Hot Metabolism : The Metabolic Exercise Plan Carolyn Hansen Hot Metabolism System | Page 8

The answer is that muscle tissue is active tissue. It requires fuel to do its work. Even when it is not flexing it needs to burn fuel to keep warm and be ever ready to perform when called upon at a moment's notice. Fat tissue, on the other hand, has a much lower capacity to keep itself warm and can perform no action that expends energy through moving mass around (which muscles do wonderfully). This is why ten pounds of lean muscle tissue is to be far preferred over ten pounds of fat tissue. The former is going to burn fat all day long, while the latter just sits there doing nothing. How much energy does a pound of muscle consume? It is something of the order of 10 calories per day. Not much, but a great deal more than can be attributed to a pound of body fat. So an extra ten pounds of lean muscle tissue will use up about 100 calories per day - equivalent to about a pound of fat each month. Moreover, this is the rate at which calories are consumed if you sit on the couch all day. If you add actual physical activity to your day (always a great idea) the number of calories each pound of muscle consumes each day could be anywhere from two to five times as much as if you sat still all day long.