How to Lose 20 lbs. of Fat in 30 Days… Without Doing
Any Exercise
Fat Loss via Better Science and Simplicity
It is possible to lose 20 lbs. of body fat in 30
days by optimizing any of three factors: exercise,
diet, or drug/supplement regimen. I’ve seen the
elite implementation of all three in working with
professional athletes. In this post, we’ll explore a
variation of the “slow carb” diet as used by Dean
Karnazes, an ultra marathoner famed for completing
50 marathons on 50 consecutive days in 50 different
states. The most impressive part of this, for me, is
that he did so, not with the typical anemic
marathoner build, but with a well-muscled mesomorph
body.
In the last six weeks, I have cut from about 180
lbs. to 165 lbs., while adding about 10 lbs. of
muscle, which means I’ve lost about 25 lbs. of fat.
This is the only diet besides the rather extreme
Cyclical Ketogenic Diet (CKD) that has produced
veins across my abdomen, which is the last place I
lose fat (damn you, Scandinavian genetics). Here are
the four simple rules I followed…
Rule #1: Avoid “white” carbohydrates
Avoid any carbohydrate that is — or can be — white.
The following foods are thus prohibited, except for
within 1.5 hours of finishing a resistance-training
workout of at least 20 minutes in length: bread,
rice, cereal, potatoes, pasta, and fried food with
breading. If you avoid eating anything white, you’ll
be safe.
Rule #2: Eat the same few meals over and over again
The most successful dieters, regardless of whether
their goal is muscle gain or fat loss, eat the same
few meals over and over again. Mix and match,
constructing each meal with one from each of the
three following groups:
Proteins:
Egg whites with one whole egg for flavor
Chicken breast or thigh
Grass-fed organic beef
Pork
Legumes:
Lentils
Black beans
Pinto beans
Vegetables:
Spinach
Asparagus
Peas
Mixed vegetables

Eat as much as you like of the above food items.
Just remember: keep it simple. Pick three or four
meals and repeat them. Almost all restaurants can
give you a salad or vegetables in place of french
fries or potatoes. Surprisingly, I have found
Mexican food, swapping out rice for vegetables, to
be one of the cuisines most conducive to the “slow
carb” diet.
Most people who go on “low” carbohydrate diets
complain of low energy and quit, not because such
diets can’t work, but because they consume
insufficient calories. A 1/2 cup of rice is 300
calories, whereas a 1/2 cup of spinach is 15
calories! Vegetables are not calorically dense, so
it is critical that you add legumes for caloric
load.
Some athletes eat 6-8x per day to break up caloric
load and avoid fat gain. I think this is
ridiculously inconvenient. I eat 4x per day:
10am – breakfast
1pm – lunch
5pm – smaller second lunch
7:30-9pm – sports training
10pm – dinner
12am – glass of wine and Discovery Channel before
bed
Here are some of my meals that recur again and
again: