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THE REBOUND EFFECT
Untitled Document
The REBOUND EFFECT
BY CHRIS ACETO
Gain up to 10 pounds in six weeks with this step-by-step approach to maximising
muscle growth immediately after a diet
If you’ve ever dieted for a bodybuilding contest — or for an extended
period just to reduce bodyfat — then you know what you want to do right
after that: nothing but eat all the decadent foods that you’ve been avoiding
for the past couple of months.
Sure, that’s one way to follow up a restricted diet, but it can turn into
a disaster, resulting in startling bodyfat gains. A better strategy is to use
this time to gain impressive heaps of muscle by taking advantage of the body’s
rebound effect.
The best gains of an entire year often come in the first few weeks after a cutting
phase, making that period of time ideal for growth. In fact, you can easily add
five, six or even 10 pounds of real muscle mass in just six short weeks. Here
are seven steps you can use to transition from a diet straight into six weeks
of pure anabolism.
1 | Understand your body’s overcompensation mechanisms. The lucky bodybuilder
has a fantastic metabolism that allows him to get ripped to the bone yet retain
valuable muscle mass during a precontest diet. For many, getting ready for a
contest is an exercise in modified starving. Some bodybuilders have to cut back
on nearly everything — fat, carbohydrates and total calories — while
pumping up the time spent on cardio to facilitate bodyfat burn. The truth is
that the entire dieting process is hard on the body and often throws it into
a chronic catabolic state where it loses some muscle or, at best, struggles to
maintain muscle mass. The upside is that when the potentially catabolic process
is alleviated, the body overcompensates, reverses gears and rebounds into a very
strong anabolic state.
2 | Ramp up your intake of carbs and quality fats. When dieting, you are always
restricting something. Consuming fewer carbs and less fat results in less energy.
That can trigger muscle loss, but it also sets in motion anabolic signals that
can prime the body for major growth when you end the diet — as long as
there are sufficient amounts of carbs and fats in your revamped nutrition programme.
After dieting, the body can’t wait to get growing, as long as you reintroduce
the right amounts of these nutrients.
In addition, hormones and enzymes help get the growth ball rolling. When you
diet, testosterone levels can fall. When you start to eat again, they quickly
bounce back. Rising testosterone levels, coupled with an increase in food intake,
result in quick and substantial gains in muscle mass.
Furthermore, while muscle reserves of stored carbs (glycogen) decline during
a dieting phase, glycogen-storing enzymes that potentially pack away a lot of
carbs are working overtime. When you finish your diet and start to eat more quality
foods, your body swells with massive glycogen stores, which directly affects
growth.
3 | Follow the “150 rule” of carbohydrate intake. No two bodybuilders
have the same metabolism. That’s one reason competitors diet on different
amounts of carbohydrates. Some eat a very low-carb diet to get cut up, while
others eat a modified low-carb diet. Neither case warrants pounding down carbs
after a competition and expecting to grow without getting fat. Be choosy and
take a smart approach.
For the bodybuilders I work with, I have found that adding 150 grams (g) of carbs
a day seems to work best. If you dieted on 170 g of carbs a day, you can expect
to grow without gaining bodyfat by taking in a total of 320 g of carbs daily
for the first three weeks after your diet phase. If you ate 300 g daily while
dieting, go to 450 g a day.
The best sources are slow-burning carbs such as oatmeal, granary bread, brown
rice and yams with meals, and simple carbs or sugars before and after your workouts.
4 | Adjust your carbs in the fourth week after a dieting phase. The body is an
interesting machine. As you feed it after a dieting phase, your metabolism actually
rises. As it does, you should continue to add more carbohydrates to compensate
for the increase. If you do not add more carbs by the fourth week, your body
may stall and fail to continue to achieve additional muscle gains due to a lack
of energy coming in to support your rising metabolism. Therefore, from weeks
four to six, add another 100-125 g of carbs a day to your diet.
If you were eating 320 g at the completion of the third week, you could go to
420-445 a day; if you were eating 450 g a day, go to 550-575.
5 | Don’t cut yourself short on fats. I’ll be the first to say that
an extremely low-fat diet remains an excellent and proven way to rip up for competition
or for the beach. Extreme low-fat dieting gets rid of the main macronutrient
that is most likely to interfere with the shedding of bodyfat — dietary
fat — and it allows you to keep your carbs somewhat higher during a cutting
phase. The big downside of very low-fat diets is that they can also cause a drop
in testosterone, growth hormone (GH) and insulinlike growth factor-I (IGF-I).
But, guess what? When you go back to eating the right kinds of fat in the first
weeks after dieting, it helps support testosterone, GH and IGF-I levels, and,
as mentioned in step 2, rising testosterone levels have a strong effect on adding
quality mass. Increase your dietary fat in the first three weeks by 40-50 g a
day, and add another 10-15 g daily in weeks four to six. Ideal sources of fat
include a mix of the following: saturated fats, found in lean beef and full-fat
dairy products; omega fats, from salmon and fish-oil supplements; and monounsaturated
fats, found in avocados, olives, nuts and olive oil.
6 | Know your protein quotient. You have to pound protein to grow, right? That
is not necessarily the case in the first few weeks after a diet. Getting your
body to overcompensate and grow is really a matter of increasing energy. Do this
by consuming more carbs and dietary fat, and, of course, by cutting out cardio
during this period of time. That said, how much protein do you need?
In the first six weeks after a diet or contest, a gram of protein per pound of
bodyweight each day is more than enough and a little less is fine. Why? Efficiency.
When you increase calories by adding carbs and fat, you lessen the need for higher
protein intake. The added fuel from carbs and fat makes the body extremely efficient
at packing protein away in muscles. A higher carb and fat intake also lessens
the need for the additional protein commonly consumed during a dieting phase.
Rising testosterone and GH levels further support the body’s ability to
take up and use protein without waste, another reason protein needs are not as
great as many think during a postdiet period.
7 | Change your training. Of course, how you train can also affect growth. Generally,
during a diet, in addition to performing cardio, bodybuilders tend to train with
high volume and high intensity. When you come off your calorie restriction, you
should also change your workouts. For best results, take a week or two off from
working out to let your body recover. Then, get back into it with low reps and
heavy weights. This will help you boost your gains in strength and muscle mass.
Bodybuilders often squander the period after a contest or diet in their eagerness
to stop worrying about their food intake, instead taking the respite as a chance
to binge on whatever they feel like eating. A far better strategy is to view
these six weeks as an ideal time for growth: by increasing calories from quality
carbs and fats, you can take advantage of this narrow but potent anabolic window
of opportunity to make solid gains. FLEX
To order Chris Aceto’s training and nutrition books, including Championship
Bodybuilding and Everything You Need to Know about Fat Loss, visit www.nutramedia.com.
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