tone up

"Tone, not bulk". Let's clear some myths.

Heyyyyy,

I talk to women on the socials and to new clients all the time who say, “I want to tone up without bulking.” Lately it’s, “I want a Pilates body, not a weightlifting body.” I get it ... and it’s time to clear this up (again), because your goals are 100% doable and the barbell is not the villain. Here’s the real story -- lifting doesn’t make you bulky, a calorie surplus does. Think house reno ... you can rearrange furniture (recomposition) at maintenance calories, but to add a new room of any kind you need extra bricks (energy / calories).


When you lift with enough protein and a true surplus, muscle grows (and usually a little fat, depending on sleep, stress, and programming). When you lift with enough protein but without a surplus, you get stronger, tighter, and denser ... clothes fit "better" even if the scale hardly moves. That’s recomposition. And that “I got bulky in a week” feeling? It’s usually glycogen and water plus normal inflammation from new training. It settles, promise.


“Pilates body” versus “weightlifting body” is mostly a combo of muscle amount, body-fat percentage, and posture ... not the brand of movement. You can absolutely lift and look “Pilates-y”: keep calories at maintenance or a slight deficit, hit protein, do 3–4 smart lifts per week, do some mobility and walk daily. If you do want to actively build more muscle, a small surplus works better. Most women in a true newbie phase can add roughly 0.25–0.5 lb of muscle per week with a 200–300 kcal/day surplus and about 0.7–1.0 g of protein per pound of a body weight you feel most comfortable at (think 120–150 g protein at 150 lb). If recomposition is your vibe, keep protein high, train hard, and let patience do its compounding magic ... the mirror will tell on you before the scale does.


Training can stay simple and effective ... three to four lifts per week focused on things. like squats, hinges, pushes, pulls, and carries. Two to four challenging sets of 6-12 reps. Add a rep or 2.5–5 lb somewhere each week. Rest 1-2 minutes between sets so you can actually lift well. On the food side, aim for 30–40 g of protein at each meal, put most carbs around training for performance and recovery, and include healthy fats for hormones without drowning the day plus lots of fiber. Myths to retire ... a dumbbell didn’t bulk you overnight (that was water and glycogen). High reps don’t “tone” while low reps “bulk” (both build muscle if the sets are very hard). 

If you want the plan done for you, that’s literally why I built The Metabolic Edge ... periodized workouts you can do at home or in the gym, nutrition guides that make protein and fiber and balanced eating EASY, and live coaching + workshops so we can tweak in real time. It’s the exact system I used to change my health and body, and the method hundreds of women are now using for themselves, too. And now, it's available to you through the TME community!


If nothing you're doing is working or sticking and you're a woman in her late 30s, 40s, 50s or beyond, I'd love to help guide you through what does work (for your body goals, yes, but also for your health!).


With you (and your goals),
Tara

You're "doing everything right", right?



Sometimes it's not a lack of discipline that's derailing our progress, but misguided advice instead! Today I'm sharing 5 of the most common "healthy habits" I see people -- mostly women -- using for fat loss while getting no (or the exact opposite) results.

Next week — on Wednesday — the cart will be opening for the very first public launch of TRANSFORM: Body + Mind, my 28-day metabolism-boosting course. HOP ON THE WAITLIST NOW to reserve your spot and get a discount code when it's go time. ;-) 

XO,
Tara

What are YOUR big rocks?

Are you mopping the floor when your house is on fire?

Are you chewing gum for the extra calorie burn, but then chugging down a Venti Frap on your way home from work?

Watch this #WonderWednesday LIVE video to see what the heck I'm talking about…and help figure out where to start with your weight loss and health goals.

Then, come back and drop a comment.  Tell me, what is one of YOUR big rocks?

In good health,

Tara

P.S. It's subtle, but around a minute or so in, I shoo away a neighbor so I can keep talking to you guys!  :-O  Oops.  At least I'm passionate!  Haha.

Baby Skull Crushers

It's a bird, it's a plane, it's….Jagger (all 20 pounds of him) and we're working out together!

Today is part 2 in my GREAT & GRATEFUL series that coincides with Thanksgiving week here in the United States.  As many of you know, I had an incredibly difficult time both with getting pregnant and during my two pregnancies as well.  After multiple rounds of IVF and two pregnancies with Hyperemesis Gravidarum (check out helpher.org for more about this disease), I might be the luckiest person I know to be on the 'other side' with two wonderful, healthy children.  In today's video, I share a brief, fun moment on the kitchen floor with Jagger.  We workout, we laugh, we play.  Magnolia just so happened to be upstairs avoiding her nap when this was shot.  ;-) Today I mention my journey, my babies, the beautiful life of joy and health we can now share together.  GREAT & GRATEFUL!

Try these at home with the nearest baby, toddler, or gallon of water you have for a good triceps burn.  **Please note: no skulls were actually crushed in the making of this video!  It's a weird name for an exercise, right?

In health and gratitude,

Tara

Should Women Lift Heavy?

I take a quick dive into this juicy topic in today's video.  Watch up!

Do you know any ladies that want to workout but are afraid of 'bulking up'?  Do you have anyone in your life that you believe would benefit from health talks, healthy recipes, family wellness info, etc.?  Send them this way!  

Do you want the bonus content that I send to my most fabulous and loyal peeps? Be sure to join my email list.  Sign up is over on the home page.  It's free and guess what?  You get a pretty "cool" smoothie formula PDF just for signing up to hang with me.  :-)

Will lifting heavy result in big, bulky, "masculine" muscles? Or, is it most effective for toning up and boosting metabolism? Watch the video to learn more.