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All fat loss programs
that are bodybuilding-inspired will have fundamental similarities,
so you will definitely notice some of the same nutrition and
training principles in Burn the Fat and Body-for-Life.
What Burn The Fat does
differently - and superbly well - is to address the 2 major
drawbacks of Body for Life, which are the same problems of most other
mainstream diet programs including The Zone, The Atkins Diet, The Ketogenic Diet, the High carb Diet and many others.
These drawbacks
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1) Lack of individualization, and
2) Way too much push for supplements and other products that are
completely unnecessary.
First, Body-for-Life and all these other diets have their positive points (BFL
has more positive points than most). The problem is; none of them
are 100% applicable to all people all the time. Genetics and
metabolic individuality explain why some people thrive on high carbs,
while others get fat on high carbs. It explains why some people do
extremely well on Atkin's and Ketogenic diets, while others only lose muscle
and feel lousy on these programs.
Burn the Fat is the first program to take the best of all the
programs, compile the information into one exhaustively detailed
resource, and throw away the junk and the hype - leaving a solid
backbone of universal principles which apply to everyone. Then,
instead of prescribing one generic program for everyone, this
"baseline" program has room to be personalized - which is an
absolute necessity for long-term success.
You should question any program that prescribes the same diet and
exercise routine for everyone. There are 6.2 billion people on our
planet today and no two bodies and metabolisms are exactly the same.
Don't you know someone who eats anything they want, yet they have
six pack abs and never gain an ounce of fat? And don't you know
someone who is the opposite - If they eat one cheat meal, it goes
straight to their waistline or thighs? It's true! The need for
personalization is obvious.
Burn the Fat is incredibly flexible and customizable. Once you have
your fundamentals mastered (Body for Life covers the fundamentals for
beginners quite well), the question remains; do you know how to
"tweak" and fine tune your diet and training to fit your body type?
If not, you could be like the fly trying to get outside by flying
straight through a glass windowpane: It's going to die trying right
there on the windowsill. With equal or even less effort, the fly
could simply change direction and zoom right outside through the
open door ten feet away. That's exactly what happens if you're
eating wrong for your body type and then you switch to the right way
for you.
You won't find one single nutrition program in
Burn the Fat
- you
will find THREE different nutrition programs, starting with the
basic fundamentals (which you have to master first). Then you simply
adjust your nutrition based on the information you'll learn in
chapter 5 on body types and nutritional individuality (there's a
whole chapter on this subject where you can learn the real reason
why some people can eat whatever they want and stay skinny).
And what about training? How could one workout work for everyone? Do
you give the same weight training program to a competitive
bodybuilder that you do to a complete novice? It's ridiculous to
even consider. Burn the Fat has not one, but FOUR training programs.
And within each of these four training programs are TWO schedules,
one more conservative for time-scrunched people, and one more
aggressive for people who really want to go for it (that's eight
routines all together).
Ditto for cardio: How can you recommend one cardio program for
everyone? I teach you how to systematically manipulate cardio
frequency, duration, intensity, timing and type to accommodate your
goals and get the results you want. One cardio workout just doesn't
cut it for everyone. Even if you use a scientifically proven
technique like high intensity interval training, how long do you
think you could do this before your body adapts to it? Variation and
individualization is a must!
Okay, second drawback… Although Body for Life has a lot of solid information,
it's undeniable that it's also an advertisement for a supplement
company. The author of Body-for-Life, Bill Phillips, while he has now sold the
company, was the founder and CEO of EAS supplement company and
publisher of Muscle Media 2000 Magazine (which was also a
promotional tool for nutritional supplements, as are almost all
bodybuilding and fitness magazines).
I'm not singling out Body for Life specifically, this drawback is true with
many of the popular diet programs today: You buy the book/program
and then you're told that you have to buy all this other stuff to
make the program work; pills, bars, powders, drinks, etc, etc. Is
all this stuff really necessary? I say definitely not!
This doesn't mean I'm "anti-supplements" either, it's more correct
to say that I am "pro-food." I believe in proven supplements for
"insurance" purposes, such as a daily multi vitamin and essential
fatty acids, (2) for convenience purposes (meal replacements and
protein powder), and (3) on rare occasion, a legitimate natural
product emerges which really does enhance performance (such as
creatine). I've used these products myself and recommend them to my
clients on occasion.
I have nothing against even aggressive promotion of legitimate
products and services as long as they help enhance the lives of
other people. What irks me is NOT the promotion of supplements and
weight loss products, it's (1) the selling of unproven, bogus
products to make a profit, and (2) the dishonest way that legitimate
products are often misrepresented and marketed. Some diets make it
sound like supplements are a necessity or you have absolutely no
chance of succeeding.
The truth is, supplements are NOT required to lose fat - they're not
even a major factor!
A GREAT BODY DOESN’T COME IN A PILL!!!!
What's unique about
Burn The Fat is that it's NOT a promotional
vehicle for product sales. It's an information resource and a
complete fat loss program that really is for life - not for just 12
weeks. I know people who have spent $3000 to $5000 per year on
supplements - and that's not an exaggeration! Think about that for a
minute! What's really ironic is that many of these people - even
after spending all that money, haven't gotten the results they
wanted!
The bottom line is, I think Body For Life is a very solid program.
It's got nutrition, weight training, cardio and motivational aspects
all rolled into one, which is a winning combination in my book. I
also think Bill Phillips has done a commendable thing by getting
weight training and bodybuilding style nutrition out to the general
public. Phillips is an excellent motivator too. If I hadn't
developed my own program, Body For Life is one of the programs I
would recommend (with the previous warnings about supplements and
personalization).
A lot of people who did the Body For Life challenge said that Burn
The Fat was like the next step beyond Body For Life…sort of like an
advanced course, but still good for beginners because it covers the
basic stuff too. If you're currently in a Body For Life challenge or
planning on entering one, Burn The Fat, Feed The Muscle can help you
by giving you advanced tools and strategies to take it to an even
higher level.
So if you're a B.F.L.B ("Body for Life Burnout") and you want to
take it to the next level with a program that that's more customized
to your personal needs, (and you don't want to miss your car payment
because you bought so many supplements), then get a copy of Burn The
Fat Feed the Muscle.
Click here to find out more about the Burn The Fat, Feed The Muscle
program.
About The Author:

Tom Venuto is a lifetime natural bodybuilder, personal trainer, gym
owner, freelance writer and author of
Burn the Fat Feed the Muscle: Fat Burning
Secrets of the World's Best Bodybuilders and Fitness Models.
Tom has written over 140 articles and has been featured in Ironman
magazine, Natural Bodybuilding, Muscular Development, Muscle-Zine,
Exercise for Men and Men's Exercise. Tom is the Fat Loss Expert for
Global-Fitness.com and the
nutrition editor for Female Muscle.com and his articles are featured
regularly on literally dozens of other websites including
Bodybuilding Applied.com
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