How To Turn Fat Into Muscle

Fitness myths, like turning fat into muscle, are a real pain in the butt. They waste your time by leading you to use ineffective and inefficient exercise and nutrition techniques. Here's one of my myth busters from Men's Fitness magazine. That column gives you the truth on how to lose fat and gain muscle.

By: craig ballantyne
Fitness myths are a real pain in the butt. They waste your time by leading you to use ineffective and inefficient exercise and nutrition techniques. Here's one of my myth busters from Men's Fitness magazine. That column gives you the truth on how to lose fat and gain muscle.

Myth: You can turn fat into muscle

The Truth:

You have a better chance of turning straw into gold than converting fat cells to muscle-the two are completely different kinds of tissue. For one thing, fat can't be flexed, whereas muscles control all your body's movement. Nevertheless, when people see a guy who's made a successful body transformation, they tend to assume he actually swapped one for the other. At first thought, it seems to make sense-the muscle he built is exactly where the fat used to be.

In reality, though, the only way anybody ever turned flab into abs is by losing fat and building up the muscle that was lying beneath it. Your best strategy for doing that: a high-protein diet; regular, intense strength training; and cardio-especially fat- and calorie-incinerating intervals.

Here's another popular myth:

Myth: 1 pound of muscle burns 50 calories per day

The Truth:

This is another of the biggest misconceptions and most often quoted myths in fitness articles.

Unfortunately, it is just not possible for each pound of new muscle to burn 50 extra calories per day. Just think about this number in the big picture. If I put on 10 pounds of muscle, it is wishful thinking to believe that my metabolic rate will go up 500 calories. That would be a huge jump, and would make it difficult to keep the new muscle on my body if my metabolism jumped up that much.

I'm the first person to recommend strength training to people, but we can't use this myth any more as justification. But not to worry, there are plenty of other reasons to strength train when your goal is a better body (increased bone mineral density, increased real-life strength, and improved bodysculpting are just three reasons to use strength training).

You have permission to publish this article in your web sites, ezines or electronic publication, as long as the piece is used in its entirety including the resource box, all hyperlinks (HTML clickable) and references and copyright info.

craig ballantyne

Author Bio

Craig Ballantyne is a fitness expert and regular contributor to Men's Health and Women's Health magazines, and is on the advisory board for Oxygen Magazine. Craig's trademarked fat burning, muscle building workouts, help people lose fat fast in the comfort of their own homes. Learn more at http://www.TurbulenceTraining.com





Related Articles

build muscleBuild muscleIn today?s world we all want to look a certain way. We feel that we need to look like our favorite celebrity. We feel that we need to lo...
Fat tuesdayThe goal of The Biggest Loser Show is to lose weight as fast as possible. In order to do this, the contestants engage in very extreme programs that ar...
weight lossIn today's society so many people are looking for quick weight loss solutions. What people fail to realize is that weight loss should be done graduall...
Health_GeneralMany individuals are interested in burning fat and there are specific bodybuilding workouts that are best for burning fat. Having too much body fat ca...
Health_GeneralAre you one of those people who spend so much time at the gym only to get nothing from it? Are you frustrated at the amount of time you feel you've wa...