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Nutrition and Exercise
Tips to Walk Away From Death
By Marty GallagherRecently yet
another super-heavyweight Iron Immortal died from a heart attack at age
forty-five or thereabouts. Typically, when I read of these tragedies I
search my memory banks and then write some sort of tribute. Rather than
eulogize yet another fallen warrior, for whom it’s too late, and at the
risk of sounding presumptuous, I thought a slightly different approach
might be appropriate and perhaps even helpful in preventing a future
tragedy. It is my contention that a shockingly large percentage of
retired national and international-level powerlifters and Olympic
weightlifters eat too much, do nothing insofar as cardiovascular
training and as a direct result unnecessarily risk premature death.
Retired super heavyweight lifters are particularly susceptible to this
fatal phenomenon. Typically, the ‘at risk’ big-man lifter reduces or
quits weight training - but doesn’t quit the enormous eating habits that
got him big enough and dense enough to handle world record poundage.
Super-heavyweight powerlifters consume too many calories and in
particular they eat way too much saturated fat.
Food is broken down for energy within the body. A gram of fat contains
nine calories. A gram of protein or carbohydrate contains four calories
per gram. For a man intent on bulking-up as large as possible as fast as
possible, fat calories, dense and compact, are the ticket. Fat calories
pack twice the caloric bounce-per-ounce as protein or carb calories and
boy do they ever taste good! Allowing taste to dictate our diet can be
fatal. High fat food is delicious and it gives food a wonderful,
seductive flavor. The bulking lifter can eat twice as many calories when
they choose fat over protein or carbohydrates.
The problem is that dietary fat is easily converted to body fat. To use
an automobile analogy, the big lifter develops a body akin to that of a
1967 Cadillac Eldorado - but the heart muscle of the lifter does not
enlarge to accommodate the increased bulk. Metaphorically, the lifter
has a heart designed to power a 1967 VW Beetle but his 65-horsepower
heart motor now motivates a 5000-pound Cadillac body: what an incredible
strain on his little blood-pump. For a few short years, hugeness is
okay: the human body is incredibly resilient, but if the lifter doesn’t
pare the pounds eventually the little heart muscle can suffer a blowout.
Or will wear out from overuse.
The miraculous heart muscle pulsates 60-90 times a minute, sending blood
coursing through the veins and capillaries to receptive muscles and
organs with the precision and regularity of a fine Swiss watch. A
hundred pounds (or more) of extra bodyweight will stress the tiny heart
to the breaking point. It’s a hell-of-a dilemma; to reach the top of the
powerlifting game the lifter needs density in relation to their height.
Ever notice how few tall Powerlifters reach the international level? To
achieve the requisite density a tall lifter (over six-foot) would need
weigh 400-pounds to match the density-per-inch the typical under-six
foot super heavyweight achieves. Most people who meet top powerlifter
are amazed at how short they are in relation to their weight. To
maximize leverage, lifters need density-per-inch-of-height and super
heavyweights, unencumbered by weight divisions, always have an effective
avenue available to increase their density-per-inch: eat more food and
get bigger.
Big men feel they need dietary fat, ‘dirty’ calories, in order to gain
the sheer bulk necessary to compete at the national and international
level. As my old coach Hugh Cassidy used to preach, a serious
super-heavyweight lifter can always “eat his way through a sticking
point”. Of course when Hugh retired he dropped from 300-pounds to
190-pounds bodyweight inside a year. Cassidy was no dummy (a
powerlifting genius) and had the sense to reduce his caloric intake when
the whistle sounded and the game was over. A lot don’t and the
consequences are apparently disastrous.
That giant lifter who happily scarfs down saturated fat, motivating that
Eldorado body around with that VW engine, eventually has a second deadly
complication rear its ugly head. Saturated fat produces plaque and as it
floats through the bloodstream plaque adheres to the arterial walls
leading to and from the heart. Over time the tube diameter becomes
constricted with plaque buildup and when it clogs completely (assuming
you don’t die from heart spasms) a roto-rooter (angeoplastsy) balloon
procedure or by-pass surgery is required to open constricted
passageways.
It’s a dastardly double whammy: the lifter’s diet adds bodyweight -
creating a stress-load on the over-taxed heart pump and the fat in the
lifter’s diet reduces the efficiency of the already taxed heart by
constricting the blood flow. It’s a deadly one-two combination. Often
the whole situation is further complicated when the lifter ceases hard
training. Now sedentary, his high caloric intake accelerates body fat
accumulation at an astonishingly fast rate. If left unchecked this
scenario will lead to health problems as surely as the sun rises in the
east and sets in the west.
I once helped a 350-pound super heavyweight take second place at the
USPF Nationals and thereby secure a slot on the IPF world championship
team. He was elated and afterwards we decided to have room service send
up victory pizza. I was staying on the second floor and the elevators
were acting up so we decided to walk the four mini-flights to the second
floor. It was an easy climb but our IPF-destined lifter was gassed like
he’d just climbed Mount Everest without using an oxygen tank. He was far
more blasted from the 22-step walk-up than his 881-squat or
750-deadlift. He heaved and gasped like a coal miner with black lung
after smoking a Camel and took a full thirty minutes before he
recovered.
I remember how when the Pizzas came he knelt down on the floor at the
foot of the bed. He took his Pizza Hut extra-large, set it on the bed,
opened the box, still kneeing, placed his elbows on the bed and
commenced to chow-down. His huge distended stomach hung all the way to
the floor and there was no daylight showing between his gut and the
sunlight shining in the open window behind him. Looking like a pregnant
rhino, his face hovered a scant six-inches above the pizza box as he
devoured the entire thing in 10-minutes flat, steam shovel style, like
he was strip mining a hill for coal. He gobbled his pepperoni and
sausage and then went scavenging for leftovers from the other three
boxes. Feeling better he took a nap.
I once asked George Hector how it felt to be able to squat 975 and
deadlift 840 weighing 360. “For two days a year, at the National and
World championships, it’s great – the other 363 days a year it sucks!”
George ran into health problems (phlebitis) reduced down to 242 and set
a slew of world records. But wise men like George and Hugh and John Kuc
are the exceptions, not the rule. Too many huge guys are attached to
their ‘sea food’ diet and it comes back to bite ‘em at some point. And
it needn’t be that way. Incorporating two lifestyle changes,
substitution dieting and light cardiovascular training, can spell the
difference, literally, between life and death.
DIET: Rather than try and get a red-blooded powerlifter on a fancy-dan
bodybuilder diet – one which they won’t adhere to anyway – we offer the
substitution diet for your consideration. All of us have bad foods we
naturally gravitate towards (those high in fat and sugar) and we all
have some good foods (high in protein) that we like. The idea is to
identify the ‘good’ foods and substitute them for the ‘bad foods’ you
currently consume in quantity. The beauty of this approach is that you
never feel hungry because anytime you have a craving for bad food you
eat a substantial amount of good food in its place. You smother the
hunger and satiate the desire.
Plus, every time you replace a fat food with a protein or carb food, you
can eat the same volume of food while cutting your calories in half (9
calories per gram of fat versus only 4 calories per gram for protein). A
gram is a gram and if you previously ate a quart of Ben & Jerry’s or a
sixteen-ounce pizza, you now may eat an equal volume of protein or
carbohydrates and eliminate artery-clogging saturated fat while
simultaneously cutting your calories in half. It is a good deal: you
reduce the deadly saturated fat with muscle-building protein or natural
carbohydrates and still reduce overall calories. Don’t eat flour carbs
like cakes, bread or pastry. Stick to grains, rice, vegetables and
potatoes.
Clean protein actually stimulates the basal metabolic rate, causing the
body to burn more calories as it gears up to meet the challenge of
digesting protein. Dietary fat, on the other hand, is easily
compartmentalized into fat storage. A note of caution: avoid protein
foods that are loaded with saturated fat. Fish, chicken (minus the
skin), lean beef, goat, turkey, organ meats, egg whites, skim milk and
protein powder are great sources of clean protein.
Man-made carbohydrates like bread, pasta and pastries will cause the
body to secrete insulin. Insulin spikes cause carb calories to be
converted and compartmentalized into fat storage instead of being used
for energy. Avoid them. Natural carbohydrates have a far lesser impact
on insulin and are recommended as the preferred carb sources. Fiber
carbs actually dampen insulin spikes and a diet high in clean protein
and fiber, low in refined carbs and moderate in starchy carbs, is the
fastest way to lose lard.
CARDIO CONDITIONING FOR POWERLIFTERS: Powerlifters take a dim view of
cardio training – aerobics – and contemptuously consider cardiovascular
training effete, irrelevant and at odds to their stated purpose:
maximizing size and strength. And there is a good case to support that
viewpoint. But we are talking aerobics for health, not strength.
Aerobics, it is widely felt, weakens a competitive powerlifter and any
benefits are offset with negatives. Few hard core lifters would be
caught dead riding an exer-cycle, walking a treadmill or jumping up and
down on a stair-stepper. The broad consensus among the power elite is
that cardio is counterproductive to the stated goal. Yet, it has been
scientifically and medically proven that three to five, twenty-minute
sessions at 60% (or more) of age-related heart rate maximum per week
will perform miracles for the heart, lungs, internal organs and glands.
Cardiovascular training flushes the human plumbing system: capillaries,
veins, tubes, heart and lungs all benefit from regular aerobic exercise.
Internal organs strengthen and improve function when subjected to
regular, systematic doses of aerobic exercise. There is a compromise
solution for the lifter intent on losing lard. There is a type of
aerobic exercise that provides great cardio stimulation without being so
intense as to interfere with strength building - walking.
LOW STRESS AEROBIC ACTIVITY: A big man with little or no background in
cardio training can hit 70% of their age-related heart rate maximum with
a brisk walk around the block. And that’s all that’s needed. No need to
join a health spa, no need to purchase an expensive exercise bike or
treadmill, forget all that stuff and get outdoors and take a brisk walk.
Walk outside for ten minutes as quick as you can then put a forefinger
on your carotid artery or wrist pulse and count the beats for six
seconds. Multiply this number by 10 to determine how fast your heart is
beating. Then compare this to your age-related heart rate maximum to
determine your aerobic intensity. What’s the formula? Simple: 220 minus
your age are your 100% heart rate maximum. Then determine 70% of this
number.
AGE 30 40 50
100% 190 180 170
70% 133 126 119
60% 114 108 102
Start with a ten-minute walk at 60%. Put on a WalkMan, get outside and
take a good fast walk. Do this three of four times a week on days that
you don’t lift. If you no longer lift, get back in the saddle. Add a few
minutes per walking session until you are hitting twenty minutes per
session. When you can walk for twenty minutes at 60% try to bump that up
to 65% and eventually 70% or more. Increase the intensity by walking
faster and swinging your arms a little more. Suck in that good outdoor
oxygen and push a little. 3-4 sessions a week at 60-70% of age related
heart rate maximum would do wonders for the internal plumbing of a
cardio-challenged lifter. Walking avoids the bone-jarring pain of
jogging or running - no rips or tears from walking. Don’t po-pah walking
- I have had occasion to interview bodybuilding dominator Dorian Yates
for Muscle & Fitness and one thing struck me : Yates’ aerobic program
often consisted of a brisk walk around his posh neighborhood with his
dogs. In the off-season Yates would walk for thirty minutes three or
four times a week. Weighing 300, he had no problem hitting 70% of age
related heart rate maximum using a brisk walking pace. Unlike his
American competitors, many of whom spent two hours a day on bikes and
stair-steppers, the bull-strong Yates felt that too much cardio affected
his weight training and he preferred to confine his aerobics to off-day
walks. Wise advice that is applicable to the massive powerlifter who
wants to incorporate some health-preserving cardio into their training.
Lifters who walk in conjunction with powerlifting report improved
recovery and better digestion along with a nice increase in appetite.
The metabolism kicks up when you undertake a brisk walk as this
stimulates the digestive process. Food is processed better and when
saturated fat is cutback the athlete sees an almost over-night
improvement in the way they look and feel. If fat calories are replaced
with ‘clean’ calories muscle is retained while the life threatening
effects of body fat and artery constriction are improved. Confine cardio
training to low-impact walking done on off-days and no strength loss
should occur: on the contrary, the lifter will be able to train harder
and longer as a result of their new-found endurance and improved
nutrient assimilation. All around it’s a good deal – particularly when
the alternative is so dire and bleak. So take a chance and take a walk.
Hell, no one even need know you’re doing ‘aerobics’ or going on a diet:
as far as anyone is concerned, you’re just taking a walk. You can
literally walk away from death if you just get off the strata-lounger,
exchange that cheeseburger with Mayo on Wonder bread for a lean steak
and a salad and then go outside and take a walk!
Marty Gallagher is a former strength and fitness chat columnist for
washingtonpost.com. He is also a former national and world champion powerlifter.
Marty's articles have been featured in Muscle Media, Muscle & Fitness, and
Powerlifting USA magazines. His website,
http://www.martygallagher.com, assimilates years of accumulated knowledge
from the athletic elite and makes them accessible to the common person.
The "Purposeful Primitive" way has been proven effective time after time
after time for weight loss, increasing muscle tone, and complete physical transformation.
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