Proven, Never-Fails, Step-By-Step Method For Blistering Fat Loss

Ah… the age of sensationalism. Where people make ridiculous claims based on unproven theories and NON real world results.

And perhaps, right about now, you’re thinking that I’m about to rake you over the coals with some “magic” fat loss formula that only exists in Peter Pan land or that can only be achieved by those with no job and no social life.

Nope.

Not even close.

What I’m about to share with you is the result of over 2 years of tweaking and is proven to work in a “free range” environment…

… and never fails.

It doesn’t require that you understand hormones… it doesn’t require that you understand how fat is oxidized… it doesn’t require you understand the difference between protein, carbs, and fats…

In fact, it’s like driving a car.

You likely don’t understand how power steering works, or the flame speed of gasoline, or whether the engine represents an adiabatic, nonisentropic process or not, or whether the fuel mixture is “rich” or “lean” or in stoichiometric proportions, or the drag coefficient of your car…

… because you don’t need to.

You just know that if you put the key in (or push the button), shift out of park and hit the gas, you get the result you want.

But, just in case you ARE a fanatic about the hormones, etc of fat loss, the method I’m getting ready to show you naturally takes all of this into account, WITHOUT you even having to worry about it.

I REPEAT. It ALL is NATURALLY accounted for… without ANY extra focus on your part.

And again, it’s been tested relentlessly over thousands of people in the free range.

(Free range = people do it for themselves with no exterior coaching or accountability… it’s all on them. Having a personal trainer or diet coach looking over you is NOT free range)

It’s also “healthy”. So far, every person that’s gotten all of their “health” measurements checked have come back “normal” or “above normal”… which I guess is the only way you can truly measure “health”.

Also, I promise you this:

Although this process ISN’T magic… it will surely feel like it is. Just give it a week and test it out.

Okay, lets get started.

First, we need to understand the “primary driver” of fat loss… and there is only one. It is simply: Fat loss requires a caloric deficit over time. Create it however you want but regardless of the how… the deficit MUST be achieved in order for fat loss to occur.

It is a non-negotiable law.

In fact, it’s really the only RULE of fat loss, everything else, all of the methods (even this one) are governed by this rule. They must ALL fit inside this bucket in order to work. This is why there are so many diet books and programs… they all can pretty much “work” as long as they don’t violate this rule. Yet, most methods FAIL because they don’t allow for the 2nd step in this method.

Second, you need to understand and map out your lifestyle CONSTRAINTS.

You need to do this.

Before you figure out how you want to tackle fat loss, you have to understand the “rate limiting steps” of your life. Face it, if you’re slammed ALL day, have limited financial resources, with 7 kids and the nearest gym is 40 miles away, you have different constraints than a person with no kids, a gym next door, no job because they were left a fortune and have all the time in the world.

Yet, many plans and programs superimpose the plan that “works” for person B on person A and expect it to work… and blame your laziness or willpower when it doesn’t because the plan is (cough) PROVEN. This is akin to one person being able to dunk a basketball on a 20 foot goal on the moon, and another person NOT being able to dunk an 8 foot goal on earth… even though they did the same exercise program.

Not only do initial conditions matter (where you start)… but the constraints and build up of your life matter as well.

You need to IDENTIFY your constraints and work them INTO your plan, not try to expend all of this energy trying to ELIMINATE the constraint. Face it. You have certain responsibilities in your life and some things even though you COULD change them, the energy it would take to change them is so much, it’s not worth it.

And, guess what. You don’t have to.

Here’s an example:

I eat dinner with my girlfriend every night. In the past, I would have imposed certain rules on this dinner and it just feels weird. It’s kinda like not eating dinner with your kids every night and having them ask “Why isn’t mommy/daddy eating with us?” Basically, I know this is going to happen each night and it’s imperative for our relationship that I let it happen. We get to reconnect and debrief each other. Overall, it’s good for my sanity.

If you have a job in sales, then you KNOW that you’ll be entertaining clients and taking them to dinner. But, you also know that you can’t order a salad when everyone else (your potential sale) is eating steak because part of sales is NOT insulting the client. (if you’re in sales, you get this comment, if you’re not… I’ll explain “mirroring” another time).

So you KNOW that this is a constraint of yours.

What about exercise? How much time can you create a week for it? How do you fit it in?

(As an aside, at this stage, you can’t worry about local optimums or whether something is the “best” way or if certain TIMES are better than others. At this stage, you have to get a handle on the hand you’re working with, not WISH for another hand. Also, if certain TIMES of the day were the only times that you could exercise for results, personal trainers would be REALLY expensive because they’d only be able to work you out between 7am and 8am each day. There would BE NO OTHER TIME SLOTS… think about that.)

Ultimately, this is called “Seeing The Battlefield” and your ability to do this will determine your success or failure.

Now, after we’ve determined all of our “lifestyle constraints” – oh, and these could be “health constraints” as well like diabetes, a broken foot, etc. (Funny that people and coaches tend to take “health” constraints seriously but tend to overlook and ‘blame game’ lifestyle constraints with accusations of willpower deficiency, etc. Trust me when I say that no one EVER needs willpower to continue doing something THAT IS EFFORTLESSLY WORKING FOR THEM… this is an important thing to know, as we’ll soon see)

Next, we have to set up our measurement protocols and goals.

How are we going to determine our results? How are we going to measure our progress and MOST IMPORTANTLY… where do the ERRORS in any measurements occur?

Here’s a fact:

ALL conventional (ie accessable to you… not in a lab) measurements for both caloric intake and caloric burn have error rates that are completely unacceptable in all other scientific and engineering research. Where as most error rates in other fields need to be less than 0.1% of the unit of measurement to be “acceptable”, measurements for both caloric intake (labels, etc) and caloric burn (calorie counters on machines, body bugs, and other formulas) have error rates that can exceed 30%!

For example, you could read your food labels and think you’re getting 1000 calories of food, but because of “rounding” on the labels and maybe your servings were larger than the average ‘batch size’, you could very EASILY consume 300 calories MORE than you think.

Couple that with thinking you burned 1000 calories in a workout when you only burned 200… and you can see how crazy this gets.

Naturally, some people may say, “Well, I’ll just get a food scale and measure my food” – and that’s completely fine – UNLESS you have a time or money constraint and can’t make it work in your life.

This is why we determine CONSTRAINTS FIRST… before we decide on plan of attack. You can’t have an aerial bombing run if you’ve got no planes, right?

Now, because of the insane errors that occur with all forms of calorie counting (both in and out)… we’ve come up with the following guidelines and frame work for you to work within.

1. Assume that the amount of calories you are burning through exercise is LOWER than you think.

2. Assume that the amount of calories you are taking in through food is HIGHER than you think.

3. Assume that you CANNOT and WILL NOT drop any fat WITHOUT some sort of dietary controls on food volume.

4. Assume that you CAN lose body fat through calorie restriction ALONE (ie no exercise needed)

Now, I can go through rigorous proofs on how this all really works but lets just say that exercise alone generally causes compensatory effects in most people (ie sleep longer, take a nap, eat more) when the other variables aren’t strictly controlled.

So, what’s the easiest way to wrap all of this up into one nice little guideline to follow?

Free Range Guideline: “Assume that exercise and daily activity burns NO EXTRA calories in your day and use your calculated BMR as your calorie starting point for the day”

Sure, sounds harsh, but it actually makes more sense than you’d think.

1. If exercise introduces a compensating effect, then the calories you ‘burned’ off could be re-injected at some point during the day.
2. Exercise generally burns LESS calories than you think – unless you’re exercising more than 2 hours a day, which goes back to our constraints

Therefore, we can effectively view the calories burned by exercise as a ‘wash’ for all practical purposes and in fact, with the errors involved, is really the only way you can be SURE you have a handle on this part of the equation.

So, for example, I just went to a BMR calculator and got that my BMR is roughly 1861 calories burned per day. I just rounded up for simplicity and use 1900 as my “base number”.

Now that I have my base number… which is the only number I’ll need… I just multiply this number by 7 to get my maximum weekly caloric load.

1900 x 7 = 13300 calories per week

So, now we see that I have a MAXIMUM budget of 13300 calories per week and still lose SOME fat. (because of our assumptions, this will be a LITTLE lower than your maintanance in general, but it guarantees you’re under the bar for all PRACTICAL purposes.

Next, we apply our constraints.

Applying your constraints to exercise generally yields this recommendation:

Weight training is your foundation… cardio is your “extra”. If you have a time constraint on either DAYS you can work out or TIME PERIODS or BOTH, weight training will ALWAYS take presidence over cardio work UNLESS another constraint prevents it (broken bones, etc).

We can go over the “health benefits” another day but for all practical purposes, most people hate cardio… so they won’t do it… lol. (pseudo constraint)

(Now, remember, exercise is NOT necessary for fat loss… so don’t get your panties in a bunch if this is a toughy for you. If you can’t workout for a week straight, no biggie, just work with the “diet” portion and inject your workouts back in when you’re able)

Applying your constraints to “diet” will likely look like this:

1. What are the lifestyle constraints? These include work, kids, time, and social activities. Dropping body fat for most people represents a SOCIAL problem and most plans fail when you get around the pressures of others. More on this in a bit.

2. What are your FOOD constraints? What do you like to eat? What do you hate to eat? What about drinks? Hate water? ETC. If your plan requires you to eat things that you don’t like, you won’t stick with it, lets be honest and upfront about this.

3. Establish scenarios where WILLPOWER may be needed due to “aroused” states and eliminate or incorporate these scenarios into your program. In other words, if you have plans to meet your friends at a sports bar to watch the game and you like beer, either ACCOUNT for this proactively in your plan OR don’t go. Never let WILLPOWER be the thing keeping you on target when you can take care of it ahead of time. THIS IS IMPORTANT. Your fat loss strategy SHOULD NOT be willpower driven.

4. Take your maximum weekly caloric load and subtract out 3500 x the ideal number of pounds of fat you’d like to drop that week. I say ideal because with all of the error built in PLUS the fact that we’re likely going to “eyeball” our food for the week with guess-timations, and the fact that our daily “targets” are more “beacons” than exact numbers, this works well.

So for me, I subtracted out 7000 calories (2 pounds of fat) per week to give me a “balance” of around 6500 calories per week to consume.

(Sounds rough doesn’t it? Hey, it’s your plan and you can adjust however you want as LONG as it’s something you can stick with… that’s the key if you haven’t noticed. This WHOLE process of deriving your plan has NOTHING to do with hormones and local optimums and EVERYTHING to do with the deficit YOU CAN STICK TO OVER TIME)

5. Take your “adjusted” caloric load, apply your constraints to it, and map out your week.

For example, I know that Saturdays we generally go out and its important for me to be social. I also know that I’m eating dinner with my girl EVERY DAY. So, I start there and wrap EVERYTHING ELSE AROUND THESE 2 THINGS.

I’m not going to “best case scenario” my plan on willpower and assume that I won’t want a few drinks. What if I see a friend that I haven’t seen in a while? Instead of willpowering my way through, I just build this in. So lets say Saturday is a 2000 calorie day. That’s the “allotment”. That leaves me 4500 calories for the rest of the week.

Next, I assume that on average, each dinner meal for the rest of the week (that I control because I do the grocery shopping) is going to be about 500 calories give or take… so that’s 3000 calories out as well.

That leaves me 1500 calories to spread throughout the week.

And, with my work schedule, I generally don’t eat breakfast and lunch is rare unless I dine out… so I essentially “fast” for a few days per week… even though that’s not the plan, it’s just how my life works.

Here’s my general fat loss plan for myself:

Monday: 500 calories (dinner only)
Tuesday: 1000 calories (lunch and dinner or all dinner)
Wednesday: 500 calories (dinner only)
Thursday: 1000 calories (lunch and dinner or all dinner)
Friday: 500 calories (dinner only)
Saturday: 2000 calories (lunch, dinner, maybe some drinks)
Sunday: 1000 calories (lunch and dinner, or all dinner)

… and I generally get 4-5 days of exercise in. 20-30 minutes of walking to read and clear my head per day and 45-60 of weight training… but sometimes I skip the walk if time is an issue.

Also, my days are interchangeable so if a buddy of mine calls on a Wednesday and wants to do lunch, I just go ahead with it and let Thursday be Wednesday.

Now, are all of these numbers exact?

Heck no.

But they give me a great ballpark or “beacon” to shoot for each day and all of the possible errors are already built in to the program, so even if I “accidentally” overshoot by a bit one or two days out of the week, I’m still all good.

Some things to note:

1. Eliminate or account for ALL willpower challenges. For me that means generally I go to the grocery store each night for dinner to eliminate the extra food that may be available in the house if I wake up in the middle of the night… because even if I’m not hungry, I tend to want to put something in my mouth. Controlling food availability is one way to eliminate the need for willpower. Make sense? This is just an easier battle to fight than struggling and eventually giving yourself a reason to eat the pop tart that’s staring at you.

2. Your food choices are going to be based on your plan, so in general, you’ll be eating more veggies by default. It’s really the only way to get in a higher volume of food and still stay under “budget”. You’ll also probably find that protein sources help with hunger… although after the first week, it’s generally not a huge issue to contend with. With that said, you’ll probably stay away from processed carbs because they make you hungry after you eat them… so it just makes sense to make it as easy as you can on yourself. But, then again, they may NOT affect you in this manor.

3. You’ll probably employ strategies like “intermittent fasting” and “cheat meals” by default, because that’s just how your life works out. So your “hormones” that everyone is trying to scare you about… well, they’re taken care of.

In conclusion, I’ve lost of 35 lbs using this method and my muscle size and strength are for the most part, the same (when I normalize back to eating regularly).

Each winner of our transformation contest has used this method, even if they didn’t KNOW IT, to win their respective divisions.

Barban used this in his quest to drop 35 lbs as well.

It’s been tested on 1000’s of “free range” people. It doesn’t require a coach, just simple math and applying your personal constraints to the problem FIRST. Quite frankly, it’s the ONLY way I know that takes all of the mystery and scare tactics out of fat loss and applies the REAL REASONS you never get results to your problem.

Oh, and don’t forget, by ALL measurable markers… it’s “healthy” as well.

And I just gave it to you… for free.

Oh, and by the way, because you’re accounting for ALL of your social events and gatherings, NO ONE will ever know that you’re trying to lose body fat. Everything you’re doing is “covert”… it’s under the radar.

That means, that NO ONE can persecute you because they have no IDEA that you’re doing ANYTHING… because you’re not BROADCASTING it to the world!

In fact, they’ll probably start accusing you of having a RAVENOUS METABOLISM… how funny is that?

This is truly the only method I’ve ever seen that:

1. Eliminates most of the need for “willpower”
2. Eliminates the social pressures of “going on a diet” and the persecution of “friends and family” challenging your diet with other “diets” and “that’s not healthy” talk
3. Takes into account YOUR life YOUR constraints
4. Bases food choices on numbers and what you like, not on trying to eat a “certain” way
5. Keeps your “hormones” in check… by all “guru” accounts (insulin, leptin, growth hormone, etc)… and WITHOUT you having to hassle or worry about it.

Our Adonis customers have been using this “Covert Nutrition” for a while now and in fact, if you want, you can find out MORE about it by picking up the Adonis Index Systems today. Take the test drive and after you order, before you download everything, you’ll be presented with an unbelievable deal to pickup this “Covert Nutrition” bundle where you can discover all of the basic in’s and out’s of why this method is so effective.

Just go here to order.

Look, if you’ve had some issues trying to drop body fat, give this method a try for a week. In one week, if you identify all of your constraints and apply this method just as I’ve outlined, you’ll weigh less 7 days from now… guaranteed.

And yes, it’s healthy (I know I’m gonna get blowback from this… this “healthy” talk, but we’re the only people you know that have HARD “free range” data and health measurements from people just like you that have used this).

Give it a try.

Stay cool,

Brad

p.s. If you’re not losing weight on the scale, don’t fool yourself into thinking that you’re “turning muscle into fat”… muscle doesn’t grow as fast as fat disappears. So even if you are gaining muscle and losing fat, the scale will be going DOWN.

Health, Fitness, BMI, and AI…Are They Connected?

Health and Fitness are poorly defined terms and can only really make sense when you apply your own personal definition. With that said there are general definitions that most people will accept as having at least something to do with both health and fitness.

Health seems to have something to do with reducing risk of premature death and disease, namely having favorable blood markers for disease such as total cholesterol, HDL, LDL, HDL/LDL ratio, Triglycerides, glucose, insulin, blood pressure and heart rate.

Beyond that, reduced stress and how you feel in general are probably the most important indicators of health.

Fitness on the other hand seems to refer to movement and capacity to be active.

So far there isn’t one measurement that indicates health AND fitness, until now.

I think the Adonis Index ratio might the one measurement that indicates both health and fitness.

In recent years height to waist ratio has gained favor over BMI as a better indicator of health and disease risk for lifestyle disorders such as cardiovascular disease, obesity, and diabetes.

But height to waist ratio doesn’t say much about fitness. I think the addition of the shoulder measurement and thus the Adonis Index ratio is a more complete measurement of both health and fitness.

Having and healthy and fit body is synonymous with having a body that other people will admire.

In todays podcast we discuss:

1. What health means and how we measure it

2. What fitness means and how we measure it

3. What the look of a healthy body is

4. BMI vs Height to Waist Ratio vs Adonis Index Ratio as markers of health and fitness

5. A personal health perspective vs a global health perspective

6. What to do when you’ve made a big time change in your health and fitness

John

p.s. Here is the awesome thread in the forum that we talk about in the podcast (there are multiple pages, click through to the 2nd or 3rd page for the cool before and after’s).

p.p.s. (Brad edit) Something’s up with the comments, I’ll get them fixed today hopefully)

Weight Loss Research Explained

In last weeks podcast I interviewed a weight loss researcher who is beginning to study body fat regulation. We discussed some of the theories that he and his colleagues would be trying to explore during their research.

This brought up many issues about the way weight loss research is done and if weight loss research itself can be of any real value to free living people.

Some of you seemed to find last weeks podcast a contradiction to what you’re used to hearing from me.

Although I didn’t agree with much of what Stephan had to say I wanted to give him a fair chance to explain his theories. After all I approached him for an interview, it wouldn’t be fair if I just fought with him on each point I disagreed with (and there were many).

This weeks podcast is an explanation of my views on how the process of studying weight loss is itself the confounding variable that renders most of the research virtually useless.

I will also discuss research bias and why you must take these kinds of research claims and theories with a grain of salt.

Finally the true weight loss experiment is you and the rest of us who are doing it for real on our own without being in an artificial research setting. In essence we are the only true weight loss research study worth paying attention to.

John

Body Fat Regulation, Can We Change it?

The regulation of body fat stores is a complex interplay of many hormones, chemical messengers and systems with your body. It’s also big business for the food and supplement industry. It is also a growing area of research as we try to get a better understanding of what exactly is going on.

In this podcast I interview Stephan Guyenet, his area of research is body fat regulation.

We discuss the possible mechanism for body fat regulation and why we are seeing the overweight and obesity issues that are becoming prevalent in todays society.

John

What Makes a Good Coach

You most likely have multiple ‘coaches’ in your life that you refer to for diet/fitness advice, lifestyle advice, financial advice, career advice, academic advice and relationship advice.

In some cases these could be friends and family who you trust, and in other cases they could be professionals that you follow/hire either online or in person.

In the new digital world there are many people promoting themselves as coaches who may not be the right person for you to listen to. But how do you know the real coaches from the pretenders?

In this podcast we discuss what makes up a good coach and how to tell if you’re getting legitimate direction and coaching or if you’re just being sold a story that does little more than separate you from your money while delivering limited results.

John

Your Definition of Healthy

The word “health” doesn’t mean anything until you give it a definition. Your definition has to suit you and fit into your lifestyle.

The diet, fitness and food industry try to sell their wares using ‘health’ as a claim. And if you don’t have your working definition in place you could end up wasting a lot of time money and effort working towards someone else’s definition of ‘health’.

Your workout and eating habits will only make sense once you’ve developed your own working definition of health.

In this podcast we come up with a workable definition of health that seems to simplify the whole process of exercise and diet that also incorporates genetic fitness and physical attraction and the AI and VI ratios.

John

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