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Fitness Influencer Kim French in Two-Piece Workout Gear Shares "Glute-Focused Leg Day"

"That triset will make your buns NUMB 😵‍."

Kim French is revealing the workout behind her amazing glutes – in her workout gear. In a recent social media post the fitness influencer flaunts her famous behind in a two-piece exercise set during a sweat session at the gym. "Spicy glute focused leg day 🔥🌶That triset will make your buns NUMB 😵‍," she writes in the caption of the series of Instagram clips. "Listen ladies, I cannot make you get up and get your workouts done every day, but I can help with exactly what to do to get the best possible results for your efforts!" What is the workout and how does she approach diet, fitness, and self-care? Here is everything you need to know about her lifestyle habits.

1

She Started by Cutting Calories and Running

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Three months after having her second child, Kim decided it was time to get back into shape. She was 182 pounds, 40 pounds heavier than her pre-pregnancy weight and she was regularly, "binge eating just to get through the sleepless nights," she told Women's Health. "So I decided to cut calories and start running, which I had never done before. With my new routine, I started to see changes on the scale, but I felt miserable. I didn't enjoy running very much, and I was starving all the time on my 1,200-calorie-a-day diet—but I thought ramping up my cardio and lowering my calories was the only way to lose weight. Plus, it was technically working."

2

Her Husband Introduced Her to Strength Training

"When I hit 140 pounds, I was back to my more ideal weight, but was completely unhappy with the way I looked. I had lost a lot of body fat, but I was still wobbly—I was, as some people call it, 'skinny fat.' My husband, who works out religiously, convinced me to go to the gym with him. I had never been to a gym before in my life, but I agreed to go and just test a few of the weight machines. I was so nervous. I felt very intimidated and thought everyone was going to be looking at me, judging me for not knowing what I was doing," she continued. "But when I got in there, I realized that everyone was doing their own thing and didn't really take much notice of me. I tried a few machines and, to my surprise, liked it. I liked feeling sore, I wanted to tone up and get stronger, and I liked lifting more than I liked doing cardio—so I signed up and soon started going to the gym on my own."

3

LISS Workouts

"In the beginning, I was following up my weight training with an hour of cardio. I wasn't that strong and didn't know exactly what I was doing, so I would just do the exercises on low weight and practice my form. After learning more about technique, I started doing just 30 minutes of LISS (low-intensity steady state) cardio after lifting weights," she continued. "I liked doing cardio after my weights so I could use up the energy from my pre-workout meal on lifting, and then burn off the rest during a cardio portion. I usually started with heavy compound exercises such as squats, deadlifts, and hip thrusts, and then moved on to isolation exercises. I put a lot of focus and effort into my glutes, cranking out exercises like squats, deadlifts, glute bridges, hip thrusts, and using the hip-abduction machine. But I'd also deliberately mix up every single session to keep my muscles shocked and growing. After a few months of training I started to see noticeable differences in my muscles as they began to grow and tighten. My workouts now: Tuesday is legs/glutes, Wednesday is back/arms, Thursday is legs/glutes and Friday is shoulders. Sometimes this changes depending on my kids' schedules, but that's my usual routine."

4

Amping Up Her Caloric Intake

She also started eating more. "One of the biggest factors contributing to my success was ditching my 1,200-calorie diet. It was a struggle to get my head around eating all those extra calories since I didn't want to put weight back on, but I just had to trust the process and forget about the scales. I discovered that the more food I fed my body, the more the muscles would grow, so I kept upping my calorie and protein intake until I was consuming 2,000 calories per day—and this is when I started to see the real progress, especially in my glutes, the area I focused a lot of effort on," she told Women's Health. "One thing I wish I had known from the beginning is that weight lifting increases your metabolism, which burns body fat faster—I put myself through such a miserable time with undereating and doing hours of cardio and home HIIT workouts, when what I really needed to be doing was lifting."

5

2,000 Calories Per Day and Counting Macros

"Now, I still eat 2,000 calories per day over five smaller meals. I eat every three hours starting at 9 a.m. and make sure each meal contains a ton of protein, adding up to at least 150 grams a day to help my muscles repair and build. I track my macros to make sure I am getting the right amount of protein, but I am not too strict about it. If I am hungry and I want a snack, then I have one. I listen to what my body needs, and what it wants—there aren't any foods I will never eat. On the weekends, I allow myself treats; if I want chocolate then I will eat it, but I just try not to binge, and instead indulge in moderation," she says.

6

Her Glute Workout

"Are you ready to bake those cakes?" she asks in her recent post, revealing her go-to exercises for glutes:

  • DB Deficit Static Lunges – 12 reps per leg x 3. "Adding the deficit creates more ROM," she says.
  • Barbell Sumo Deadlifts – 10 reps x 4
  • Triset x 3

~ Banded DB Hip Thrusts x 10 reps

~ Banded DB 1/2 rep Hip Thrusts x 10 reps

~ Banded Abductions x 50 reps

  • Smith Sumo Squats – 8 reps x 3
  • Landmine Squat into RDL – 8 reps x 3. "Notice how I'm not fully extending up and keeping constant tension in my glutes," she says.
  • Single Leg Leg Press – 10 reps per leg x 2
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