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THE PERFORMANCE LIFESTYLE
Nutrition
Anders Varner
San Diego Athletics
www.sandiegoathletics.com
admin@sandiegoathletics.com
“My sport has evolved from performing on a given day, at a certain task, to maximizing
my performance in every aspect of my life. My goal is no longer athletic performance
but Lifestyle Performance and the base of Lifestyle Performance starts with nutrition.”
Introduction
By purchasing this e-book and turning through the first few pages, we can draw a small assumption that
you are interested in learning about nutrition and fueling your life for performance. This makes me
happy. You are here to learn and I hope the information you find in this book guides you down a path of
exploration and learning.
I am no different. I am a lifelong athlete. I started playing hockey at three years old, left home at 14 to
go to boarding school to play hockey, and I currently spend most of my waking hours in a gym teaching
people how to lift weights and live a healthier life. I started training when I was 13 at a grungy gym
under my high school football stadium. I trained with the high school wrestling team and was the
youngest, smallest, and least experienced person in the room. However, that dusty, grungy weight room
would be the start of a lifetime passion that has led to opening San Diego Athletics in Pacific Beach,
California in 2010.
Throughout my training life, I always trained with an intense passion and purpose. In high school it was
to play college hockey. At 5’8”, size was not on my side so I had to find a way to get bigger, stronger, and
faster to excel on the ice. I found that in back squats and eating. In 2006 I found CrossFit and competing
in this budding sport became the purpose of my training. I learned Olympic lifting, gymnastics, and took
all that weight room knowledge from high school and tailored my training to succeed in the Sport of
Fitness.
If the weight room is the place to gain strength, I learned very early on that the kitchen is the place to
properly fuel workouts, recover, and improve overall health. Since walking into my first gym at 13, my
nutrition has been fueled by my goals, which often involved competition and winning. When gaining
weight and training to get stronger, I would eat upwards of three pounds of meat a day. I have gone
carb free, high carb, low carb, and everything in between. By sampling and experimenting, I have
learned that the only “bad” diet is one that is misaligned with your goals. If you want to be a vegan, you
should do it as long as being a vegan is aligned with the goals and mindset you have created for yourself.
Over the past year, for the first time in my life, I have moved away from competing in athletics. I own a
business with my best friend, Bryan Boorstein, and we just passed the five year mark. I have grown up a
little and my brain and body are less interested in testing and competing and more interested in
longevity and quality of life. Also, I just got married. To say the least, my mindset has changed from
being an athlete and focusing on peak performance, to living a long life in which my training and fitness
enables a quality of life and freedom from restrictions. I want to train for health. I want to eat and fuel
my body in a way that is healthy, allows for athletics and aesthetics, and also allows me to eat some
sugary deliciousness when I feel the need. I want to run, jump, surf, ride a bike, throw a baseball with
my future kids, lift weights with the best in the world, do handstands, and still have my wife get excited
when I take my shirt off.
My sport has evolved from performing on a given day, at a certain task, to maximizing my performance
in every aspect of my life. My goal is no longer athletic performance but Lifestyle Performance and the
base of Lifestyle Performance starts with nutrition.
The below information is only my recommendation. For specific recommendations, please consult your
doctor.
Let’s get started …
Overall Goals of the Performance Lifestyle
1. Health and Longevity– To establish a baseline of good habits that allow a life free of disease and
freedom to run, jump, and play, as well as to create a baseline of functionality that allows you to focus
on personal and professional growth.
2. Simplicity – The program is designed to create a baseline of activities to ensure health and longevity.
By adopting the methods, nutrition is not something you have to worry about. Simplicity allows small
behavior changes (eating habits) to make a drastic impact on your lifestyle.
3. Freedom - Freedom of movement, freedom from sickness, and freedom from the mental burden of
asking if you are doing the right thing. Follow the guidelines, create healthy habits, and you never have
to question yourself again.
Goal Setting
Before we dig too deep into protein, fat, and carbohydrate, we need to add a little context to the
conversation. In the introduction, I explained how my goal is “Lifestyle Performance.” I want to achieve
peak performance in every aspect of my life. I want my family and friendships to be empowering,
supportive, and loving. I want San Diego Athletics operating at the highest extremes of coaching as well
as business systems. And, I personally want to be able to experience life to its fullest and to not be held
back by physical or health limitations.
Goal setting is an extremely played out term. People get so focused on the end result that they blow off
the self-work required to make real change. The real purpose of goal setting is to have an honest
conversation about areas of your life that you struggle with. In a recent podcast I heard Dan John, a very
well respected strength coach, say, “When I hear people talk about reaching their goals, what they are
really telling me is that they are not presenting to the world the best versions of themselves.” I think this
really sums up the purpose of goal setting. Do you want to lose weight? Yes! Why? Well, probably
because you know that you are not showing the world the best version of you.
To start the conversation with yourself, we want you to write down your goal, and then ask three
questions. Since this is regarding nutritional changes, we will tailor the question to your eating habits.
What is the goal of gaining control of nutrition in your life?
____________________________________________________________________________________
What will you attain by reaching this goal?
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
Why is this goal important?
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
What has been the biggest hurdle in the past keeping you from reaching this goal? What will you do
different this time?
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
The depth to which you answer these questions is completely up to you. I would love it if you thought
about the answers thoroughly or do the exercise more than once. Here is an example of why depth, and
asking yourself, “Why,” matters.
What is the goal of gaining control of nutrition in your life?
Lose 10 pounds_______________________________________________________________________
What will you attain by reaching this goal?
Look better__________________________________________________________________________
Why is this goal important?
So I look skinny_______________________________________________________________________
What has been the biggest hurdle in the past keeping you from reaching this goal?
Drinking______________________________________________________________________________
For your first time doing any goal setting exercise this is pretty good. But, you can see that the answers
lack depth and very little of the answer is heartfelt and personal. Now, let’s take this a step further.
What is the goal of gaining control of nutrition in your life?
I want to lose 10 pounds_________________________________________________________________
What will you attain by reaching this goal?
I will gain confidence in myself knowing that I was able to focus on something and achieve my goal.
Why is this goal important?
It is important because I want to feel good about myself. I want people to know how hard I can work to
achieve things. Reaching this goal will give me confidence in myself and I can use it as a stepping stone
to build in other areas of my life.________________________________________________________
What has been the biggest hurdle in the past keeping you from reaching this goal?
I have a hard time saying no to going out or eating bad food. I want to hang out with my friends but it is
also tough when we go partying and then late night food and then they eat brunch and all of this keeps
me from reaching the goals I set out for myself. I will only eat out once a week and choose moderation.
I think it is very obvious to see how adding a little depth to your goal setting can have a significant
benefit to the real life application of the nutrition plan we will lay out. Take the time to have a real
conversation with yourself. Committing to lifestyle change is very difficult and it helps to fully
understand why you think it is important.
So you have your goals, you have really thought about some of the underlying problems, and you have a
clearly defined vision of why you want to make changes in your life …..
Well, hold on, we need to learn the basics of food and nutrition first.
Nutrition: The Basics
And by basics, I mean just barely scraping the surface. Like, first week of your 101 nutrition course in
college. Like the simplest, most basic idea of things that really smart scientists have written entire
textbooks on. Get it? Ok. I just want to be on the same page so we do not chase ourselves down a rabbit
hole of hormones, enzymes, and digestive processes. That information is important and you can find this
info very quickly on Google. All I am interested in is providing you with surface-level information that is
actually applicable to you making a well informed decision when you open your mouth and insert food.
Everything you eat is made up of three main macronutrients: protein, fat, and carbohydrate. Once food
enters your mouth, your body is designed to digest the food and distribute these macronutrients to your
cells as fuel for your body. This fuel comes in the form of calories. Calories are the energy that our body
uses to carry out its daily functions. The macronutrients have specific roles once they are digested and
distributed throughout the body. As you go through your day, your body is constantly undergoing
thousands of processes to keep you healthy, strong, and moving. All of these processes are fueled by
the calories in macronutrients.
Protein
Protein is the building blocks of all cells. Protein contains four calories per gram and is made up of
smaller substances called amino acids. Twelve amino acids are naturally produced by the human body
and nine amino acids must be consumed and digested in the food we eat. Any food that contains all nine
essential amino acids is considered a complete protein. The most common source of complete protein is
animal meat (beef, chicken, fish, bison, lamb, etc). There are a few non-animal, complete proteins such
as soybeans, buckwheat, and quinoa. If you are a vegetarian, it is very important to ensure you are
getting the proper amino acid profile in your diet.
Protein has three main uses for the body: fat store, energy, and the building and repairing of cells. The
exact amount of protein (and all macronutrients) that is needed for you is dependent upon your Basal
Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR). Your BMR is a calculation that determines the number of calories you need
to fuel your body on any given day (lucky for you, we already did all the calculations). To simplify, if you
lift a ton of weights and exercise frequently, you will need more calories, protein, carbohydrate, and fat
than a sedentary person. But, if you consume more than your daily allotment, the body will turn the
excess into stored fat that it can use when there is a deficit.
Protein can also be used for energy when the body is performing in a carbohydrate deficit. The body
undergoes a process called gluconeogenesis where it turns protein molecules into sugar molecules that
the body can use for energy.
Most important, and most common, protein is the building block for every cell in our body. If you come
to the gym to lift weights, protein is the thing your body will use to rebuild the muscle tissue that makes
you stronger. This rebuilding is not just for lifting and getting stronger muscles. Your vital organs—your
heart, lungs, and brain—are made of cells and protein is the base for the health and success of each
individual cell. It is important that we not only eat protein, but that we eat high quality, complete
proteins for the health and performance of our cells.
Carbohydrate
Carbohydrates are such a hot topic in the world of nutrition. To start, carbohydrates do not make you
fat. At four calories per gram, carbohydrates are our body’s preferred source of energy. When we eat
carbohydrates, they enter our body and release a hormone called insulin. Insulin, in many ways, is the
opposite of glucagon (hormone released by proteins). Insulin and glucagon are hormones released from
the pancreas and are in charge of regulating blood sugar. Insulin is a storage hormone that regulates the
speed at which carbohydrate is digested and glucagon is a releasing hormone that releases blood
glucose from the liver when blood sugar dips too low. See, this is why we try to keep this surface level.
All these words and hormones are so boring.
All you really need to know is our body loves carbohydrates. It loves them because they provide the
body with energy. It is easy for your body to run off carbohydrates. Also, when you are physically
exerting yourself, your body really wants easy carbohydrates to replenish the energy it is burning in the
workout. Right before, during, and shortly after your workout is a fantastic time to have a field day with
carbohydrates. However, carbohydrate can have a downside. If you are eating simple carbohydrates,
but not quickly burning them, your body will continue releasing insulin and storing these calories as fat
in the body. Carbohydrates are our friend, we need them, and our body loves them. But we also have to
be careful how we use them.
Fat
Fat does not make you fat either. Fat is a macronutrient that carries nine calories per gram and has no
hormonal impact on insulin or glucagon. Do you see the balancing act yet? Protein creates glucagon, a
releasing hormone. Carbohydrate releases insulin, a storage hormone. And fat is hormone neutral to
balance everything out. Fats can be found in two forms, saturated or unsaturated. Saturated fats are
most commonly found in animal proteins and unsaturated fats are found in plant proteins. It is
important to find lean cuts of meat to keep the saturated fat profile down. There is scientific evidence
on both sides that will argue until death of whether saturated fats are bad for you. I think humans have
eaten meat for a very long time so saturated fat, by itself, is not going to kill you. But, humans also did
not have grocery stores and access to such a large amount of meat. Hunting is too difficult to have an
unlimited supply. So, yes, be mindful of the fat profile you are eating but do not lose sleep over eating
saturated fats.
Fats are also essential to life. Fat can be used for energy and allows proteins and carbohydrates to carry
out their function. As with protein and carbohydrate, overconsumption can lead to weight and fat gain
in the body. The key with fat, and all macronutrients, is the quality, quantity, and timing of these
macronutrients.
Body Weight
Should be simple enough, right? Step on a scale, look down, and write it in the box.
Sorry, you know we cannot make things completely one size fits all. When entering your bodyweight
into the spreadsheet, please follow these guidelines. But first, let get some definitions out of the way.
Body Weight (BW) – total amount you weigh
Body Fat (BF) – the amount tissue on your body that is not bone, organ, or muscle tissue
Lean Body Mass (LBM) – total body weight minus body fat
Body Fat Percentage – The percentage of body fat to total body weight. To calculate
body fat there are many methods. If you have access to a coach that is capable of using
calipers, this is easiest. For additional methods, please use one of these methods
compliments of www.nerdfitness.com. Healthy body fat percentages for women are
under 25% and for men, under 15%.
Once you have found your body fat percentage, we can move forward with the weight you should put
into the spreadsheet.
If your body fat percentage is…
Female > 25% Body Fat
Male > 15% Body Fat
If NO, you can skip this and move the next bolded section
If YES, do the calculation below…
Calculate total body fat (not the percentage, actual pounds of fat), divide it in half, and add that number
back to your LBM. If you go two consecutive weeks without losing a pound, drop the BW to your LBM.
Once you are at or under 25% body fat percentage, enter your actual body weight into the calculator
Example:
Bodyweight: 175
Body Fat Percentage: 30%
Lean Body Mass: 175 x 30% = 123#
Total Body Fat: 175-123= 52# of total body fat
Body Fat/ 2: 52/2= 26#
123 (LBM) + 26 (1/2 BF) = 149#
When you stop losing 1 pound per week, use LBM weight until body fat is under 25% for females and
15% for males. As a general rule, healthy individuals will be under the 25% for females and 15% for
males. Our first goal in this process is to get you to a manageable weight. Once we have your body fat
percentage in a healthy range, we can adjust the calculator to your actual weight.
If your body fat percentage is…
Female < 25% Body Fat
Male < 15% Body Fat
Use total body weight for the calculator. If you are already under these numbers, by eating properly,
timing your carbohydrates, and fueling your body for performance, you will increase strength and stay
lean by following the spreadsheet.
Activity Level Profile
I am a big believer that the majority of humans are built so similar that there really can be general
template to the way we eat. Unfortunately, this is only somewhat true. Yes, we all need to eat a
balanced diet of protein, fat, and carbohydrate. We also need to time our carbohydrates around our
workouts so we can replenish our muscles with the energy they need to rebuild. But the extent to which
we need the additional calories is based on our activity level throughout the day which dramatically
differs from person to person.
Most mornings, I wake up between 4:30 and 4:45 AM. I coach for three hours until about 9:00 AM.
Shortly after I am done coaching I head on an hour-long walk. In that hour I will usually stretch for 20
minutes and cover around three miles on the boardwalk. I will come back to the office, answer emails,
train around 2:00 PM and then coach for two to three more hours. I am in constant movement
throughout my day so I will need more calories as a baseline than a more sedentary person.
Many individuals wake up in the morning, get in their car, sit in traffic, sit at their desk with short breaks,
get back in their car, hit the gym for an hour of intensity, and then go home and unwind watching TV.
I understand that these lifestyles are on opposite ends of the spectrum. The point is to illustrate how
you need to assess your daily activity to apply these principles to your life. Below is a chart of activity
levels and the corresponding multiplier we will add to your daily caloric intake.
Activity Level Profile
11 Sedentary
12 4-7 Hours of working out per week
13 5-10 hours of working out and high activity level throughout week
14 10-15 hours of working out per week
15 10-15 hours of working out per week and a very high activity level
11 – Individuals that do not spend much time doing concentrated exercise. They wake up, go to work,
come home, sit on the couch, and then go to bed. If they are working out, the 1-3 hours a week is not
enough to matter and they should maintain relatively low caloric intake.
12 – Individuals that spend four to seven hours a week in the gym and exercise with moderate to high
levels of intensity fall into this multiplier. You may also be in the gym three days a week but play on an
adult league team where you are playing with intensity. This multiplier is for the person that has a daily
dose of physical activity done at high intensity.
13 – Very similar to “12” but this person may throw in a double day or two throughout the week.
14 – For individuals that do multiple double days in a week or are training with very heavy weight in
multiple sessions.
15 – Daily double days in the gym plus living a very active life. This multiplier should be thought of as
someone that trains multiple times a day and has a very active life. If you coach for four hours a day and
train twice a day, you would end up with this high of a multiplier.
But what if I am in the middle?
This is totally fine. I am an in the middle person. I train four to six hours a week, yet I am on my feet and
moving all day long. I fall into a 12.5 multiplier and usually skew my calories slightly higher than what is
on the spreadsheet. I am most likely a full 13 but the 12.5 gives me some wiggle room if I am not lifting
with a ton of intensity that week.
The most important aspect to the activity level multiplier is that you are honest with yourself. If you are
sitting most of the day but walk your dog at night, you are not having an “active” day. Yes, walking your
dog is great but there is very little intensity and you have been sedentary for most of the day. The only
way for this to work is to be honest. You are not going to be perfect every day but hold yourself
accountable, do the right things, and get a little better every day.
Can You Help Me Understand What Is Going On?
As a general rule, I am a huge fan of logic. I like it because there is a cause and an effect. You can see
what causes something to happen and the reaction or aftermath that comes from the event. An
understanding of nutrition should be the same way.
Food is energy. The human body uses this energy for daily function as well as fueling workouts. But the
type of energy we use changes with the amount of energy we are using at any given time. If you are
sitting at your desk, you are not using much energy. If you are working out, you are burning a ton of
energy and you need to quickly replenish those energy stores to help your body recover. See, logic is
awesome, it just make sense.
So here are a couple things to think about when we discuss energy:
Carbohydrates – short term energy
Fat – long term energy
Protein – a constant throughout the day
Exercise – massive expenditure of energy
So on any given day, we need our energy in to match our energy out. When we look at the breakdown
of our spreadsheet, you will notice that an overwhelming majority of our carbohydrates are consumed
in the four hours of pre, intra, and post workout. We eat pre-workout carbohydrates to give the body a
quick shot of energy before we start training. We drink very simple carbohydrates (sugary drinks) during
the workout to replenish the energy expenditure and maintain energy levels, and then post workout to
replenish energy and to signal our body to start repairing itself.
Fat is our long term energy source. It also does a great job at slowing down the digestion process of
carbohydrates. Carbohydrates, centered around our workout and times of high energy expenditure, are
for quick energy. We need fat as the energy source when we are not quickly expending calories by
working out.
Protein is a constant throughout the day. However, digesting protein is a very different subject. Picture
an eight ounce steak. As you eat that steak, your body has to break down that chunk of meat into
something that your body can use. The process of digestion is very taxing on the body. If we are already
in a state of high energy expenditure we do not want to add digesting heavy proteins on top of that.
Plus, who wants to eat steak in the middle of the workout? We still need to get some protein in the
body to help muscles repair. We do this by consuming processed proteins in the form of protein
powder. During your workout, drinking a protein shake with simple carbohydrates is recommended to
jumpstart the rebuilding process when your workout is finished.
When we put this all together, the entire nutrition system is based off of your workout window. The
further you are away from your workout, the fewer carbohydrates and more fat you will eat. As you
approach your workout, we will trade in the fat calories for quicker, cheaper energy in carbohydrates.
After your workout, we will flood the body with carbohydrates and finish the night off with very low
carbs and higher fat.
Rest days are a bit different. Just because you are not working out with intensity, the body still needs
energy from carbohydrates, just not as much, about half. We also want to load these carbohydrates in
the earlier portion of your day to ensure that they are burned and not stored. Protein is upped as the
body will have a full day of recovery and we slightly increase fat levels to aid in recovery and long term
energy once carbohydrates stores have been used.
If you got lost, we can simplify. Eat high carb, low fat pre, intra, and post workout. The further you are
from your workout, eat less carbs and more fat. Protein stays the same throughout the day. On rest
days, eat a well-balanced meal, five times a day and cut the carbs towards dinner time to ensure
carbohydrate will not be stored as fat overnight.
The What-If’s
Alcohol
Alcohol is basically poison, but it’s a part of life. You should count the macros as a carbohydrate but try
not to have 1,000 drinks in a night. If you eat perfectly for five days in a row and then have 15 beers in a
night, you are probably doing yourself a disservice. Moderation is a good tool to have in your arsenal.
Cheat Meals
If cheat meals lead to more cheat meals, refrain. If cheat meals lead to mental sanity, enjoy in
moderation.
Also, we want to ensure we are getting all of our macros on a daily basis. If a Saturday night rolls around
and you still have 50g of fat and 100g of carbs to consume, a pint of ice cream or a couple donuts will fit
perfectly. Please understand, I am NOT telling you to eat donuts. However, this is the real world and this
has to fit into your real life. Moderation and making conscious decisions is a part of life.
What if I miss a meal?
Try to divide the macros evenly throughout the remainder of the meals on your plate.
This seems like a lot of carbs. I thought carbs made you fat.
It only seems like a lot. It is important to fuel your body for your lifestyle. Following this plan will fuel
your body without creating fat stores from excess carbohydrate.
What if I eat more than my allotment?
You are totally going to live. Maybe take a little off the next meal or maybe just forget it ever happened
and be perfect on the next one. Play the long game but make as many good decisions as you can along
the way.
Conclusion
Thank you for reading through this manual. I hope it provides some structure and guidance to your
nutrition. From this base, you can tinker and adjust the numbers to reach more individualized goals.
If all of this is too much, and you only take away one thing from this, PLEASE spend some time in the
goal setting section. The most important conversation you will ever have is with yourself. If you cannot
be honest with yourself about your flaws, your ambitions, and your goals, life will be very challenging.
Take some time and find out what matters, why you want to make changes, and why you want to
accomplish the things you desire in life. Nutrition is a small thing but understanding basic concepts and
implementing this into your life can become the baseline that leads to future success. Discover your
why, make it important, and nutrition will be a small step in accomplishing much larger goals.
I hope following this template brings some calm and confidence next time you sit down to eat.
Establishing a baseline of health is the key to success in all aspects of life. It is hard to conquer the world
if you are sick or do not have the energy to be your best every day.

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The Performance Lifestyle - Nutrition

  • 1. THE PERFORMANCE LIFESTYLE Nutrition Anders Varner San Diego Athletics www.sandiegoathletics.com admin@sandiegoathletics.com “My sport has evolved from performing on a given day, at a certain task, to maximizing my performance in every aspect of my life. My goal is no longer athletic performance but Lifestyle Performance and the base of Lifestyle Performance starts with nutrition.”
  • 2. Introduction By purchasing this e-book and turning through the first few pages, we can draw a small assumption that you are interested in learning about nutrition and fueling your life for performance. This makes me happy. You are here to learn and I hope the information you find in this book guides you down a path of exploration and learning. I am no different. I am a lifelong athlete. I started playing hockey at three years old, left home at 14 to go to boarding school to play hockey, and I currently spend most of my waking hours in a gym teaching people how to lift weights and live a healthier life. I started training when I was 13 at a grungy gym under my high school football stadium. I trained with the high school wrestling team and was the youngest, smallest, and least experienced person in the room. However, that dusty, grungy weight room would be the start of a lifetime passion that has led to opening San Diego Athletics in Pacific Beach, California in 2010. Throughout my training life, I always trained with an intense passion and purpose. In high school it was to play college hockey. At 5’8”, size was not on my side so I had to find a way to get bigger, stronger, and faster to excel on the ice. I found that in back squats and eating. In 2006 I found CrossFit and competing in this budding sport became the purpose of my training. I learned Olympic lifting, gymnastics, and took all that weight room knowledge from high school and tailored my training to succeed in the Sport of Fitness. If the weight room is the place to gain strength, I learned very early on that the kitchen is the place to properly fuel workouts, recover, and improve overall health. Since walking into my first gym at 13, my nutrition has been fueled by my goals, which often involved competition and winning. When gaining weight and training to get stronger, I would eat upwards of three pounds of meat a day. I have gone carb free, high carb, low carb, and everything in between. By sampling and experimenting, I have learned that the only “bad” diet is one that is misaligned with your goals. If you want to be a vegan, you should do it as long as being a vegan is aligned with the goals and mindset you have created for yourself. Over the past year, for the first time in my life, I have moved away from competing in athletics. I own a business with my best friend, Bryan Boorstein, and we just passed the five year mark. I have grown up a little and my brain and body are less interested in testing and competing and more interested in longevity and quality of life. Also, I just got married. To say the least, my mindset has changed from being an athlete and focusing on peak performance, to living a long life in which my training and fitness enables a quality of life and freedom from restrictions. I want to train for health. I want to eat and fuel my body in a way that is healthy, allows for athletics and aesthetics, and also allows me to eat some sugary deliciousness when I feel the need. I want to run, jump, surf, ride a bike, throw a baseball with my future kids, lift weights with the best in the world, do handstands, and still have my wife get excited when I take my shirt off. My sport has evolved from performing on a given day, at a certain task, to maximizing my performance in every aspect of my life. My goal is no longer athletic performance but Lifestyle Performance and the base of Lifestyle Performance starts with nutrition.
  • 3. The below information is only my recommendation. For specific recommendations, please consult your doctor. Let’s get started … Overall Goals of the Performance Lifestyle 1. Health and Longevity– To establish a baseline of good habits that allow a life free of disease and freedom to run, jump, and play, as well as to create a baseline of functionality that allows you to focus on personal and professional growth. 2. Simplicity – The program is designed to create a baseline of activities to ensure health and longevity. By adopting the methods, nutrition is not something you have to worry about. Simplicity allows small behavior changes (eating habits) to make a drastic impact on your lifestyle. 3. Freedom - Freedom of movement, freedom from sickness, and freedom from the mental burden of asking if you are doing the right thing. Follow the guidelines, create healthy habits, and you never have to question yourself again. Goal Setting Before we dig too deep into protein, fat, and carbohydrate, we need to add a little context to the conversation. In the introduction, I explained how my goal is “Lifestyle Performance.” I want to achieve peak performance in every aspect of my life. I want my family and friendships to be empowering, supportive, and loving. I want San Diego Athletics operating at the highest extremes of coaching as well as business systems. And, I personally want to be able to experience life to its fullest and to not be held back by physical or health limitations. Goal setting is an extremely played out term. People get so focused on the end result that they blow off the self-work required to make real change. The real purpose of goal setting is to have an honest conversation about areas of your life that you struggle with. In a recent podcast I heard Dan John, a very well respected strength coach, say, “When I hear people talk about reaching their goals, what they are really telling me is that they are not presenting to the world the best versions of themselves.” I think this really sums up the purpose of goal setting. Do you want to lose weight? Yes! Why? Well, probably because you know that you are not showing the world the best version of you. To start the conversation with yourself, we want you to write down your goal, and then ask three questions. Since this is regarding nutritional changes, we will tailor the question to your eating habits. What is the goal of gaining control of nutrition in your life? ____________________________________________________________________________________ What will you attain by reaching this goal?
  • 4. _____________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________ Why is this goal important? _____________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________ What has been the biggest hurdle in the past keeping you from reaching this goal? What will you do different this time? _____________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________ The depth to which you answer these questions is completely up to you. I would love it if you thought about the answers thoroughly or do the exercise more than once. Here is an example of why depth, and asking yourself, “Why,” matters. What is the goal of gaining control of nutrition in your life? Lose 10 pounds_______________________________________________________________________ What will you attain by reaching this goal? Look better__________________________________________________________________________ Why is this goal important? So I look skinny_______________________________________________________________________ What has been the biggest hurdle in the past keeping you from reaching this goal? Drinking______________________________________________________________________________ For your first time doing any goal setting exercise this is pretty good. But, you can see that the answers lack depth and very little of the answer is heartfelt and personal. Now, let’s take this a step further. What is the goal of gaining control of nutrition in your life? I want to lose 10 pounds_________________________________________________________________ What will you attain by reaching this goal? I will gain confidence in myself knowing that I was able to focus on something and achieve my goal. Why is this goal important?
  • 5. It is important because I want to feel good about myself. I want people to know how hard I can work to achieve things. Reaching this goal will give me confidence in myself and I can use it as a stepping stone to build in other areas of my life.________________________________________________________ What has been the biggest hurdle in the past keeping you from reaching this goal? I have a hard time saying no to going out or eating bad food. I want to hang out with my friends but it is also tough when we go partying and then late night food and then they eat brunch and all of this keeps me from reaching the goals I set out for myself. I will only eat out once a week and choose moderation. I think it is very obvious to see how adding a little depth to your goal setting can have a significant benefit to the real life application of the nutrition plan we will lay out. Take the time to have a real conversation with yourself. Committing to lifestyle change is very difficult and it helps to fully understand why you think it is important. So you have your goals, you have really thought about some of the underlying problems, and you have a clearly defined vision of why you want to make changes in your life ….. Well, hold on, we need to learn the basics of food and nutrition first. Nutrition: The Basics And by basics, I mean just barely scraping the surface. Like, first week of your 101 nutrition course in college. Like the simplest, most basic idea of things that really smart scientists have written entire textbooks on. Get it? Ok. I just want to be on the same page so we do not chase ourselves down a rabbit hole of hormones, enzymes, and digestive processes. That information is important and you can find this info very quickly on Google. All I am interested in is providing you with surface-level information that is actually applicable to you making a well informed decision when you open your mouth and insert food. Everything you eat is made up of three main macronutrients: protein, fat, and carbohydrate. Once food enters your mouth, your body is designed to digest the food and distribute these macronutrients to your cells as fuel for your body. This fuel comes in the form of calories. Calories are the energy that our body uses to carry out its daily functions. The macronutrients have specific roles once they are digested and distributed throughout the body. As you go through your day, your body is constantly undergoing thousands of processes to keep you healthy, strong, and moving. All of these processes are fueled by the calories in macronutrients. Protein Protein is the building blocks of all cells. Protein contains four calories per gram and is made up of smaller substances called amino acids. Twelve amino acids are naturally produced by the human body and nine amino acids must be consumed and digested in the food we eat. Any food that contains all nine essential amino acids is considered a complete protein. The most common source of complete protein is
  • 6. animal meat (beef, chicken, fish, bison, lamb, etc). There are a few non-animal, complete proteins such as soybeans, buckwheat, and quinoa. If you are a vegetarian, it is very important to ensure you are getting the proper amino acid profile in your diet. Protein has three main uses for the body: fat store, energy, and the building and repairing of cells. The exact amount of protein (and all macronutrients) that is needed for you is dependent upon your Basal Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR). Your BMR is a calculation that determines the number of calories you need to fuel your body on any given day (lucky for you, we already did all the calculations). To simplify, if you lift a ton of weights and exercise frequently, you will need more calories, protein, carbohydrate, and fat than a sedentary person. But, if you consume more than your daily allotment, the body will turn the excess into stored fat that it can use when there is a deficit. Protein can also be used for energy when the body is performing in a carbohydrate deficit. The body undergoes a process called gluconeogenesis where it turns protein molecules into sugar molecules that the body can use for energy. Most important, and most common, protein is the building block for every cell in our body. If you come to the gym to lift weights, protein is the thing your body will use to rebuild the muscle tissue that makes you stronger. This rebuilding is not just for lifting and getting stronger muscles. Your vital organs—your heart, lungs, and brain—are made of cells and protein is the base for the health and success of each individual cell. It is important that we not only eat protein, but that we eat high quality, complete proteins for the health and performance of our cells. Carbohydrate Carbohydrates are such a hot topic in the world of nutrition. To start, carbohydrates do not make you fat. At four calories per gram, carbohydrates are our body’s preferred source of energy. When we eat carbohydrates, they enter our body and release a hormone called insulin. Insulin, in many ways, is the opposite of glucagon (hormone released by proteins). Insulin and glucagon are hormones released from the pancreas and are in charge of regulating blood sugar. Insulin is a storage hormone that regulates the speed at which carbohydrate is digested and glucagon is a releasing hormone that releases blood glucose from the liver when blood sugar dips too low. See, this is why we try to keep this surface level. All these words and hormones are so boring. All you really need to know is our body loves carbohydrates. It loves them because they provide the body with energy. It is easy for your body to run off carbohydrates. Also, when you are physically exerting yourself, your body really wants easy carbohydrates to replenish the energy it is burning in the workout. Right before, during, and shortly after your workout is a fantastic time to have a field day with carbohydrates. However, carbohydrate can have a downside. If you are eating simple carbohydrates, but not quickly burning them, your body will continue releasing insulin and storing these calories as fat in the body. Carbohydrates are our friend, we need them, and our body loves them. But we also have to be careful how we use them. Fat
  • 7. Fat does not make you fat either. Fat is a macronutrient that carries nine calories per gram and has no hormonal impact on insulin or glucagon. Do you see the balancing act yet? Protein creates glucagon, a releasing hormone. Carbohydrate releases insulin, a storage hormone. And fat is hormone neutral to balance everything out. Fats can be found in two forms, saturated or unsaturated. Saturated fats are most commonly found in animal proteins and unsaturated fats are found in plant proteins. It is important to find lean cuts of meat to keep the saturated fat profile down. There is scientific evidence on both sides that will argue until death of whether saturated fats are bad for you. I think humans have eaten meat for a very long time so saturated fat, by itself, is not going to kill you. But, humans also did not have grocery stores and access to such a large amount of meat. Hunting is too difficult to have an unlimited supply. So, yes, be mindful of the fat profile you are eating but do not lose sleep over eating saturated fats. Fats are also essential to life. Fat can be used for energy and allows proteins and carbohydrates to carry out their function. As with protein and carbohydrate, overconsumption can lead to weight and fat gain in the body. The key with fat, and all macronutrients, is the quality, quantity, and timing of these macronutrients. Body Weight Should be simple enough, right? Step on a scale, look down, and write it in the box. Sorry, you know we cannot make things completely one size fits all. When entering your bodyweight into the spreadsheet, please follow these guidelines. But first, let get some definitions out of the way. Body Weight (BW) – total amount you weigh Body Fat (BF) – the amount tissue on your body that is not bone, organ, or muscle tissue Lean Body Mass (LBM) – total body weight minus body fat Body Fat Percentage – The percentage of body fat to total body weight. To calculate body fat there are many methods. If you have access to a coach that is capable of using calipers, this is easiest. For additional methods, please use one of these methods compliments of www.nerdfitness.com. Healthy body fat percentages for women are under 25% and for men, under 15%. Once you have found your body fat percentage, we can move forward with the weight you should put into the spreadsheet. If your body fat percentage is… Female > 25% Body Fat Male > 15% Body Fat If NO, you can skip this and move the next bolded section
  • 8. If YES, do the calculation below… Calculate total body fat (not the percentage, actual pounds of fat), divide it in half, and add that number back to your LBM. If you go two consecutive weeks without losing a pound, drop the BW to your LBM. Once you are at or under 25% body fat percentage, enter your actual body weight into the calculator Example: Bodyweight: 175 Body Fat Percentage: 30% Lean Body Mass: 175 x 30% = 123# Total Body Fat: 175-123= 52# of total body fat Body Fat/ 2: 52/2= 26# 123 (LBM) + 26 (1/2 BF) = 149# When you stop losing 1 pound per week, use LBM weight until body fat is under 25% for females and 15% for males. As a general rule, healthy individuals will be under the 25% for females and 15% for males. Our first goal in this process is to get you to a manageable weight. Once we have your body fat percentage in a healthy range, we can adjust the calculator to your actual weight. If your body fat percentage is… Female < 25% Body Fat Male < 15% Body Fat Use total body weight for the calculator. If you are already under these numbers, by eating properly, timing your carbohydrates, and fueling your body for performance, you will increase strength and stay lean by following the spreadsheet. Activity Level Profile I am a big believer that the majority of humans are built so similar that there really can be general template to the way we eat. Unfortunately, this is only somewhat true. Yes, we all need to eat a balanced diet of protein, fat, and carbohydrate. We also need to time our carbohydrates around our workouts so we can replenish our muscles with the energy they need to rebuild. But the extent to which we need the additional calories is based on our activity level throughout the day which dramatically differs from person to person. Most mornings, I wake up between 4:30 and 4:45 AM. I coach for three hours until about 9:00 AM. Shortly after I am done coaching I head on an hour-long walk. In that hour I will usually stretch for 20 minutes and cover around three miles on the boardwalk. I will come back to the office, answer emails, train around 2:00 PM and then coach for two to three more hours. I am in constant movement throughout my day so I will need more calories as a baseline than a more sedentary person. Many individuals wake up in the morning, get in their car, sit in traffic, sit at their desk with short breaks, get back in their car, hit the gym for an hour of intensity, and then go home and unwind watching TV.
  • 9. I understand that these lifestyles are on opposite ends of the spectrum. The point is to illustrate how you need to assess your daily activity to apply these principles to your life. Below is a chart of activity levels and the corresponding multiplier we will add to your daily caloric intake. Activity Level Profile 11 Sedentary 12 4-7 Hours of working out per week 13 5-10 hours of working out and high activity level throughout week 14 10-15 hours of working out per week 15 10-15 hours of working out per week and a very high activity level 11 – Individuals that do not spend much time doing concentrated exercise. They wake up, go to work, come home, sit on the couch, and then go to bed. If they are working out, the 1-3 hours a week is not enough to matter and they should maintain relatively low caloric intake. 12 – Individuals that spend four to seven hours a week in the gym and exercise with moderate to high levels of intensity fall into this multiplier. You may also be in the gym three days a week but play on an adult league team where you are playing with intensity. This multiplier is for the person that has a daily dose of physical activity done at high intensity. 13 – Very similar to “12” but this person may throw in a double day or two throughout the week. 14 – For individuals that do multiple double days in a week or are training with very heavy weight in multiple sessions. 15 – Daily double days in the gym plus living a very active life. This multiplier should be thought of as someone that trains multiple times a day and has a very active life. If you coach for four hours a day and train twice a day, you would end up with this high of a multiplier. But what if I am in the middle? This is totally fine. I am an in the middle person. I train four to six hours a week, yet I am on my feet and moving all day long. I fall into a 12.5 multiplier and usually skew my calories slightly higher than what is on the spreadsheet. I am most likely a full 13 but the 12.5 gives me some wiggle room if I am not lifting with a ton of intensity that week. The most important aspect to the activity level multiplier is that you are honest with yourself. If you are sitting most of the day but walk your dog at night, you are not having an “active” day. Yes, walking your dog is great but there is very little intensity and you have been sedentary for most of the day. The only way for this to work is to be honest. You are not going to be perfect every day but hold yourself accountable, do the right things, and get a little better every day.
  • 10. Can You Help Me Understand What Is Going On? As a general rule, I am a huge fan of logic. I like it because there is a cause and an effect. You can see what causes something to happen and the reaction or aftermath that comes from the event. An understanding of nutrition should be the same way. Food is energy. The human body uses this energy for daily function as well as fueling workouts. But the type of energy we use changes with the amount of energy we are using at any given time. If you are sitting at your desk, you are not using much energy. If you are working out, you are burning a ton of energy and you need to quickly replenish those energy stores to help your body recover. See, logic is awesome, it just make sense. So here are a couple things to think about when we discuss energy: Carbohydrates – short term energy Fat – long term energy Protein – a constant throughout the day Exercise – massive expenditure of energy So on any given day, we need our energy in to match our energy out. When we look at the breakdown of our spreadsheet, you will notice that an overwhelming majority of our carbohydrates are consumed in the four hours of pre, intra, and post workout. We eat pre-workout carbohydrates to give the body a quick shot of energy before we start training. We drink very simple carbohydrates (sugary drinks) during the workout to replenish the energy expenditure and maintain energy levels, and then post workout to replenish energy and to signal our body to start repairing itself. Fat is our long term energy source. It also does a great job at slowing down the digestion process of carbohydrates. Carbohydrates, centered around our workout and times of high energy expenditure, are for quick energy. We need fat as the energy source when we are not quickly expending calories by working out. Protein is a constant throughout the day. However, digesting protein is a very different subject. Picture an eight ounce steak. As you eat that steak, your body has to break down that chunk of meat into something that your body can use. The process of digestion is very taxing on the body. If we are already in a state of high energy expenditure we do not want to add digesting heavy proteins on top of that. Plus, who wants to eat steak in the middle of the workout? We still need to get some protein in the body to help muscles repair. We do this by consuming processed proteins in the form of protein powder. During your workout, drinking a protein shake with simple carbohydrates is recommended to jumpstart the rebuilding process when your workout is finished. When we put this all together, the entire nutrition system is based off of your workout window. The further you are away from your workout, the fewer carbohydrates and more fat you will eat. As you
  • 11. approach your workout, we will trade in the fat calories for quicker, cheaper energy in carbohydrates. After your workout, we will flood the body with carbohydrates and finish the night off with very low carbs and higher fat. Rest days are a bit different. Just because you are not working out with intensity, the body still needs energy from carbohydrates, just not as much, about half. We also want to load these carbohydrates in the earlier portion of your day to ensure that they are burned and not stored. Protein is upped as the body will have a full day of recovery and we slightly increase fat levels to aid in recovery and long term energy once carbohydrates stores have been used. If you got lost, we can simplify. Eat high carb, low fat pre, intra, and post workout. The further you are from your workout, eat less carbs and more fat. Protein stays the same throughout the day. On rest days, eat a well-balanced meal, five times a day and cut the carbs towards dinner time to ensure carbohydrate will not be stored as fat overnight. The What-If’s Alcohol Alcohol is basically poison, but it’s a part of life. You should count the macros as a carbohydrate but try not to have 1,000 drinks in a night. If you eat perfectly for five days in a row and then have 15 beers in a night, you are probably doing yourself a disservice. Moderation is a good tool to have in your arsenal. Cheat Meals If cheat meals lead to more cheat meals, refrain. If cheat meals lead to mental sanity, enjoy in moderation. Also, we want to ensure we are getting all of our macros on a daily basis. If a Saturday night rolls around and you still have 50g of fat and 100g of carbs to consume, a pint of ice cream or a couple donuts will fit perfectly. Please understand, I am NOT telling you to eat donuts. However, this is the real world and this has to fit into your real life. Moderation and making conscious decisions is a part of life. What if I miss a meal? Try to divide the macros evenly throughout the remainder of the meals on your plate. This seems like a lot of carbs. I thought carbs made you fat. It only seems like a lot. It is important to fuel your body for your lifestyle. Following this plan will fuel your body without creating fat stores from excess carbohydrate. What if I eat more than my allotment? You are totally going to live. Maybe take a little off the next meal or maybe just forget it ever happened and be perfect on the next one. Play the long game but make as many good decisions as you can along the way.
  • 12. Conclusion Thank you for reading through this manual. I hope it provides some structure and guidance to your nutrition. From this base, you can tinker and adjust the numbers to reach more individualized goals. If all of this is too much, and you only take away one thing from this, PLEASE spend some time in the goal setting section. The most important conversation you will ever have is with yourself. If you cannot be honest with yourself about your flaws, your ambitions, and your goals, life will be very challenging. Take some time and find out what matters, why you want to make changes, and why you want to accomplish the things you desire in life. Nutrition is a small thing but understanding basic concepts and implementing this into your life can become the baseline that leads to future success. Discover your why, make it important, and nutrition will be a small step in accomplishing much larger goals. I hope following this template brings some calm and confidence next time you sit down to eat. Establishing a baseline of health is the key to success in all aspects of life. It is hard to conquer the world if you are sick or do not have the energy to be your best every day.