Get Fit In 12 Weeks: The Explode Program

As promised, I am going to share with you my first workout split program. It's called The Explode Program. This routine will last you for the next 12 weeks and will focus on total body strength while losing fat.
Get ready to have 4 days of intense lifting a week, with 3 days of cardio.
20 RULES OF THUMB before I give you the breakdown:
FOOD & REST
1. Eat a meal within 3 hours before your workout, with at least 15g of protein.
2. Eat a meal within 1.5 hours after your workout, with at least 20g of protein.
3. If you can't eat a meal until later, make sure to eat a protein bar or a protein shake within 45 minutes of your workout's end, and eat a full meal as soon as you can, no later than 3 hours later.
4. Of course get plenty of complex carbohydrates and veggies.
5. Never let yourself feel hungry, never be too full. Ideally you are eating 4 small-medium, balanced meals a day.
6. Schedule your meals and try to eat at the same time everyday.
7. Get 7-9 hours sleep a night now that you can.
8. Drink 2 liters of water a day. Don't be afraid of bloating!
WORKOUT
9. Warm-up for 5 minutes of jogging on the treadmill before your workout.
10. Get loose with some dynamic plyometrics if you have to (i.e. push ups, shoulder rotations, hip twists, neck rotations, etc.) for a few minutes.
11. During your workout, aim for 1.5 - 2 minutes rest in between sets.
- Breath out during the exertion phase of the rep. Forcefully. Breathe in during the negative phase.
12. For any exercise that requires you to bend your knees, LOOK STRAIGHT or UP.
13. Stretch for 10 minutes at the end of every workout.
14. If you are going to combine cardio and strength training, always leave the cardio for AFTER the weights, and do it for at least 25 minutes without walking, no matter how slow you have to jog.
15. Don't be afraid to ask for a spot or some form tips from a personal trainer. Form is much more important than weight at this stage.
16. When I say 8 reps, I mean at a weight and intensity that you can barely do a 9th, and could definitely not do a 10th without totally screwing up the form.
17. There is a reason I have chosen an 8 rep range – for optimum for strength building and fat loss if done properly. You have to make sure that your intensity is up, you are choosing the right (heavy) weight, and your breathing is powerful.
18. Concentrate on using the muscle group you are working out on. Make every rep count and do not simply 'follow the motion'.
19. 14-16 sets per lifting session should burn you out and allow you to finish after about an hour. If your timing is slower, you are resting too long.
20. Drink at least a small glass of water for every 20 minutes you spend lifting.
Read, remember and apply.
We will now start with DAY 1, coming up on my next post...
Work out & Drink Up
If you want to live a long and healthy life, you're probably trying to eat right, exercise regularly and get enough sleep. Good steps. Now how about adding a little alcohol to your regimen?
Could drinking alcohol have a benefit similar to that of exercise?
If you don't want to exercise too much, can you trade it for one to two drinks per day and be fine? The answer may be yes and that finding, not surprisingly, has proved to be a crowd pleaser.
There are a number of reasons a drink can be such a tonic. First, alcohol and exercise affect your heart health in similar ways. They help increase good cholesterol, or HDL [high-density lipoproteins], and clean the circulatory system's pipes. HDL helps remove fatty deposits, created by bad cholesterol, or LDL [low-density lipoproteins], from blood-vessel walls. The higher the HDL, the less likely vascular disease becomes. The lower the HDL, the more likely.
A survey done on 12,000 people over a 20-year period found that exercise and drinking alcohol each had an independent beneficial effect on the heart and a compounded effect when practiced together. The investigators got even greater insight when they separated the study participants into four categories.
People who don't drink at all and don't exercise had the highest risk of heart disease. People who drink moderately and exercise had a 50% lower risk. Tee-totaling exercisers had a 30% decreased risk, as did moderately drinking couch potatoes.
This study is part of a growing body of work that makes a medical virtue out of what was once seen as a vice. There is evidence that alcohol in combination with caffeine can limit the damage to your brain after a stroke, even though it may not lower your risk of having a stroke in the first place. Other possible benefits include lowering your risk of diabetes, improving insulin sensitivity in postmenopausal women and decreasing dementia rates in older adults who had been consuming one to six drinks per week.
Before you rush off to hit the bar after your workout, keep in mind that your age matters. Alcohol may do you no coronary good until you reach the age at which heart disease becomes an appreciable risk. You wouldn't advise everyone to drink. You shouldn't even think about doing it until age 45 or 50. There's absolutely no proof of a preventative and protective effect before age 45. Also, younger women who have a higher risk of breast cancer and anyone who has a family history of alcoholism should pass on the pint and order a soda.
And remember, moderation is everything.
For myself, I only drink on Friday nights, on other days, only a glass of red wine.
When is the best time to exercise?
QUICK TIP:
Exercising in the morning before breakfast puts your body into an active mode so that your body can function better through the day. Doing it before breakfast also helps to utilize stored energy in muscles and fat cells.
Exercising in the evening helps to reactivate your body's metabolism since it is found to slow down as the day passes.
I don't know about you but working out in the morning really wakes my body up and I feel more progressive when I do my work. Working out in the evening however, makes me fall asleep easier at night. I'd workout twice a day if I could but personally, I prefer doing it in the morning.
I have a shoot for Coca-Cola, will write more later!
3 Hours A Week – All It Takes
"A smart workout three times a week is better than mindlessly going through motions on the elliptical every day."
"Hey Fay! It's so good to see you again. You have lost some weight, haven't you?" an old school mate of mine, Peter, said to me last night after we bumped into each other after FEMALE Magazine's 50 Most Gorgeous People show at Zouk.
I must admit, all that running & working out pays off when you receive such a compliment. While working out/running, sometimes all I can think of is "Why am I making myself do this? Oh god, I just want to stop, give it up, surrender to the couch and try again harder tomorrow." I procrastinated on working out alot and sometimes I'd just eat 2 burgers and tell myself that I'll just work it out tomorrow. The next day, I'd drag myself out of bed and like "oh-no", literally, I would have a last minute appointment/casting and would have no time to work out. I try, for the longest time, I kept telling myself I was trying. But I was doing too little yet expecting too much.
A YEAR AGO, I was growing a little out of shape. I went from 100pounds to 125pounds faster than you can say Big Mac. I had just graduated from school and I had put on a little bit of weight from all the late night snacks, going to bed late (sometimes not having any sleep for more than 24 hours at all), eating fast food and not working out AT ALL. Any art student could probably relate to the outrageous deadlines and mountainous workload that continuously piled up day by day. I was already procrastinating with schoolwork that I don't even remember even thinking about working out. It started to show. Friends in school started pointing out that I was beginning to put on a bit of chub. I joined a bikini competition and even a pageant but lost all confidence when I saw how I looked like in a bikini. After graduating, I flew over to Florida to live with my aunt and do a bit of modeling.
I would say that that was probably the first big turning point in my life. My aunt, Martini, sat me down for a serious talk about what I wanted to do with my life. I was too shy to say it at first because I was so insecure... so I told her I wanted to do graphic/web design because it was related to what I did in school. She read me like a book and firmly asked me again what I really wanted to do, or be. I finally told her I really wanted to be a model.
"What's holding you back?"
"My weight."
I looked back at my photos two years ago and I realized how much I had neglected my body. I wanted to lose weight so badly I became anorexic. I'd refuse to eat, but when I did, I'd binge. I hated looking at myself in the mirror, I'd shower with the lights off and go out with wearing a sweater even if it was 30degrees Celcius outside. Anorexia didn't work for me. It doesn't work at all. So I started to change my diet and started eating more fruits and greens and less sweets and treats. I didn't start running in the beginning because I had little (or no) stamina so I started out with in-line skating. I learnt in-line skating since when I was probably 8 and enjoyed doing it. Then I tried out jogging, and gradually started running. I also got into kickboxing and did ab workout videos. However, I still wasn't seeing any results.
I felt extremely low about myself and almost wanted to give up. I didn't take up a number of modeling jobs because I realized I was out of shape and barely looked anything like my modeling photos. After 3 months, I moved to California and started going to the gym. I'd run on the treadmill for about 30 minutes and do some light weight lifting to tone up. I also discovered a new favorite toy - the workout ball. There's just so many things you can do with the workout ball, especially if you're aiming for that fab abs. More on that coming soon...
When I weighed myself early March this year, I was about 120pounds (I had lost about 5pounds) and in the next month I was about 118. I returned to Singapore mid-April to surprise my mother for her birthday and realized there were actually a few things I could do here. So I started working the 9 - 5pm and did some web designing, then doing retail. Since I started working, I haven't had much time to work out but I realized I was still losing weight. I didn't own a weighing scale, believe it or not, but I realized that I could wear my sister's clothes. She wears a size 0 and I was a size 4. And I haven't ran in a month.
I was guilty, but glad it was still working out. Maybe because I stayed active by working office hours and still made sure I went to bed by midnight. But I wasn't about to let myself go. I wanted to get back on track again. On my days off, I'd run for half an hour and jog for another half and do some ab workout on the workout ball. I tried to make sure I did this at LEAST twice a week, as compared to what I did before - every single day. I realized I fit into clothes better and that I didn't really have to workout everyday to feel better or lose weight. After giving my body its much needed rest/break, I actually started to notice the difference in how I look when I wear my old clothes.
So, if you're planning to start losing weight, you have to find a sport that you like doing. Something simple like perhaps swimming, jogging/running, tennis, basketball or in-line skating. Mix that with light weight training, and a balanced diet. Go easy, start by doing it three or two times a week. It is important that you do a sport that you like so you always look forward to it. If you suddenly feel like running is too boring, switch to in-line skating, like what I do, or swimming. An hour a day, 3 times a week. That's 3 hours a week. All it takes.










