Woman & Home (UK)

HOW YOU REALLY LOSE FAT!

Our fitness guru, Annie Deadman, on whether cardio is the best fat-busting exercise

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Question: ‘Do I really have to do cardio exercise to lose fat?’ Answer: ‘No!’ There it is. Out loud. One enormous myth totally busted. And, sisters, that’s not a personal opinion, that’s raw fact. Today’s column is about cardio versus resistance training for losing body fat, so let’s tuck in. Let me set the scene.

Cardio exercise (swimming, running, cycling) will increase your cardiovasc­ular fitness. CV fitness is one component of our overall physical fitness… stay with me, this is important… and this one is about improving the body’s ability to deliver oxygen to working muscles.

So, if you’re not used to exercise and you suddenly make a 100-metre dash for the train, then the speed at which the heart can pump out enough blood (containing that oxygen) to your legs will be slower than for the woman behind you who is also late for the train but regularly runs 10k. Her heart will have adapted during her training and will be able to deliver more blood to those legs, in fewer pumps, for longer periods of time. Get my drift?

Both women may well be carrying too much fat, but that’s different.

Running keeps us fit, but it doesn’t necessaril­y keep us in shape. Read on.

This involves overloadin­g your muscles and taking them out of their comfort zone – moves such as squats, push-ups, bicep curls and so on. The muscles change because small muscle fibres tear (sounds gruesome, it isn’t really), and they grow back dense, toned and firm. So

Mrs Notveryfit does 10 squats and hurts so much that she can’t sit on the loo the next day. Mrs Reallyquit­efit regularly knocks out four sets of 10 squats a few times a week and has started to love that burny feeling. Her body has adapted and her legs are super firm. She can sit on the loo with precious little pain.

Interestin­gly, the effects of those squats will last them both longer. Both types of exercise (cardio and resistance) burn energy (calories). In fact, 30 minutes of running at a good pace will most likely burn more calories than 30 minutes of resistance training. And that is why the old chestnut of cardio = fat loss has stuck so rigidly in the mind of the general public. But it is having firm muscles that burns fat. I’m not saying don’t do cardio; I’m saying add in resistance training too.

Muscle is a more metabolica­lly active tissue than fat… which is a posh way of saying it burns more calories at rest. By having firmer muscle through your resistance training, your metabolic rate will rise. So often, I hear women say, “I can’t lose weight because I have a slow metabolism.” Then raise it!

Firmer muscles will mean better supported joints and stronger bones, both of which are allies in the descent towards the golden years. Lean muscle mass diminishes with age, so by the time we hit the menopause, we’re all moaning that we’ve put on body fat. We can reverse this simply by starting a resistance-training programme.

Start with body-weight moves. Follow an online workout suitable for your level or do my live workouts every Wednesday at 9am on the w&h Facebook page. You won’t get muscular – you will get firm and strong.

The most important factor for successful fat loss is always going to be making healthy diet choices. Feed those working muscles with protein, eat good fats and whole carbohydra­tes, and a minimum amount of sugar. Then add in exercise, but choose what makes you happy and make resistance training a part of that. The empowermen­t and downright upbeat feeling that some humming muscles gives you is glorious.

‘It is firm muscles that burn fat’

✢ Annie is a fitness coach and author of The 21 Day Blast Plan (Harpercoll­ins). Her fat-loss plan at theblastpl­an.com is helping w&h readers overhaul their food and exercise regime. Follow her on Instagram @anniedeadm­an

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