Big Red's Teen BodybuildingArticle #4 - The Importance Of Supplements
By: Big Red
I am often asked the following two questions: a) What do you take and how is it working? and b) But can't you build a better physique from
whole food? These two questions go hand in hand. Right now I'm taking protein powder, meal replacement powders,
multi vitamins, and Glutamine. The answer to both questions is yes. You can build a better body on a real good
diet just like the guys back in the 50's did, but to do so can take so much time, energy, and trips to the supermarket. Believe me, mothers hate running to the grocery store to buy food... its one of my mom's biggest pet peeves.
Supplements make it much easier to get the necessary nutrients to build muscle and can even give you an advantage
and enhance your training when taken right and combined with a good diet. In this following article, I'm going to talk
about the importance of supplements, their rank of importance (in my opinion), and supplements that can be added
to give you the advantage over the guy who refuses to use creatine, but thinks he'll get big from eating frosted flakes after he works out.
Ok, let me first say that the most important aspect of diet is whole foods. You must eat 6 - 7 meals per day and each one
should contain protein and carbs. 3 - 4 of these meals should consist of whole foods like chicken, rice and salad. The
other 3 - 4 should consist of liquid protein like protein shakes and mrp's. Usually when I pick out an mrp, I try to get
the most inexpensive, as most contain about the same ratio of macro-nutrients (carbs/pro/fat) 24/42/2, but still one
that is from a reputable company. Right now I am taking EAS Myoplex ($1.60/serving when bought from Bodybuilding.com, $2.74 per serving when bought elsewhere), but I will probably switch to Nutriforce by
Sportpharma ($1.44/serving from Bodybuilding.com). As you can easily see it is much cheaper and much better for you than eating at
a fast food restaraunt and about the same price as 10 eggwhites and a serving of oatmeal, but much easier to eat
and better tasting. Usually I take a packet between classes (I eat breakfast at 7:30, and lunch at 2:30).
Equally important are whey protein powders as they are absorbed faster than mrp's and therefore desireable after working out and
before bed. This is exactly when I take them. A scoup after working out, then a scoup and a half before bed. Like
mrp's, I try to find one that is inexpensive, has low sodium (under 100mg), low-carbs (under 5-6gm), and from a
reputable company. Right now I am taking Optimum Nutrition 100% Whey, but Prolab's 5 lb. Pure Whey and EAS's 100% Whey Protein 5 lb. are high quality and inexpensive also.
I believe that along with the top two, multi-vitamins rank in the top 3 (between protein and multi's it is impossible
to distinguish which is more important... they are both essential). Currently I take a generic one-a-day multi
four times per day (2 with breakfast and 2 before bed). Make sure you are getting at least 500 mg's of vitamin c and
400 iu's from vitamin E. The other nutrients should be over 100%, remember people that exercise intensely need
more nutrients than those who don't. EAS and Prolab make good multi blends.
When you're diet is good and the above three are being used properly, then and only then (considering you have the
money, that's why I gave what I thought to be the most inexpensive solutions) should you move on to
the next set of supplements. I think the next most important supplement is creatine. While it has never really
worked well for me (I'm in the unlucky 10 percentile), almost everyone else I know has gotten phenominal results
from this supplement. The most important time to take it is directly after working out with a high carb. I prefer to
take it with gatorade or Endurox Accelerade, but grape juice will work well too. It is important to take your creatine
with a protein powder that is not enriched with glutamine (this means you cannot take it with mrp's as most are enriched
with glutamine) because the two amino's use the same substrate to transport them into your muscle cells and when taken
within 1-1/2 hour apart will not absorb. I prefer to take it with a carb, then have a protein shake an hour later,
then eat a whole food meal an hour after that.
When buying creatine it is important to find a reputable brand.
This means no GNC blowout sale creatine as it can be very low quality. Personally I think the best creatine products out
there (pure creatine, flavored ones are a waste of money in my opinion, as you are paying for dextrose which costs about 30 cents
a pound) are Prolab's, AST's, and EAS's.
Glutamine is also very important as it makes up to 60% of the amino acids in the skeletal muscles. When you train
intensely (as I'm sure you do) glutamine is the first amino to be used as fuel. It is found in food, so if you're
eating a high protein diet, you probably are getting somewhere from 3-5 gms per day. You can find it in most whole protein
foods, but it is abundant in cottage cheese, whey protein, and most mrp's are enriched with it. Most people
supplement with 5-10 gms per day. Some of the advantages to taking glutamine
is that not only does it replenish your glutamine stores in your muscles, but it highly strengthens the immune system
which for those of you who have had to miss workouts due to illness will gladly appreciate.
Lastly (I have seen this
in many places, although I'm not sure how true it is) it can increase growth hormone by as much as 400% if taken
before bed. I have taken glutamine religiously for the past 3 months and feel it has helped my recovery immensely.
This is great because it takes my legs forever to recover and I have to do a lot of walking being in college. I
recommend glutamine to all of those who have the money. Take it first thing in the morning (5 gm) and right before you go
to bed (5 gm). Will it cause you to put on 10lbs in under a month? No, but being defficient in it could hurt your gains
greatly. My favorite glutamine brand is Prolab.
If you read my last article about cutting up, you will see that I highly promote Ephedrine/caffeine stacks as they are
a great supplement toward fat loss and preserving muscle in the process. I have gotten the most dramatic results from
E/C stacks. Not only can they significantly increase your fat metabolism when you are using a cutting diet, but they
can help you increase the intensity of your workouts. When I'm tired from classes, I'll pop an E/C and 15 minutes later
be pumping out more weight than I would if I had gone in without it.
It is very important that you cycle it if you
are taking it every day for fat loss, and if you are taking it as a workout booster, not to use for more than 3 days
per week without out cycling. I try not to take it more than 2 times per week. I think in the aspects of saving money
that buying Prolab Caffeine 200mg stacked with either the Higher Power Ephedra or AST EPH 833 is good. I use the
latter one. If you're looking for an all in one stack, AST Dymetadrine Xtreme is awesome, and Xenadrine NRG is really powerful too.
Being a teenager means you have naturally high testostorone, and while it is bad to alter it unnatrually by
introducing androgen's or steroids into the body, it's always a plus to enhance your testostorone production
naturaully. ZMA is becoming one of the most popular supplements today, and it's also one of the safest. Your
body needs zinc and magnesium, the two are responsible for over 500 different functions in the human body,
and these minerals are hard to get because multi's contain calcium as fillers. ZMA is calcium free, and when
taking on an empty stomach before bed can give great results for most people. I believe that because so many are deficient
in these minerals and when they get enough it causes a great change. This just shows how powerful it can
be. I think most of the ZMA on this site is of good quality, except the EAS version because it contains calcium.
I think the most cost effective is Optimum Nutritions ZMA.
As I have said many times before, diet is the most important aspect of the nutrition part of bodybuilding. Once
your diet is in order though, supplements can give you a great advantage. Below I'm going to briefly outline
a great supplement stack for a workout day (provided you have the money, most won't).
*Note, only take the E/C/A stack on workout days (less then 3 days per week) and on non-workout days take your Creatine mid-day on an empty stomach.
6:30am- 5gm glutamine, multi vitamin, 500mg vitamin c
7:00am- Breakfast
9:45am- MPR in skim milk
12:00p- Lunch
2:30pm- EAS Myoplex in water
3:15pm- Ephedrine/caffine stack
3:30pm- Workout
4:30pm- 5gm creatine in carbpro, chromium picolinate
5:30pm- Protein shake in water
6:30pm- Supper
9:00pm- ZMA
10:00p- Protein shake in skim milk, glutamine, multi vitamin
Now obviously most of you being students cannot afford this, but this would be the ultimate teenage stack to add
lean mass. The reason your the protein shake after your workout is in water is because the casein in the milk
slows the absorbsion of whey, and after you lift, you want it to be absorbed fast.
Good luck to all, BiG RED.
Some are destined to succeed, others are determined.

jcho0809@postoffice.uri.edu
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