I go to gym once in 2-3 days, and I have a nice physic except my fatty stomach. Now I have started running daily for half an hour. But some of my friends suggest me that stop running, because it will also reduce your other muscles(e.g. chess and shoulder etc) with your stomach fat. I have really worked hard to gain some muscles and now I'm worrying does it really reduce our other muscles, as it reduces fat in stomach, by running. If that is the case, then what are other exercises that I can do to reduce my fatty stomach fast. Also I want to ask, whether walking at normal speed will help reduce fatty stomach.
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Yes, combining strength workouts with non-strength workouts will reduce the effectiveness of the strength workouts. Of course, that should be acceptable if your goal is broader than pure strength. Per Tom Kurz' Science of Sports Training, page 174:
However, Rippetoe and Kilgore note that there is a way around this issue:
(Page 72, Practical Programming) (Note that strength and power, though related to muscle size, are not synonymous with that attribute.) Just lifting will make you bigger and stronger than if you combine lifting with running, but running as well as lifting is a fine way to improve body composition (lose fat) at the same time as building muscle. |
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It won't directly, but it can indirectly. You have to have a decent calorie surplus to grow muscle - otherwise your body can't build on what you've done in the gym, and you won't grow any muscles. Running alongside your workout can burn the extra calories that you were going to use to build muscle. This is probably what your friends are referring to. There's nothing inherent about running that damages muscle gains though. Be aware: If you stop your cardio workout, you could hit a plateau very quickly. Your muscle gains are dependent on you exhausting your muscles. If you don't exhaust your muscles, your body will never get the signal that it needs to be stronger and bigger. If your heart and lungs are not up to the task of exhausting your muscles, you'll never grow that way, either! There are two main approaches to balancing these demands:
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