Friday, December 26, 2008

Chasing Rabbits



“If the dog hadn't stopped running to take a sh*t, he'd of caught the rabbit."

My grandpa used to always say that for some reason. I think it was usually when I made an excuse about something. The good news is I got older I heard it less and less (maybe I learned to quit making excuses). That quote has nothing to do with this blog except the fact that it reminds me of another saying about rabbits:

"If you chase two rabbits both will escape."

I see this all the time, people who are trying to obtain way too many goals at one time. They want to bench 300 pounds, lose 50 pounds of fat, gain 20 pounds of muscle, run a marathon, increase their vertical and swim the English Channel without floaties all at the SAME TIME. People end up chasing 10 rabbits (actually goals) and catching no rabbits (actually accomplishing nothing).

I compete in power lifting and bodybuilding and train for other goals as well. The catch is I don’t train for them all at the same time. I will take a block and hit it hard with one goal in mind. My training and diet will change to reflect that goal. By doing this and focusing on 1 goal at a time you catch the rabbit. You just have to say screw everything else except your number 1 goal. Once you reach it then set another.

Here is a great example. Say you want to drop some body fat? Hit it hard for X number of weeks and kick some ass. At the end of the block you will be a lot leaner and happier you reached that goal. Now you want to increase your bench max? Now work on that for X number of weeks while maintaining your body composition. Now you want to increase your 40 yard dash time? Work on that for X number of weeks while maintaining your body composition and new strength. You get the picture?

Now go catch A rabbit.

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays!

I would like to wish all my clients, friends and readers a Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays!

Don't stress about a few bad meals over the Holidays. Remember it is your nutrition and exercise between New Year's and Christmas that affect how you look, not what you eat between Christmas and New Years.

I'm going to end this short blog post with 2 tips:

This is for fat loss/maintenance people:

You will slip during the Holidays. That's normal, just don't make an entire day of it. Eating a few bad meals over the Holidays could still lead to 90% or better compliance for most people. However, taking a whole day and eating crappy all day automatically will take most below 90%. Do not skip your normal meals either.

This is for my athletes looking to gain weight:

EAT, EAT, EAT! Literally stuff yourself with everything you can at each dinner you eat at. Don't vomit though. You will lose precious weight gaining calories.

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Merry Christmas, Bob




Merry Christmas, Bob
by Chris Shugart



The following Article was first featured in Testosterone Nation four years ago. It's often regarded as one of the most inspirational, get-off-your-sorry-ass articles and, given that it has a Christmas theme, I thought it appropriate to run it again this Christmas.

"So, what are you doing for a living these days?" Bob asked me. We're sitting on the couch at one of those tedious holiday get-togethers, you know, the ones where you're supposed to be nice to family members you never see except during major holidays and funerals. I think Bob is my wife's brother-in-law's second cousin or something.

"I'm the assistant editor and a writer for Testosterone magazine," I say. Bob looks at me with a blank expression on his face, as if I'd just told him I sell handmade testicle warmers beside the freeway and was looking to open franchises across the nation.

"It's a bodybuilding magazine," I say.

Blank expression. Deer caught in the headlights. Ronnie Coleman doing trigonometry.

"Oh," Bob finally says, "I heard you were, like, one of those bodybuilder guys or something. So, what's that like, you know, working out every day and stuff? I just don't have time to lift weights all day, but I have been meaning to get rid of this beer belly." He takes another sip of beer. "What do you suggest?" Sip.

At first I was a little offended. I wanted to grab him up and say, "You can't tell I'm a bodybuilder?! Look at my ass! Now, if that's not a nice round squat-built piece of sirloin, I don't know what is! You think that comes naturally? I can crack walnuts with this puppy! Wanna see? Huh, punk? Do ya? Do ya?"

Then I realize this just might cause a scene and could cost me several Christmas presents. I was planning on returning any presents I got and using the money to buy a power rack, so I didn't want to jeopardize this gift getting opportunity. I also realized that old Bob probably had a certain preconceived image of a bodybuilder and I just didn't fit that image. I'm not gorilla huge; I weigh about 205 at 5'11" right now. (When I first started lifting I was a pudgy 159, so that's not too shabby.) Also, I wasn't wearing clown pants, a fluorescent string tank top, a hanky on my head and one of those little fanny packs. And isn't that what real bodybuilders are supposed to wear?

Bob continued to sit there drinking his Natural Light, smoking a cigarette and waiting for an answer, oblivious to the fact that he'd come this close to seeing some serious walnut- crunching ass power. I tried to figure out how I could explain to the average guy what the typical T-Man does and why he does it. How could I get him to understand what it is we do, how we feel, how we live? So I took a deep breath and told him something like this:

"Well, Bob, I guess you could use the term bodybuilder if you really need a label for what it is we do. Most of us actually don't stand on stage and compete, though. We lift weights and manipulate our diets so that we'll look good naked. Sure, it's healthy too, and we'll probably live a longer and more productive life than the average guy, but mostly it's about the naked thing. Truthfully, it goes beyond even that.

"Let's be honest here. We do it because of people like you, Bob. We look at you sitting there with your gut hanging over your belt and we watch you grunt and groan just getting out of a chair. Guys like you are our inspiration, Bob. You're better than Anthony Robbins, Bill Phillips, Deepak Chopra, and Zig fucking Ziglar all wrapped up into one. We love it when guys like you talk about not having time to exercise. Every time we see you munching on a bag of potato chips, you inspire us. You're my shot in the arm, Bob, my living and breathing wake-up call, my own personal success coach.

"You want to know what it is we do? We overcome. We're too busy to train, too, but we overcome. We're too busy to prepare healthy meals and eat them five or six times a day, but we overcome. We can't always afford supplements, our genetics aren't perfect, and we don't always feel like going to the gym. Some of us used to be just like you, Bob, but guess what? We've overcome.

"We like to watch 'normal' people like you tell us about how they can't get in shape. We smile and nod sympathetically like we feel your pain, but actually, we're thinking that you're a pathetic piece of shit that needs to grow a spine and join a gym. You smile sheepishly and say that you just can't stay motivated and just can't stand that feeling of being sore. (For some reason you think that admitting your weaknesses somehow justifies them.) We listen to you bitch and moan. We watch you look for the easy way out. Because of people like you, Bob, we never miss a workout.

"You ask us for advice about diet and training and usually we politely offer some guidance, but deep inside we know you won't take our advice. You know that too. We smile and say, 'Hope that helps. Good luck,' but actually we're thinking, 'Boy, it would suck to be you.' We know that 99% of people won't listen to us. Once they hear that it takes hard work, sacrifice and discipline, they stop listening and tune us out.

"We know they wanted us to say that building a great body is easy, but it just isn't. This did not take five minutes a day on a TorsoTrack. We did not get this way in 12 short weeks using a Bowflex and the Suzanne Somers' 'Get Skinny' diet. A good body does not cost five easy payments of $39.95.

"We like it that while you're eating a candy bar and drinking Mountain Dew, we're sucking down a protein shake. You see, that makes it taste even better to us. While
you're asleep we're either getting up early or staying up late, hitting the iron, pushing ourselves, learning, succeeding and failing and rising above the norm with every rep. Can you feel that, Bob? Can you relate? No? Good. This wouldn't be half as fun if you could.

"We do it because we absolutely and totally get off on it. We do it because people like you, Bob, either can't or won't. We do it because what we do in the gym transfers over into the rest of our lives and changes us, physically, mentally, maybe even spiritually. We do it because it beats watching fishing and golf on TV. By the way, do you know what it's like to turn the head of a beautiful woman because of the way you're built? It feels good, Bob. Damned good.

"When we're in the gym, we're in this indescribable euphoria zone. It's a feeling of being on, of being completely alive and aware. If you haven't been there, then it's like trying to describe color to a person who's been blind since birth. Within this haze of pleasure and pain, there's knowledge and power, self-discipline and self-reliance. If you do it long enough, Bob, there's even enlightenment. Sometimes, the answers to questions you didn't even know you had are sitting there on those rubber mats, wrapped up in a neat package of iron plates and bars.

"Want to lose that beer belly, Bob? I have a nutty idea. Put down the fucking beer. I'll tell you what, Bob. Christmas morning I'm getting up real early and hitting the iron. I want to watch my daughter open her presents and spend the whole day with her, so this is the only time I have to train. The gym will be closed, so I'm going out in my garage to workout. You be at my house at six in the morning, okay? I'll be glad to help you get started on a weight training program. It'll be colder than Hillary Clinton's coochie in there, so dress warm.

"But let me tell you something, Bob. If you don't show up, don't bother asking me again. And don't you ever sit there and let me hear you bitch about your beer belly again. This is your chance, your big opportunity to break out of that rut. If you don't show up, Bob, you've learned a very important lesson about yourself, haven't you? You won't like that lesson.

"You won't like that feeling in the pit of your stomach either or that taste in your mouth. It will taste worse than defeat, Bob. Defeat tastes pretty goddamned nasty, but what you'll be experiencing will be much worse. It will be the knowledge that you're weak, mentally and physically. What's worse is that you'll have accepted that feeling. The feeling will always be with you. In the happiest moments of your life, it'll be there, lying under the surface like a malignant tumor. Ignore it at your own peril, Bob.

"Don't look at me like that either. This just may be the best Christmas present you'll get this year. Next Christmas, Bob, when I see you again, I'm going to be a little bigger, a little stronger, and a little leaner. What will you be? Will you still be making excuses? This is a gift, Bob, from me to you. I'm giving you the chance to look fate in those pretty eyes of hers and say, 'Step off, bitch. This is my party and you're not invited.' What do you say, Bob? Monday, Christmas morning, 6am, my house. The ball's in your court."

Okay, so maybe that's not the exact words I used with Bob, but you get the picture. Will Bob show up Monday? I don't know, but I kind of doubt it. In fact, Bob will probably take me off his Christmas card list. He probably thinks I've got "too much Testosterone," like that's a bad thing. I think Bob is just stuck in a rut, and as the saying goes, the only difference between a rut and a grave is depth.

The way out of the rut is to make major changes in your life, most of which won't be too pleasant in the beginning. The opportunity to make those changes seldom comes as bluntly as I put it to Bob. Most of the time, that opportunity knocks very softly. What I did was basically give Bob a verbal slap in the face. You can react two ways to a slap. You can get angry at the person doing the slapping, or you can realize that he was just trying to get you to wake up and focus on what you really want and, more importantly, what it'll take to get it.

If you're a regular T-mag reader, I doubt you need to be called out like Bob. But maybe you've caught yourself slacking a little here lately. Maybe you've missed a few workouts or maybe you started a little too early on the usual holiday feasting, like, say, back in September. Just remember that the time to start working on that summer body is now. The time to get rid of those bad habits that hold you back in the gym is now. You want to look totally different by next Christmas? Start now. This isn't because of the holidays or any corny New Year's resolutions either. The best time is always now.

Christmas day I want you to enjoy being with your family and friends. I want you to open presents, sip a little eggnog and have a good meal. But if your regularily scheduled workout happens to fall on December 25th, what will you be doing at six o'clock that morning?

That's what separates us from guys like Bob.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

What I've Been Up To...


(PIC: Me doing some pull ups)



Lately I have been crazy busy. Here is a run down of what all is going on in my life:


• I recently got engaged on December 5th. I couldn’t be happier. We are planning on a wedding in September.

• I have signed a contract/agreement with a new website that is starting January 28th. I would consider it an “All things Paducah” type site. I have my own health/fitness/nutrition page on the site. I have a ton of great ideas. It should be really interesting.

• I have an article running in Paducah Parenting in January. It isn’t exactly how I wanted it to look but the editor wanted me to “soften” it a little. It has to do with personal training certifications just to give you a hint. Apparently comparing some certifications difficulty to obtain, to as easy as waiting for your check to clear, would leave a “bad taste” in some trainer’s mouths. I wonder why?

• I finished up the semester with all A’s and B’s and made the Dean’s list. I just wanted to brag a little.

• My training is going great. I’m training myself very similar to my athletes and love feeling athletic. Mobility work, foam rolling and old school static stretching has made me feel 10 years younger.

• I read two great books this week by Christian Thibadeau. Anyone interested in learning some more in-depth knowledge of training should check his books out.

• I am attending the NSCA Sport Specific Conference around the first of January. I hope to learn some awesome information and meet some really good speakers.

• Just to give everyone a heads up, expect to see some really cool things from me and Argonauts in the next year.

• To all of my in-season clients I wish everyone good luck and kick some ass.

• Biotest’s Spike is the closest thing to crack I would imagine there is. First of all, for the record I have never tried crack nor plan to. Spike is very addictive though. Actually I can live without it, but Spike is the best pre workout energy drink since the old school thermos w/ephedra (which is now illegal). However; here is my reasoning behind this. I ran out before I had placed my next order. I remembered GNC sells Spike with one hell of a mark up rate. So, I paid damn near 4 dollars per can of Spike. Desperate times call for desperate measures.

Friday, December 12, 2008

“The best inspiration is not to outdo others, but to outdo ourselves”




As some of you know I compete in bodybuilding and power lifting from time to time. I have no desire to go pro in either sport but I use it as a means of competition. I have been a very competitive athlete all my life. From football to racing motocross for 8 years, competition is in my blood.

I was looking through last year’s workout log the other day and came across a page. It wasn’t my typical workout log page though, it was a paragraph. The paragraph was in my writing, but for a split second I didn’t remember writing it. As I read through the paragraph it all came back to me. I was training for a bodybuilding competition at the time and it was a late lower body day. One of those 9 pm, I’d rather be at home days. As I remember I had just finished my first set of squats and was disappointed in myself. I wasn’t pushing it like I should have. I was alone in the gym, besides the Pantera blasting from the speakers, and I had no one to push me. So in this haze of pleasure and pain my emotions took over and this is what I wrote:

“When I’m too tired to train, don’t feel like cooking a meal, don’t want chicken and broccoli again…. I think. I ask myself, “What is my competition doing?”. I picture them training harder, eating better than me and it lights a fire deep inside. I train harder and eat better than my fictitious competitor. That way I know when it comes down to it, trophies are handed out and I’m walking off that stage the best man won. That I held nothing back in my pursuit to be the best I can be. I can smile and know what it feels like to live.”

I think this paragraph sums up a whole lot more than just bodybuilding. I think its how people should view a lot of things. From business to training to dieting, its all about being the best you can be and doing what it takes. That’s what living is.

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Nutrition Seminar / Athlete Training Article




I would like to thank everyone who attended my “Athletes: Are You Performing at Your Highest Level?” nutrition seminar. It was definitely a success and I hope everyone learned something applicable.

Here is a link to a recent article I wrote about athletes training programs. It is worth taking a look at:

www.builtforshow.com/resources/


(Copy and paste link into your browser)

It is the second article from the top. Also, check out the main page. The “Built for Show” book is a great read and I highly recommend it.

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Athletes: Are You Performing at Your Highest Level?



ARGONAUTS FITNESS PRESENTS:

1st Ever FREE Athlete Nutrition Seminar

Saturday December 6, 2008
11:00-11:30 am

3031 Broadway
Paducah, KY 42001

Chase Karnes, NSCA-CPT

Presents:

“Athletes: Are You Performing at Your Highest Level?”

Free to all athletes, coaches and parents.
Seating is limited. Standing room is also available.

Saturday, November 29, 2008

"Getting Big is a Battle..."



“Getting big is a battle and my weapon is my fork!” – Dr. John Berardi

Dr. Berardi says it best with this quote. If you want to gain muscle you have to eat. I’ve heard numerous guys say things like:

“I just can’t gain weight”

“I am a hardgainer”

“My metabolism is too fast”

“My genetics won’t allow me to build muscle”

And those are just a few of the many excuses. While I am sure a lot of their workouts probably aren’t the best, if their nutrition was up to par they would at least have some noticeable results. Their problem is they just don’t eat enough. If you want to get big you have to eat big. That doesn’t mean a bunch of shit food either. I’m talking about eating a lot of clean foods. I currently on a clean bulk and weigh 194 pounds. Here is a peak into my diet journal from yesterday:

Meal 1:
Homemade protein shake (Includes healthy fats, protein and complex carbs)
6g Omega-3 Fish Oil

850 cal 28g fat 104g carbs 52g protein

Meal 2:
Homemade protein shake (Includes healthy fats, protein and complex carbs)

790 cal 22g fat 104g carbs 52g protein

Meal 3:
5 oz. Turkey Breast on 2 slices 100% whole wheat bread

300 cal 1g fat 42g carbs 38g protein

Pre/Peri Workout:
1 Spike + BCAA’s

Post Workout:
Whey Isolate with Waxy Maize

540 cal 0g fat 90g carbs 45g protein

Meal 4:
Protein shake

467 cal 12g fat 40g carbs 48g protein

Meal 5:
8 oz. Ground Sirloin
2 cups broccoli

410 cal 17g fat 11g carbs 50g protein

Meal 6:
Chocolate Peanut Butter Shake

426 cal 24g fat 16g carbs 34g protein


Totals: 3783 cal 104 g fat 407 g carbs 319 g protein

Keep in mind this is a training day so my calories are a little higher than off days. I actually utilize carb cycling even when bulking. On my off days my calories are lower and my carbohydrates are much lower. My diet isn’t perfect and could use more vegetables and more whole foods and less shakes. But being a full time student and working full time shakes are about my only options sometimes. Also, my diet isn’t the same everyday and foods change but on workout days calories still stay around 3800-4100. Hopefully this gives you an idea of how important food is. Food is the most anabolic substance known to man. Stop making excuses about being a hardgainer and start eating.

Friday, November 28, 2008

The Day After Thanksgiving



I woke up this morning at around 5:15. Was it to go Christmas shopping and save on all the big sales? Nope, just thinking about the stress of that causes my cortisol levels to rise. (However, it would be nice to try on some clothes today. The lighting in those dressing rooms appears to add 20 lbs of muscle and drop your bodyfat to the low single digits. It is pretty badass, until you get home of course). I did get up today to train clients. Yes, the day after Thanksgiving (which most are out of school and off work) people wanted to train. It wasn’t that I begged them to come in today. I made no threats nor gave any bribes. They simply asked me if they could train. At first it didn’t seem like a big deal. Yet, the more I thought about it, I came to realize it kind of is. I am proud that they have ingrained this into their routine. I had 12 clients come in today to train. Some soccer players, wrestlers, figure athletes, triathletes, powerlifters and some that just enjoy working out and improving themselves. Most would look at today as a day off from work or school and from the gym. Not these people. I am glad these clients wanted to be there. For most it wasn’t their normal time slots or even days. But they chose to train. It just makes me happy to see people that dedicated to getting their workout in and one step closer to their goal. It’s not that they have to, they choose to. I think more people need to start “choosing” to add working out and proper nutrition to their schedule. It should be a part of everyone’s life.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Haterade!



As defined by the urban dictionary a hater is: A person that simply cannot be happy for another person's success. So rather than be happy they make a point of exposing a flaw in that person. The definition of Haterade is: The metaphorical drink that gives haters their ability to hate, just like Gatorade gives athletes the fluids to compete physically. Combined by mixing the words "hater" and "Gatorade".

Lately I feel as if a lot of people have been sipping on a nice cold bottle of Haterade. It seems everyone is jealous of others success. I have high school athletes that their teammates make remarks like: “Oh, I work out alone because I don’t need someone to hold my hand through my workouts.” I mean what the hell? First of all there is absolutely no hand holding going on. Stop hating because they are getting bigger, faster and stronger while you are sitting on your ass after school. Then they are taking your starting position on the team once season starts. Another example that bugs me is when I have a client doing their best to follow their meal plan and get the pounds off. They are super determined but then someone has to drink a bottle of some good ‘ole Haterade and start making negative comments about their progress or other things. Then on top of that start trying to sabotage their dietary efforts but offering junk food to the person. Another example of someone and their Haterade consumption is when someone is working out in the public gym, doing the exercises that work while some someone sits on the leg extension machine giving them dirty looks. Stop it, enough with the hating.

I think its time we sneak into those peoples houses and substitute their Haterade with a nice cup of shut the hell up!

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Squats



I was fortunate enough to have my classes cancelled today. That means I have more time to catch up on things I may have been getting behind on. It also gave me a little bit of time catch up on some article reading. I came across a Mike Mahler article on T-Nation.com and loved this excerpt on squats.

“Let's be honest: Lots of guys hate doing squats, and avoid them like a psycho ex-girlfriend. Lots of guys complain about not making progress. How much crossover do you think there is between those two groups?

Pretty close to 100 percent?
Squats work because they're hard to do. They're responsible for more workout-induced puking than any other exercise. (Helpful tip: Don't eat anything for two hours before squatting.)”


That simple short paragraph couldn’t be truer. I don’t care if you are 6 years old or 60, male or female, tall or short, love them or hate them, squats (or a variation of) should be included in your program.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Heavy Stuff...



This past weekend Parker Shields and I both set National Powerlifting Records through the SLP. Here is the write up straight from the SLP website:

“For the teenage division, fifteen year old Parker Shields set all new national raw records for the 13-15/165 class with a 285 squat, 195 bench and 400 pull for an 880 total. Training partner Chase Karnes did the same at junior 198 with his 450 squat, 350 bench and 520 deadlift, finishing with a 1320 total!”

Here is a video of the lifts: http://www.youtube.com/user/ChaseKarnes

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Tiffany Tells Us How It Is...



Tiffany Upshaw is an up and coming fitness model as well as Optimum Nutrition/ABB athlete. She lives in Florida and plans on a career in fitness modeling as well as competiting in figure. Tiffany took the time out of her busy schedule to answer a few questions. How did she build such a great physique? How does she train? What does she eat? When does she eat it?

Chase: Tiffany, first of all I’d like to thank you for taking the time to be a part of this interview. My first question to you is how did you get involved in health and fitness? Tell us a little bit about your background.

Tiffany: I got involved with fitness for 4 years now but really its been 8 weeks of hitting the gym hard on a figure workout regimen and dieting on a Ketosis diet. I've always loved fitness and staying in shape since high school. I was a 4 year Varsity Competitive Cheerleader for Riverdale High School in Fort Myers, FL and with that, you must be physically fit, have extreme stamina and strength. That took me to the next level of getting into the gym, working out to build strength and cardio for stamina. Just picture running around on a mat, doing a dance routine, lifting a 115lb girl in the air (above your shoulders), tumbling (back handsprings, back tucks), throwing girls in basket tosses...ALL of that, takes a strong girl with excellent stamina. So I went above and beyond in the gym to assist in making the best out of cheerleading.

Chase: Wow! That definitely takes some strength and stamina. You have a great physique. How much do you believe your genetics play in reaching your physique and how much do you think is due to your lifestyle: nutrition, weight training, cardio, supplements?

Tiffany: Thanks! I am African-American (father) and Caucasian (mother) and I personally think I get the muscle type genetics from my dad. I think genetics have a good portion to do with my physique or anyone’s physique but I've always been good at easily building muscle mass. However, I would say a good majority of my physique (looking at the last 8 weeks of training and dieting), my dieting, supplements and training has more to do with my physique than genetics. Someone who has always had a weight problem, with the possibility of it being caused by genetics, can change that just by dieting and training. Like they say, 90% is your diet and 10% is your workout regimen.



Chase: Yeah, I agree with that. Everyone has different genetics but you can always improve upon what you where given. I’m sure many women out there would love to hear a breakdown of your typical day. What is a typical day in your life consisting of: work, training, cardio, etc.?

Tiffany: My typical day consists of mainly timing. For instance, let’s take a work day, Wednesday.

6am: 45 minutes of cardio BEFORE any food intake.

Around 7am: 168g of Liquid Egg Whites w/1tsp. of Splenda, a couple shakes of cinnamon, a bit of water (mixed together) and 2 Omega-3 eggs cooked and scrambled in the microwave for a minute.

8:30am: Start work at Dr. Wittenborn's Plastic Surgery Office.

9am: 8oz. water + 1 scoop of Whey Isolate Protein and 20g of either cashews, walnuts or raw almonds.

(Check in patients, answer phones, check out patients, etc.)

12:00pm: 4-6oz of a grilled chicken breast w/ 1 cup of broccoli or spinach. 28g of either cashews, walnuts or raw almonds and a water w/a flavored Splenda To-Go packet.

2pm: 8oz. water + 1 scoop of Whey Isolate Chocolate Protein and 1 tbsp. of natural peanut butter.

4pm: Leave Work and head to the gym to train Hams and Calves and then do 30 minutes of cardio after training.

6pm: 4-6oz of a Bacon Wrapped Filet seasoned with Mrs. Dash or an all-seasoning w/1 cup spinach or broccoli, spray butter, 20g of either cashews, walnuts, or raw almonds and a water w/ a Splenda flavored packet.

8pm: 12oz. water + 1 scoop of Casein Protein and 1 tbsp. of natural peanut butter.

Between 8 and 10pm: Nighty Night!




Chase: Sounds like a busy day. Looks like a good mix of high protein, healthy fats and fibrous carbs. I know fitness modeling is your goal and you are definitely heading in the right direction. Are figure competitions anywhere in your future or just strictly modeling?

Tiffany: Well, I signed a 1yr. contract with ON/ABB so I definitely want to back up that honor and get an NPC competition under my belt! Right now I am looking to do a local/small competition for next year and that will hopefully allow me to move further to Junior Nationals. I also am looking to do a Muscle Mania bikini, model, figure competition as well in Miami or Tampa next year. My goal is to be the youngest female athlete to turn Pro :o)

Chase: Well you are on the right track. What are two tips you would give a female reader hoping to achieve your look?

Tiffany: STICK with your diet and train hard! It's not going to be easy but just think of the end result!

Chase: That’s great advice. What are the two biggest mistakes you see most women make in the gym?

Tiffany: Form and lack of motivation.

Chase: What do you say to women who think weight training and supplementation will make them “big, bulky and manly”?

Tiffany: However they got the information has gotten them completely mislead. Of course certain supplements will make you gain weight and bulk you up but not all of them. They would need to educate themselves on different supplements and what ones would be perfect for them to take.

Chase: Can you let everyone know how they can contact you?

Tiffany: Sure :o) I enjoy meeting and talking to new people!

Email: tiffanyupshaw@gmail.com
MySpace: www.myspace.com/officiallytiffanyupshaw

For My Trainer:

Jeff DeLaney
jeff@thecozzateam.com


Chase: I really appreciate your time. Thanks again and best wishes in your career!

Tiffany: Thank you!! I enjoyed sharing!

Saturday, October 4, 2008

Thoughts From the Gym Floor:




I work at a gym obviously (I feel stupid for even typing that). Sometimes however, I like to mix my training up. I like to train at Murray State in their facility. I like to stop in Mega Gym up in Draffenville for a change of pace. Yesterday I decided to stop in Energy Fitness. Here are some of my random thoughts from the gym floor:

• Upon entering I realized I forgot my wallet so I made my friend pay my day pass. $12.00. I paid him back later with a few beer at Tokyo Sushi.

• I felt bad because the desk worker was taking donations for breast cancer awareness month and I had to look like an ass for having to say no. I may stop in there today just to drop off a donation.

• Its nice to work out in a large facility such as Energy. Occasionally I felt as if I was at Globo Gym from the Movie Dodgeball though.

• Super sets are damn hard to do in a big gym. Trying to superset dips and incline curls weren’t even worth it. I would have to walk what seemed like 50 yards then wait for an incline bench to open up then walk back 50 yards. I just stuck with straight sets for the day.

• I thought Monday was international frat boy bench press and curl day. Apparently so is Friday.

• Four friends of mine are dieting for a bodybuilding building show. How I didn’t envy them up in the cardio area doing their cardio.

• The music was awesome though. I heard some Pantera, Clutch, Metallica and Black Label Society. Oh wait, I was wearing my iPod. The music was terrible.

• After completing a new PR on set of push press my friend (who forgot his iPod) asked what I was listening to. I replied with, “NSYNC: Bye, Bye, Bye”. That wasn’t a lie though. When I paused my iPod that’s what I heard playing on the gym speakers.

• PR is a personal record for those who don’t know.

Well it sure is nice to train with a new change of scenery. Followed up with a shake and some post workout sushi it was a great night. After that we saw a little magic at Max’s from a friend and client of mine Todd Duff (www.toddduff.com). Very impressive stuff I recommend everyone to check it out live sometime.

Saturday, September 27, 2008

The Terror Within

The Real Killer: Obesity.

Saturday, September 20, 2008

No Excuses




Some people wonder why they never get results. This article may be a bit blunt but it’s the truth. A lot of people see little or no results because they are full or EXCUSES. This article may slightly offend some people. I am ok with that though because to be honest I’m offended by how many excuses I hear from people. I’m tired of hearing the following:

• I don’t have time.
• I’m too old.
• I have bad genetics.
• I looked good until I had kids.

You get the idea. So now I will examine a few of these excuses and explain why they are total B.S. in my book.

I don’t have time.

This one is great. You don’t have time do you? Well there are 168 hours in a week. So there are 168 hours in my week, your week, his week, her week, everyone has the same amount of hours in their week. Its how you utilize these hours that really matter. I understand everyone is busy in this day and age. They have jobs, husbands and wives, kids, and many other commitments. People get the idea that because I am a trainer I work out all day long. I wish it was that simple. I am a trainer not a pro athlete. People pay me to work them out, not pay me to work out (as a pro athlete is). I schedule 40 hours+ a week with clients, drive to and from Murray at least 10 hours a week, take classes 12 hours a week, study at least an hour a day, check email and keep up with the latest in the fitness industry daily, cook and prepare all my meals for the day each night, see my girlfriend daily, sleep 7-8 hours a night and somehow still find time to lift weights 3 hours a week and run sprints/strongman training 2 hours a week. Some days I may be deadlifting at 6:00 am or doing squats at 9:00 pm but I make time for it. The key word is MAKE time for it. Everyone has the time there, its just what they choose to do with that time that’s the problem.

I’m too old.

This excuse drives me crazy. Too old? How can 30 something years old be too old? I don’t care if you have a full head of gray hair and get a senior citizens discount your still not too old. I have a client in his 50’s who trains harder that most teenagers and 20 somethings I know. I have a client in his 70’s who trains harder and is more disciplined that most athletes I know. He is still losing bodyfat and building muscle and he is in his SEVENTIES. No one is too old! You know why your think your too old? Because you sit around watching tv, eating and talking about how old you are. That’s why. You create your own destiny. If you think your old, tell yourself your old and even better act like your old then damn soon enough you sure will feel old. George Foreman won a world title in his forties (considered old for an athlete). He defied the odds and you know how? He trained hard and ate right. He trained when he felt tired, weak and even “old”. Look at LL Cool J. He was on the cover of Men’s Fitness just last month and has a build better than any 20 year old I see on a daily basis. Age is just a number. The reason 50, 60 and 70 year olds are making progress and defying the odds is because they tell themselves they are still young. They choose to be that way.

I have bad genetics.

This is one that drives me crazy. Bad genetics you say? No one is meant to be fat. There are different body types and shapes and sizes do vary but the body is not meant to hold large amounts of fat. People want to exercise a couple times a week then complain because they are still fat. These people need to take a look at the pizza and ice cream they eat for dinner a couple nights a week. Pizza and ice cream ARE NOT genetics. The fact that you’ve ate that way and did little or no exercise is what causes excessive fat gain…not genetics. If you want to lose fat you need to be getting 5 hours of exercise a week and eating right 90% of the time. Sound like a lot? Make a decision, how bad do you want it? Then you know what to do. If not then be happy being overweight and don’t blame your genetics. Realize it’s your lifestyle.

I looked good until I had kids.

Don’t blame your kids for this one. Now I do understand that women gain weight during pregnancy and the body goes through a lot of changes. I have experience training pregnant women. However if you kid is 10 years old guess what? That’s not baby fat around your waist and hips. If your baby weighed 8 pounds and you gained 80 guess what? You ate like shit. I have the perfect example. I have a client who became pregnant and continued working out all through the pregnancy. She gained a normal amount of weight and had her baby. Within 8 weeks post pregnancy she was back to her pre pregnancy weight. You know how? She didn’t live off ice cream and brownies. She ate good 90% of the time and exercised.

I hope you all understand I didn’t write this article to offend anyone. I just wanted to point out common excuses and if one offended you should probably look at why? Is it because I pointed out the brutal truth? You are never too old to do something. You where not born overweight, but you let yourself become overweight. If you are already there then make the change. Exercise regularly and change the way you eat. If you can’t give up your junk food daily, stop making excuses, complaining and blaming it on your genetics. Don’t blame your innocent kids, get off your butt and do something. If you think you have no time realize everyone is busy. Everyone has a ton of responsibilities. The difference is we make time.

What is the secret to success? It is dedication and discipline. It is that simple. Make time to work out. Don’t miss workouts. Make time to eat healthy. Don’t miss meals. Stop making excuses, no one wants to hear them.

Congratulations Jay!



I would like to congratulate Jay Pitman on his recent accomplishment of completing the Louisville Ironman Triathalon. That is an awesome achievement.

Congratulations Laura!


I would like to congratulate Laura Duff on the recent accomplishment of preparing for and competiting in her first figure show. For those of you all that don't know it is A LOT of work for a girl to prepare for a show. It is a 24/7 job. From the strenous training, cardio and diet to the posing, shoes, hair and nails. It is not an easy process. It takes a lot of hard work, discipline and dedication. Good job Laura!

Monday, August 4, 2008

13 Reasons to Take Your Fish Oil




Thirteen reasons to use fish oils to get lean

This is an excerpt from coach Poliquin's and Dr. Houston's upcoming book on fat loss.

Serious trainers want to find a supplement that will give them an edge. For those of us interested in positively and optimally altering body composition and maximizing our training efforts, fish oils offer thirteen possible advantages:

1. Cell membrane health: Eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), insure that cell membranes remain healthy. The membranes are flexible and contain larger numbers of insulin receptors that are more receptive and responsive to circulating insulin. This results in decreased fat storage in the adipocytes (fat cells)

2. Fish oils turn on the lipolytic genes (fat burning genes)

3. Fish oils turn off the lipogenic genes (fat storage genes),

4.Fish oils diminish C-reactive proteins, a newly identified risk factor associated with various inflammatory diseases, including atherosclerosis, angina, coronary heart disease, heart attack, stroke, congestive heart failure and diabetes. The D.H.A. fraction of the fish oil seems to be one most responsible for that protective effect. DHA also has best ability to reduce blood pressure.

5. Increase utilization of fat stores from the adipocytes.

6. Preferential utilization for energy production once stored in the Adipocytes.

7. Reduced inflammation from physical training.

8. Pain management from the reduced inflammation.

9. EPA regulates blood supply to the brain that is essential in maintaining focus in weight training sessions. DHA is important in brain membranes, memory and cognitive function.

10. Fish oils increase serotonin levels (the happy neurotransmitter). Therefore, fish oils will decrease incidence of depression, anxiety, panic attack and reduce carbohydrate cravings.

11. Fish oils will improve your cardio-vascular risk profile by lowering VLDL, triglycerides, homocysteine, fibrinogen and increasing HDL levels. Combining fish oils with plant sterols will improve lipid levels even more than either alone.

12. Fish oils can also decrease blood pressure by several mechanisms.
These include increases in the vasodilatory compound, nitric oxide, reducing vascular inflammation, blocking the constrictive elements in the vascular wall such as the calcium channels reducing blood viscosity, and inhibiting a blood vessel constrictor (thromboxane). Lipoprotein (a) is another CVD predictor that can be lowered by fish oils (a 19% reduction was seen with natural, stable fish oils and just 4% with a highly purified fish oil).

13. Fish oils are a great stress fighter. Supplementation with n-3 fatty acids inhibits the adrenal activation of steroids, aldosterone, epinephrine and norepinephrine (catecholamines) elicited by a mental stress, apparently through effects exerted at the level of the central nervous system.

Saturday, July 19, 2008

Bodybuilding



This past summer I decided to take the time to prepare for and compete in 2 bodybuilding shows since my schedule allowed. The first show I competed in was The Hub City Fitness Quest in Jackson, Tn. I was very happy with the outcome. I finished 1st place in the Men’s Open Middleweight Class. Then the next weekend I competed in the NPC GNC Central Indiana Bodybuilding and Figure Championships in Anderson, In. I was very pleased with my placing at that show as well. I walked away with two 2nd places in the Men’s Open Middleweight and Novice Middleweight. My goals and plans for competing now are to take a break (from the stage, not training) and finish up school this year. Then next fall possibly compete again. Thanks to all my clients, friends, family and girlfriend for support during my contest preparation.

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Congatulations Parker!

I would like to congratulate my client Parker Shields for setting the Illinois State Deadlifting Record this past weekend in Metropolis. Parker not only lifted a personal best deadlift of 385 pounds (at a weight of 165 and 15 years old) but also beat Illinois previous record for his division. Congratulations!

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Congratulations Jay!


I just wanted to congratulate Jay on his latest accomplishment, The Memphis in May Triathlon. This being his second triathlon along with Nashville's Music City Marathon all in under a months time. What an athlete and great accomplishment. I expect to see many more great feats in the near future.

Sunday, May 4, 2008

Drink your Tea




Lately I have been trying to reduce my daily caffeine intake. With the last few months of classes combined with work plus training and preparing for my next competition I felt my caffeine intake has gone a bit overboard. I get the majority of my caffeine through coffee, or at least I did. I have decided to up my green tea intake (I did drink green tea daily but usually no more than 8oz) and replace my coffee with green tea. Now, green tea does still contain caffeine but a much lower amount than coffee. Plus with health benefits like these you cant go wrong:

• Increased 24-hour energy expenditure and fat oxidation
• Decreased waist circumference
• Decreased lipid oxidation
• Improved blood vessel function
• Reduced risk of heart disease and stroke
• Decreased serum cholesterol and triglycerides
• Prevention of atherosclerosis
• Reduced risk of developing high blood pressure
• Inhibition of oxidative damage
• Decreased growth of abnormal cells
• Enhanced immune function
• Prevention of prostate cancer
• Reduced risk of skin cancer
• Regression of oral cancer
• Decreased ovarian cancer risk
• Natural resistance to microbial infection
• Decreased plaque and oral bacteria
• Lower risk of developing kidney stones
• Reduced risk of Parkinson disease

Friday, May 2, 2008

Wow!

This video may leave you speechless. It may make you tear up. It may make you smile. It may make you look at your priorities in life. It may make you re-evaluate your life. Whatever it does to you I think it should be seen by all.
-Chase


Tuesday, April 29, 2008

100 Calories of Sh*t


"My mom let's me grab five 100 calorie packs after school since they are healthy"

It all began as I was sitting in the break area of the Exercise Science department between classes the other day. I was studying up for my next class when I look up to see this girl eating a 100 calorie pack of Oreos. Now, it's not like it was the first time I had ever saw those little deceitful packs, but it was the first time I had put much thought into them. Basically these little packs are a portion control of junk food. They have no nutritional value. They are still sh*t. So basically some may justify it by only eating a little sh*t food, not a lot of sh*t. Sh*t is still sh*t. Most people, especially those who are over-fat, can’t eat “just a little” of a unhealthy tasty food. No fat person eats a single Oreo, thinks to themselves, “Man that cookie was good and plenty for today”, they eat the whole row of Oreo’s. Nutrition facts should be per row of cookies, not the small 1 or 2 cookie serving size they list.

Just remember as a clearly not sober Paula Abdul would say on American Idol, "It is what it is". Sh*t food is still sh*t food. It will shorten your life, wreck your health and make you an ugly naked person. It doesn’t make it healthy just because its served in a little pouch that says 100 Calories on it. Wouldn’t you rather eat a bunch of healthy, nutritious, great tasting food? You can. Eating healthy seems to have a stigma about it and being bland and bad tasting. That’s way wrong. It can be very, very good. And another plus is you’ll live longer, be healthier, and look better naked.

Saturday, February 9, 2008

Psychology and Social Dynamics



The photo above is me pulling a truck 60 yards up a 12% incline. I thought it was an appropriate photo for this article.
"You’re going to be different. Embrace it. I give you permission to stand out. You're different. Stronger. Better. Be the outcast."

The following article was written by Chris Shugart in regards to his Velocity Diet. I believe the skills and principles he touch on during this article are great. This is a must read for anyone trying to begin to live a healthier lifestyle or already living it. -Chase Karnes


"You are the average of the five people you spend the most time with."- Charles Poliquin


While nutrition and exercise are the clear components of success with any physique transformation, there are less obvious variables that most people don't even think about: psychology and social dynamics.

The mental game is perhaps more important than the nutrition and exercise program. Why? Because just as the muscles are useless without the nervous system to control them, body transformation is impossible without the right mindset. To make radical changes on the outside, you have to first look inside.

Your drastic changes to your nutrition not only takes willpower during the first couple of weeks before the taste, craving, and behavioral changes kick in, it also takes a certain social attitude. In this chapter, we'll talk about both the internal and external cognitive skills it takes to succeed.

Skill #1: Recognizing Rationalization

There is one concept you must internalize and make a part of your daily life if you want to succeed. If you don't master this skill, you quite simply won't make a single long term change in your body:

You must, before you even begin the nutrition changes, learn to recognize and squash your use of rationalization.

About fifteen years ago I found myself sitting in a college psychology class. I was fat, out of shape, and my eating habits were out of control. But the worst part was that I'd mentally blocked all of this out of my immediate consciousness. I avoided stepping on scales, taking my shirt off at pools, and even looking in the mirror. I'd built up so many protective walls that I was walking around practically unaware of my condition.

I knew of course that I was nearing the state of clinical obesity, but I chose not to think about it. I had excuses for everything: I was too busy to workout. Healthy food was expensive. Eating was a stress reliever. Heck, I deserved to eat garbage as a reward for my hard work in school. I even remember saying that I'd rather be fat and happy than lean and miserable. (In reality, I was already miserable being overweight.)

Two things happened that day. First, I had to take a body fat test as part of a PE class. Humiliated and red faced, I took off my shirt and let some cute co-ed try to measure my body fat percentage with a set of calipers. I was so fat she had a hard time doing it. I clearing remember her trying to pinch my rolls of belly fat with the calipers. My face burned with embarrassment.

Later that day in the psychology class, the professor went over the concept that shattered every psychological wall I'd ever erected. That concept was known as rationalization.

Rationalization is a type of ego-defense mechanism. Basically, rationalization involves creating false but plausible excuses to justify unacceptable behavior. Essentially, you're lying to yourself to make yourself feel better or to relieve guilt.

To relieve his guilt about stealing from the office, a person may tell himself, "Well, they underpay me anyway. It's only fair." Someone may try to relieve his guilt about cheating on his girlfriend by saying, "Well, I'd had a few beers, so I wasn't in my right mind."

When I grasped the definition of rationalization, my ego-protecting, guilt-relieving wall of lies came crashing down. Hard. And once a person grasps the concept, it's almost impossible to un-grasp it.

I saw immediately what I was doing to myself by overeating and not working out. All my excuses became transparent. I became angry and disgusted with myself. It was a hard lesson, but from that day forward I learned to recognize rationalization and put a stop to it.

Here's the power of this recognition: once you're aware of rationalization, it's very hard to keep doing it. And once you stop doing it, it's amazing how quickly you start to achieve your goals.

As with many other aspects of life, rationalization is probably the single biggest roadblock in a person's way when he or she is trying to lose fat, add muscle, get healthy, or increase performance. We always seem to have a good reason to skip a workout or eat something we know is bad for us. We're not lying to others about why we're doing these negative things; we're lying to ourselves.

I think what broke me out of my downward spiral of rationalization was mostly the realization that what I was doing -- self-directed lying to excuse my bad diet and lack of training -- had been named and defined by a psychologist. I mean, I was doing something that negatively affected my whole life, and it had been defined and placed into psychology textbooks 100 years ago! Again, this made it very difficult to keep doing it. The act of recognition alone helped me to stop making these thin excuses and get on with changing my behaviors.

Here are some examples of rationalization related to body-transformation:

"I had a good workout today. I can have the Chinese buffet tonight."

"I don't have time to exercise."

"I've had a tough week. I deserve a big meal."

"I'll start the diet next week or next month."

The latter example is a special form of rationalization I call justified procrastination. To procrastinate means to put something off until another day. Justified procrastination is when you put something off -- like starting an exercise program or a diet -- but rationalize the delay. Example:

"I'll start the V-Diet after my birthday (or vacation or holiday, etc.)"

Sometimes, there may be a real reason not to start the diet (waiting for your supplement order to arrive for example.) But for the most part, the time to start any training program or diet is now. There is great power in immediate action. Ninety-percent of delays are merely justified procrastination, and you must learn to recognize it and squash it.


The Rubber Band Trick

Noted sports psychologist Dr. Jack Singer has a useful trick he uses to help athletes recognize and remove negative thinking patterns. What he does is have them wear a rubber band around their wrist. When they catch themselves having a self-defeating thought like "I choke under pressure during the game" they snap the rubber band on their wrists and replace the negative thought with a positive one such as "I excel under pressure."

Even if that statement is untrue at the time, the action helps them to reprogram their mindset and improve their performance.

The V-Dieter can use this same trick to defeat rationalization. Example: A co-worker brings in donuts. You catch yourself thinking, "Well, one donut won't hurt; I'll just skip a shake today. And besides, I don't want to be rude by turning down the free food."

Once you see that you're making a weak rationalization to justify cheating on your diet, quickly snap the rubber band on your wrist and think, "That's an example of rationalization. I'm too strong of a person to do that to myself."

Finally, remember that defense mechanisms like this are often defined as "largely unconscious" or "semi-unconscious." But rationalization can be recognized and defeated. In fact, it must be.

Skill #2: Evaluating Social Partnerships and "Toxic" People

Look around. Who is surrounding you right now? Visualize your close circle of friends, your immediate co-workers, and the family members you spend the most time with. Who are they? This is important because research has shown that the best indicator of success isn't socioeconomic status, education levels, or any of the usual suspects. It's the people you surround yourself with.

For this reason, it's important to have the skill of evaluating social relationships, including close personal relationships with spouses, best fiends, and immediate family. These people can help you achieve your goals or stand in the way of you achieving them. They may even actively try to make you fail - yes, even your spouse or best friend. Especially your spouse or best friend.

Let's review the three main social categories as related to the V-Diet:

The Positive Partnership

Many people choose to do the V-Diet with a friend, spouse, or boyfriend or girlfriend. This is a great idea. Women thrive in groups or partnerships, from training partners to diet partners. Men do too, especially if there's an element of competition. Men compete with each other while women tend to support each other. It's in our base natures.

Couples do well on the V-Diet together too. After all, if you're having your nineteenth shake of the week while your boyfriend is having pizza, friction can occur. The V-Dieter may resent the pizza eater, or the pizza eater may resent the V-Dieter for having the willpower to tackle her weight problem. But doing the diet together removes all those possible problems, if a positive partnership occurs.

A positive partnership is supportive. It can be supportive via positive pep talks and encouragement, or it can be supportive through the careful use of "tough love." Some people simply respond better to a verbal butt kicking than hand holding. In a positive partnership, one person will simply keep the other motivated and on track.

The Negative Partnership

Negative training and diet partners are supportive too, just in a counterproductive manner. Negative partners don't sabotage one another, rather, they work together to rationalize cheating on their diets, skipping workouts, or having lazy workouts.

Their mentality is one of partners-in-crime. If one V-Dieter says she thinks she's going to skip that day's NEPA walk, the other may justify this and agree to skip her walk as well. Spouses may justify a weekday cheat meal at a restaurant.

This type of negative support is comforting because human beings feel better about negative or destructive behaviors if these behaviors are performed in a group setting, something known as deindividuation in the field of psychology. "You lie to me, I'll lie to you, and we'll all be happy" seems to be the motto of these destructive tag-teams.

Obviously, negative partnerships are to be avoided. If you find yourself in one, get out or choose to be the strong member, the one who pulls the other up instead of participating in the downward spiral. As with many of these psychological and social issues, awareness is the key. Once you're knowledgeable about this pitfall, it should be easy to avoid.

The Solo V-Dieter

Most V-Dieters go it alone, often while being told how "crazy" they are for doing it. The greatest enemy of the V-Diet isn't fast food and comfortable couches, it's other people. In many cases, these other people can be classified as toxic.

The concept of "toxic people" was popularized by Dr. Lillian Glass in her book by the same name. A toxic person is basically anyone who holds you back, cuts you down, makes you experience any number of negative emotions on a regular basis, and generally causes you to feel like a piece of toilet paper, and not that nice triple-quilted stuff either. A toxic person can be a friend, a co-worker, a family member, and even a spouse.

A V-Diet saboteur, as I call them, is out to sabotage your training and diet program. He or she can do this overtly or covertly, and through physical or emotional manipulations. Let's go through some examples:

* A family member cooks you your favorite cheat food and encourages you to "live a little" and give up the diet.

* A friend drops seemingly casual but negative comments:

"Yeah, you've lost some fat, but that can't be healthy."

"It's great that you lost ten pounds so far, but when you lose weight fast it always comes back."

* A co-worker knows you're dieting yet keeps offering you junk food. This office saboteur has been known to wave donuts in your face in a "joking" manner. He or she may also refer to you as a "health nut" or "fanatic."

* Your spouse tries to talk you out of going to the gym, or make you feel guilty about it:

"Why can't you spend time with me instead of running off to the gym?"

"We're strapped for cash and you spend $50 a month on a stupid gym membership?"

"Why do you go to the gym so often? Are you seeing someone up there?"

So why do they do it? Well, they may be doing it consciously or unconsciously. It can be done out of hatred or competition, but the usual culprits are jealously and fear.

Example: Your spouse (who usually hasn't been bitten by the fitness bug) sees you losing fat and getting more defined. Your body is looking better and better. She's afraid you'll leave her for a better looking partner, so she tries to sabotage you in order to "keep you." Delusional thinking? You bet, but frighteningly common.

Another example is the jealous co-worker. She sees your discipline and hard work, and she watches as your body changes. She's failed at fat loss many times in the past and she's jealous of your achievements. Her attempts at sabotage can take many forms: caustic comments (often made as thinly disguised jokes), tempting you with crappy food, subtly discouraging your healthy behaviors, or even spreading rumors that you must be "on something."

(Sorry, you may think I'm picking on women here. No, both sexes can be saboteurs; women are just really, really good at it.)

These types of saboteurs behave this way to make themselves feel better. Your discipline and success is like a slap in the face to them. Without saying a word, you're making their excuses look pathetic. These infectious whiners won't be inspired by you; they'll be offended. Nothing angers a toxic person more than seeing someone else succeed.

I've seen toxic men use these same tactics on their wives. You'd think a man would want his overweight wife to get into shape, right? Not if he's toxic! These men might not like having overweight wives, but they'll do everything they can to keep them that way.

Why? Rampant insecurity. Keeping your wife fat is a great way to control her and keep her at home. This is usually coupled with verbal and emotional abuse. And yes, I've seen insecure women do the same thing to their husbands and boyfriends.

Sound crazy? It is, but I can't tell you how many times I've tried to help someone with their Velocity Diet only to have their spouse do everything in their power to ruin it. And here's where we learn about how devious the saboteur can be. You know what the most common form of sabotage is for these poisonous personalities? This line right here:

"Honey, I love you just the way you are. You don't have to lose weight."

BS! That's a velvet hammer used to squash another person's opportunities. It's sleazy and dirty and only used by an insecure person who's emotionally retarded. Aesthetics aside, I'd be wary of any person who doesn't want his or her significant other to make positive health decisions.

"I love you just the way you are" is a polite way of saying "I'll feel inadequate and lazy if you get into shape and I don't! Please stay fat and increase your risk of heart disease, cancer, and diabetes. Better you die at age 45 that me feel insecure or pressured to get into shape myself!"

A few things to keep in mind regarding the V-Diet saboteur:

#1: Watch for poisonous patterns.

Not everyone who offers you a slice of pizza or suggests you skip a workout is a saboteur. What you're looking for here are consistent patterns of behavior. How often does the person do this? How many different ways does the person try to do it?

#2: There are no "casual" negative comments.

If someone regularly makes nasty remarks, even in a joking manner, he could be a saboteur. Remember, saboteurs can be awfully subtle and polite about derailing your progress. They employ the "death by a thousand cuts" technique. And their tongues are wicked sharp. The closer the person is to you (wife or parent), the deeper the cuts.

#3: The V-Diet saboteur is the one with the problem.

It's easy to take these attacks personally, but you shouldn't. The Saboteur is the one with the "issues," not you. Their insecurity, jealously, and self-loathing are forced on you because you represent the opposite. Even though you don't mean it, you're a symbol of their failings and shortcomings.

#4: The toxic person is seldom seen by you as an "enemy."

Although they can be, the actions of a saboteur are seldom overt. And the saboteur himself is seldom a person who obviously has it in for you. The most prevalent saboteurs come from within your own family and close circle of friends.

#5: Sabotage often comes disguised as concern, a favor, or a nice gesture.

I was recently contacted by a guy who'd lost thirteen pounds during the first three weeks of his Velocity Diet. Although he had more fat to lose, his family was already filling his head with negative thoughts and lashing out. They told him he was anorexic, that he had a problem, that losing fat was unhealthy, that he took "too many pills," and that protein would damage his kidneys.

No surprise, everyone in his family was obese and did nothing but vegetate in front of the TV and eat potato chips. But still, verbal barbs like this coming from your family can be the sharpest and most frustrating.

Were they really concerned? No. They were upset that this guy was climbing out of the box they'd put him in. His success was making them feel inadequate. His fat loss reminded them that they were obese couch spuds. Luckily, this guy resisted the pull of the fatty flock and dodged their attempts at sabotage. Side note: Saboteurs sometimes travel in packs.

#6: Dealing with the V-Diet saboteur

A co-worker can usually be ignored. Once you learn to recognize and interpret these attempts at sabotage, you can see them for what they often are: a sign that you're accomplishing something. Take it as a compliment. Eat it up and thrive on it.

But what about the friend, family member or spouse? Dr. Glass recommends confronting them with humor. I agree, the straightforward approach is the best. End the game as fast as possible. When they try to sabotage you, ask them directly about it:

"Why are you offering me a cookie when you know I'm dieting for summer?"

"Why do you try to keep me from going to the gym?'

This is especially effective when the saboteur doesn't even realize what he or she is doing. Remember, these are often delusional people wrapped in a security blanket of defense mechanisms, and a reality check is just what they need. It'll be very difficult for them to continue with their sabotaging ways after you point out what they're doing.

The Final Word on the Saboteur

The V-Diet and the healthy lifestyle that follows is all about achievement and living a full, engaged life. The foundation of this is exercise and a healthy diet. With that solid base, anything is possible and all aspects of life are enriched. The saboteurs hate that, and they secretly resent you for doing what they either can't or won't.

The bitter, complacent people out there don't want you to rise above the norm. You're not allowed to be different. Today, "normal" is fat, weak and unhealthy, and their message to you is "Stay in your box!" Given the chance, they'll drag you down and lock you up.

Listen to what people around you are really saying. Spot the saboteurs, let them know you're on to them, and diffuse them.

Skill #3: Be the Outcast

I received an email the other day from a V-Dieter that went something like this:

"Chris, I have to attend a dinner at a restaurant for my company, but it doesn't fall during my solid meal day. What can eat that won't blow my V-Diet?"

My answer shocked her:

"You can drink your usual shake before you go and eat nothing, or you take your shake with you to the restaurant."

She was practically livid. What would people think? What would they say? How would she explain herself?

The problem here is her mindset. Why is she afraid of being different? Why does she have such a desire to fit in, even when "fitting in" means doing something counter to her goals? What, is she going to get fired for not eating a plate of pasta and breadsticks at the Olive Garden? What's the worry?

As a social species, we all have the desire to fit in, to belong to a group. But in terms of fitness and health, to "fit in" today would mean being overweight and a slave to toxic foods and unhealthy habits. I prefer to be the outcast, don't you? Yes, you are going to stand out during and after the V-Diet. You are going to do something most people won't even attempt to do.

The correct mindset is this:

"I am going to so something completely radical in order to make a fast, radical change in my body and my life. Some people will think I'm crazy. That's okay. I don't want to be like them anyway. I want to stand out. I want to achieve what they can't achieve. I'm different. I am not average. Average is fat and unhealthy. I am above average. My dedication will make people uncomfortable. They may try to sabotage me. That's okay too. This is fun. This is an adventure. It makes me interesting and different. After I'm done, those average people will ask me how they can be 'crazy' too, and I will help them."

You’re going to be different. Embrace it. I give you permission to stand out. You're different. Stronger. Better. Be the outcast.