Five No-nonsense Tips to Get Fit

So you want to know how to get fit.

How to get fit - Truth and Strength

If I asked you to tell me five things you can do to get fit and stay fit, you can probably give me five good answers.

As a matter of fact, most people can.

But if I asked you if you were going to do those things, what would your response be?

The way I see it is simple. Most people will do one of two things:

  1. List a few good ideas, then revert back to rationalising why you cannot do ALL of those things.

  2. You will look me in the eye and tell me that you CAN and WILL.

If you fall under the first type, I have bad news for you. This article probably will not help you.

There are only a few things in life that you should lay down all the chips for- Things that cannot be compromised for anything or anyone. Ever.

Health is one of them.

So unless you take a no-discussion approach to restructuring your life around health, no amount of ideas will help you.

It’s not pretty, but it is the truth.

If you belong to the second group, then you are on your way to something great.

I don’t even know you and I believe in you.

Because you told me you CAN and WILL. That’s enough for a man like me.

In fact, you can stop reading here. Just go and follow through on your words.

Go.

But in case you were wondering what health tips I have followed for the last year to get fit and stay fit, here they are.

No-nonsense, no-rambling. Straight to the goods.


#1: Eat More Vegetables

Conventional wisdom says that macro-nutrients are what keep you alive. But do you want to be alive, or do you want to thrive?

Eat more greens. Eat more color. Eat mostly organic.

Yes it’s what I do. Yes I’m biased.

Next.

#2: Chill on the Sugar

Sugar is a major problem in developed countries, where it is added to pretty much everything. Nearly every processed or ready-made food has added sugar and/or modified corn.

Yes your urban life is busy. Yes it’s time-consuming to prepare a healthy meal. It’s even harder if you don’t know how to cook. So two options:

  1. Discard that Netflix cue and spend some time learning and cooking. Or.
  2. Find a better job and get out of the 9-5 typical office life.

Or. BOTH.

Here’s a tip on grocery shopping: Don’t bother shopping in the snacks isle. Don’t shop in any isles. Shop in the periphery for fresh fruits, meats, and vegetables.

Yes you need sugar. Yes your brain thrives on it. Have I had a muffin or waffle or cake or cookie in the last two weeks?

No.

Am I still brainstorming up amazing ideas for this blog while succeeding in my studies?

You bet.

So cut the junk. As Arnold Schwarzennegger would say: “Put that cookie down!”

#3: Exercise

No brainer.

I will keep it brief, and give you some personal tips in three fitness categories: Weights, cardio, core.

Weights:

You don’t need to look like a body builder to be fit, but a few more pounds of muscle sure make you look that much more full and attractive (That’s for both men AND women, by the way). Some quick tips about weight training:

  • Warm up. Don’t jump straight into the heaviest set. Make sure your joints are ready first.
  • Work up to a heavy weight SLOWLY.
  • You should always have a sweat going when you get to your working sets.
  • Barbells are the best. Compound movements are the best. Any weights are fine- Oh, and that includes your body.

(In case you don’t know, working sets are sets in your exercise where you are trying to actively grow the muscle. They should be anywhere from 6-9 reps, depending on the muscle group involved. You should struggle on your last few reps in each working set.)

Work on mobility. Don’t just think about the weight. Trying to put up the numbers without good form and range of motion is a sure-fire way to get injured. A.K.A nowhere.

Cardio:

Forget treadmills (On second thought, don’t, they’re good for warming up). The best cardio is interval training. There are too many videos about HIIT (High Intensity Interval Training) on YouTube. Go search them up. Or just do windsprints. You get the same result.

Don’t do HIIT all the time. Three times a week is plenty. Do them on off days or before you lift weights. Regular jogging is awesome too, provided you have a good neighborhood or park to run in. Do NOT run beside busy streets. The air is polluted, and there are too many dangerous drivers that can potentially run you over. I don’t take that chance, and neither should you.

More info on cardio HERE. 

Core:

“Abs are made in the kitchen”.

Don’t make me laugh. Abs are made by effective work and dieting down.  Forget about sit ups. Planks and ab rollers are where it is at. One arm, two arm, side planks. Doesn’t matter. Do a few sets every other day. Do them at the tail end of your workout. Do them in the park, on the beach, in bed…

You get the idea.

Use Ab rollers regularly. I love Ab rollers because all you need is a solid floor to get great results. Don’t fall for expensive gimmicks like “ab toners” or “home ab trainers”.

Just now, I googled “ab exercise equipment”.

This just makes me laugh.

In fact, you can get far superior results with something like this:

Valeo Ab Roller Wheel

The idea is that the way you grow your abs is the same way you grow any other muscle group- Train them directly!

Here is an awesome science based abs training video from one my favorite YouTubers, Jeremey Ethier:

One last thing about training. Don’t forget to stretch and relax your muscles from time to time. You train them hard, and therefor you need to take good care of them.

Yoga is good if you have the time. Otherwise a simple set of stretches should suffice. If muscle tension is something you struggle with, using lacrosse balls and foam rollers to perform myofascial release (which a fancy way of saying deep tissue massage) will help plenty. DO NOT do static stretching before hoisting heavy weights. Trust me.

Speaking of relaxing.

#4: Relax

It sounds simple. And it is. There are numerous techniques out there. Below are two of the best tools I use to alleviate day-to-day stress.

Meditiate for 20 minutes each day. To do it, simply sit somewhere quiet and try to not have a thought for the entire 20 minutes. It will be impossible. You will have many, many thoughts intrude into your mind. Because that is how amped up on stimuli our modern brains are. Tell that brain who is boss. Let the thoughts come, but let them wash over you. Keep coming back to the feeling of nothingness. After twenty minutes, you will feel like a different person. After twenty weeks, you WILL be a different person. A better person.

Take deep breaths. Again, sit somewhere quiet. Take a deep breath in from your nose into your belly. Hold it for a few seconds, and let it out SLOWLY through your mouth. Some people advocate the 4-7-8 ratio of in-hold-out. I personally ignore that. I just do what feels right for me, which is to breathe out for longer than I inhale. The key here is to do what feels right for you.

#5: Leave out ALL the fast food. Forever.

Leave the MacDonalds, KFC, Taco Bell, and anything that has a drive-through. Don’t eat anything that is heavily processed, fast food or not. Restaurant food and cafeteria style food need to be cut down too.

Best option: Start cooking your own meals.


And that is IT. Five tips on how to get fit and become healthy as can be.

One more piece of advice:

You need to get used to the idea of being uncomfortable. Condition yourself to embrace each challenge.

When you love the hardship, nothing stands in your way. Because you’d just crush it.

Stay true.

Stay strong.

Stay fit.

Until next time.

Your friend,

-Tie


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About Tie Fighter 34 Articles
I write articles on fitness, health, and motivation. Background includes B.Sc, M.D (family practice), and being a generally curious guy. Feel free to message/email me with any comments, questions, or collaboration ideas.

2 Comments

  1. I like your site Tie. I agree with a lot of the things you say, not some crazy surprise since I don’t think common sense is as uncommon as people sometimes may think.

    But I do like having a lot of my thoughts mirrored like this. I admire your encouragement for each of us to be the best us, it’s something I try to do in my life for those around me, keeping in mind that the only person I’m competing with is myself.

    Unfortunately the being part of the equation is something I’m struggling with right now. I have all these ideas and desires, but you know that 3 year gap where you let ‘freedom’ get to your head? Well that happened to me post undergrad, and I’ve let it go on for twice as long, letting a research project take over my life with procrastination and avoidance. This feeling that I’m rolling around the starting line this late in life is something that I’m letting weigh on me way too much.

    The idea that I’m able to be the kind of person that let something slide for so long breaks me. I know logically the only option is to throw off those mental shackles and be the best person I can be *now* since I’m *never* going to change the past.

    Long story short. I know my life is for from a write off, and I WILL change, simply because I want it that badly. I thank you for creating this site, I know the kind of inertia I deal with getting something started, so I absolutely admire you doing this. It helps breathe life into my own efforts at being more involved in living my life.

    I know that was a lot of waffling, but I do have an on topic question. What are you currently doing to meditate? Do you follow any particular guide or system? Just spending the time clearing your mind is pretty solid advice from what I’ve gleaned from my year of using headspace. Which has just run out and though I enjoyed it, I need to be a bit more financially responsible right now, and I didn’t particularly like the feeling of being reliant on something external for my peace of mind.

    It’s funny, I actually settled on 20 minutes as what worked best for me another nice bit of validation.

    I’m currently just running an unguided timed youtube video, and just doing my own meditation routine. I doubt I’m doing it *wrong* or anything, just wouldn’t mind a second opinion. You’ve won me over in a few pages of hypertext as being someone whose advice I value.

    • Hello Alam,

      First of all, thank you for taking the time out of your schedule to write such a thoughtful comment. I deeply appreciate the fact that our ideas resonate, in fact it is the very goal of this site.

      As for your question on meditation, my thoughts are similar to yours in that it is always evolving. I currently follow the 20 minute routine, and when I have more time, to do a session of yoga. I do not believe that meditation is something that has to be deliberate. It can be done in any form and way, provided that one empties his mind. The goal for me- whether or not I reach it- is to eventually master my feelings and the ways it interacts with my body.

      To be more specific on what I do. I have done P90X for many years, and I’ve actually converted the workout sessions from video to audio and placed it in my MP3 player. YogaX is the guided session I use to relax, but I find that all the guided workout sessions can achieve of state of thoughtless-ness, in that I can turn off my mind and just feel my body- This may apply to many other guided workout/yoga routines too. As I have mentioned, moving in nature is a big part of my routine, whether it is jogging, walking, or working out. There is something deeply grounding about being surrounded by trees and/ or grass and letting the sounds of Earth supplant my inner dialogue, if only for a few brief moments.

      There is no shame in relying on something external. Action begets feelings, and vice versa. We are visual, tactile, and social creatures after all. On that, I find reading a book to be an emotionally liberating experience. I enjoy biographies and books by successful people, and will often put them onto an audio book and listen when I am in transit or have some downtime.

      I hope that this helps. At the end of the day the important thing is that you are actively searching. In time you will find out what works best for you-Be it wisdoms, routines, or values. Namaste.

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