
RR 3, Box 384
Mifflintown, PA 17059
THE NUTRI-SPEC LETTER
Volume 15, Number 11
From:
Guy R. Schenker, D.C.
November, 2004
Dear Doctor,
EAT FAT! BE LEAN!
In integrating our knowledge of nutrition with our
knowledge of exercise physiology we have come to a surprising conclusion. Those
who want to maximize health with the ideal combination of good food and good
exercise need to rely on the consumption of fat. We have also learned how
to apply the laws of nutrition plus the laws of physical training to the benefit
of the full spectrum of health seekers, from the joggers and leg flingers
at one end of the spectrum to competitive athletes at the other.
Summarizing the universal principles of physical
conditioning: All your friends, family members and patients will get the most
from exercising if they do exclusively high intensity, short duration
work outs.
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They must exercise no more than 4-5 times weekly.
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One to three of those workouts should be Grizzly Bear Intervals.
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One to three of those workouts should be Grunt and Growl Strength Training.
Here is the best way to summarize the metabolic needs
of exercisers:
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Ex Plodders, Ex-Flingers, and Chubby Athletes need to consume a tremendous
amount of fat --- their own! The only way to assure that they feed on their body
fat is with some combination of interval training and strength training. The
rest of their caloric needs are met by the NUTRI-SPEC Fundamental Diet.
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Lean athletes need to consume a diet high in fat supplied by meat, fish,
poultry, eggs, and cheese, to a point --- then, by olive oil, butter, and cream
as necessary to meet caloric needs.
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Achieving exercise goals is contingent upon following the NUTRI-SPEC Fundamental
Diet and supplementing with the Diphasic Nutrition Plan, or, when appropriate,
supplementing to restore metabolic balance. Without the benefit of NUTRI-SPEC,
exercise can very easily cause excessive catabolic stress, thus accelerating
the aging process rather than preserving youth.
In the pages that follow we find a summary of how to
give our patients the benefits of the exercise plus nutrition philosophy
discussed in recent Letters. There is a section devoted to those patients who
were formerly plodders or flingers, a section for competitive athletes, and even
a section for those who have chosen to pursue the extreme demands of long
distance competition and body building. We also have detailed descriptions of
Grunt and Growl Strength Training as well as Grizzly Bear Interval Training. The
strength training exercises can be performed with the equipment found at any
health club, or even in most home gyms. The interval training can be done
running (in the world, or on a treadmill), bicycling, swimming, or with a
cross-country ski machine or other “aerobic exercise” contraption. We should
photo copy these pages and use them as handouts for our patients.
A common question during our months of discussing
exercise physiology is how do we implement these exercise principles for a 62
year-old, arthritic, 50 pound overweight patient who hasn’t exercised in years
and years? The answer is that these exercise principles apply universally. The
principles are the same for obese arthritics as anyone else; it is just that
implementation needs to be modified such that, a) the interval training will not
likely be done with running --- go with swimming, exercise bike, or some other
exercise contraption, and b) the strength training must avoid traumatizing
pathological joints.
With this series of letters on the metabolic benefits
of exercise we are not suggesting you become an exercise evangelist. Attempting
to force your patients into activities they view with repugnance is certain to
cause frustration and failure for you and for them. But for all the patients you
know who are already trying to improve quality of life with exercise, you and
only you can give them guaranteed success.
No one can integrate nutrition and exercise like you
can.
Sincerely,
Guy R. Schenker, D.C.
SUMMARY: Optimal Health from the Ideal Combination of Nutrition and
Exercise
EX-PLODDERS & EX-FLINGERS:
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NUTRI-SPEC Fundamental Diet
- Optional, but recommended: Power Tea, 3 cups
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Supplements: Di-Phasic Nutrition Plan (or Metabolic Balancing Plan)
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4 or 5 workouts weekly
- Grizzly Bear Intervals = 1-3X weekly
- Grunt & Growl Strength Training = 1-3X weekly
COMPETITIVE BALL PLAYERS, WEIGHT LIFTERS, SWIMMERS, TRACK & FIELD ATHLETES
(not distance swimmers, cyclists, or runners, triathletes, or body
builders):
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NUTRI-SPEC Fundamental Diet
- Increase quantity proportionately up to a max of 6-8 ounces
Meat/fish/poultry/eggs/cheese per 150 lbs. per each of 3 meals. (If competitive
body weight is easily maintained, then carb intake may be increased as much as
desired at meals.)
- If caloric needs have not been met, add extra olive oil, butter,
and if necessary, cream.
- Power Tea, 3 cups
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Supplements: Di-Phasic Nutrition Plan (or Metabolic Balancing Plan)
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(DURING OFF SEASON) 4 or 5 workouts weekly
- Grizzly Bear Intervals = 1-3X weekly
- Grunt & Growl Strength Training = 1-3X weekly
- Sport-specific workouts = precede or replace interval or strength training on a workout day (--- Always at least 2 days
weekly of total rest).
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(IN SEASON) = No Intervals; Strength Training 1X weekly after
practice or game (not on a day when there is no practice)
DISTANCE ATHLETES and BODY BUILDERS [NOTE: The term “Optimal Heath” does
not apply to these athletes since their sport requires a non-physiological
specialization. The regimen described below will maximize performance while
minimizing catabolic stress and the associated acceleration of aging.]
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NUTRI-SPEC Fundamental Diet
- Increase quantity proportionately up to a max of 6-8 ounces Meat/fish/poultry/eggs/cheese per 150 lbs. per each of 3 meals. (If competitive
body weight is easily maintained, then carb intake may be increased as much as desired at meals.)
- Supplement each meal with extra olive oil and/or butter
- Mid morning, mid afternoon, and late evening supplement with 1 cup of power tea with 1 heaping teaspoon of dextrose, and as much cream as necessary to meet caloric needs.
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Supplements: Di-Phasic Nutrition Plan (or Metabolic Balancing Plan)
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Distance athletes = maximum of 4 or 5 workouts weekly
- Grunt and growl strength training = 1X weekly during off season only
- Sport-specific workouts = all workouts should be done as interval training ( ---
no long, slow distance, even though this contradicts your coach).
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Body Builders = maximum of 3 or 4 workouts weekly
- Grizzly Bear Intervals = 1X weekly
- Sport-specific workouts = modified Grunt and Growl Strength
Training = 2-3X weekly
- Complete a grunt and growl training workout (70% of maximum single attempt lift; one set to momentary exhaustion) in its entirety; then, go back and exercise each body part a second time (with either the same or a different exercise), completing 2 more sets with a weight equal to approximately 50% of maximum single attempt lift; each set to momentary exhaustion.
GRUNT AND GROWL STRENGTH TRAINING
(Grunt and Growl Strength Training should be done 1-3 times weekly, and is most
effective if accompanied by 1-3 Grizzly Bear Interval workouts weekly.)
Getting Started:
Determining the weight to use for each exercise. (This procedure is done on your
first workout day, and need never to be repeated unless someday you have stopped
exercising for some reason and are getting re-started.)
- For each exercise listed below, make your best guess on your maximum single
attempt lift and try to lift it.
- If too heavy to lift, lighten up; if too easy to lift, add more weight.
Attempt another lift.
- Repeat to find the weight you can just barely lift one time.
- Multiply by 0.7. This is your workout weight for that exercise.
- NOTE: On your first workout, all you will do is determine your workout weight
for all your exercises.
Grunt and Growl Strength Training Routine:
- You will alternate between workouts A and B below.
- The exercises should be performed in the order listed.
- Each repetition is done at a rate of 25 degrees per second on the concentric
contraction and 70-100 degrees per second on the eccentric contraction.
- (*This is the most important component of Grunt and Growl Strength Training.)
Do as many reps as you possibly can --- grunt and growl as much as you need to
to squeeze out just one more rep. This way you know you’ve gotten the most
anabolic stimulus possible from this exercise. That point of total momentary
exhaustion is your moment of victory. [Note that the number of reps required to
reach exhaustion will be different for different exercises. This is because
you have your own unique proportions of fast and slow twitch fibers in the
various muscles of your body.]
- As the weeks go by, you will find that the number of reps required to reach
exhaustion for the various exercises will increase. When that number of reps has
increased by 2, it is time to increase your workout weight for that exercise by
about 10 percent.
EXERCISES:
Workout A
- Leg Press or Squats
- Pec/Delt Press
- Lateral Raise
- (Optional) Tricep Kick-backs (cable (not dumbbell))
- (Optional) Roman Chair
Workout B
- Leg Extension's
- Leg Curl
- Pulldowns or Chin-ups
- Reverse Flies or Bent Over Rowing
- (Optional) Bicep Curl (cable (not dumbbell or barbell))
GRIZZLY BEAR INTERVALS
(Grizzly Bear Intervals should be done 1-3 times weekly, and are more effective
if accompanied by 1-3 Grunt and Growl Strength Training workouts weekly.)
You may choose running, bicycling, swimming, cross country skiing or other
“aerobics” exercise contraption for your Grizzly Bear Interval Training. The key
to success is putting out high intensity bursts of speed lasting 30-90 seconds.
[NOTE: “High intensity” is a relative term. Output that might be high intensity
for one person might seem an easy cruise for another.]
Pretend there is a grizzly bear chasing you. Take off at nearly full speed and
go like crazy until you feel as if you’d rather be Mr. Grizzly’s lunch than go
another second. At that point (which should be at the end of a 30-90 second
burst) stop. In precisely 60 seconds take your 15 second pulse. Go right into
your next Grizzly Bear chase, repeating the cycle until you see a pulse that is
clearly not recovering. Go home and feel powerful.
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