The NxLabs Body Challenge Blog

Archive for December, 2008

How To Keep Diet Discipline During The Holidays

Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008

You know those cheesy Public Service announcements about peer pressure you had to sit through in school? The same drills designed to keep you from being cool can now pay off during parties. Face it, our culture today makes food a reason to celebrate, not a source of fuel. But if you’re serious about making physical gains, then a long weekend should be a welcome time off work – not your diet. The harder you diet, the more it seems those around you will want to kill you with kindness. I don’t know how many times I’ve had someone try to cajole me into “just one little piece of Pizza” while I’ve been contest dieting. They don’t get it and they won’t get it, so it’s up to you to stay strong.

One crucial detail to remember is that one day of indulgence could very well derail the train of progress you’ve been working so hard to keep rolling . Oftentimes a welcome and sometimes needed cheat-day doesn’t come during a long, holiday weekend. You control your destiny and should schedule that day as a reward for weeks of strict diet. If you can schedule for a holiday then even better. You cannot, in fact, ruin months of training and diet with one day of bad behavior. Sometimes it can help to rev up your metabolism and restart the fat-burning machine.

Holiday Survival Tips:

  1. When in doubt, abstain. If you think you just can’t stay disciplined on that July long weekend or Thanksgiving at Grandma’s – stay home. Don’t put yourself in the path of temptation. All that food will be there when you finish the competition. Last time I checked there wasn’t a shortage of the lips and buttholes that go into a foot long.
  2. Focus on what you can eat, not what you can’t. Most friends and relatives, no matter how much they might joke, will respect your restraint. You’re not rubbing their faces in it, you’re making a choice for your body.
  3. Find alternatives. Lean turkey is still a great source of protein, but do not trust your family’s cooking when it comes to side dishes. The potatoes are loaded with butter, the cranberries are pure sugar and the desserts are still desserts. Fill up on what you can eat and deflect the conversation back to others. No-Sugar Jello, pickles and salads have gotten me through many a diet pitfall.
  4. If you’re going to drink – DON’T. Alcohol is the silent diet killer. Talk about empty calories. While even Vodka is a lower calorie alternative than beer– one little shot is still over 80 calories. Hardly worth sabotaging the chance at a title.

How to Take a Good Competition Photo

Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008

Participants must post before pictures of themselves. These must be original photos and must be taken and posted within a week of registration. Some things to consider when taking your progress and pose photos:

Clothing

  • Wear the same type of clothing in all your photos.
  • Remember that if you are covering up parts of your body it will be difficult to show your progress, so show it off.
  • Do not cover your legs with long shorts or “cut” them out of the photo.
  • Avoid wearing jewelry or accessories as it could block the judges view of your physique.

Photos

  • Try to get the highest quality photos you can. Remember, this is the only way the judges can see your transformation. Good, clear, high quality photos are essential. Again, good, clear high quality photos are essential.
  • Try taking them outside in either the morning or the late evening (when the sun is low) as the light is generally better for photos at that time.
  • Take your photos against a plain background.
  • Please include your whole body, from head to toe. Make sure to take the key poses, so comparisons can be made. Additional flexing photos can be taken for progress comparisons, but make sure to have the main ones.
  • Try to fill the photograph with yourself. If you stand too far away it may be hard to see your great results.

With your photos you can also submit additional stats

  • Weight
  • Waist, chest, arms, thigh measurements
  • Body fat % (you should be able to have this measurement taken at any local gym, or you can usually buy a small body fat caliper at any sporting goods or health store. It will come with directions on how to measure your body fat %)

Tips on Pre-Contest Tanning

Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008

Prior to performing on stage, bodybuilders will apply various products to their skin to improve their muscle definition.

These include tanning oils, such as commonly known brands like Pro TanTM and Dream TanTM (to make the skin darker and not “wash out” under bright stage lights) and various oils (to make the skin shiny to enhance definition). They will also use weights to “pump up” by forcing blood to their muscles to improve size and vascularity. Some may also gorge on sugar-rich candies to enhance the visibility of their veins (vascularity), often considered a sign of high muscle definition.

5 Tanning Tips

  1. Start tanning at least two months out from the show. And for those of you who have fair skin, bump that up to three months.
  2. If you haven’t been in a tanning bed for a while, limit the amount of time you spend during your first few tanning sessions to prevent your skin from burning. Once your body has built up a tolerance and your skin starts getting darker, increase the amount of time you spend on the bed, accordingly.
  3. If you use a tanning bed, make sure you flip over from time to time. This will help prevent getting those little white blotches or “grill lines”on the back of your shoulder blades and butt.
  4. Moisturize, moisturize, moisturize. Use skin cream that contains aloe vera and vitamin E after you tan (you’ll need to cut this out two weeks from your show to ensure you don’t retain subcutaneous water).
  5. Stop tanning five days out from your show. If you burn it can actually make you hold water under your skin. It’s the body’s natural reaction to cool it by sending water to where the heat is.