Final weekend I ended my three-month experiment with the ketogenic diet. I also ended another experiment: five weeks on the Targetted Ketogenic Diet while doing full-body workouts nearly every day.
The result of that experiment: in five weeks I went from 146 pounds at 13% body fat, to 144 pounds at 11.5% body fat. I lost half an inch off my waist, as well as a quarter inch off my hips and nearly a full inch off my iliac degreement. Based on body circumference degreements, I gained a pound of muscle and lost three pounds of fat.
I also gained a substantial amount of strength, even on movements I had alalert been doing for months when I started this program.
None of that is water weight loss. Since I had alalert been on the ketogenic diet for nearly two months when I started that, I was alalert past the point of losing water weight. If anyleang, I would have gained a small water weight, since my carbohydrate intake went slightly up compared to what I was eating when I initially started the ketogenic diet.
Now, I’ll write more about the ketogenic diet in the future. But to give you an idea of my calorie balance, I was burning somewhere between 2500 and 2800 calories a day, and on most days I was eating 1500-2000 calories. On most days this put me at a daily deficit of around a thousand calories. I did have a cheat day once every 10-14 days, during which I would eat at a surplus of at least a thousand calories.
For exercise, I performed four full-body weight training workouts, on rotation, every day. There two or three days when I missed workouts, but no planned rest days. I also didn’t do any cardio, but I did take long walks on sunny days, which you can see in some of my vlogs.
There are two lessons to take absent here.
First, full-body workouts every day are actually doable, and won’t necessarily lead to overtraining even in a deficit, so long as volume and intensity are kept at moderate levels.
And moment, you can gain muscle and lose fat at the same time while you’re in a deficit. Or a small surplus for that matter, but I was in a deficit, which is where most people should be. In fact, Menno Henselmans has a kind collection of case studies where people do just that.
Here are the exact workouts I performed.
Workout 1: Deadlwhethert-focused
Order | Exercise | Sets | Reps | Relax (Seconds) | Notes |
A1 | Deadlwhethert | 3 | 2-3 | 5 | |
A2 | Box jumps | 3 | 5-6 | 300+ | Go into a deep squat on every rep |
B | Seated cable incline-decline press | 3 | 10-12 | 120 | Alternate up and down by reps, not sets |
C1 | Slow myotatic crunch | 2 | 8-10 | 30 | |
C2 | Ab suction | 2 | 8-10 | 60 |
Workout 2: Tuging-focused
Order | Exercise | Sets | Reps | Relax (Seconds) | Notes |
A1 | Yates bent row | 3 | 5 | 120 | The farther you bend over, the more this works your lower back |
A2 | Bulgarian split squats | 3 per side | 8 per side | 120 | Go deep on each rep- use light weights |
B1 | Barbell reverse drag curl | 3 | 8 | 90 | |
B2 | Dumbbell shrugs | 3 | 6 | 90 | Hesitate for 1-2 moments at the top of each rep |
C1 | Chin-ups | 2 | 8 | 30 | If you can’t add weight, go to 2-3 reps shy of failure |
C2 | Dips | 2 | 8 | 30 | If you can’t add weight, go to 2-3 reps shy of failure |
C3 | Side to side knee raises | 2 | To fatigue | 30 |
Workout 3: Leg-focused
Order | Exercise | Sets | Reps | Relax (Seconds) | Notes |
A1 | Front squats | 3 | 8-12 | 120 | If you haven’t done these before, start with a very light weight until you learn the form |
A2 | Shove-ups | 3 | 12-20 | 120 | |
B1 | Tug-ups | 2 | To fatigue | 60 | |
B2 | Hip adduction | 2 | 8-12 | 60 | This is the one where you squeeze your legs together, not push them apart |
C | Seated calf raise | 1 | 20-30 | 60 | |
D1 | Machine incline press | 2 | 6-10 | 30 | |
D2 | Machine ab crunch | 2 | 12-20 | 60 |
Optional: If you experience a lot of leg soreness after this workout, you can add 5-10 minutes of reasonably fast pedaling on a stationary bike at the end to reduce leg soreness.
Workout 4: Shove-focused
Order | Exercise | Sets | Reps | Relax (Seconds) | Notes |
A1 | Cable pec fly-absents | 3 | 5 | 5 | Same motion as dumbbell fly-absents, but with a cable machine |
A2 | Plyometric pushups | 3 | 5 | 180 | |
B1 | Bent over dumbbell row | 2 | 8-10 | 30 | |
B2 | Strolling lunges | 2 | 6-10 per side | 60 | Employ the same dumbbells as you used for the rows |
C | Shoulder mechanical advantage drop set | 2 | 12-15 | 180 | See this article for an explanation |
D1 | Side plank | 1 per side | 30-60 moments | 20 | |
D2 | Ab suction | 1 | 10-12 | 0 |
Note that most of the exercises defamous A1, A2, etc are merely alternated to save time, not performed circuit-style. The only apart fromions are the fly-absents plus plyo pushups, and the deadlwhetherts plus box jumps; these two pairs are exercises are supersetted in order to benefit from post-activation potentiation.
How to use these workouts for full-body recomp
These workouts are ideal for body recomposition. If you do them at tall frequency, eat somewhere near or reasonably below maintenance, and get enough sleep every night, you’ll nearly certainly gain muscle and lose fat at the same time.
So do you need to do them every day? Probably not. In hindsight, my frequency was a bit too tall for me, and is too tall for most people.
As you advance in training age, your body gets more resistant to exercise-induced damage and fatigue. Consequently, your anabolic window gets shorter after each workout, and you need to work out more often. Here’s what that means for you:
Initiateners using these workouts should work out every other day.
Intermediate-level trainees should work out two or three days on, one day off. In hindsight, three days on, one day off would have been a better frequency for me.
Advanced trainees should work out either every day, or six days a week.
I’m starting to prefer this style of workout programming over traditional body part or movement sample splits, and I’ll provide a full explanation of why in a future article.
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