Personal Trainer Today.com Logo
 
 

Recent Publications

 
 September 2008
 August 2008
 July 2008
 Library

May 2008
Education and Business Articles

 
Successful Weight Management
Ever Heard Of Collateral Damage?
Dominate Other Personal Trainers
Triming that Waistline

Industry Issues

 
Industry Position Statement
Discussion Boards
Personal Training Discussions

Search

Search the internet's largest personal trainer library!



 

 

Looking for a Fitness Job!
Check out Fitness Career Counselors


Verve - The Insanely Healthy Energy Drink
Paid Advertisement

 
Library : May 2008


Triming that Waistline
By Ron J Clark
May 1, 2008, 10:36

Email this article
 Printer friendly page

Before I continue, allow me to point out the difference between uncovering the abdominals and conditioning the abdominals. Uncovering involves fat loss in the midsection, while conditioning involves training the midsection. These are two entirely different things. If you are an experienced resistance trainee this had better not come as a big surprise. Never train abdominals with the intention of losing fat around the waist. Approach your abdominal training as a part of your overall core conditioning.


Let’s face it, what do people ask for more than anything? A flatter stomach! What do trainers and fitness enthusiasts immediately focus on when fat loss in the abdominal region is the challenge? You guessed it, abdominal exercises. Wrong! In the absence of dieting and/or improving your fitness lifestyle in other areas, if you were to do nothing but abdominal exercises you would show no results when it comes to revealing those invisible abs. This may be one of the single biggest reasons beginners lose their motivation to train. They exclusively do tons of abdominal work and never show signs of improvement. When a person does see fat loss progress while training abdominals, it is almost always because there are other newly added components of their fitness program that are responsible. Specific to fat loss, abdominal training alone is nearly worthless.

 

Imagine if you will, impermeable sheaths of tissue separating subcutaneous fat stores from muscles throughout the entire body. For our purposes, these sheaths separate subcutaneous fat from its underlying muscles making it impossible for localized fat to move directly across to trained muscles. Now imagine the cardiovascular system being able to transport fat to muscle. When muscle energy is expended and is being replaced in any location in the body, under the proper dietary conditions, fat burning hormones and enzymes circulate to every fat cell the vascular system can reach (almost all fat cells in the body) simultaneously. Hence, there is a general fat release throughout the body, not localized or isolated fat release as some still believe. Frequent, low to moderate intensity full-body workouts with a moderate amount of aerobics thrown in, coupled with an effective diet, will go a long way to improving general fat loss to include that waistline.

EDITORS NOTE –

 

Ron J Clark is the President & Founder of the National Federation of Professional Trainers (NFPT.) NFPT offers Personal Trainer Certification. For a free brochure call: 1.800.SAY.NFPT or 1.765.471.4514. or visit online at www.nfpt.com

 

Top of Page

 

NFPT - Personal Trainer Certification

Personal Training on the Net

Fitness Business Education - Shaping Your Life!
Fitness Business Education is an essential part of every growing business in the fitness industry.
 
Fitness Generator
The Hottest Personal Trainer
business builder.

Paid Advertisements

Vemma - Liquid Vitamins and Essential Minerals
 


If you are interested in the submission of articles under the below stated conditions, please reveiw our Article Submission Guidelines.

* This is a FREE personal trainer education website. Personal Trainer Today is solely owned by National Federation of Professional Trainers (NFPT). This website is intended as a source of fundamentally “fair use” education in keeping with NFPT’s mission to provide free education. This organization does not charge visitors for viewing contributions made to this website, nor are writers compensated for their contributions. The majority of articles here are either the property of NFPT or its organizational writers with all having been contributed for publication by NFPT. Articles presented as being by “NFPT Research Staff” encompass all articles belonging to NFPT and its organizational writers in addition to a small number of archived individual contributions also understood to be originally presented to NFPT for publication. As one of these contributors, if you no longer desire your article(s) to remain in this “public domain” simply contact us with article credit changes or removal requests. Be reminded that it is this organization’s goal to provide as large and diverse a resource of free personal trainer education as possible. Moreover, additional contributions are considered to have been originally presented by named fitness professionals for the expressed purpose of being published by NFPT. At any time, any named author no longer wishing their work to be provided in this free education forum under possible “fair use” terms, are invited to contact us and request the article be removed. Be reminded that it is this organization’s goal to provide as large and diverse a resource of free personal trainer education as possible and your contributions are quite valuable to readers here.

To the best of its knowledge, and at its discretion, NFPT has not, and reserves the right in the future, not to post any registered copyrighted material in keeping with its free education mission. Irregardless, in many cases, “fair use” education criteria apply to these works. Authors of currently posted articles are compelled to inform National Federation of Professional Trainers of any article copyright status change for its immediate consideration and removal. There are in excess of 500 articles currently being managed here with the extraordinary task of upholding the above policies which are intended and designed to accommodate and respect authors and the disposition of their work while still accomplishing this organization’s greatest goal which is providing widespread free education. It should be understood that National Federation of Professional Trainers is held harmless by its contributors regarding copyright disputes involving but not limited to third parties. NFPT thanks you for your understanding and respect of these policies and most importantly, its mission.

Compliments of NFPT, Inc.