Exercise and eating

banana workout woman 300x199 Exercise and eatingAny­time you exer­cise, you do so in order to try and
main­tain good health. You also know that you have to
eat as well, so your body will have the energy it
needs to exer­cise and main­tain for the every­day tasks
of life. For mak­ing the best of your exer­cise, what
you eat before and after you work­out is very important.

No mat­ter if you are going to be doing a car­dio
work­out or a resis­tance work­out, you should always
make it a point to eat a bal­anced mix of pro­tein and
car­bo­hy­drates. What makes that deter­min­ing per­cent­age
of carbs and pro­tein you con­sume is whether or not
you are doing car­dio or resis­tance exer­cise and the
inten­sity level that you plan to work at.

The ideal time for you to eat your pre work­out meal
is an hour before you start. If you plan to work
at a low inten­sity level, you should keep your pre
work­out meal down to 200 calo­ries or so. If you
plan to exer­cise at a high level of inten­sity, you
will prob­a­bly need your meal to be between 4,000
and 5,000 calories.

Those of you who are doing a car­dio ses­sion will
need to con­sume a mix of 2/3 carbs and 1/3 pro­tein.
Doing so will give you longer sus­tained energy from
the extra carbs with enough pro­tein to keep your
mus­cle from break­ing down while you exercise.

For resis­tance exer­cise, you’ll need to eat a mix
of 1/3 carbs and 2/3 pro­tein, as this will help
you get plenty of energy from the carbs to per­form
each set you do and the extra pro­tein will help
keep mus­cle break­down to a min­i­mum while you
exercise.

Eat­ing after you exer­cise is just as impor­tant as
your pre work­out meal. Any­time you exer­cise,
whether its car­dio or resis­tance, you deplete energy
in the form of glyco­gen. The brain and cen­tral
ner­vous sys­tem rely on glyco­gen as their main
source of fuel, so if you don’t replace it after
you exer­cise, your body will begin to break down
mus­cle tis­sue into amino acids, and then con­vert
them into usable fuel for the brain and the
cen­tral ner­vous system.

Keep in mind that mostly dur­ing resis­tance
exer­cise, you’ll break down mus­cle tis­sue by
cre­at­ing micro tears. What this means, is that
after a work­out, your mus­cles will instantly go
into repair mode. Pro­tein is the key here for
mus­cle repair, as you don’t want mus­cle break­ing
down even fur­ther to cre­ate fuel instead of
lost glycogen.

Once you have fin­ished a car­dio ses­sion, you’ll
need to con­sume mainly car­bo­hy­drates, prefer­ably
those with high fiber. Rice, oat­meal, whole wheat
pasta, and north­ern fruits are excel­lent sources.
Also, try to con­sume 30 — 50 grams of there
types of carbs after you exer­cise. After your
car­dio work­out, it is fine to eat within 5 — 10
minutes.

Once you’ve fin­ished a resis­tance work­out, you
will need to con­sume a com­bi­na­tion of carbs and
pro­tein. Unlike car­dio work­outs, resis­tance
work­outs will break down mus­cle tis­sue by cre­at­ing
micro tears.

You’ll need pro­tein as this hap­pens to build up
and repair these tears so that the mus­cle can
increase in size and strength. The carbs will
not only replace the lost mus­cle glyco­gen, but
will also help the pro­tein get into mus­cle cells
so it can syn­the­size into struc­tural pro­tein, or
the mus­cle itself.

After your resis­tance exer­cise, you should wait
up to 30 min­utes before you eat, so that you won’t
take blood away from your mus­cles too fast. The
blood in your mus­cles will help the repair process
by remov­ing the meta­bolic waste products.

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