The Weight-Loss Workout
Get fit all over with these eight great moves!

What if you could combine a sizzling calorie burn with an all-over toning routine? This workout does just that. By alternating high-energy cardio intervals with strength moves that target all of your major muscles, you'll burn more fat than you would get from lifting weights alone. And if you stick to the routine, you can drop pounds and lose inches in as few as two to three months.
The magic of this weight-loss workout is that these strength moves target many muscles at once by incorporating both lower-body and upper-body work. While you won't increase your metabolism by lifting weights, a commonly believed gym myth (see my articles on this here and here), you will burn extra calories with these particular resistance moves. The multiple squat and lunge variations have a high-calorie-burning, cardio-like effect since the muscle groups in your butt and thighs are large and use of lots of energy.
All you need to do is follow this workout three times a week using weights, and do the same workout on another three times a week but without weights. (Alternate weighted and non-weighted days; muscles get stronger faster if you avoid lifting weights on consecutive days.) Ready, set, burn that fat!
How to do it:
- What you need: weights and a step
- Choose a weight that is heavy enough to challenge your target muscles, but not so heavy that your joints feel strained. Start with dumbbells that are at least 5 to 8 pounds and gradually work up to using 6 to 20 pounds, depending on the exercise.
- Start by performing one set of 10 to 15 repetitions of each exercise, and work up to doing three sets of 10 to 15 reps.
- Do this workout with weights three times a week (but not two days in a row). Perform the same routine again without weights—and moving slightly faster through the strength moves—on three days a week (these can be done on consecutive days).
- You can also substitute a non-weight day with 45 to 60 minutes of cardio such as walking, cycling or using a cardio machine.
- Modify this workout to match your fitness level. Follow the recommended moves, and adapt them as needed by using a lighter weight.
Are you ready for the weight-loss workout? Click here to the moves!
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Martica is a Manhattan-based exercise physiologist and nutritionist and an award-winning fitness instructor. She has written for a variety of publications including Self, Health, Prevention, The New York Times and others. Martica is the author of seven books, including her latest, Cross-Training for Dummies. (Read her full bio.)
50
Weight Loss Tips
I lost
30 pounds in three months. If you wanted to know how I did it, and
how I intend on maintaining my current weight, then these 50
weight loss tips are for you. I’m not an expert, but I do speak from
experience. If it helps you attain your own weight loss goals, then I’m happy to
have helped (if only to serve as a reinforcement of knowledge you already
possess). Most of this, I learned on my own or through close friends and family
members. Ponzi’s been a great help through the entire process, being a model
partner in the weight loss process. Feel free to add your own tips to this list,
too! If someone wants to help me extend these points into a full-on eBook, I’m
all ears.
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To say " While you won't increase your metabolism by lifting weights, a commonly believed gym myth ... you will burn extra calories with these particular resistance moves" is to contradict yourself. Lifting weights is the definition of resistance moves. You do in fact increase your metabolism when you weight train correctly. You also change your body composition (more muscle, less fat) and lose inches, weight loss is secondary. This is a terrible article. It IS very hard to build muscle and lose fat at the same time. By increasing muscle mass you increase metabolic rate, period. Anaerobic interval training, whether it's lifting weights, riding a bike, or using an elliptical; when done right, has been shown to burn more calories than aerobic exercise, and keep the metabolic rate up higher longer after the period of exercise is over. Now a person should be cleared medically, and find a trainer who knows what he/she is doing before starting program like this, but it gets better results. High intensity interval training also improves insulin sensitivity through a different mechanicism of action than aerobic exercise, though it is more beneficial to healthy nondiabetics than diabetics.
The problem with this article is it's too generic. People are all different ages with different fitness levels and activity tolerances. You can't be everything to every exerciser out there. It's like taking a suit that's custom made for someone and altering it so everyone will be able to wear it. It doesn't work.
High Intensity Interval Training is excellent for fat loss if you know what to do, and are physically able to push yourself. Best way to lose fat. If you can't do that, then long extended periods of aerobic exercise will work. It's a 'calories in' vs. 'calories out' equation like it always is.
Keep a food diary for a week, figure out how much you eat. Figure out your Caloric needs for a day, and eat that much. Then exercise to create a 3500-7000 kcal deficit per week. That is 500 to 1000 kcals a day. That's losing one to two pounds a week. It's easy, you just have to commit to it and do it, every day.
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MSN Health & Fitness does not provide medical or any other health care advice, diagnosis or treatment.







