For anyone who is bored with their current workout or confused about whether their training methods and nutrition plans are really as effective as they should be, The Edge provides the latest research and proven tips for guaranteed success.
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Perhaps your best efforts seem to be failing and you have begun to question the feasibility of your goals and even your ability to attain them. It's only natural.
The good news is that in our experience, you're not the problem. The problem is with the methods and products you have been using. Gimmicks don't work, but you can succeed and you will succeed, using the Weider Triangle Method. This method utilizes training and nutrition programs that are proven to work. It gives you the tools you need to fine-tune and customize your performance-fitness program to attain the results you want and get that competitive edge.
Since its development, the model has evolved to a new point, and we updated it to include the most discoveries about health, exercise, bodybuilding, fitness, nutrition, and sports performance. Today, more people are engaged in fitness activities for the sake of health, and looking and feeling better, than they are for athletic competition. We've taken this shift into consideration as we fine tune the Triangle.
Unfortunately, we still see people making plenty of mistakes as they try to get fit, and competitive athletes make some of the very same mistakes. From yo-yo dieting, to cutting out entire groups of healthy foods, to exercising too much too quickly, to taking dangerous diet pills-we've seen it all. People are confused! They succumb to bad advice, loads of it. They hear tips in the gym or they discover theories in quick-fix books. Some of these authors will have you believe they've made a major discovery, only to hook you into following their unbalanced approaches.
Fortunately, in response to this sad state of fitness affairs, we are here to provide the fitness-minded public a solution in the form of the new Weider Triangle Method. We are here to help lead you to fitness success.
What is Fitness?
Before getting into the particulars of the Weider Triangle Method, it seems appropriate to review exactly what we mean by fitness. Fitness means different things to different people. It's a matter of degree, extent, and magnitude. What works for one person in terms of results and enjoyment does not necessarily work for another. Just as a marathon runner and a power lifter will have different views of what fitness is, so do people training to attain their ideal weight and shape. Laborers need a different level of fitness than do office workers. To some, fitness might mean a slim build. They look and feel good and can run to catch a train without becoming winded. To others, it might mean they are able to lift heavy weights. To you, it may mean being able to swim for an hour.
Generally, to be fit means more than simply being able to perform your daily activities with ease. Real fitness implies something more, and it is usually associated with above-average strength and stamina. This is what The Edge is all about-it's about attaining real health. The health component of fitness is always important to keep in mind, because in our experience we see people who exercise following unbalanced training and nutrition programs that are actually causing long-term harm. This is especially true for people who are exercising to lose weight. It is just as easy to lose weight sensibly by adopting an exercise regimen, and you will be better off in the long run. Just because someone looks thin does not mean that they are healthy or in peak athletic condition. This brings us to the introduction of a new concept in fitness science, the concept of "performance fitness."
What is Performance Fitness?
While developing fitness is great, developing fitness with more specific performance goals in mind is even better. Performance fitness is a concept built into the WTM. Performance fitness is a new way of looking at fitness. It's a way that makes you aware that there are many facets of fitness, and that in order to achieve performance fitness you need to consider these physical, mental, and biochemical factors. Just as astronauts have to run through their systems checklist before taking off into outer space, you need to perform your own systems check on a regular basis to keep your personal fitness goals on track. It is about developing your fitness for performance needs. It's about setting goals, and following a program of training and nutrition to reach them. But it's also about setting a cross-section of goals to attain well-rounded results.
The checklist that follows at the end of this chapter will get you thinking about the different components of performance fitness. If you're going to stick to a program and get results, it's crucial that you consider all these elements, such as physical, mental, and biochemical factors (such as your cholesterol level). We encounter many people who spend all week long weight training every day and eating a very healthy diet, only to pig out on the weekends, stuffing themselves full of junk. Then there are people whose fitness salvation is running, and run they do, every day. But their diets are garbage. Exercise alone isn't enough, because performance fitness always starts with good nutrition.
If you do not clearly identify your fitness goals, how can you make any progress? For example, if you don't realistically have time to train, then should you really try to do a race? If your goal is to build strength to be a great tennis player, your program is obviously going to be much more intensive than someone who wants to be a little faster on the court during the weekly recreational basketball game, or someone who just wants to look better in the mirror. Training should not run you down; it should enhance your performance. So knowing your performance-fitness goals and how to best achieve them is vital to the Weider performance-fitness philosophy.
Once your goals are established and you have a plan in place, another consideration for achieving peak performance is to include everything in your life that will help you reach your goals, and exclude everything that will detract from them. It sounds simple enough, but in spite of this obvious correlation, even the best athletes can score low when it comes to proper strength training and sports nutrition programs. Attaining peak performance means developing the "right" new habits; constantly learning about new discoveries; mastering the art of setting clear and realistic goals; effectively planning to achieve your goals; employing intelligent nutrition and training methods; having perseverance to develop athletic and fitness excellence; and finally the reward-becoming a champion.
The Pursuit of Personal Excellence
The Weider Triangle Method allows you to be your personal best and achieve your goals. This success model applies to attaining athletic performance and personal fitness goals, and it can be applied to other areas of your life.
First, by following the Triangle approach, you will quickly develop a healthy and functional body. You will also see improvements in your mental fitness, and you will develop good habits, which include planning and scheduling to integrate your fitness goals into your life. In time you will begin to realize that being positive and believing in yourself will help you stick to your plan and accomplish your goals.
Second, you must then start to identify bad habits, the ones that detract from attaining your goals. This could include bad eating habits, poor time management, substance abuse, or lack of motivation.
Third, work on your skill and technique. Become a master of them. Strive for perfection.
Fourth, always think positive thoughts. Focus on your daily and long-term goals every day. Create daily mantras to repeat every morning and in the evening, to keep your mind focused on what matters most to you and free from extraneous thoughts.
The Weider Triangle Method of Peak Athletic Performance
The Triangle
The Weider Triangle Method combines three crucial components: strength from weight training and bodybuilding; energy from sports nutrition; and technique from skill training and practice. These components are integrated to produce reliable improvements in athletic performance and personal fitness. No one component can work without the other two. Without technique, there is no skillful movement. Without strength, there is no effective body movement. And without sports nutrition there is no growth, energy, or recovery. By integrating the three components of the Weider Triangle Method, we have a system that is proven to succeed.
The Triangle is unique in tailoring weight training and nutrition needs to your chosen sport. Specificity is important. For example, we know from viewing sophisticated video and computer skill analysis techniques developed over the past twenty years that even one finger out of place can impede performance. This knowledge is important for your goals, too. The Triangle shows that precision leads to optimum fitness.
1. Strength
In sports, strength makes a critical difference between two athletes of equal skill. Once trainers concentrated on the specific muscles used in a given sport, but now we know that it is the strength of the whole body that counts. Functional power comes only from a complete program of weight training and physical conditioning. During the past several decades, more and more people have turned to bodybuilding and weight training to improve their body build and strength. We have continued to review the latest advances in this form of training for your utilization and to benefit your athletic and personal fitness objectives. This includes the newly developed Variable Weight-Training approach, which breaks the barrier of the antiquated one-size-fits-all weightlifting approaches you may have already tried, with limited success.
In recent decades, there have been significant advances in exercise science, especially in the area of using weight training to improve athletic performance and personal fitness. Not long ago coaches and trainers thought weight training for the whole body produced "muscle-bou... --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
18 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Getting "The Edge" with the Weiders,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Edge: Ben and Joe's Weider's Ultimate Guide to Strength, Speed, and Stamina (Hardcover)
I'm 47 years old, and used to live in the gym. Then laid off for almost three years. I started back again with a personal trainer, but wasn't satisfied. I've read all the magazine articles - but getting the right, customized program can be very daunting. "The Edge" is a practical guide, with proven, tailorable programs and clear explanations of exercizes, frequency, and type of result that can be expected. It also has a very clear nutritional program, and an EXCELLENT, and thoroughly up-to-date section on food supplements. Whether you're 20 or 50; Whether want to just "tone up", get ready for sports competition, or body build, "The Edge" has a program for you. I highly recommend it. AC, Stamford, CT.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Disappointing and not for everyone,
By Sufyan "The Suf" (Doha, Qatar) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Edge: Ben and Joe's Weider's Ultimate Guide to Strength, Speed, and Stamina (Hardcover)
I disagree with the reviews above. I feel this book is really confusing. Ive been weight training, on and off, for 7 years at least. Due to lack of progress and chronic shoulder injuries I was forced to rethink my training program and start from scratch; back to the basics. The book is basically split up as follows: 2)Set programs A, B, C, D Starting with program A for beginners and ending with D for athletes. 3)Exercises: The above programs contain a number of recommended exercises done over a certain time period. this section explains how the exercises in the above programs are performed. 4)A whole section on nuitrtion: the basics, what kind of diet to maintain according to the type of sports youre in, and a bit about supplements. Now i personally had no problems till i reached the set programs section. Personally i was hoping the book would teach me how to tailor programs for my own needs. I was more than happy to do set programs, except for the fact that the book was very vague in a few areas. For example, how many sets should one do for each exercise performed. To say that athletes can do such and such number of sets and that beginners should do so and so isn't very helpful for someone trying to get back into training. Plus there is no real mention of whether or not one should incrementally increase weights from set to set. I mean does one stick to one workload weight or increase as one goes on in the same exercise? I don't know. This maybe a good book for some but it definitely left me more confused than I was to begin with. This is not a book that can be used to tailor your programs at all, which is what I was looking for. Out of fairness I cant say that the set programs don't work as I haven't tried them out. This is the first Weider book ive purchased and it hasn't given me a good first impression. And the only reason i gave this book a two star was because of the few bits of information here and there that i found useful. Definitely not for everyone.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
More of a nutritional book for bodybuilding,
By "passat76" (Cordova, TN United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Edge (Paperback)
Bottom line is, YOU GET WHAT YOU PAY....if you are looking for a good bodybuilding exercise book without the nutrition stuff, you better stick with Arnold's Modern Bodybuilding Encyclopedia because you will be disappointed if you are looking for a good Joe Weider's training book ...I was not impressed with the muscles exercise section....only basic exercises are covered and they are described very vaguely....doesn't mention machine exercises at all....Weider Training techniques are covered very concisely....the nutritional section of the book is the strongest part of this book (a piece of work)...it covers everything from what to eat, when to eat and how to eat...very detailed guidelines on caloric and protein intakes per body weight, even tells you what foods to eat in order to lose or gain weight and build muscle with an astonishing detail...a complete overview of every single nutrient that your body produce and use to build muscles....it also covers all nutritional supplements out there in the market from vitamins, minerals and aminoacids.... If you are looking for a good nutritional reference to build muscles and strenght by eating correctly, this is the book you are looking for!....I guess bodybuilding nutritional books are so underrated that folks don't pay much attention to them...no wonder, this book sell at a bargain price...for what this book is worth, get it fast....this will make a good addition to your collection!
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