Is there such a thing as a pre-workout nutrition plan?
Certainly, and following a correct one will yield you great results than either exercising on an empty stomach or one filled with the incorrect food.
Actually, a correct pre-workout nutrition plan will be one that can supply quick energy sources, mostly carbohydrates, that can preserve your energy reserves, and also able to provide added blood flow to the muscle tissue.
The Pre-Workout Essentials; Carbs and Proteins
Carbs
When you work out for periods longer than 30 minutes, you start using up your energy reserves. These energy reserves are merely glycogen, it is the sugar stored in the liver and muscles.
Exercising will burn your stored energy quickly, and it can’t use the oxygen kept in the fat deposits as a fuel. Therefore the body needs to find sugar fast, and does so in the muscle tissue and from the blood.
So, it’s best to eat something with simple sugars in it just before training. This will reduce the amount of body glycogen used during your training.
An added benefit is that eating the simple sugars before training will give you a sustained performance. It must also be mentioned that keeping your glycogen levels high, along with those of insulin, make the best environment for muscle growth.
Proteins
As mentioned above, you need to get the blood flowing into those working muscles during a workout. It is very important then, to insure that you have enough available amino acids for muscle tissue.
A lot of people think that proteins are necessary after the workout.
They are not wrong, but they error if they think they are not needed BEFORE the workout.
In fact, it is proven that if you can supply available amino acids to your body before the workout, it will be more easily taken up by the muscles than it will after the workout.
Research has proven “the response of net muscle protein synthesis to consumption of a protein solution immediately before resistance exercise is greater than when the solution is consumed after exercise”.
The reason for this is consumption of protein before the workout.
What to Eat Before a Workout
An excellent choice would be slow cooked oatmeal with honey and milk with a protein mix added. As an alternative to oatmeal, try a bagel or similar, with honey, again with the protein mix.
There are also many commercial drink mixes available with exact proportions of the carbs, sugar and protein you need plus added vitamins and minerals, and other additives.
You must see what works best for you. However, you should not be too full of food or drink in any case, before the workout. Moderation is called for.
A perfect time is to eat or drink your nutrition one hour before the workout. You will find that the digestion has already well progressed, and that your body is primed and ready to workout and train.
A final note. The commercial mixes are usually expensive, and have set ratios of nutrients available. Your own mixes can provide an economic alternative with at least equal results.
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Tags: Added Benefit, Amino Acids, Blood Flow, Empty Stomach, Glycogen Levels, Nutrition Plan, Resistance Exercise, Workout Plan
Many diseases of modern man, including third world countries, are directly related to his high carbohydrate way of eating. Our metabolism evolved when pre-historic man was basically a carnivore, supplementing his diet with plants, fruits, nuts, and grains. When he settled down and started raising his own food, he ate less meat and more of the plant food. Unfortunately, his metabolism has not had time to evolve to the point that his increased agrarian lifestyle is optimal for his health.
Insulin, a hormone produced by the pancreas, evolved in pre-history to regulate blood sugar, to control the storage of fat, to direct the flow of amino acids, fatty acids, and carbohydrate to the tissues, to regulate the liver’s synthesis of cholesterol, to function as a growth hormone, to control appetite, and to drive the kidneys to retain fluid.
As modern man added more and more carbohydrates and less and less protein and fats to his diet, the pancreas has had to work harder and harder to keep up with the excess of carbohydrates and many of our modern diseases, which are really symptoms of excess insulin, became more and more prevalent.
Modern agrarian society is now more prone to heart disease, high blood pressure, obesity, and type II diabetes as well as other ailments.
Diet and lack of exercise are the main culprits in these maladies. It stands to reason that diet and exercise are the cures.
The diet needs to be carbohydrate restricted, with adequate protein and essential fatty acids. Add a reasonable exercise regimen to balance it out.
These diseases are more likely to show up as we age. It is never too late to start correcting our lifestyles, but if we start as young people, these metabolic diseases might not show up at all.
Tags: Agrarian Lifestyle, Agrarian Society, Amino Acids, Carnivore, Culprits, Modern Man, Third World Countries, Type Ii Diabetes



