Tag: fat loss

  • If You Struggle with Fat Loss

    If You Struggle with Fat Loss

    “There is another word for self-discipline. It is patience”. – Henepola Gunaratana

    There is no “secret sauces” in achieving the body that you want. There is no magic tricks or lifestyle hacks to speed up your process of improving how your body feels, looks and functions. There’s only so many books you can read because eventually you’ll have to bite the bullet and do the hard stuff. And fat loss can be as hard at it gets. There is no special pill for you to swallow that’ll take all your problems and issues away. Not even Dr. Oz can help you here, no matter what he might want you to believe.  (more…)

  • The Ultimate Guide for Getting Lean without Hating Life

    The Ultimate Guide for Getting Lean without Hating Life

    There’s some habits that are crucial for your quest to getting lean (and staying there) while maintaining sanity and balance in life. I can guarantee that if you work towards owning these habits (one at a time, course), you are well on your way to become a healthier version of yourself. (more…)

  • Idiot Proof Your Fat Loss Plan

    Idiot Proof Your Fat Loss Plans

    Give me six hours to chop down a tree and I will spend the first four sharpening the ax. -Abraham Lincoln

    Whether your goal is to lose ten kilograms or to run a marathon you have to plan everything step by step. Approach these goals the same way as you would an important project at work. It’s unlikely that you’d take on a project without a plan on how to execute it. Solid planning always beats “winging it”.

    Trying to lose 10 kilograms with a vague decision of “train more” doesn’t get you anywhere in the long run. The question you need to ask is how much more? How will I fit training in my schedule? What if I can’t make it to the gym, what is my fall back plan? How do I keep myself accountable? Is more training the easiest way for me to lose weight or do I have other options? And then the most crucial question of them all, why do I want to lose ten kilograms in the first place?
    (more…)

  • How To Build Training Consistency

    How To Build Training Consistency

    Not everyone has the willpower and determination to tackle each training session with the same passion and rage as Arnold did. And that’s fine. For you, having training motivation might be a constant battle between putting your feet up after a long day in the office versus dragging your ass into the gym. Here are some ways to build training consistency while still having time to do other things. (more…)

  • Story of a Recovering Fitness Addict

    This is the most personal blog I’ve ever written.

    There’s a reason why I preach a reasonable approach to health and fitness: I know how life becomes when fitness takes over.

    Throughout my twenties, I was obsessed with fitness. I missed out on a lot of awesome stuff because, on most occasions, I chose the gym when others went to do something else.

    I combined that with healthy eating taken too far, and it snowballed. Combining too much training with a strict diet adds up to a dysfunctional, unhappy life.

    Here’s how my healthy fitness habits turned into an obsession. How it ran my life in a way that I can’t recommend to anyone. And how the penny eventually dropped, allowing me to become the healthiest and happiest version of myself. So yes, this is personal.

    Fitness started as innocently as it does for most people. I dabbled in training in my mid-teens, but nothing too serious; my life didn’t revolve around it.

    But like most snowballs, things evolved gradually and then not so gradually.

    I remember travelling to Sydney five years later and training most days when my mates went to do what other travellers do: relax on the beach, drink, and, I don’t know, sightseeing. I should’ve been enjoying the warm summer days in a new city, but I decided to spend most of the trip doing bicep curls.

    I didn’t feel like it was a good day unless I trained first.

    The second time around in Sydney, two years later, I was training 4-6 times a week, close to two hours at a time. Everything I ate or drank was based on how much I would have to train to burn off the calories. No matter how much I trained, I was never happy with my appearance.

    By then, I was getting compliments, saying I looked great.

    Compliments acted as gasoline to fire—they fed my obsession.

    So at that point, I was already well on my way to becoming an orthorexic, an eating disorder that involves taking one’s healthy eating to an extreme. Count calories, and only choose the “purest” of foods. Food selection became a moral choice; it was either “good” or “bad” for me.

    Then I took my first personal training job in a gym full of bodybuilders.

    Their definition of letting loose was putting a tablespoon of low-sodium tomato sauce on low-sugar barbeque sauce on Saturday nights.

    I thought being a personal trainer meant having a six-pack and building your diet around poached chicken breast, steamed broccoli and Ikea mustard while counting every calorie you eat. I thought that life is all about how you look and how you value yourself and others.

    But I thought I was doing everything right. My life revolved around my body fat percentage. And the environment that I was in was feeding all this.

    Yet, I can’t blame others for my obsessions as it was something deeper that I was trying to reconcile within myself.

    My life had no balance whatsoever, and I remember obsessing over eating and training to the point where it heavily affected other aspects of my life. My poor wife (girlfriend then) must’ve thought she’d lost her partner to the “health” industry.

    I put health in quotes because, as you can tell, none of my actions made me any healthier. I thought that this was how my life would be if I wanted to have a career in the fitness industry.

    I was constantly getting sick because I wasn’t eating the variety of foods or calories a functioning body needs. But I was not being able to connect the dots between my actions and how I felt.

    I was avoiding going out because of how it would affect my looks. Eating was not enjoyable, but more like a math class of counting calories. Food was not fun; it was purely consumed for fuel. It wasn’t about flavours but protein, fats and carbs. If I didn’t eat out of a Tupperware container, I was freaking out as I had no idea what sort of evil intruders would invade my body.

    In hindsight, this sounds absolutely fucking bonkers.

    And as with most people who take fitness to extremes, I thought I was at the pinnacle of health. Do you think I am too skinny? Whatever, piss off.

    I got deeply offended if anyone mentioned that maybe there was something wrong with my eating or training strategies.

    Looking back now, I see that I lacked self-confidence, and I tried to compensate for it by making myself look as good as possible. It probably wasn’t that good of a look in the first place.

    But when immersed in the situation, you can’t see the forest for the trees and other clichés.

    I still remember the moment I realised that maybe I wasn’t juggling all the balls.

    I went to the grocery store with a friend. He picked up a roasted chicken, and I grabbed a packet of rice crackers. I weighed all of 77kg at the time (I am 188cm tall, but let’s call it just shy of 190cm because it sounds better). His exact words were, “Dude, you shop like you are trying to lose weight”.

    That’s when it hit me. What are you doing?

    The difference to all the previous comments I ignored in the past was that this one came from a peer who was in better shape than I was (I mean, considering the mindset I had at the time, who wasn’t?).

    Yet he still seemed to enjoy more things in life than just training. After that moment, little by little, I became more aware of what was going on.

    Climbing back out required a major but gradual shift in thinking.

    When you are new at something and still finding your feet, many of your actions are based on what the people around you are doing. When I started lifting weights, I thought the only reason to do it was to look like a bodybuilder or a cover model.

    After years of this mindset, I gradually shifted my values to health and strength over aesthetics.

    And over time, I found what feels right for me. I discovered what I value in life and based my actions on those values. And now, in my early thirties (Joonas from 2023 here, you’re not in your early thirties no more, mate), I look better than I did when I was obsessed with eating healthy and training.

    Or maybe it’s just because I feel better and am more comfortable in my skin.

    When you are happier inside, it affects how you look on the outside. Do I still sometimes struggle and base my worthiness on how I look? Yes, but those are brief moments passing by. I deal with them by stopping and asking myself, “What’s important?”.

    I see a lot of folks going through the same that I went through.

    I try to share what I’ve learned in subtle ways, but it’s impossible to force it. I remember how I reacted then, and I know it’s like pushing water uphill if I try to convince others now. Most people have to come to the conclusion themselves.

    At some point, it will click. Maybe for you, it’s happening right now.

    The bottom line is you want to be happy, healthy and feel good.

    It doesn’t really matter how you look as long as you feel good about yourself.

    After my experience, I honestly think that a life spent chasing the perfect body is a life wasted. It’ll never be enough, and you’ll miss a lot of great moments while doing so.

    Do you want to be on your deathbed listening to people talk about how chiselled you looked every summer? Or do you want something more meaningful?

    Yet, this is not a hall pass to ignore your health.

    It’s about finding a balance. There are no evil foods; nothing is good or bad. It’s just food, and you can have whatever you desire.

    Sometimes you eat a bit more of something, and sometimes you eat a bit less. You don’t have to exercise excessively or go on a detox after a massive Christmas meal.

    You don’t have to diet to prepare for a big meal or punish yourself after eating ice cream.

    Be mindful and slow things down, enjoy the moment and move on.

    And use the same mindfulness in your training.

    Do things that make you happy. You deserve that.

  • It’s So Easy

    It's So Easy

     

    You get nothing for nothing if that’s what you do. – It’s So Easy, GN’R
    Anything worth striving for takes work. You have an image how you would like to look or be. Lean, sexy, muscular, sizzling, chiseled, brave, strong. The sky is the limit when describing your future self. But these are just words and no matter how many inspirational quotes you read or post on Facebook it won’t get you very far. You can read all the books in the world and pay for all the possible advice but if you don’t take action nothing ever changes.

    (more…)

  • The Art of Slowing Down – Part I

    Slow Down
    Knowing how to relax is sort of a big deal. Not only because it is immensely important for your mental well-being but it can play a huge part if you struggle gaining ground in your fat loss efforts.

    (more…)

  • Thoughts On… IV: Fat Loss and Movement

    Fat loss and movemen
    Once again t’s time to collect my random thoughts in a bullet point format and set them free for the world (hey mum!) to see. These are random notes that I keep on Evernote. Every now and then I go through them all to see what I’ve been thinking on. Here’s the latest on fat loss and training. Enjoy!

    (more…)

  • Fat Loss Is Not About Willpower

    You’ve set yourself a clear goal to reach your health goal in six months. You’ve know that the biggest road block is your appetite for sweets at work. You’re motivated, committed and maxed out on willpower.
    Until the first busy afternoon at work when your stress levels are through the roof. You start fancying a thought of a sweet sweet chocolate goodness. You try not to think of that vending machine loaded with chocolate bars. Or that bowl of chocolates in the break room. But no matter how hard you try the chocolate goodness creeps back in your head until it become impossible to resist. So you give in and make the vending machine sing, but only today. Because tomorrow you’re stronger, more motivated, even more committed and full of willpower.
    And then tomorrow afternoon rolls around and you repeat the same cycle. Same thing happens over and over again. Why is that and what to do about it? To find an answer we have to revisit a couple of studies from the past.

    (more…)

  • Bedtime Ritual – Better Sleep Better EVERYTHING (Step by Step Guide)

    Bedtime Ritual

    In the past I’ve written about the importance of having a morning routine to set you up for the day ahead. Think of yourself as an athlete going to a big match, instead that your match is the big business meeting that’ll happen at 10.30am. Yes, you’ll have to plan and “train” for it but you also need to be mentally ready. Getting in the right head space before getting to work (or other place important) can help you with that.

    Today however we’ll focus on building a similar routine before hitting the slumbertown at night. (more…)