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Sheldon
Bunting
Age: 29
Height: 5ft 11"
Weight:
82kg
Body Fat: 8%
Waist Size: 31"
From: Manchester, England
I have followed
all the magazines advice through the years - finding as everyone
does that one opinion conflicts with another opinion but have
slowly but surely built up my own rules on what constitutes a
good method to get great
6 pack
abdominal definition.
I work as a
Veterinary Surgeon - very hectic schedule but for those who
complain that there isn’t enough time in the day for the gym and
work and everything else - I find a way! You have to realise
first of all what
body type you are and therefore
how much body fat you need to lose (and how much cardio you need
to do) to get the results you are aiming for. I am a more
naturally muscular build (good genetics) and this does play a
part in how good your abs will appear.

For those with
higher body fat measurements then time to hit a good diet (see
later) combined with hard sessions of cardio to burn it off. You
can’t spot reduce, that is to say working loads of abdominal
exercises doesn’t readily burn subcutaneous fat from that
specific area - all you do is raise your metabolic rate and
therefore burn fat from throughout your body reserves. If only
it were that easy.
For my cardio I do
it as part and parcel with my weight lifting - research shows
that a good heavy lifting session with limited rest ( ie
supersetting body parts) burns nearly as many calories as
running on a treadmill. I also play squash once weekly and jog
2-3 times also but nothing too intense.
Workout wise I now
do full body workouts using compound exercises (ie exercises
recruiting multiple muscle groups during the rep) as this has
been found to stimulate greater muscle growth in a shorter space
of time compared to doing split sets of individual muscles per
day (like chest mon, back tues, biceps wed etc). I do a circuit
of 1 chest, back, shoulder, biceps, triceps and finally leg
exercises (3 x 8 reps of each) then start at the beginning and
repeat - for example I would do- Chest - flat bench Back - pull
ups wide grip Shoulders - Smith machine press in front Bis -
Incline bicep curl Tris - Cable lying extensions Legs - machine
squat Then I start again on chest and do- Chest - flys incline
bench Back - wide grip seated row to chest Shoulders - cable
front raise Bis - concentration curls Tris - standing rope tri
extensions Legs - calf raise In the rest periods between sets I
do my abs routine - so 1 set chest then ball curl next set chest
then plank hold etc etc I do three days on, one day off. Each
day I follow the same pattern but select different exercises for
the same bod parts each day so in 3 days I do 6 diff exercises
for each body part.
My gains on this
system have been rapid and pretty ripped. In terms of abs I vary
the exercise to keep them guessing - ball curls, roman chair
with medicine ball between knees, plank hold, weight plank hold
hanging knees to elbows, cable crunches, side plank etc etc I
change it up v frequently - no abs workout is the same two days
in a row. Form is also key - I do all exercise with reasonable
weight and slow proper contractions, holding at the peak of
contraction for 2 count then lowering - all exercises done this
way from pull-ups to ball curls. Fast momentum based jerkin
movements build nothing in my opinion - form is king.
In terms of diet I
do the well documented 6-7 small meals a day, porridge for
breakfast with some fruit and a few eggs, lunch could be beans
on toast or pasta and chicken, dinner stir-fry chicken and veg
with rice, in between each meal a protein shake and 2
bananas/apples totalling 6 meals a day. I aim for roughly 40g
carbs and 30g protein each meal. I find it hard sometimes
because of work to eat this regularly but I stick to it as close
as possible. The 30 g protein is easily worked out but the carbs
- all brown no refined white bread/rice/pasta - 40g constitutes
2 large bananas 3 potatoes, 100g pasta that I use, 3 slices of
multigrain bread. I believe that abs have become an obsession
and are probably now the most wanted body improvement in men -
dedication is all that’s required to achieve THE goal.
Good Luck with the
SixPackNow Program
Sheldon
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