Sunday, September 27, 2009

TIM TEBOW



TEBOW = Born in Manila phillipines is an award-winning football star for the florida gators.
He is almost 1.91m tall and 109 kg in weight. the perfect combination for a football player. Timothy Richard "tim" tebow was the first college football player to rush and pass for 20 touchdowns in a season.

He was also the first sophomore to win the HEisman.
His contributiion in 2006 football season was as a key reserve who helped the Gators win college footbal;l's national champinship game.

Tim Tebow as a sophomore in 2007 esason , became gator's starting quaterback and broke the Southeastern Coference records for both rushing touchdowns and total touchdowns.

2009-

Tebow opened the 2009 season continuing a streak of throwing and runnung for a touchdown in blowout wins over Charlestion Southern and Troy.

When starting a game with Kentucky , He was suffering from respiration illnesses and taking bags of intravenous fluids, even so , he continued his game.

late in the game , he was hit by one of the defensive end Taylor Wyndham and in the back of the head.

The blow took him out for several seconds and was brought to the hospital afterthis .

He was apparantly suffering from only a BAD CONCUSSION

Tim tebow is not that lucky this time . Maybe this will bring him out for quite some time.

Friday, September 25, 2009

How Long Will It Take To Lose Weight?

Imagine how nice it would be to know how long it might take to be "swimsuit" ready. You'd know when to start getting cut for the summer and roughly how long it might take. How many people ask... How long will it take me to lose weight? By using some information in your body composition, it's easy to tell how long does it take to lose weight. Just a few steps can take you from a body fat percentage to the number of weeks it's going to take you to reach your goals. You might know how to burn the fat, but do you know how long will it take me to lose weight? Let's find out right now. Keep in mind that your body is made up of lean body mass and fat. If you know you are 40% body fat, the conclusion would be the other 60% is lean body mass (muscle and bone). If you know the correct description of weight loss then you'll know it's the reduction of body fat while maintaining or gaining muscle mass. Let's use a short term and realistic goal of a 5% reduction in body fat for these examples. A few simple calculations and we can translate this goal into pounds and how long it's going to take to achieve your goal. Calculate How Much Does Your Fat Weigh: (Example Client is male, 220 pounds, 40% body fat) Step 1: Determine the Fat Weight Body Weight x Body Fat Percentage (220 x 40% = 88) In our example, this person is carrying 88 pounds of fat. Step 2: Determine the Lean Body Mass Body Weight - Fat Weight (220 - 88 = 132) 132 pounds are from lean body mass in our example. Now here comes the fun part finding your ideal weight with that 5% reduction in overall body fat. Calculate Your Goal Weight: Step 1: Your Goal Weight Lean Body Mass / (1.00 minus Body Fat Percentage Goal) In our example, the person carries 132 pounds of lean body mass. The body fat percentage goal is 35% (5% body fat reduction). 132 / (1.00 - .35) = 132 / .65 = 203 pounds Do you see it? 203 pounds is the goal weight for a person who's 220 pounds at 40% body fat that wants to reduce their body fat by 5%. Calculate How Long It Will Take to Burn the Fat: Step 1: Current Weight - Goal Weight That means 220 pounds - 203 pounds = 17 pounds body fat reduction. Based on the accepted standard of one pound per week, this person is looking at about 17 weeks to go from 220 pounds at 40% body fat to 203 pounds at 35% body fat while maintaining their 132 pounds of lean body mass. Remember, you want to burn the fat, but keep the muscle. And now you know, it's going to take 17 weeks to see the expected results. 5% is a short term, safe goal and at one pound a week, you'll have a very high rate of muscle retention. Not only do you know how to burn the fat thru nutrition and exercise, but unlike most people, you can find out how long it will take to see the results you want.About the AuthorMarc David is an innovative fitness enthusiast and the creator of the "NoBull Bodybuilding System" method on nobullabs.com He can show you how to reduce your body fat thru diet, how to gain weight or create more muscle thru an abundance of workout tips by training LESS, not more!
Once a self-confessed skinny, "135-pound weakling." Today Marc is a 200 pound bodybuilder who teaches thousands of people to gain weight, build muscle and reduce body fat with a workout and nutrition system so simple that even a complete beginner can understand it!
Marc dispels many "bodybuilding myths", tells you what most people never realize about nutrition, and what the drug companies DON'T WANT YOU to know. visit nobullabs.com

Top 6 Sources of Fitness Myths

By: Marc David http://85efa-map5ymfx38k5atd-0q89.hop.clickbank.net/ Nearly everybody who's started out with the dream to get into shape, build muscle or lose fat, has fallen prey to some type of fitness myth. Many times, those myths come from sources and publications that we trust. Maybe it's false advertising that leads somebody to start a myth or the quest to get rich. Or maybe it's just simple ignorance. The fitness industry is no exception. As with any commerce industry, there's the potential for myths that develop into frauds, dangerous exercises, worthless supplements or just incomplete information. If there is money to be made, you are guaranteed to find some popular fitness myths. These 6 sources of myths, deception and fraud are not all inclusive. They are the top contenders for a variety of reasons which will be explained below. The best way I know how to combat and avoid falling prey to any of these misconceptions and myths is to travel down the path of education. It's far less costly to educate yourself (just learning from a variety of sources) than fall victim to ignorance and waste years and sometimes thousands of dollars on false information. Not to mention the frustration that myths can incur. Fact is... These 6 sources can be myth-makers or myth-busters! 1. Websites and Magazine Editors: Without a doubt, magazines and websites can be a popular source of bodybuilding myths. Sometimes the story will just have it's facts wrong. Or it might be an editorial. Sometimes editors have to take an old story and put some popular spin on it to make it more interesting. If something is published that is controversial (the recent Soy examples) it can be fuel for further research and studies but more often than not, people take a single article in a popular magazine or newspaper as fact. There is a common belief that if it's in print... it must be right. Am I right about that so far? Pick up an issue of Cosmo, Us, People or look at back issues of most popular fitness magazines. How many times have you seen a new twist or angle put on the ever popular, "Arnold's Arm Routine." It's part of life to re-create, re-package and enhance old stories. Just keep in mind that myths can start anywhere. 2. The "I Feel It" Syndrome: Just because it worked for me, doesn't mean it works for you. This can apply to training programs or supplements. The "I Feel It Syndrome" simply doesn't take into account the Principle of Individual Differences. Everybody is slightly different. If a beginning builder happens to respond very well to some strange exercise (not taking into account they are new and will almost respond to anything) it doesn't make that exercise or routine one that will work for everybody. I cannot tell you how many times I've personally heard people tell me that Creatine is a worthless supplement that simply doesn't work. While it might not work for them (roughly 30% of the population does not respond to regular creatine products) there are over 300 peer reviewed and published studies that show many benefits of creatine and that it does work. For starters, I'm going to take 300 journals with well researched documentation over "somebody" in the gym telling me it doesn't work. 3. The "Big Guy" Syndrome: A younger bodybuilder might look up to the biggest guy in the gym, but without knowing how the big guy got big... it can be a real source of myths. How he or she got big might be 1) hard work and dedication 2) genetics 3) drugs 4) combination of all the suggested. The person asking simply doesn't really know how they got bigger and most likely it will be a combination of hard work and dedication along with some pseudo-scientific explanation of their training. Reminds me of a story one person told me. A very large bodybuilder was the envy of all the younger guys in the gym. They always wanted to know his "secrets." He never told them until one day, this young guy was pestering him. "Do you really want to know the secret?" The Big Guy asked. "Yes!" Said the young student. "It's Alpo Dog food. Seriously. Something they put in there just builds muscle. I can't explain it." The Guru said. [ 2 weeks pass ] The younger guy see the big bodybuilder again and says, "You know I really don't like the taste. I just can't keep eating the stuff." Now I can't tell you if this is true. It's probably a myth in itself. But it lends itself to proving a point that you can get a lot of myths from the biggest guy or gal in your gym. And over time, it can be pretty costly or foul tasting depending on the advice you receive. 4. Supplements Salespeople: How many supplements have over 300 peer reviewed and published studies behind them from various sources? Not many. Supplement salespeople have a clear agenda to push their products. Which is fine expect you don't know what they are thinking, their agenda or if they have some quota to fill. Just keep in mind they may or may not know what they are talking about. Keeping yourself informed will help you make the right choices and help them direct you to what you want. 5. Equipment Salespeople: Similar to the supplement salespeople, how many highly trained and fully qualified equipment sales people are fully aware of biomechanics and how exercises related to the body? Not a whole lot. You could get an entirely different story about muscle building from a Bowflex salesperson over a person at Sears who wants to sell you a weight stacked machine. You can easily fall prey to the machines vs. free weights myths right here. 6. Podcasters: Heck, I'll put myself on the chopping block here. With the Internet being so popular and everybody having a microphone, all of us who podcast about fitness can spread myths or be a new source of a myth. Much like website or magazine editors, we want readers and listeners and might put new slants on old stories. Hopefully you will research things for yourself, get other opinions, check with your doctor if necessary and educate yourself so that you can make informed choices. Even my podcast is simply there to help you learn to love to learn. Make no mistake... while this list isn't all inclusive of every possible sources of myths, they are the lead contributors. But that doesn't mean they are inherently bad or you need to avoid them. In fact, the same sources can be the greatest contributors of myth-busting! My point is... Keep yourself informed and just be cautious. I'm going to close this article out with a quote I think sums up falling prey to the fitness myths that you may encounter. "If you think education is expensive, try ignorance." - Derek Curtis BokAbout the AuthorMarc David is an innovative fitness enthusiast and the creator of the "NoBull Bodybuilding System" method on http://85efa-map5ymfx38k5atd-0q89.hop.clickbank.net/ .He can show you how to reduce your body fat thru diet, how to gain weight or create more muscle thru an abundance of workout tips by training LESS, not more!
Once a self-confessed skinny, "135-pound weakling." Today Marc is a 200 pound bodybuilder who teaches thousands of people to gain weight, build muscle and reduce body fat with a workout and nutrition system so simple that even a complete beginner can understand it!
Marc dispels many "bodybuilding myths", tells you what most people never realize about nutrition, and what the drug companies DON'T WANT YOU to know. visit http://85efa-map5ymfx38k5atd-0q89.hop.clickbank.net/

DONT STOP READING IF YOU WANT BIG ABS

Meal Planning 101: Variety Sucks By: Marc David http://85efa-map5ymfx38k5atd-0q89.hop.clickbank.net/ In the next 2 minutes you are going to learn why meal variety sucks and how that can be the single factor that leads you away from your goals. Pull up a chair and hear me out please. "Variety Sucks!" - he said. My eyes were wide open like a kid who just heard his first swear word when I heard that. In fact, stunned because many people who I've run across told me that variety in my meals is the KEY to success. You know what I mean don't you? "No not that kind of variety," he said. "Meal variety. When you change your meals all the time. Everything has to be new for each meal. You get bored right? So you always have to have something different. That sucks." Again, I couldn't believe my ears and yet, he was right. You probably already know this... What if you continually change your meals all the time, so it's always a new meal every day. Of course you won't be bored but what you will find impossible to do is stick with your plan and maintain a steady goal. Obviously you can understand that makes perfect sense! You're probably wondering if most professional bodybuilders and those who you admire have pretty boring diets. Let's take an example of Jenny Craig, Weight Watchers or any number of other commercial diets on the market today. Okay, you're probably wondering... What do they all have in common? Face it... they are all using pre-planned meals! Don't miss a word of this... You are never guessing at what to eat or making hasty choices without full well knowing exactly how many calories are in that meal, the protein, carb and fat contents too. Knowing this is critical to keeping your meals targeted towards your goals. The more variety you have, the harder it will be to stick with a set meal plan to ensure you are getting the proper nutrients as well as enough calories. And now you begin to realize that variety does suck. Do you ever try and create a meal on the fly? No planning just go to a restaurant and pick something off the menu only to track your meal later and find out you were way over your goal or you aren't close to your calories for the day and have to literally stuff yourself later? Here's my confession... My greatest success in terms of nutrition have come from a variety of pre-planned meals. 7 day meal plans where I know what I'm going to eat, what to shop for and all of them laser targeted towards my goal. You see, variety in the food choices isn't a bad thing at all. Variety ensures we are getting the proper nutrients and ratios. It helps to have several pre-planned meals so that you aren't too bored but you know what's ahead. Pre-planning your meals for the week lets you go shopping for the foods you need as well. Think of how impossible it will be to just "eat" if you don't give some thought into the meals you are having to reach your goals. Grocery shopping would be a nightmare if I didn't already know my meals well in advance. I know your boring alarm is going off right now but it doesn't have to be that way. Plan out your meals. The more pre-planned meals you have, the easier it will be to shop. The faster you can put together something that meets your needs. The people who simply must have a new breakfast, lunch and dinner so they don't get bored with foods, are the ones always counting calories. They are always guessing at what meal they are about to eat if it fits their goals. They find out AFTER they have eaten it. The successful people know before the food hits their mouth what the meal is doing for them. They already know how many calories. They know the portions. Calorie counting only had to happen once. Think about this for a minute. If you want variety in everything you eat and you don't want to have pre-planned meals because that just sounds too boring, then realize that might be why you aren't reaching your goals. I'm not saying meals have to be boring and bland but you should know before hand what you are going to eat. That's a pre-planned meal. That's why variety in one sense of the meaning sucks!About the AuthorMarc David is an innovative fitness enthusiast and the creator of the "NoBull Bodybuilding System" method on http://85efa-map5ymfx38k5atd-0q89.hop.clickbank.net/
He can show you how to reduce your body fat thru diet, how to gain weight or create more muscle thru an abundance of workout tips by training LESS, not more!
Once a self-confessed skinny, "135-pound weakling." Today Marc is a 200 pound bodybuilder who teaches thousands of people to gain weight, build muscle and reduce body fat with a workout and nutrition system so simple that even a complete beginner can understand it!
Marc dispels many "bodybuilding myths", tells you what most people never realize about nutrition, and what the drug companies DON'T WANT YOU to know. visit http://85efa-map5ymfx38k5atd-0q89.hop.clickbank.net/