it, like, Hey guys, here is how natural bodybuilders
eat to get so ripped and muscular. It may not suit you, but it works
for us. Take it or leave it.
On the other hand, I cant help
feeling that theres got to be a way to better help the countless
individuals who havent yet formulated their own philosophies,
and who find nutrition overwhelmingly confusing. For many people,
even a simple walk down the aisles of a grocery store, and trying
to decipher the food labels and nutrition claims is enough to trigger
an anxiety attack.
Thats where I hope this is useful.
I cant draw the line for you, or tell you what to eat, but
I can suggest a list of new rules for clean eating which
simplifies nutrition and clears up confusion, while giving you more
freedom, balance, life enjoyment and better results at the same
time.
New Rule #1: Define what clean eating means to you
Obviously, clean eating is not a scientific
term. Most people define clean eating as avoiding processed foods,
chemicals and artificial ingredients and choosing natural foods,
the way they came out of the ground or as close to their natural
form as possible. If that works for you, then use it. However, the
possible definitions are endless. Ive seen forum arguments
about whether protein powder is clean. Arguments are
a waste of time. Ultimately, what clean eating means is up to you
to define. Whether your beliefs and values have you restrict or
expand on the general definition, define it you must, keeping in
mind that your definition may be different than others.
New Rule #2: Always obey the law of energy balance
Theres one widely held belief
about food that hurts people and perpetuates the obesity problem
because its simply not true. Its the idea that calories
dont matter for weight loss, as long as you eat certain foods
or avoid certain foods. Some people think that if you eat only clean
foods, youre guaranteed to lose weight and stay lean. The
truth is that eating too much of anything gets stored as fat. Yes,
you can become obese eating 100% clean, natural foods. Theres
more to good nutrition than calories in versus calories out, but
the energy balance equation is always there.
New Rule #3: Remember that foods are not fattening,
excess calories are
Theres a widespread fear today
that certain foods will automatically turn into fat. Carbohydrates
particularly refined carbohydrates and sugars - are still
high on the hit list of feared foods, and so are fatty foods, owing
to their high caloric density (9 calories per gram). Foods that
contain fat and sugar (think donuts) are considered the most fattening
of all. But what if you ate only one small donut and stayed in a
calorie deficit for the day would you still say that donut
was fattening?
If you want to say certain foods are
fattening, you certainly can, but what you really mean is that some
foods are calorie dense, highly palatable, not very satiating and
eating them might even stimulate your appetite for more (betcha
cant eat just one!). Therefore, theyre likely to cause
you to eat more calories than you need. Conversely, non-fattening
foods have no magical properties, theyre simply low in caloric
density, highly filling and non-appetite stimulating.
New Rule #4: Understand the health-bodyfat paradox
Two of the biggest reasons people
choose to eat clean are health and weight loss. Health and body
composition are intertwined, but dietary rules for health and weight
loss are not one in the same. Weight gains or losses are dictated
primarily by calorie quantity. Health is dictated primarily by calorie
quality. Thats the paradox: You can lose weight on a 100%
junk food diet, but that doesnt mean youll be healthy.
You can get healthier on an all natural clean food diet, but that
doesnt mean you wont gain weight
and if you gain
too much weight, then you start getting unhealthy. To be healthy
and lean requires the right combination of calorie quantity and
quality, not one or the other.
New Rule #5: Forbidden foods are forbidden.
Think of you on a diet like a pressure
cooker on a burner. The longer you keep that pot on the heat, the
more the steam builds up inside. If theres no outlet or release
valve, eventually the pressure builds up so much that even if its
made of steel and the lid is bolted down, shes gonna blow,
sooner or later. But if you let off a little steam by occasionally
having that slice of pizza or whatever is your favorite food, that
relieves the pressure.
Alas, you never even felt the urge
to binge
because you already had your pizza and the urge was
satisfied. Since the cheat meal was planned and you
obeyed the law of calorie balance, you stayed in control and it
had little or no effect on your fat loss results. Ironically, you
overcome your cravings by giving in to them, with two caveats: not
too often and not too much.
New Rule #6: Set your own compliance rule
Many health and nutrition professionals
suggest a 90% compliance rule because if you choose clean foods
90% of the time, its easy to control your calories, you consume
enough nutrients for good health, and what you eat the other 10%
of the time doesnt seem to matter much. Suppose you eat 3
meals and 2 snacks every day, a total of 35 feedings per week. 90%
compliance would mean following your clean eating plan for about
31 or 32 of those weekly feedings. The other 3 or 4 times per week,
you eat whatever you want (as long as you obey rule #2 and keep
the calories in check)
Youll need to decide for yourself
where to set your own rule. A 90% compliance rule is a popular,
albeit arbitrary number a best guess at how much clean
eating will give you optimal health. Some folks stay lean
and healthy with 80%. Others say they dont even desire junk
food and they eat 99% clean, indulging perhaps only once or twice
a month.
One thing is for certain the
majority of your calories should come from natural nutrient-dense
foods not only for good health, but also because what you
eat most of the time becomes your habitual pattern. Habit patterns
are tough to break and what you do every day over the long term
is what really counts the most.
New Rule #7: Have free meals, not cheat
meals
Cheating presupposes that youre
doing something youre not supposed to be doing. Thats
why you feel guilty when you cheat. Guilt can be one of the biggest
diet destroyers. Consider referring to these meals that are off
your regular plan as free meals instead of cheat
meals. If having free meals is part of your plan right from
the start, then youre not cheating are you? So dont
call it that. What can you eat for your free meals? Anything you
want. Otherwise, it wouldnt truly be a free meal, would it?
People sometimes tell me that my bodybuilding
diet and lifestyle are too strict. I find that amusing
because I love eating clean 95-99% of the time and I consider it
easy. I had a butter-drizzled steak, a glass of wine, and chocolate
sin cake for dessert to celebrate my last birthday. I had a couple
slices of pizza just four weeks before my last competition (and
still stepped on stage at 4.5% body fat). Oh, and Im really
looking forward to my moms pumpkin pie and Christmas cake
too. Why? How? Because as strict as my lifestyle might appear to
some people, Ive learned how to enjoy free meals and I will
eat ANYTHING I want - with no guilt. Meanwhile, my critics are often
people with rules that NEVER allow those foods to ever cross their
lips.
New Rule #8: For successful weight control, focus on compliance
to a calorie deficit, not just compliance to a food list
Dietary compliance doesnt just
mean eating the right foods, it means eating the right amount of
food. You might be doing a terrific job at eating only the foods
authorized by your nutrition program, but if you eat
too many clean foods, you will still get fat. On the
fat loss side of health-bodyfat paradox, the quantity of food is
the pivotal factor, not the quality of food. If fat loss is your
goal and youre stubbornly determined to be 100% strict about
your nutrition, then be 100% strict about maintaining your calorie
deficit.
Lesson #9: Avoid all or none attitudes and dichotomous thinking
If you make a mistake, it doesnt
ruin an entire 12 week program, a whole week and not even an entire
day. What ruins a program is thinking that you must either be on
or off your diet and allowing one meal off your program to completely
derail you. All or nothing thinking is the great killer of diet
programs.
Even if they dont believe that
one meal will set them back physically, many clean eaters
feel like a single cheat is a moral failure. They are terrified
to eat any processed foods because they look at foods as good or
bad rather than looking at the degree of processing or the frequency
of consuming them.
Rest assured, a single meal of ANYTHING,
if the calories dont exceed your energy needs, will have virtually
no impact on your condition. Its not what you do occasionally,
its what you do most of the time, day after day, that determines
your long term results.
New Rule #10: Focus more on results, less on methods
Im not sure whether its
sad or laughable that most people get so married to their methods
that they stop paying attention to results. Overweight people often
praise their diet program and the guru that created it, even though
theyve plateaud and havent lost any weight in months,
or the weight they lost has begun to creep back on. Health food
fanatics keep eating the same, even when theyre sick and weak
and not getting any stronger or healthier.
Why would someone continue doing more
of the same even when its not working? One word: habit! Beliefs
and behavior patterns are so ingrained at the unconscious level,
you repeat the same behaviors every day virtually on automatic pilot.
Defending existing beliefs and doing it the way youve always
done it is a lot easier than changing.
In the final analysis, results are
what counts: weight, body composition, lean muscle, performance,
strength, blood pressure, blood lipids, and everything else you
want to improve. Are they improving or not? If not, perhaps its
time for a change.
Concluding words of wisdom
We need rules. Trying to eat intuitively
or just wing it from the start is a recipe for failure.
Ironically, intuitive eating does not come intuitively. Whether
you use my Burn The Fat, Feed the Muscle program or a different
program that suits your lifestyle better, you must have a plan.
After following your plan for a while,
your constructive new behaviors eventually turn over to unconscious
control (a process commonly known as developing habits). But youll
never reach that hallowed place of unconscious competence
unless you start with planning, structure, discipline and rules.
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Creating nutritional rules does
NOT create more rule breakers. Only unrealistic or unnecessary
rules create rule breakers. Thats why these new rules
of clean eating are based on a neat combination of structure
and flexibility. If you have too much flexibility and not
enough structure, you no longer have a plan. If you have too
much structure and not enough flexibility, you have a plan
you cant stick with.
To quickly sum it all up: Relax
your diet a bit! But not too much!
If you'd like to learn the rules
that bodybuilders and fitness models follow to "eat clean"
and stay lean, then check out Burn
The Fat Feed The Muscle.
Tom Venuto, author of:
Burn
The Fat Feed The Muscle
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In this candid and revealing
interview, David Grisaffi, an in-the-trenches fat loss and
abdominal training expert and author of the best-selling ebook
Firm and Flatten Your Abs, interviews fat loss expert and
best selling author Tom Venuto.
These fat loss pros discuss
what it really takes to uncover your abdominals, and the reasons
why it takes more than hundreds of situps and crunches to
succeed. Some of the facts Tom reveals will surprise you because
you wont hear them from most other experts in the weight
loss and fitness industry.
Why? Because they either dont
know or they have a vested interest in keeping the truth hidden
from you. In this revealing discussion you'll learn top secret
ab training techniques and the truth about diet scams and
rip offs!
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In this interview, Tom Nicoli,
a clinical hypnotherapist who was featured on Dateline NBCs
Ultimate Weight Loss Challenge, meets with fat loss expert
and best selling author Tom Venuto.
The two Toms discuss what it
really takes to increase or even skyrocket your
fat loss success and they uncover the reasons why it takes
more than hard work and physical effort to succeed
it also takes the right mindset. Some of the facts Tom reveals
you will surprise you because you wont hear them from
most other experts in the weight loss and fitness industry.
Why? Because
they either dont know or they have a vested interest
in keeping the truth hidden from you. !
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About
The Author
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Tom Venuto is a natural bodybuilder,
certified personal trainer and freelance fitness writer. Tom
is the author of "Burn
the Fat, Feed The Muscle, which teaches you
how to get lean without drugs or supplements using secrets
of the world's best bodybuilders and fitness models. Learn
how to get rid of stubborn fat and increase your metabolism
by clicking
here.
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