Product Details
The Warrior Diet

The Warrior Diet
By Ori Hofmekler, Diana Holtzberg

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Product Description

Get Potent and Powerful—
When You Unleash the Power of Instinctual Eating

The Warrior Diet presents a brilliant synthesis of modern scientific research and ancient time-tested secrets for reducing body fat, gaining energy, getting stronger and looking younger.

Our problem, according to Ori Hofmekler, is that we have lost touch with the natural wisdom of our instinctual drives. We have become the slaves of our own creature comforts. The result: ill-advised eating and lifestyle habits that leave us vulnerable to all manner of disease—not to mention unwanted flab, premature wrinkling and a sagging, weak, unattractive body. The first step is to break the chains of our current eating habits. The Warrior Diet proves that humans are at their energetic, physical, mental and passionate best when they "undereat" during the day and "overeat" at night. Once you master this essential eating cycle, a new life of explosive vigor, good looks and vitality will be yours for the taking.

Not just a diet, but a whole way of life, The Warrior Diet encourages us to seize back the pleasures of being alive—from the most refined to the wild and raw. The Warrior Diet is practical, tested, and based in commonsense. Expect results!


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #370326 in Books
  • Published on: 2003-06
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 420 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

For the Greco-Roman soldier wannabe, this modified fasting program from a former member of the Israeli Special Forces is similar to weight builders' "animalbolics" diet. Forget calorie counting. Instead, Hofmekler suggests that we return to our bodies' instinctive eating style, "undereating" during the day and "overeating" at night. He recommends eating a daily main meal in the evening, with no caloric restrictions (light snacking on fresh fruits and vegetables is okay during the day, as is eating small amounts of lean protein). According to the author, this burns fat, builds muscles, accelerates metabolism, and slows aging. Short, intense strength and aerobic exercises (illustrated) are also part of the "warrior training," along with pre-and post-workout meals. Alluring though the "warrior" image may be, it seems unrealistic to expect most men especially the 40-plus who would most benefit to stick with this plan for a lifetime.

Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Review
"Women everywhere are raving about the super-effective warrior diet—and losing weight at record speeds." -- Woman's World, November 2002

An original, distinctive, and highly satisfying diet plan, meant especially for those who pursue an active lifestyle. -- Midwest Book Review, 2002

The Warrior Diet is our "# ONE Slim-Down Miracle of 2002—Our Pick for Best of the Best." -- First for Women magazine, December 2002

About the Author
Ori Hofmekler is a modern Renaissance man whose life has been driven by two passions: art and sports. Hofmekler’s formative experience as a young man with the Israeli Special Forces, prompted a lifetime’s interest in diets and fitness regimes that would optimize his physical and mental performance.

After the army, Ori attended the Bezalel Academy of Art and the Hebrew University, where he studied art and philosophy and received a degree in Human Sciences.

A world-renowned painter, best known for his controversial political satire, Ori’s work has been featured in magazines worldwide, including Time, Newsweek, Rolling Stone, People, The New Republic as well as Penthouse where he was a monthly columnist for 17 years and Health Editor from 1998–2000. Ori has published two books of political art, Hofmekler’s People, and Hofmekler’s Gallery.

As founder, Editor-In-Chief, and Publisher of Mind & Muscle Power, a national men’s health and fitness magazine, Ori introduced his Warrior Diet to the public in a monthly column—to immediate acclaim from readers and professionals in the health industry alike.


Customer Reviews

Lean-n-Mean4
I came across this title on the Dragon Door website where I had ordered a set of kettlebells (see The Russian Kettlebell Challenge by Pavel Tsatsouline). After doing a little background research about the Warrior Diet book and its author, I decided to order it from Amazon.com.

I followed the diet along with following a system of workouts based on static weightlifting (i.e., deadlifts, standing presses) and ballistic lifting (clean and jerks, snatches), as well as aerobic training.

As for the diet itself, it is revolutionary to our modern dietary "philosophy", which in my way of thinking, says: "I would rather be comfortable than be truly alive." It was not so much the name "Warrior Diet" as it was the philosophy behind it that inspired me to practice it.

In short, the author encourages the reader to strive for a state of physical and mental toughness, the foundation of which is built on our most basic function- eating. During the day, one eats small amounts of fruits and vegetables (with a little protein). At night, one can eat until s/he is satisfied.

Over a period of two months, I've lost only 8 lbs. (from 175 to 167), but, much to my wife's delight, I have regained musculature that I haven't seen in twenty years. Even more, my concentration has greatly improved and I don't get the afternoon blahs like I did under my old (conventional) rules of eating.

To top it off, I think my attitude is changing. I am an engineer, and more like Dilbert than I care to admit. However, since I've been going without food during the day and eating like a horse at night, I've turned into a real horse's $$$ at work. Not in a bad way- I still have my job- but I find myself speaking up to defend good ideas and tearing up bad ones. In other words, I don't go with the flow anymore. Is this due to the diet or merely psychological? I don't have a clue, but in light of the other benefits, I'll keep practicing the Warrior Diet.

And I don't care if you find this review helpful or not.

More Like the Hunters Diet5
-I was skeptical at first, just reading this book, but decided to give it a go. It goes against everything I have read or been taught prior on eating. I was eating 6-8 small meals throughout the day maintaining my sizable physique plus some stubborn fat stores. Now I eat little bits here and there throughout the day followed up with a feast at night of such size that previous eating habits would have made me feel guilty. The book is a good read adding some historical bits here and there to put you in a good thought process.
-I have been on the diet for nearly a month now and I have to admit it works, for me. During the first two weeks I was dropping a pound every 1-2 days slowly tapering off to 1 pound of weight a week(13 total pounds as of this morning). I didn't find it hard to undereat during the day as long as I knew I was getting my reward that evening with a nice big meal. I am an avid drug free weight trainer and have lost no strength nor have I lost any size where it counts. I am losing bodyfat big-time, and have lost a total of 4 inches off my waist as of the day I write this. I have an over-abundance of energy throughout the day but especially around feeding time and have caught myself pacing in anticipation of my meals, its not a hunger thing either its more like some sort animal hunter thing that has been awakened, Grrr!
-After reading this over though I am thinking it may be a conditioned response... like some sort of zoo animal at feeding time. I guess I could vary my feeding times or take up hunting animals with a sharpened stick and a big rock.

Revolutionary and thought provoking, BUT....4
Ori Hofmekler (former editor/publisher of Mind and Muscle Power magazine. Man, I LOVED that magazine!) definitely has alot of guts for writing a diet book such as this, giving controversial advice concerning meal frequency and portion sizes! The main theme is this: undereat or fast during the day, keeping blood sugar levels low and eating only very small amounts of food, like vege/fruit juice, protein, whole fruits/veges. This cycle of the diet (which occurs on a daily basis) serves as the detoxification mode. Your body is cleansing, you are working off fat stores, and brain function/creativity/instinctual drives should be increased positively. Workouts with weights and cardio should be done on an empty stomach, where fat burning is highly increased due to a 'fasted mode'. Then in the evening, you 'overeat' on lean proteins, veges, salad, etc. I highly enjoy Ori's creative ideas and the historical twist he puts in the book regarding ancient warriors and Greeks, and the diet did have some success for me, when I was strict with it. The diet is extremely convenient for students as well, who don't have the time to mess with frequent meals. But, beware, don't think that you can overeat at night on anything you want, Ori is very clear that the overeating faze is for healthy foods only! Also, I don't believe that if your goal is to gain alot of muscle that this particular diet is for you...more for people that are interested in the 'lean' look.