The Benefits of Vitamin D Supplementation

With winter in full swing and with it the short days, dark evenings and lack of sunshine, we thought we’d post a reminder about the benefits of using Vitamin D supplementation.  We recommend that almost everyone supplement with Vitamin D throughout the winter months, especially if they live in the UK.

It’s always worth getting tested beforehand to ascertain what your current Vitamin D status is and help you decide what is an appropriate dosage.  We recommend people who take Vitamin D supplementation get retested at least bi-annually.

Here’s guest post from Canadian Strength Coach Charles Poliquin on the benefits of Viatmin D supplementation:

“Take vitamin D to lose fat and gain muscle. Over and over again, research shows that if you have low vitamin D, you will be more likely to be overweight, have less muscle mass, and higher risk of injury. Vitamin D deficiency is SO easy to solve—don’t let it keep you from getting and staying lean!”

Read the full article here==>>


Get Enough Sleep to Get Lean For Summer

Guest post by Charles Poliquin on the importance of sleep and how it can help you lose (or gain!) body fat:

“Get enough sleep to lose weight for summer—you’ll improve cardiovascular health too!

Getting adequate rest every night is one of the simplest and most dramatic ways to improve body composition quickly. If you make one change to get lean for summer, make it a habit to get at least 8 hours of sleep every night by establishing a consistent sleep schedule.

I guarantee that with adequate rest you will improve body composition and just feel all around better.”

Click here to read the full article>>

 

Is Your Face Cream making You Fat?

About half of our members of W10 Performance are women, most of whom are on a quest to lose body fat, increase muscle tone, have more energy and feel fitter.

They come to us fully expecting to address exercise, nutrition and hydration, but they are less prepared when we get into some more involved areas and further down the line suggest that their choice of cosmetics might, or is likely to be, influencing how much and where they lose their fat from.

Well, sorry ladies, it’s true, your favourite cream may be contributing to your frustrating lack of fat loss.  It stands true for men also, but men generally use fewer products and are much easier to convince when it comes to switching…. most of the time.

Now before I go on, I should highlight a couple of things (if for no other reason than to cover my derrière)

  1. I’m no expert in this area and I urge you to treat anything that I have to say on the subject with a healthy dose of scepticism. And,
  2. I have no ties with the EWG and I am not or cannot vouch for the efficacy of their research.

It’s a fact that most modern cosmetics are riddled with a host of dubious synthetic ingredients, which would horrify us if we realised that we were essentially ‘eating’ them through our skin. Chemicals are getting into our bloodstream from all angles: Creams and lotions through the skin, sprays and powders inhaled, lipsticks eaten, eye make up absorbed through the eyes (now that’s some thought) and so on. We’re being bombarded with toxic chemicals and in most women’s cases via several products that they use every day.

Yes, there are some regulations in place, but it might be fair to say that they are not as tight as they could be. For example, some ingredients that are banned, can actually be included if the manufacturers can make a strong enough case that they cannot ‘reasonably’ be removed.  Let’s just say that cosmetics represent big business (I saw five billion quoted somewhere) and wherever there are sunscreen covered limbs in the sea, sharks will come to feed.

The implications of this are wide ranging, and personally I’m convinced very relevant for long-term health.  And I think we’re talking severe hormonal disruption that is having a significant impact of many people’s lives.

BUT, if we’re talking fat loss, and as a Biosignature Practitoner I use Charles Poliquin’s Biosignature Modulation as a reference, excess chemicals or toxins means we’re talking accumulated fat around the hips and thighs.

CP puts forward that where you store your fat is an indication of your hormonal profile, and that when you know this, you can use certain interventions to effectively spot reduce – or lose fat from a particular place.  In other words, you can target the troublesome fat on your thighs by doing certain things.

Aside: The jury is out in some camps about the validity of the system, but I like it.  I don’t use it exclusively but I think there’s plenty of principles put forward that make a lot of sense – and more importantly, work in practice.

Given what I currently think I know my own conclusions are these:

  1. We Londoners are toxic people (from a purely physiological perspective that is!)
  2. Chemical toxins are most readily stored in lower body fat – hence why we very rarely measure a pair of lean legs when caliper testing people first time around
  3. We can reduce lower body fat by reducing our toxic load
  4. Cosmetics are seriously implicated when it comes to toxicity
  5. If we limit our exposure to toxins from cosmetics we’ll take a significant step to reducing fat on our thighs

To try and make my point about how many chemicals we’re being exposed to in the name of vanity I’ve used an article in this weekends Sunday Times (Style Magazine) which listed the current most popular cosmetic products as voted for by the readers.  This is particularly useful because we know that this means that these products are amongst the best sellers and ones being used by many of us every day.

The article listed each product by category and I’ve taken the liberty of running five of the ‘best rated’ products through the Environmental Working Group’s database - http://www.ewg.org/skindeep/company.php?comp_id=3604 - a database which looks at all of these products, lists their ingredients, and highlights their potential risks.  It then goes on to give the product a rating from zero to ten – 0-3 being low risk, 4-6 being moderate concern and 7-10 being the most concerning.

Personally, I don’t use many cosmetics, but where I would/do I would try and use products that were rated zero, and I certainly wouldn’t use anything rated above a three.

You’ll see that none of the products score in the low concern range, with the lowest product rated at four. 

Best Skincare Brand

Brand: Clinique

Product: Dramatically Different moisturizing Lotion

Rating: 5

http://www.ewg.org/skindeep/product/265570/Clinique_dramatically_different_mositurizing_lotion/

It lists high concerns for endocrine (hormonal) disruption, organ system toxicity and irritation to skin, eyes or lungs.  Moderate concerns fare listed for biochemical or cellular level changes.

Best Body Product

Brand: Palmers Cocoa Butter Lotion

Product: Body Gloss Lotion

Rating: 8

http://www.ewg.org/skindeep/search.php?query=palmers+cocoa+butter+lotion

There are several Palmers Cocoa Butter products listed with lowest one getting a rating of five.  The Body Gloss Lotion scores highest with a rating of 8.  This showed a low to moderate risk of cancer, a high risk of developmental and reproductive toxicity and a moderate to high level of allergies and immunotoxicity.  Listed under other high concerns are endocrine (hormonal) disruption, irritation to the skin, eyes or lunges and biochemical or cellular level changes.  There were moderate concerns listed also for neurotoxicity and organ system toxicity.

Best Eye Cream

Brand: Nivea Visage

Product: Nivea Visage Q10 Anti Wrinkle Refreshing Eye Roll On – Not listed.

Substitute: Nivea Visage Q10 Anti Wrinkle Reducer Crème

Rating: 4

http://www.ewg.org/skindeep/product/231454/Nivea_Visage_Q10_Advanced_Wrinkle_Reducer_Eye_Creme%2C_SPF_4/

The cream version was listed and scored four overall, with moderate concerns for developmental and reproductive toxicity and allergies and immunotoxicity.  Other high concerns listed for neurotoxicity, organ system toxicity, and irritation to the skin, eyes or lungs. Moderate concerns for biochemical or cellular level changes.

Best Womens Classic Fragrance

Brand: Chanel

Product: Chanel No 5

Rating: 7

http://www.ewg.org/skindeep/product/130609/Chanel_No_5_Eau_De_Toilette/

High concerns were listed for allergies and immunotoxicity.  Other high concerns were highlighted for endocrine (hormonal disruption) and biochemical or cellular level changes.  Moderate concerns for neurotoxicity and other system toxicity.

Best Luxury Buy – Over £50

Brand: Clarins

Products:  Clarins Super Restorative Decollete and Neck Concentrate  - Not listed

Substitute: Clarins upper Restorative Total Eye Concentrate

Rating: 5

http://www.ewg.org/skindeep/product/58447/Clarins_Super_Restorative_Total_Eye_Concentrate/

Moderate risk listed for developmental and reproductive toxicity and moderate to high risk of allergies and immunotoxicity.

So whats the take home point I’m trying to get across?

I’m suggesting that our cosmetic products are contributing to our sub-optimal health and are potentially making us or keeping us fat by overloading us with chemical toxins.  I’m also suggesting that this can manifest itself as fat stored around the thighs.

And what am I suggesting as a course of action?

I‘m suggesting that you check out what is actually in your cosmetic products and, best case, switch to products with a rating of zero.  Worst case, switch to products with a rating of three or under.

Am I suggesting that this will make everyone’s thighs supermodel-esque?

No.  But it combined with other things like eating organic foods, avoiding plastics, eliminating tap and bottled water, switching toxic household cleaning products, etc etc etc, it will certainly help.

How do your products stack up?

You might also find these top tips for picking safer products useful.

http://www.ewg.org/skindeep/top-tips-for-safer-products/

The Meat & Nuts Breakfast

Guest post by Charles Poliquin and something we advocate here at W10 – The Meat & Nuts Breakfast.

“When people ask me for the best single dietary tip for optimal leanness, energy and sustained mental focus, I invariably tell them to try the rotating meat and nuts breakfast. Clients ranging from NHL & NFL stars to corporate executives rave about the increased mental acuity and focused energy they derive from this food combination. The meat allows for a slow and steady rise in blood sugar. The nuts provide a great source of healthy smart fats that allows the blood sugar to remain stable for an extended period of time”.

Read the complete article here>>

W10 Fat Loss 101

W10 training tip: Full-body compound movements are superior to body part split-routines for fat loss purposes!

In anticipation of the enquiries and the barrage of questions we’d be facing relating to fat loss – it being January and all – last week we held a seminar at the gym focussing primarily on, you guessed it, fat loss.  We touched upon nutrition, training, supplements and other factors such as sleep and stress etc, but most of the content was about what, why and when to eat.  We also also had one of our members who is a chef knock us up some menus in keeping with our ‘green list’ – more on that later.

We did our best as always to keep things simple.  In hindsight, we tried to cram to much in in such a short space of time – we get carried away – so as promised here is a brief summary of what was covered.  Apologies for the delay….. it’s January, and there’s the usual influx of people coming through the doors with new goals and New Years resolutions!

In the interest in keeping things brief (ish) we’ve got for five key points in each area.  Some of these are simple and certainly won’t gain us column inches for the next ‘new’ diet, but they work – consistently.

Here goes…

Goal setting

  1. Set measurable short-term goals.  Fat loss needs to be sustainable, definitely – but it’s best achieved when attacked in short and highly focussed (unsustainable perhaps) bursts.  We’ve found 28-days to be optimal – it’s about all most people with other stuff going on in life can commit/stick to 100%.
  2. Commit 100%.  52-week long, half-arsed fat loss programs don’t work.  Focus for 4-6wks and do exactly what is required.  If you get to where you want to be, great – if not, go back to ‘moderate’ living for a couple/few weeks, and do it again.  Repeat this process three or four times per year if necessary, just stopping doing it half-cocked all year every year.  It hasn’t worked and it’s unlikely to!
  3. Shift your goal from an ‘outcome’ goal to a ‘process’ goal.  Most people fail when they align their goals to a particular outcome, Eg. ‘I want to lose a stone’.  They are much more successful when they set process goals, Eg ‘I will go to the gym three times per week, every week and I will eat foods from W10′s green section of the pyramid for all but two meals, every week’.  Forget about the outcome, just follow the steps it takes to get there and it will happen as a matter of course.
  4. Measure progress.  Weight alone isn’t a great marker.  Skinfold readings, photos, circumference measurements or an item of clothing are far better indicators of progress.  Whatever it is, get some marker.
  5. Find a social support network.  Do it with someone, make yourself accountable by telling as many people as possible and hang around with like-minded folk.  Don’t kick around in a health club with all the other demotivated and uninspired souls – the environment is not conducive to getting results.

Training

  1. Train with purpose.  Turning up and going through the motions won’t cut it.  Fat loss requires that you create significant metabolic disturbance and you’ve got to train accordingly.  Be prepared to work hard for it.
  2. You need to train four times per week consistently – three minimum – to see significant results.
  3. Stick to full body strength training programs – body part split routines are not the best choice for fat loss.  And big multi-joint exercises like squats, lunges, push-ups, chin-ups, etc are where it’s at if you want to shed fat.
  4. Keep your workouts short.  Under an hour including mobility/movement prep & flexibility work.  Cutting carbs, caffeine, calories, and other ‘feel good’ things from the diet will cause an initial stress response (as will food separation anxiety!), don’t add to this considerable cascade of stress hormones by smashing yourself in the gym for several hours, several times per week.
  5. Add some short, sharp conditioning blocks to your strength training for more rapid results – either at the end of your workout or as separate sessions.  Include metabolic resistance training (bodyweight included), interval training, hill sprints, sled work and so on to massively accelerate fat loss.

Nutrition

  1. Eat clean.  Follow the W10 Food Pyramid (soon to be published on the site) and eat from the green list.  Avoid Category B vegetables and excess fructose (fruit) for an initial period of 14-days.
  2. Eat regularly.  Three meals and two snacks is often the preferred approach, and that’s fine, but based on experience we find people do better with four small meals (Eg 7am, 11am, 4pm & 7pm).  This could be breakfast, lunch, mid-afternoon protein shake (if you struggle to find time to eat mid-afternoon) and dinner.  (Get a quality protein supplement – we stock Solgar).
  3. Include adequate amounts of protein.  This doesn’t mean that you’ve got to gorge on an abbatoir quota of meat a la Atkins, but most people are ‘under-proteined’, which is fat loss suicide.  There’s a reason – multiple actually – why many diets favour protein over other macronutrients….
  4. Eat from a relatively small base of foods.  Most people don’t do well with choice – we have to make too many of them already.  I can’t tell you how many people we’ve given the W10 Food Pyramid to who still look at us and ask “well, what do I eat”.  I used to think it was them.  I know realise that it’s just more to have to think about and incorporate into an already busy life.    Many people do very well when they pick three breakfast, three lunch and three dinner options and they rotate these twice through the week – Sunday when they typically have more time being the one day the make other choices.
  5. Keep a food diary throughout.  Not only does this keep you accountable, it also creates awareness of what you eat and what makes you feel good or otherwise.  An irritating thing to keep perhaps, but those who keep a diary throughout get the best results.

Supplements

  1. Supplements are exactly that – supplementary to a clean diet.  Don’t live off frankfurters and cage raised poultry/eggs whilst spending the US defence budget on supplements – thats backward.
  2. Buy reassuringly expensive.  Many products bought from mainstream high street outlets cost you more to process and eliminate than they actually give you.  It’s better not to take supplements than it is to take cheap crappy products.
  3. Different people need different things.  Biosignature Modulation works well, but before we go down that road, let’s get all of the five nutrition and training points in place.
  4. Protein supplements are not just for meatheads and knuckle-draggers.  For most people they help them get the levels of protein that are essential to their fat loss goals without the bind of meal preparation time.  Yes, ideally we should definitely eat all of our food, but protein supplements come into their own when time is short, say first thing in the morning or when mid-afternoon nutrition doesn’t fit in with work schedules.  Be sure to buy a decent quality brand (we stock Solgar).
  5. Supplements should be taken with meals  (the exception being neural stimulants).  Digestive supports (probably the most important of all supplements for most people), omega 3 fish oils, greens drinks/multi-vitamins and other ‘staples’ should always be taken with food.

Other factors

  1. Mindset.  If it was easy, everyone would be lean and you wouldn’t be reading this.
  2. Mindset
  3. Mindset
  4. Sleep.  Probably one of the most important things you can do for your health and hormonal balance, and thus fat loss efforts, is to get regular quality sleep.  Afternoon naps are great also if you have that luxury.
  5. Relaxation.  Not TV, not Playstation, and no, not your gym workouts.  We’re talking dog-walking, fresh-air induced, loved ones included, genuine relaxation.  Most people just do not do ‘nothing’, but doing ‘nothing’ occasionally is important.

So that’s it – hopefully some useful points.

We haven’t posted the 28-day sample nutrition program and the ‘green’ recipes that we provided.  We might post these next week, but please ‘Like’ our page and post on our Facebook wall if you would like them or have any questions in the meantime.

Going forward we want to make the nutrition aspect of fat loss and indeed general health far less complicated and easy to combine with a busy schedule, so we’re working on a few things we’ve come up with – our own W10 Food Delivery Box, aligned with seasonal menus, recipes and video tutorials one we’re particularly excited about.  Any suggestions, recommendations and ideas from both a practical and personal experience perspective would, as always, be greatly appreciated!

Watch this space…..