
Joe was a coaching client who got into phenomenal shape in 12 weeks. Here is his pics and you can listen to the interview I did with him at the link below.
Listen to his interview:
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Targeted Muscle Building and Fat Burning Systems for the Perfect Physique
John is the co-founder of Adonis Index, chief developer of the Adonis Index workouts and our supplement industry insider.
He will show you exactly how to work out and (not) eat to build your ideal body shape using simple and easy to follow Adonis Index approach.
Check out his personal blog at JohnBarban.com
If you want to connect with John in our AI Community, here's his profile: Community Profile: John Barban

If you're new here, you may want to check out our latest killer podcast, then get the body you deserve with the your copy of thehighly rated Adonis Golden Ratio Systems before you go . Thanks for visiting!
Joe was a coaching client who got into phenomenal shape in 12 weeks. Here is his pics and you can listen to the interview I did with him at the link below.
Listen to his interview:
Podcast: Play in new window | Download


You’ll never know what a body like this can do for you until you’ve got it. This is one of my training clients Joe, he’s got a perfect Adonis Index Ratio in this picture!
Working out takes time, effort, dedication, repetition, practice and a fair amount of pain and discomfort.
Dieting takes dedication, discipline, mental effort, emotional effort, and requires a degree of self monitoring and self reflection that likely surpasses almost any other thing you’ll attempt to do in your life.
So why do it? Why bother? Is the shape you’re hoping to get into really worth all the work? Is it just a look and shape? Or is there more to it?
The simple answer is yes, yes the body and condition is worth it, and so is the change you will go through in self perception, and how you interact with everyone around you and how they choose to interact with you.
If you’ve ever worked your way to a great shape you already know how things change. You already know how they way you feel changes and how the way everyone around you changes.
If you’ve lost that condition due to life getting in the way you know what it’s like to miss it and what it back. This memory of how good it once was is all the incentive you need if this is you.
But if you’ve never been in the shape you want YET you’re somewhat going on a leap of faith. You’re hoping that as you change all the benefits that I’ve just mentioned will actually come true.
I can tell you that it IS worth it, and it WILL happen if you put the work in, and all the things you hope will happen will in fact happen.
It’s a bit of a cliche but it’s true for working out and getting in shape…and that is you get out of it what you put into it. If it were easy and everyone deserved the benefit that comes with building a great body then nobody would value it and it would cease to be something worth striving for.
In reality only a few people will get there and all the benefits will fall onto them because they’ve done the work to deserve it.
So do you want to be one of those deserving few?!
John

The 20-week version of the 8th Adonis Index Contest came to a close this month and today we announce the results. You may recognize some faces who made a 12-week transformation and pushed it even farther for 20-weeks. You’ll also see some new faces who took the 20-week challenge straight up.
Congratulations to all for starting something and sticking to it. 12 weeks is hard enough! These men teach us that you can make a big change in 12 or 20 weeks, and they also are teaching us that once you make a change you can keep it! This second point is also very important as short term changes can be lost if you don’t turn it into a lifestyle.
Looking forward to seeing the results of the AT9 12-week competition which comes to a close in exactly 3 weeks and 1 day on Wed Nov 21st!
John
The look and shape of your body is transient. Muscle size, definition, and overall shape will be defined by your current training regimen combined with the total amount of bodyfat you are carrying.
Your genetic predisposition for bodyfat storage patterns will determine what you look like at various body fat percentages. Men who store a higher percentage of their fat viscerally can have visible abs while carrying up to 15% bodyfat.
On the other hand men who store a higher proportion of their abdominal fat subcutaneously may need to be as low as 10% bodyfat to have visual abdominal muscles.
The genetic predisposition for fat storage in the abdominal area is not within your control. What IS within your control is the total amount of fat you are carrying. No matter what your fat storage pattern happens to be, you can always lose more fat to get to a look and definition that you want.
Knowing your actual bodyfat % isn’t really going to tell you much about your look, knowing your bodyfat % combined with your genetic storage pattern will give you much more information. This can only be determined with a DEXA scan which might be difficult to come by. But thats ok because in the end the only things within your power to change are your total amount of fat and your total amount of muscle.
Focus on changing the things you can and avoid getting caught up in a numbers game about bodyfat and bodyweight.
John

The 9th Adonis Index contest starts today. This is the final 12-week contest of the year ending on wed Nov 21st. Prize money goes to the top 10 places and there are also cover model spots on some of our products up for grabs.
The previous contest winners just keep setting the bar higher and higher and our last contest was no exception.
This is your last chance to make a big change in your body in 2012. If you’re ready, then it’s time to enter and make it happen for real.
Go to this link to a watch a quick video on how to enter and get started this week.
>>Watch How to Enter Contest<<
You can submit pictures any time this week starting today and ending friday Aug 31st at midnight.
Are you gonna be the next person to be on the cover of an Adonis Index book?
John

“Bodybuilding” is a word that may conjure up thoughts of drugs, the idea of taking things to an extreme level and being excessive in nature in general. All of this is basically true, and bodybuilding as an idea has never been anything but exactly what the word means “building your body”. It doesn’t mean ‘being healthy’ or ‘being fit’, it’s not about performance metrics, or ‘fair play’ or anything else. It’s just building a body, pure and simple.
I think a degree of confusion enters the picture when people try to match bodybuilding with health. But ‘health’ is essentially a meaningless term unless you define it’s parameters and boundaries and what you actually mean when you say the word. Most people can’t really put their finger on what they mean when they say the word ‘health’ or ‘healthy’ and especially so when they try to link it to bodybuilding in some way.
The inherent disconnect between the words ‘bodybuilding’ and ‘health’ give rise to the need for another words…enter ‘fitness’.
“Fitness” has two well accepted uses/definitions.
1. The survivability/adaptability of genes or an organism within it’s environment that allows it to successfully reproduce.
2. The ability of the heart muscle to deliver large volumes of blood to working muscles over an extended period of time is referred to as ‘cardiovascular fitness’.
It seems to me that the word ‘fitness’ gets used to describe all manner of things related to exercise, diet, performance, sports, and bodybuilding to describe things that it cannot describe.
Is a distance runner ‘fit’ compared to a powerlifter? Or are they both ‘fit’ for their chosen sport?
When you think of the word ‘fit’ or ‘fitness’ you likely have a mental image of a specific bodyshape, a lifestyle, the physical abilities of this imagined person and what the are like.
You probably imagine someone who has relatively low bodyfat, is muscular but not too big, can run 5k in a decent time, can lift above average weights, doesn’t smoke, only drinks occasionally, and maintains what most would call a ‘clean’ diet.
No doubt this is essentially the image that the ‘diet and fitness’ industry is selling. The word ‘fitness’ ends up being taken to mean more than its true definition. It becomes an idea of an entire life and identity instead of the true definition of what it really means (see definition 2 above).
“Bodybuilding” on the other hand is a term that tells you exactly what it’s trying to describe “building a body”…this includes all the warts and not so noble ideas that might come with it including drugs, extremism, and the odd subculture that surrounds it. And in most cases, bodybuilders don’t mind at all as they’ve never set out be the most ‘fit’ person, or the most healthy person…all they ever wanted to do was build their body…and that is exactly what they’re doing.
I think we can borrow identity and ideas from both words. I like building my body, I also like the idea of building up some degree of cardiovascular fitness for whatever potential ‘health’ benefits it might have and general sense of vigor and well being it might help produce.
However I don’t care to be the biggest or the fittest, as these are never ending paths.
You should always be looking for a balance between building your body, and building up your level of cardiovascular fitness.
Finding the sweet spot that produces the body and performance you want given the time you are willing to spend should always be the goal.
John
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