The three main female body types and how to target your workout to maximize benefits and results without frustration or unrealistic expectations.
Make no bones about it–to be your healthiest, fittest and looking and feeling your best you need to exercise–in some form or fashion.
What you are training for will, to a large degree, determine your exercise program.
Every program no matter the goal or sport must have an element of strength training and metabolic conditioning.
We throw into the equation flexibility and mobility work to maintain joint health, range of motion, and stress reduction. These basic components present will make any person/athlete better prepared for their activities of daily living or sport.
Sounds simple, doesn’t it?
Yes, until we throw individual genetics into the mix; we come in many shapes and sizes and a one size fits all exercise program doesn’t work.
Sport specificity aside with the goal of most people being general physical preparedness (fitness), genetics will favor heavily in the mix.
3 Female Body Types
Just like with nutritional protocols, different people require varying amounts of calories and macronutrients and certain body types respond better to varying volumes and intensities of exercise.
The ECTOMORPH Body Type – The Cardio Queen
We all know someone like them; they can eat whatever they want and never seem to gain a pound.
Typically tall, thin, and longer limbed, “ectos” are often referred to as ‘hardgainers’.
They struggle to put weight on and have an even harder time putting on and maintaining muscle mass. They’re not genetically predisposed to it.
In order to overcome nature, they must load up–at the gym and in the kitchen.
The Plan
- Go heavy with the weights using low reps. Use free weights resting 2-5 min between sets and allow 48 hours between workouts for recovery.
- Limit conditioning. Ectos have high metabolisms so they need to limit cardio to infrequent, shorter duration sessions.
- Diet: Eat–a LOT and often. If they don’t, they will not gain muscle. Quality foods with adequate protein making sure to add in enough of both the right types of carbohydrates and healthy fats to raise calorie consumption
The ENDOMORPH Body Type –The Hearty Girl
Sturdy heavy-set types that have soft, stocky bodies and sluggish metabolisms may feel like they got the short straw.
Gaining weight is not a problem but losing fat is challenging. Endos must make a conscious, concerted effort to do the things their bodies should be doing for them. They need to go hard, fast, and often in the gym paying strict attention to nutrition.
The Plan
- Rev up the engine. Their slow metabolism needs a major boost. For the weights lift in the 10-12 range with moderate weight and little rest between sets. Throw in short, hard bursts of cardio to crank it into gear.
- Superset. That means exercises done back to back or circuit fashion with a reduced recovery time. CrossFit is excellent for this.
- Diet: you need more healthy fats than any other body type and very LITTLE carbohydrates. The higher fat will help to push out the unwanted body fat and the reduced carbohydrates will help you effectively go from a sugar burner to a fat burner. Portions matter.
The MESOPORH Body Type –The Natural Athlete
Mesos are lucky, they hit the genetic lotto. They add muscle with relative ease and gain or lose weight without much effort. Typically they have longer torsos, shorter limbs and tend to be strong athletic types. They are bursting with energy and tend to do well in explosive sports that require power and speed
The Plan
- For the weights, mesos should stick with compound movements that work multiple muscle groups such as deadlifts, chins, presses, and squats. These moves exploit their natural strength.
- Crank it up. They can also handle a higher volume of both weight and conditioning sessions. They can hit the gym with 4 weight training sessions and about 3 met cons each week for max results.
- Diet: Mesos should eat reasonable portions of protein, adequate healthy fat and carbs aren’t really an issue. But stick to the right ones for health reasons.
While some people will find they are a ‘classic’ type many people are a combo of either ecto/meso or meso/endo. We won’t find any ecto/endos.
While we can’t change the basic body type we were born with by implementing these training/nutrition tips you can optimize your body type and ultimately reach your fitness goals.
More Information
Karen B
Full blown ectomorph here. As I get older it’s increasingly hard to keep the weight on. My GI doc also says carbs are the way to go! I’m not much of a carb eater, especially since I needed to go on the GF diet. So I’m pleased to see the millet porridge recipe today. I’d love to see a cookbook for GF ectomorphs, with recipes that don’t mess with blood sugars.
Nathan
As someone who is an ectomorph (just observed this out about a 12 months in the past), i had NO idea why i wasn’t able to placed on any weight. I notion i used to be lifting sufficient, concept i used to be getting sufficient food, however NOPE. Apparently as an ecto, you need MORE MORE MORE to make any type of gains.