ROD 100411

ROD

Tuesday, 04Oct11

 

Tuesday BodyFat Meltdown

Let’s burn off the the snacks & beers!

This metabolic conditioning should do the trick!

6 rounds of 20 seconds work/10 seconds rest

  • Jumping pull ups
  • Battling ropes
  • Kettlebell snatches or snatch pulls
  • Dumbell push presses
  • Kettlebell swings
  • Burpees

Let’s do this circuit style with 1:00 between each round.

If you’re doing this right, you should be begging for the 1:00 rest

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Getting Physical: Underlying Beliefs That May Be Keeping You Unfit

This time around, find the type of movement that actually feels good to your body for the long-term.

As the new year opens, many of us are resolving to get up off the couch and get our bodies into shape. But if we don’t examine our underlying attitudes towards exercise, then we may end up facing some mental barriers to getting physical.

Changing your mind might just be the first step to changing your body. Here are a few common notions – and their truths – that I have witnessed as a personal trainer:

Grueling Conditioning vs. Pleasurable Movement

On television shows like the “Biggest Loser”, the media often portrays exercise as suffering. The reality is, the “no pain, no gain” approach actually creates a huge psychological hurtle to just getting started. If we associate the gym with punishment, we’ll be less inclined to go, and unlikely to consistently return.

Conversely, finding an activity that you enjoy – a dance class with a dynamic instructor, a compelling training event or a beautiful, nearby hiking trail – will ensure that you will repeatedly go. Exercising can, and should, be both challenging and pleasurable. Finding a sense of joy while exercising will ensure that you look forward to your next workout, and will eventually help you increase your intensity.

Short Term Results vs. A Lifetime of Health

Photo:Photo: Claudio Matsuoka

If you are working out to obtain six-pack-abs or a “bikini body,” then you might resort to extreme routines. Onerous fitness programs, like extreme caloric restriction, may lead to rapid weight loss, yet are virtually impossible to maintain.

Instead of toughing out the routine to achieve a perfect body, consider exercise as lifelong practice of crucial and feel-good self-care. Regularly breaking a sweat serves as very potent medicine regardless of your weight, age, fitness level or body type. To reap the benefits of fitness, we need to take this medicine for the rest of our lives, instead of administering it for a quick fix.

Spot Reduction vs. Functional Fitness

When I worked at a women’s fitness center, I often heard women list a litany of hated body parts like their abs, upper arms, or thighs. They have come to expect that they can “fix” individual body parts by using specific pieces of gym equipment that isolate individualized muscles groups.

Unfortunately, the fitness industry has fueled the idea of “spot reduction” with infomercials for gizmos called “ab-blasters” or “thigh masters”. The fact is, depending on your genetic disposition, you may or may not be able to sweat your way into a visibly muscular physique.

Photo:Photo: Fabio Macòr

Regardless, muscles are not designed to work in isolation with a machine providing support for the spine and pelvis. Popular strength training equipment that includes a seat and back support actually does us a disservice by denying us a chance to build abdominopelvic stability.

My rule of thumb is:  “If it looks like a chair, then beware.” Getting out of chairs develops our core muscles and trains the muscles to effectively work together.

Practicing integrated, full body movements (also called compound exercises) can drastically improve posture, build balance, boost athletic skill, address back pain and increase energy.  Exercise your body as an integrated, functional whole instead a fractured, conglomeration of flawed parts.

Working Out vs. Working In

Too often, exercise becomes pigeonholed as an atonement for dietary transgressions. Instead of using it as self-punishment, a movement practice can be a form of self-determination. Beyond burning calories, training can provide emotional balance, foster introspection, and increase creativity.

The conscious movement of our body opens up mental blocks and soothes our inner self. One of the reasons that yoga and other mind-body approaches have become so popular is because they engage the physical, mental, and spiritual dimensions of a person.

The conscious movement of our body opens up mental blocks and soothes our inner self.

If you find yourself giving up on exercise, then you might recognize some of these attitudes. If your workouts are no fun or you are just trying to squeeze into a smaller dress size, you might get stuck in an “all or nothing” mentality.

But you may be less apt to throw in the gym towel if you reconsider why and how you are working out. So whether you choose swimming, hula-hooping, or rock climbing, do something that you love and will do regularly. We can exercise to condition the body as well as refresh the mind and enliven the spirit.

 

ROD 092811

ROD

Wednesday, 28Sept11

 

Wacky Wednesday

Set A - 30 seconds of work/ 20 seconds of rest non-stop active movement for four rounds.

  • Kettlebell high pulls
  • Sit-outs
  • Figure 8 to hold
  • Half burpees

Rest for 1:30 before moving on to Set B

Set B – 30 seconds of work/ 20 seconds of rest non-stop active movement for four rounds

  • Kettlebell cleans (L)
  • Kettlebell cleans (R)
  • Dbl. Kettlebell overhead presses
  • Kettlebell jumping deadlifts

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Low-T Syndrome: Another Word for Male Menopause

By  SUSAN DONALDSON JAMES
By the time Dan hit 57, he didn’t recognize himself. He was always tired, fell asleep after dinner and was angry all the time.”My libido was less and I was beginning to have a loss of erection while having sex, but I thought that was part of the normal aging process,” said Dan, who did not want his real name to be used.”I had just changed doctors and he asked me, ‘Are you more grumpy and less interested in things like sex?’” Dan, now a 60-year-old California counselor, said.

“Yeah, I am more grumpy, get less enjoyment out of life and certainly am having less sexual activity with my wife of 40 years,” Dan answered. “I had excellent health all my life and he said there was a name for it — male menopause.”

The doctor ordered a series of blood tests and found Dan had  low levels of testosterone. “My levels were in the basement,” he said.

Dan, according to his doctor, has andropause, what is now euphemistically being called low-T syndrome.

Television ads for low-T syndrome have cropped up on prime-time nightly news programs, joining direct-to-consumer drug ads for erectile dysfunction, or “ED,” as well as other aging ailments such as high cholesterol, enlarged prostates and dry eyes.

Andropause is a “term of convenience” in describing the complex symptoms in aging men with low testosterone levels, according to one study at the University of Toronto Department of Medicine.

Some studies show only 25 percent of all men with low testosterone levels ever experience symptoms such as Dan’s, as well as bone loss and fracture, sleep disturbances and lethargy.

The very existence of andropause is contentious and large-scale studies on hormone treatment are only a decade old. Many say the underlying cause of some men’s complaints are part of the normal aging process.

Two Canadian studies cited by the National Institutes of Health illustrate the debate on low testosterone and its treatment.

Dr. Richard Casey, director of the Male Health Centers in Oakville, Ont., argues that andropause is primarily market-driven, “largely promoted by industry, accepted by a handful of physicians and embraced by some patients who are looking for an antidote to aging.”

“We need to resist the marketing efforts and consider the science,” writes Casey. “The range of normal testosterone levels is quite broad; levels depend on time of day and no consensus exists on what measurement of testosterone correlates best with symptoms or treatment success.”

But Dr. Alvaro Morales of Queens University in Ontario supports the concept of “testosterone deficiency syndrome” (TDS) and advocates well-monitored therapy.

“The absurd view that TDS is an invention of industry blatantly and conveniently ignores medical observations and reports going back 500 years and accelerating since the mid 20th century,” writes Morales in his study. “It does not merit further discussion.”

‘Male Menopause Is Real’

“Male menopause is real,” said Jed Diamond, a psychologist and author of a series of books on the topic, including, “Irritable Male Syndrome.”

“I describe it as adolescence, the second time around,” he said. “Everybody goes through it, just as no one can say I didn’t go through puberty. Some have a fairly easy time and, for some, it’s more difficult.”

Part of the normal part of aging, male menopause is accompanied by a gradual decline in their sexuality, mood and overall energy. For most men, it arrives between the ages of 40 to 55, but for some it happens as early as 35 and as late as 65.

 Not All Men Have Symptoms of Low Testosterone

“Men are more in denial about this than women,” said Diamond, who has a Ph.D. in international health and a master’s degree in social work. “It’s taken guys a little longer for the medical evidence to come out and for doctors to find ways to treat this. But more men are getting help.”

More men are also taking testosterone treatment in creams, gels or injections, Diamond said.

Dan began a holistic course of treatment that included testosterone shots and more exercise, better eating habits, herbal supplements, as well as a multivitamin and zinc.

“Those made a big difference,” he said. “But exercise has been the most profound thing. Without it, the other wouldn’t work. I do weights and yoga twice a week.”

 After Treatment, Noticing Fewer Aches and Pains

“After a year, the injections worked,” Dan said. “It’s not like I am doing physical feats that I was not doing before, but I was noticing a change when I would take groceries out of the car and move wood into the pile. Before, I used to groan as I did it and had more aches and pains.”

Diamond, who runs the Men Alive Clinic in Willits, Calif., said all men treat menopause differently. Some are in denial and others treat it medically. But male menopause is more complex than just increasing testosterone levels — involving hormonal fluctuation, changes in brain chemistry, interpersonal and societal changes.

“The changes have to do not only with hormones, but also sex changes that have to do with relationships and self-esteem changes. We evaluate all of these different areas,” he said, “We don’t just look at the test.”

Unlike women’s hormone replacement therapy, which uses estrogen from horses, doctors treat men with bio-identical testosterone, Diamond said.

“Biologically, it’s the same and it isn’t as expensive and they can manufacture it in large quantities,” he said.

That’s why doctors say the pharmaceutical companies are pushing treatment for low-T syndrome on television. Interestingly, direct-to-consumer advertising is only allowed in two countries in the world — New Zealand and the United States.

“The drug companies want to figure out new ways of making money,” said Dr. Robert Butler, president of the International Longevity Center in New York City and author of the landmark book, “Human Aging.”

All men do not experience low testosterone levels, he said. “Not everyone goes through a decline, though there is a small category of men in their 50s and 60s, but it’s a new market,” he said.

Men should be monitored while taking testosterone because  it can cause problems for those with heart conditions or prostate cancer that is underway, Butler said.

“I don’t fault [the drug companies] for being good marketers,” he said. “But I think the public should beware in terms of endangering themselves.”

But Dan said he has confidence in his doctor and, oddly, the regimen has had the least impact on his sex life.

“I don’t have to be fearful and anxious and I feel like I am equipped to meet whatever comes my way,” he said. “When you are 18 to 20, you think you are immortal. At 30 and 40, you think you have the world by the tail.”

“I began to lose that sense for no good reason,”  Dan said. “Now, I feel a psychological sense of completeness and robustness and maleness.”

 

 

ROD 091611

ROD

Friday, 16Sept11

 

Friday Finale

45 seconds effort and 15 seconds rest and complete 3 rounds of the following:

  1. KB Double Front Squat
  2. KB Swings
  3. Renegade Row
  4. Dynamic Squats
  5. KB Snatch (left)
  6. KB Snatch (right)
  7. Burpees

1 minute rest between rounds

______________________________________________________________________

Morning sex can mean a great day ahead for you

Sep 27, 2010 | Zenoyise Madikwa

MORNING sex is the new coffee! According to research, getting busy between the sheets in the morning can be an excellent start to your day.

  • Some men do it while they sleep

Studies show that sex gets the feel-good hormones pumping and puts a smile on your face, making it much easier to put up with whatever hassles your day brings.

Glen Rowan, a sexologist, says normally sex is associated with dark environments because it is considered a “scandalous” activity.

“Why do you think we drink after the sun sets? And why is happy hour always so great? It’s because it’s against the norm. So really we can conclude that the morning is in fact the hottest time of the day to have sex,” he says.

Rowan says this probably has a lot to do with what is referred to as nocturnal penile tumescence (NPT), which causes a man without erectile dysfunction to have three to five erections as he sleeps.

“NPT is more commonly referred to as ‘morning wood’ or ‘morning glory’. Whatever you call it, waking up with an erection is as good a reason as any to initiate a little early action.”

Unfortunately, most women do not share the same enthusiasm for morning glory as they feel bedroom activity is best reserved for night time, Rowan says.

“One of the many differences between the sexuality of men and women is that men tend to enjoy morning sex.

“Who can blame women; the bad breath, the horrible body odour and general morning drowsiness are some of the morning sex turn-offs.

But here is something to cheer up the women: morning sex could mean the difference between a good day and a great day.

Studies have proven that morning sex boosts health, your looks and the relationship.

“Scientists have proven that people who start their day by having sex are all-round healthier and happier than those who don’t.

“Having sex in the morning releases the feel-good chemical oxytocin, which makes couples feel loving and bonded all day long. It makes you stronger and more beautiful too,” says Rowan.

He says morning sex can also strengthen your immune system for the day by enhancing your levels of IgA, an antibody that fights infection. And having an orgasm releases chemicals that boost levels of oestrogen, which improves the tone and texture of your skin and hair.

Tips from askmen.com on how to make her a morning-sex person:

Gently wake her

Your woman most likely does not want to be greeted immediately by your erect penis waving in her face, so take it easy. Touch her softly and slowly.

Give her little kisses all over her face and body and let your fingers play with her hair.

This sensual approach will ensure that she wakes up in a positive, loving mood and makes it much more likely that she’ll take pleasure in morning sex.

Make her feel sexy

Your girl might not feel very sexy when she first wakes up, so to get her in the mood, be sure to tell her how beautiful she is, even if she’s a bit of a mess. Ignore the disheveled hair, the pillow creases on her face and her less-than-pleasant morning breath, and tell her how badly you want her.

If you find it difficult to keep a straight face while telling her how hot she is first thing in the morning, try using a position that doesn’t put you face to face.

Spooning her from behind is romantic and sensual, while it also conveniently allows you to avoid the misery of morning breath.

Prepare the night before

In order to avoid having to get out of bed in the morning before initiating your early loving, you should do some preparation the night before.

Keep some breath mints near the bed so you can quickly take care of your dragon breath before things start to get sexy.

Also, be sure to go to the bathroom before you go to sleep to prevent having to get up to take a leak as soon as you wake up. Don’t forget to have a condom ready to go within arm’s reach too.

Set your internal alarm

It’s important to wake up early enough to get a little action in before either of you are due at work.

So, set your internal alarm clock to wake you up with enough time to enjoy a little morning make-out time to start your day.

It’s best if you can wake up before her so you can rouse her into consciousness with your smooth moves.

Remember, you might be ready to go, but it could take a while for her to get warmed up, so factor this in when you’re figuring out how much time you will need for your morning sex.

Like anything, having morning sex every single day will get old after a while, especially for your girlfriend, who typically does not peak sexually in the morning hours like you do, so be sure to mix it up and get busy at other times of the day too.

 

 

ROD 091011

ROD

Saturday 10Sept11

 

Spartan Preparedness Training

Here we go…
 
40/20 no rest…. for three rounds. You will have 3:00 minutes to complete the run. The faster you complete the run the more rest you get before the next set. 
  • Clapping push-ups
  • Mtn climbers
  • DB Thrusters
  • Plank Jacks
  • Plank climbers… 20 seconds before the run
400 meter run / 3:00 minute limit 
  • Alt. split squats jumps
  • Burpees
  • Tuck jumps… 20 seconds before the run
400 meter run / 3:00 minute limit 
  • Swings
  • Walkouts
  • KB High pulls
  • Diamond sit-ups
  • Goblets squats
3:00 minutes to complete a 400 meter run is an average time if you run a 12 minute mile. I hope all of you can run faster than a 12 minute mile….If not, we would recommend you drop out of the Spartan Race.
 
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The Nutrition Source

How to Get to Your Healthy Weight

Exercise equipment with measure tape and a pear Introduction: Obesity and Health Risks

When it comes to nutrition, it’s easy to spend a lot of time worrying about what to eat. But how much you eat puts as much of a stamp on your long-term health as picking the right kind of fat or choosing the right mix of vitamins.

How much you weigh (in relation to your height), your waist size, and how much weight you’ve gained since your mid-20s strongly influence your chances of:

 

The Best Diet is the One You’ll Follow: Calories are what counts for weight loss. Read about the major diet study showing that how much you eat matters more than what you eat.

Many Paths to Successful Weight Loss: The latest study showing that a low-carb or Mediterranean diet are just as good as a low-fat diet for losing weight

Small Diet Changes, Big Impact on Weight: A new study from Harvard School of Public Health finds that consuming more sugary drinks and potatoes is linked to greater weight gain over time, while adopting a healthier diet may protect against weight gain

An Epidemic of Obesity: A brief look at the rapid rise in obesity over the past twenty years

Excess Weight Is Not Good for You: Cutting through the confusion around the latest studies on obesity and disease risk

Defensive Eating: Strategies to defend against over-eating

Can You Be Too Thin?: Understanding the relationship between low body weight and health

 

  • dying early,
  • having, or dying from, a heart attack, stroke, or other type of cardiovascular disease,
  • developing diabetes,
  • developing cancer of the colon, kidney, breast, or endometrium,
  • having arthritis,
  • developing gallstones,
  • being infertile,
  • developing asthma as an adult,
  • snoring or suffering from sleep apnea,
  • developing cataracts, or
  • having a poorer quality of life.

Although researchers are quibbling about just how many people die each year as a direct cause of excess weight and what it costs our health-care system, excess weight takes an enormous toll—all the more worrisome, given that we are in the midst of an obesity epidemic.

If your weight is in the healthy range and isn’t more than 10 pounds over what you weighed when you turned 21, great. Keeping it there—and keeping it steady—by watching what you eat and exercising will limit your risk of developing one or more of the chronic conditions noted above. If you are overweight, doing whatever you can to prevent gaining more weight is a critical first step. Then, when you’re ready, shedding some pounds and keeping them off will be important steps to better health.

What’s a Healthy Weight? Body Mass Index (BMI) Defined

Although nutrition experts still debate the precise limits of what constitutes a healthy weight, there’s a good working definition based on the ratio of weight to height. This ratio, called the body mass index (or BMI for short), takes into account the fact that taller people have more tissue than shorter people, and so tend to weigh more.

 

Calculate Your BMIHere’s how to determine your body mass index: Divide your weight in pounds by your height in inches. Divide the answer by your height in inches. Multiply the answer by 703. For an easier way, the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute offers an online BMI calculator or simple BMI tables.

Dozens of studies that have included more than a million adults have shown that a body mass index above 25 increases the chances of dying early, mainly from heart disease or cancer, and that a body mass index above 30 dramatically increases the chances. Based on this consistent evidence, a healthy weight is one that equates with a body mass index less than 25. By convention, overweight is defined as a body mass index of 25 to 29.9, and obesity is defined as a body mass index of 30 or higher.

Nothing magical happens when you cross from 24.9 to 25 or from 29.9 to 30. These are just convenient reference points. Instead, the chances of developing a weight-related health problems increases across the range of weights.

Muscle and bone are more dense than fat, so an athlete or muscular person may have a high body mass index, but not be fat. It’s this very thing that makes weight gain during adulthood such an important determinant of weight-related health—few adults add muscle and bone after their early twenties, so nearly all that added weight is fat.

Waist Size Matters, Too: Abdominal Fat and Health Risks

Apple and Pear with tape measure Some research suggests that not all fat is created equal. Fat that accumulates around the waist and chest (what’s called abdominal obesity or abdominal adiposity) may be more dangerous for long-term health than fat that accumulates around the hips and thighs.

Some studies suggest that abdominal fat plays a role in the development of insulin resistance and inflammation, an overactivity of the immune system that has been implicated in heart disease, diabetes, and even some cancers. It’s also possible, of course, that abdominal fat isn’t worse than fat around the hips or thighs, but instead is a signal of overall body-fat accumulation that weight alone just doesn’t capture.

In people who are not overweight, waist size may be an even more telling warning sign of increased health risks than BMI.  The Nurses’ Health Study, for example, looked at the relationship between waist size and death from heart disease, cancer, or any cause in middle-aged women. At the start of the study, all 44,000 study volunteers were healthy, and all of them measured their waist size and hip size. After 16 years, women who had reported the highest waist sizes—35 inches or higher—had nearly double the risk of dying from heart disease, compared to women who had reported the lowest waist sizes (less than 28 inches). Women in the group with the largest waists had a similarly high risk of death from cancer or any cause, compared with women with the smallest waists. The risks increased steadily with every added inch around the waist. And even women at a “normal weight”—BMI less than 25—were at a higher risk, if they were carrying more of that weight around their waist: Normal-weight women with a waist of 35 inches or higher had three times the risk of death from heart disease, compared to normal-weight women whose waists were smaller than 35 inches. The Shanghai Women’s Health study found a similar relationship between abdominal fatness and risk of death from any cause in normal-weight women.

 

Nutrition In-Depth Waist vs. Waist-to-Hip RatioScientists have long debated about which measure of abdominal fat best predicts health risk: waist size alone, or waist size in comparison to hip size.

Measuring your waist is easy, if you know exactly where your waist really is. Wrap a flexible measuring tape around your midsection where the sides of your waist are the narrowest. This is usually even with your navel. Make sure you keep the tape parallel to the floor.

An expert panel convened by the National Institutes of Health concluded that a waist larger than 40 inches for men and 35 inches for women increases the chances of developing heart disease, cancer, or other chronic diseases. (4) Although these are a bit generous,  they are useful benchmarks.

Waist size is a simple, useful measurement because abdominal muscle can be replaced by fat with age, even though weight may remain the same. So increasing waist size can serve as a warning that you ought to take a look at how much you are eating and exercising.

Keeping Things Level

Middle-aged spread is the source of millions of New Year’s resolutions. Gaining weight as you age increases the chances of developing one or more chronic diseases.

In the Nurses’ Health Study and the Health Professionals Follow-up Study, middle-aged women and men who gained 11 to 22 pounds after age 20 were up to three times more likely to develop heart disease, high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, and gallstones than those who gained five pounds or fewer. Those who gained more than 22 pounds had an even larger risk of developing these diseases.  A more recent analysis of Nurses’ Health Study data found that adult weight gain—even after menopause—can increase the risk of postmenopausal breast cancer.  Encouragingly, for women who had never used hormone replacement therapy, losing weight after menopause—and keeping it off—cut their risk of post-menopausal breast cancer in half.

What Causes Weight Gain?

Whether or not your weight changes depends on a simple rule:

Weight change = calories in – calories out

If you burn as many calories as you take in each day, there’s nothing left over for storage in fat cells and weight remains the same. Eat more than you burn, though, and you end up adding fat and pounds.

Many things influence what and when you eat and how many calories you burn. These turn what seems to be a straightforward pathway to excess weight into a complex journey that may start very early in life.

 

Did You Know...A growing body of research suggests that there’s a link between how much people sleep and how much they weigh. In general, children and adults who get too little sleep tend to weigh more than those who get enough sleep.  Learn more about the relationship between sleep and obesity.

Genes: Some people are genetically predisposed to gain weight more easily than others or to store fat around the abdomen and chest. It’s also possible that humans have a genetic drive to eat more than they need for the present in order to store energy for future. This is called the thrifty gene hypothesis.  It suggests that eating extra food whenever possible helped early humans survive feast-or-famine conditions. If such thrifty genes still exist, they aren’t doing us much good in an environment in which food is constantly available.

Diet: At the risk of stating the obvious, the quantity of food in your diet has a strong impact on weight. The composition of your diet, though, seems to play little role in weight—a calorie is a calorie, regardless of its source.

Physical activity: The “calories burned” part of the weight-change equation often gets short shrift. The more active you are, the more calories you burn, which means that less energy will be available for storage as fat. Exercising more also reduces the chances of developing heart disease, some types of cancer, and other chronic diseases.  In other words, physical activity is a key element of weight control and health.

What Leads to Weight Loss?

Scale with jumping rope

Just as weight gain is fundamentally caused by eating more calories than you burn, the only way to lose weight is to eat fewer calories than what you burn. People can cut back on calories and lose weight on almost any diet, as long as they stick to it.  (Read about the latest diet study showing the importance of finding a diet that you can follow, so you can stick to a low-calorie plan and lose weight.) The real challenge is finding a way to keep weight off over the long run.

Low-fat weight loss strategies don’t work for most people. Low-fat diets are routinely promoted as a path to good health. But they haven’t fulfilled their promise. One reason is that many people have interpreted the term “low-fat” to mean “It’s OK to eat as much low-fat food as you want.” For most people, eating less fat has meant eating more carbohydrates. To the body, calories from carbohydrates are just as effective for increasing weight as calories from fat.

In the United States, obesity has become increasingly common even as the percentage of fat in the American diet has declined from 45 percent in the 1960s to about 33 percent in the late 1990s.  In South Africa, nearly 60 percent of people are overweight even though the average diet contains about 22 percent of calories from fat.  Finally, experimental studies lasting one year or longer have not shown a link between dietary fat and weight.  And in the eight-year Women’s Health Initiative Dietary Modification Trial, women assigned to a low-fat diet didn’t lose, or gain more weight than women eating their usual fare.

Low-carbohydrate, high-protein strategies look promising in the short term. Another increasingly common approach to weight loss is eating more protein and less carbohydrate. Some of these diets treat carbohydrates as if they are evil, the root of all body fat and excess weight. That was certainly true for the original Atkins diet, which popularized the no-carb approach to dieting. And there is some evidence that a low-carbohydrate diet may help people lose weight more quickly than a low-fat diet, although so far, that evidence is short term.  More recently, a two-year head-to-head trial comparing different weight loss strategies found that low-carb, low-fat, and Mediterranean-style diets worked equally well, and that there was no speed advantage for one diet over another. 

 

Your Questions Answered - Weight LossQ. What are the best fruits and vegetables to eat if I want to lose weight? Dr. Walter Willett, Chair, Dept. of Nutrition, Harvard School of Public HealthWalter WillettA. Chose a wide variety of vegetables and fruits every day, but don’t include white potatoes as a vegetable. Potatoes are a rapidly digested starch; nutritionally, they have more in common with white bread than with other vegetables, and they should be eaten only occasionally. Go easy on fruits that are higher in carbohydrate—oranges, bananas, apricots, cherries, grapes, mangoes, pineapples, and pears. Also, avoid fruit juice since it contains a lot of sugary calories; choose whole fruit instead since it has more fiber and will make you feel more full. Why, in some studies, do high-protein, low-carb diets seem to work more quickly than low-fat, high-carbohydrate diets, at least in the short term? First, chicken, beef, fish, beans, or other high-protein foods slow the movement of food from the stomach to the intestine. Slower stomach emptying means you feel full for longer and get hungrier later. Second, protein’s gentle, steady effect on blood sugar avoids the quick, steep rise in blood sugar and just as quick hunger-bell-ringing fall that occurs after eating a rapidly digested carbohydrate, like white bread or baked potato. Third, the body uses more energy to digest protein than it does to digest fat or carbohydrate.

No one knows the long-term effects of eating little or no carbohydrates. Equally worrisome is the inclusion of unhealthy fats in some of these diets.

If you want to go the lower-carb route, try to include some fruits, vegetables, and whole-grain carbohydrates every day. They contain a host of vitamins, minerals, and other phytonutrients that are essential for good health and that you can’t get out of a supplement bottle. Choosing vegetable sources of fat and protein may also lower your risk of heart disease and type 2 diabetes.

Mediterranean-style diets may be effective. Eating a so-called Mediterranean-style diet—one that includes plenty of fruits and vegetables and that is low in saturated fat but has a moderate amount of unsaturated fat—offers another seemingly effective alternative. In a controlled trial conducted by researchers at Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women’s Hospital, 101 overweight men and women were randomly assigned to a low-fat diet or a Mediterranean-style diet. After 18 months, volunteers on the low-fat diet had gained an average of 6 pounds while those on the Mediterranean diet lost 9 pounds.  By the study’s end only 20 percent of those in the low-fat group were still following the study diet, compared to more than half of those on the Mediterranean-style diet. Other trials have also found a Mediterranean-style eating plan to be effective for weight loss. 

Since 1993, more than 5,000 women and men have joined the National Weight Control Registry. This select “club” includes only people who lost more than 30 pounds and kept them off for at least a year. What was their secret?

  • They exercised. Registry participants burn an average of 400 calories per day in physical activity. That’s the equivalent of about 60 to 75 minutes of brisk walking, or 35 to 40 minutes of jogging.
  • They ate fewer calories. On average, registry volunteers consume about 1,400 calories a day. That’s significantly less than the calories consumed by the average American. This doesn’t mean, however, that you should aim for 1,400 calories a day. What’s right for you is based on your weight, height, and activity level.
  • They watched less television, limited fast food intake, cut back on sugars and sweets, and ate more fruits and vegetables.

In the early years of the registry, about a third of the volunteers reported eating low-fat diets. Lately, though, fewer volunteers report eating low-fat diets, and more report eating moderate-fat diets. Relatively few volunteers report eating low-carbohydrate diets, but those who do seem to have had as much success in maintaining their weight loss, compared with other members of the Weight Control Registry.

 

Your Questions Answered - Weight Loss Q. Can diet pills or gastric bypass surgery help me lose weight?A. The promise of a quick fix for excess weight has always attracted Americans. But drugs and gastric bypass surgery are not for everyone.

These findings are echoed in a survey of more than 32,000 dieters reported in the June 2002 issue of Consumer Reports.  Nearly one-quarter had lost at least 10 percent of their starting body weight and kept it off for at least a year. Most chalked up their success to eating less and exercising more. The vast majority did it on their own, without utilizing commercial weight-loss programs or resorting to weight-loss drugs. Interestingly, the successful losers in the Consumer Reports survey tended to adopt low-carbohydrate, higher-protein diets rather than low-fat diets.

Keep in mind that these are commonly used strategies, not hard and fast rules. In fact, one of the main take-home messages is that successful weight loss is very much a “do it your way” endeavor. What the Weight Control Registry volunteers and the Consumer Reports survey respondents have in common is a focus on exercise and daily calories. In other words, they’ve learned to balance energy in and energy out in a way that leads to weight loss or weight maintenance.

So despite all the pessimistic prognostications about the impossibility of sticking with a weight-loss plan, these two surveys show that it’s possible to lose weight and keep it off. Unfortunately, only a minority of people who try to lose weight follow the simple, tried-and-true strategy of eating fewer calories and exercising daily. For weight control, an hour or more of exercise a day may be needed.

General Strategies for Achieving or Maintaining a Healthy Weight

It’s easy to gain weight in what Yale psychologist Kelly Brownell calls our “toxic food environment.” How, then, can you lose weight if you need to? Here are some suggestions that work:

  • Set a realistic goal. Many people pick weight goals they’ll have a hard time achieving, like fitting into a size 8 dress or a wedding tuxedo from 20 years ago. A better initial goal is 5 to 10 percent of your current weight. This may not put you in league with the “beautiful people” profiled in popular magazines, but it can lead to important improvements in weight-related conditions such as high blood pressure and diabetes.  You don’t have to stop there, of course. You can keep aiming for another 5 to 10 percent until you’re happy with your weight. By breaking weight loss into more manageable chunks, you’ll be more likely to reach your goal.
  • Slow and steady wins the race. Dieting implies deprivation and hunger. You don’t need either to lose weight if you’re willing to take the time to do it right. If you cut out just 100 calories a day, the equivalent of a single can of soda or a bedtime snack, you would weigh 10 pounds less after a year. If, at the same time, you added a brisk 30-minute walk five days a week, you could be at least 20 pounds lighter.
  • Move more.While the precise amount of physical activity needed to maintain a healthy weight may vary based on your diet and your genes, the American College of Sports Medicine and the American Heart Association conclude that “more activity increases the probability of success.”  For more tips on fitting physical activity into your day, read Staying Active: Every Body’s Path to Better Health.
  • Keep track. It’s easy to eat more than you plan to. A daily food diary can make you more aware of exactly how much you are eating. Include everything, no matter how small or insignificant it seems. Small noshes and drinks of juice add up to real calories.
  • Tame your blood sugar. Eating foods that make your blood sugar and insulin levels shoot up and then crash may contribute to weight gain. Such foods include white bread, white rice, and other highly processed grain products. As an alternative, choose foods that have a gentler effect on blood sugar (what’s called a lower glycemic index). These include whole grains such as wheat berries, steel-cut oats, and whole-grain breads and pasta, as well as beans, nuts, fruits, and vegetables.
  • Don’t be afraid of good fats. Fat in a meal or in snacks such as nuts or corn chips helps you feel full. Good fats such as olive or canola oil can also help improve your cholesterol levels when you eat them in place of saturated or trans fats or highly processed carbohydrates.
  • Reach for slow foods. Fast food is cheap, filling, and satisfying. It also delivers way more calories, not to mention harmful saturated and trans fat, than you need. People who eat at fast-food restaurants more than twice a week are more likely to gain weight and show early signs of diabetes than those who only occasionally eat fast food.
  • Bring on the water and skip the soda. When you are thirsty, reach for water. Drinking juice or sugared soda can give you several hundred calories a day without even realizing it. Several studies show that children and adults who drink soda or other sugar-sweetened beverages are more likely to gain weight than those who don’t,  and that switching from these to water or unsweetened beverages can reduce weight.

The Bottom Line: Recommendations for Healthy Weight

Scale with measuring tape What’s sometimes lost in the dire predictions about overweight and obesity in America are the enormous benefits of staying lean or working toward a healthier weight. Maintaining a healthy weight throughout life is associated with lower rates of premature death and heart disease, some cancers, and other chronic conditions. What if you’re past that point? Losing 5 to 10 percent of your weight can substantially improve your immediate health and will decrease your risk of developing such problems. The best time to start losing weight is with the first signs that your weight is straying upward. The more overweight you are, the more difficult it can be to lose weight. But as participants of the National Weight Control Registry have proven, anyone can lose weight.

ROD 082911

 Tonight we will only have the one class strating at 7:45PM.

 WE WILL ONLY HAVE ONE 7:45 PM EVENING CLASS PER NIGHT. WE WILL RESUME OUR REGULAR EVENING CLASS SCHEDULE ON TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 6TH.

  THE 11:00 AM MORNING CLASS WILL BE CANCELLED AS WELL TILL WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7TH.

 THANK YOU, 

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ROD

Monday, 29Aug11

 

Reality Monday…

is a repeat of ROD, InsanitySaturday, 14May11. Let’s do better this time around. Let’s go heavier, we’re 3 months stronger.

This is a 2 x 4 rounds of 30 seconds work/20 seconds rest non stop of…

  • KB Dip & switch
  • KB Power row & catch
  • KB Deadlift jumps
  • KB See saw presses

Rest for 1 1/2 minutes, rinse (lol) and then repeat.

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Healthy snack ideas

We’ve got eight ideas for what to eat when you’re feeling hungry or low on energy.

GREEN IS GOOD: Edamame sprinkled with sea salt makes a healthy snack.

Don’t reach for that doughnut just yet. Here are some guidelines for choosing healthy snacks.

When snacking, it’s a good idea to think about blood sugar levels. If you consume a sugary snack, chances are your blood sugar levels will spike. And although you may feel a temporary rush of energy and an elevated mood, you’ll most likely feel like you’ve hit a brick wall and experience a crash shortly after snacking on high-glycemic index foods.

After crashing, you’ll feel hungry again and repeat the vicious cycle.
A little background …
It’s important to keep your blood sugar levels stable throughout the day. Therefore, when we eat snacks, we want to apply the same fundamental rule to that of each of your regular meals. (Hopefully, you’re eating breakfast, lunch and dinner daily, to maintain steady blood sugar and help burn fat.)
Our fundamental rule is that we always want to combine the following three macronutrients when eating:
  • protein
  • carbohydrates
  • natural fat
Combining macronutrients ensures that you’ll feel full longer and won’t need to binge on sweets. In fact, if your regular meals have a good ratio of the three macronutrients, you might find you may not have to snack at all.
Pay attention to your body
Start paying attention to how you feel after eating a meal. If you feel full for three to four hours after eating and don’t have bloating or a drop in energy, then whatever you just ate is the right macronutrient proportion for you.
For example, a breakfast of two eggs, one piece of sprouted whole grain bread with a little dab of butter and two small slices of turkey bacon may satisfy you for several hours.
To keep your blood sugar levels steady, it’s a good idea not to go more than four hours during the day without eating. So taking the breakfast example above, say, eaten at 8 a.m., you’ll want to eat lunch at about noon.
Maybe you don’t get home till 6 p.m. If you wait till then to eat dinner, you’ll likely be tired and cranky, so it’s a good idea to have a late afternoon snack.
What are some healthy snack choices?
Here are some examples of healthy snacks that combine all three macronutrients:
  • Celery and raw almond butter: celery is a carbohydrate; almond butter is both protein and natural fat.
  • Cheese and crackers: opt for grass-fed cheese for higher essential Omega 3 fatty acid content if possible and gluten-free rice crackers for less intestinal bloating.
  • Hummus and carrot sticks: hummus contains a little protein and natural fat.
  • Nitrate and nitrite-free jerky: contains      protein and natural fat; you don’t always have to include a carbohydrate if you can digest meat efficiently.
  • Edamame sprinkled with sea salt: edamame is the whole soybean and it contains both protein and essential trace minerals if sprinkled with sea salt.
  • Greek yogurt: unless you’re on a      restricted diet, go for the full-fat variety, which will keep you full for longer and includes all three macronutrients.
  • Apple slices with honey and olives: perfect for those who crave sweet and salty.
  • Organic turkey breast slice with crackers: turkey contains both protein and natural fat. (It’s easy to bring a package of healthy deli slices with you to work; just make sure your coworkers don’t steal it!)
Even nutritionists, dieticians and health coaches fall off the wagon. If you do and reach for a doughnut, the best thing to do is to eat a little protein and natural fat (preferably before eating the doughnut) to stabilize your blood sugar levels.
But if you adopt these healthy snacking ideas, hopefully, your cravings for sugary junk food will subside.
Judd Handler is a freelance health reporter and certified Metabolic Typing Advisor and Functional Diagnostic Nutritionist living in Encinitas, CA. You can reach him at coachjudd@gmail.com

ROD 082711

ROD

Saturday, 27Aug11

 

The “Mad Hatter”

Another round for the NLP Spartan Race Preparedness Team.

Two rowers will be set, teams of 2 will be selected. Each team will row for 300 meters. A hat will be passed and each team will draw  an exercise, which will be performed by each team while the rowers complete their row. This will continue till someone drops from exhaustion. No, we’re kidding, we will continue this till everyone takes a turn on the rowers. Let’s kill this, We are Spartans!!!!

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Below is information on how others are preparing for the Spartan Race,  NLP  is already ahead of the curve preparing you for the roughest, toughest race on Staten Island.

Prepare for a Spartan Race by building your Endurance

Darcy Fauteux, Calgary Extreme Training Examiner

To prepare for the toughest outdoor cross country obstacle course race available today you must properly condition your body to endure the rigors it will be exposed to. A Spartan race can be broken down into 10 or more mini-races if you consider each obstacle a separtate challenge of completing the entire race.

Some racers will be more adapt at rope climbing while others excell at bearcrawling through the mud, others yet fearlessly charge firepits and club-armed gladiators with zeal. Whatever the challenges in a Spartan Race are, a competitor must be ready for all of them and more.

“Walking” the course doesn’t cut it if you want to compete at the next level, best to be stepping smartly from obstacle to obstacle at a brisk run. Long-distance endurance is not necessary, unless you are tackling a two-day death race. You will, however, require a decent aerobic base so you aren’t gulping air after one obstacle. Jog a few miles everyday(start with shorter distances every other day and work your way up to a decent distance if you have to). Running is an excellent way to build your aerobic base, and you will have to run during the race if you want to win, so lace up those runners and get out there.

You also need good muscle-strength and endurance so your arms and back haven’t turned to jello at the bottom of the wrong side of a climbing wall.To build muscle endurance, work the major muscle groups with body weight exercises. Scores of pushups and situps will help immensely. Work your legs by doing lunges and pull ups should be near the top of your list for exercises to get better at while you are training for a Spartan Race. Work reps over weight, as endurance and overall lasting strength will get you through this race, while sheer power(say from doing 400 pound squats) will not.
 
High intensity interval training (HIIT) is a scientifically proven method that, through great stress to the aerobic and anaerobic systems of the body, improves both strength and endurance. One minute stationary bike sprint intervals with only 30 seconds rest inbetweeen for only 8 or 10 reps will help build up your strength and endurance base. Try these weekly and give it your all to experience results… ( At NLP ”HIIT” is our training modality all the time.)
 
Carbo loading will help you have the fuel you need to complete the race. Remember to load up effectively, don’t start the night before or the day of the race. If you are preparing for a weekend of obstacle clearing, carbo load on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday. Eat a ton of veggies, pasta, breads, and other carbohydrate-laden foods that will build up your body’s stores for the race.
The days before, eat balanced meals, including plenty of vegetables and fruits and also lots of water. If it will be sunny, consider some type of hat to help sheild you from the sun and and definitely use sunscreen the day of. The sun will suck the energy right out of you and give you a sunburn in the process. Staying cool and protected from the sun will help you remain fresh and strong.
 
For updates and words of wisdom, join the Spartan Race Facebook page. The page is updated daily with helpful workouts of the day (WOD), inspirational words of advice and all the latest updates about the Spartan Race schedule in North America.

 

ROD 082611

ROD

Friday, 26Aug11

 

NLP Coaches Choice

5 rounds for time of:

  • 200 meter run
  • 10 Hang squat cleans (M/30# – W20#)
  • 10 Burpees

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30 Habits that Will Change your Life

Developing good habits is the basic of personal development and growth. Everything we do is the result of a habit that was previously taught to us. Unfortunately, not all the habits that we have are good, that’s why we are constantly trying to improve.

The following is a list of 30 practical habits that can make a huge difference in your life.

You should treat this list as a reference, and implement just one habit per month. This way you will have the time to fully absorb each of them, while still seeing significant improvements each month.

Health habits

  1. Exercise 30 minutes every day. Especially if you don’t do much movement while working, it’s essential that you get some daily exercise. 30 minutes every day are the minimum recommended for optimal health.
  2. Eat breakfast every day. Breakfast is the more important meal of the day, yet so many people skip it. Personally, I like to eat a couple of toasts in the morning along with a fruit beverage.
  3. Sleep 8 hours. Sleep deprivation is never a good idea. You may think that you are gaining time by sleeping less, when in reality you are only gaining stress and tiredness. 8 hours are a good number of hours for most people, along with an optional 20 minutes nap after lunch.
  4. Avoid snacking between meals. Snacking between meals is the best way to gain weight. If you are hungry, eat something concrete. Otherwise don’t. Update: for clarification, I mean don’t eat junk food between meals, but eating real food it’s ok.
  5. Eat five portions of fruits and vegetables every day. Our body and brain loves getting vegetables and fruit, so I highly recommend eating as much of them as possible. Five portions is the dose that’s usually recommended by many health associations.
  6. Eat fish. Fish is rich of omega 3 and other healthy elements. At least one meal per week of fish should be enough for getting all these nutrients.
  7. Drink one glass of water when you wake up. When you wake up, your body is dehydrated and needs liquid. Make the habit of drinking one glass of water after you wake up in the morning. Also, drink more during the day.
  8. Avoid soda. Soda is often one of the most unhealthy beverage you can find. Limit your consumption of soda as much as possible and you’re body will be grateful for that.
  9. Keep your body clean. I don’t advise spending your day in front of the mirror, but a minimum of personal care does never hurt.
  10. If you smoke, stop it. There’s no reason to smoke anymore, and quitting is possible.
  11. If you drink, stop it. Same as above. Don’t think that alcohol will solve your problems. It never does. The only exception is one glass of wine per day during meals.
  12. Take the stairs. This is just a hack that forces you to do a minimum of exercise. Instead of taking the elevator, take the stairs.

Productivity habits

  1. Use an inbox system. Make the habit of keeping track of all the ideas and things that comes to mind. You can use a notebook to do this, and then sync everything on your computer.
  2. Prioritize. If you have a list of things to do, where do you start? One way is to prioritize your list. If you are in doubt, ask yourself: “If I could only accomplish one thing today, what would it be?”
  3. Plan, but not too much. Planning is important, and you should decide in advance what you are going to do today or this week. However, planning for more than a few weeks is usually inefficient, so I would not worry too much about that.
  4. Wake up early. Waking up early in the morning is a great way to gain extra time. I personally like to wake up at 5 am, so that by 9 am I have already accomplished what otherwise would have taken me many days..
  5. Check your email only twice per day. Email can easily become an addiction, but it’s usually unnecessary to check it every 10 minutes. Make an effort and check your email only once or twice per day, see if the world will still rotate as before after you try this.
  6. Eliminate unimportant tasks. Being busy all day does not mean you are doing important stuff. Eliminate every activity that’s not important, and focus on what really matters.
  7. Clean off your desk and room. Having a clear room and desk is important to maintain focus and creativity.
  8. Automate. There are a lot of tasks that you need to perform every day or every week. Try to automate them as much as possible.
  9. Set strict deadlines. When you do something, decide in advance when you’re going to stop. There’s a rule that states that you will fulfill all the time you have available for completing a task, so make an habit of setting strict deadlines for maximizing your productivity.
  10. Take one day off per week. Instead of working every day, take one day off per week (for example sunday) where you are not going to turn on your computer. Use that time for doing recreational activities like going for a walk.

Personal Development habits

  1. Read 1 book per week. Reading is a good way to keep your brain active. With just 30 minutes per day you should be able to read one book per week, or more than 50 books per year.
  2. Solve puzzles. Quizzes, word games, etc. are all good ways to exercise your brain.
  3. Think positively. You are what you think, all the time.
  4. Make fast decisions. Instead of thinking for one hour wherever you are going to do something, make your decisions as fast as possible (usually less than 1 minute).
  5. Wait before buying. Waiting 48 hours before buying anything is a tremendous money saver, try it.
  6. Meditate 30 minutes per day. A great way to gain clearness and peace is through meditation. 30 minutes are not a lot, but enough to get you started with meditation.

Career habits

  1. Start a blog. Blogging is one of the best way to put your word out. It doesn’t have to be around a specific topic, even a personal blog will do.
  2. Build a portfolio. If your job is creating stuff, building a portfolio is a great way to show what you are capable of. You can also contribute stuff for free if that applies to your work.

What do you think? What are the habits that changed your life?

 

 

ROD 062411

ROD

Friday, 24Jun11

 

10 rounds of 10 reps.

Finish all 10 rounds of each movement before moving on to the next one, or you can circuit through this for 10 rounds.

  • 10 Air squats
  • 10 Stability ball push ups 
  • 10 Stability ball hamstring curls
  • 10 Renegade DB rows (5r/l)
  • 10 Stability ball knee tucks

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To Stretch or Not to Stretch

By GRETCHEN REYNOLDS

runner stretching
Joshua Hodge
Phys Ed

Is it time, once again, to stretch? For decades, many of us stretched before a workout, usually by reaching toward our toes or leaning against a wall to elongate our hamstrings, then holding that pose without moving until it felt uncomfortable, a technique known as static stretching. Most people, including scientists and entire generations of elementary-school P.E. teachers, believed that static stretching lengthened muscles and increased flexibility, making people better able to perform athletically.

But about 10 years ago, researchers began putting the practice to the test. They found that when athletes did static stretches, performance often suffered. Many couldn’t jump as high, sprint as fast or swing a tennis racquet or golf club as powerfully as they could before they stretched. Static stretching appeared to cause the nervous system to react and tighten, not loosen, the stretched muscle, the research showed.

Not surprisingly, stretching fell out of favor among well-informed athletes and coaches. Last year, new exercise guidelines issued by the American College of Sports Medicine specifically advised against static stretching before workouts or competitions. The European College of Sport Sciences issued a position statement saying that such stretching could “diminish” athletic performance.

Which means, naturally, that static stretching is ripe for scientific reappraisal. And right on cue, several contrarian new reviews and studies suggest that static stretching may not be so bad after all — and may even be desirable.

For the most comprehensive, and bluntest, of the new reports, published this month in Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, researchers reviewed more than 100 studies of stretching and concluded that the “detrimental effects of static stretch are mainly limited to longer duration” poses, meaning stretches that last for at least a minute. If you hold a particular stretch for a shorter period, the authors wrote, particularly for less than 30 seconds, you should experience “no detrimental effect.”

The other studies came to similar conclusions. A close reading of earlier studies, published in March in The European Journal of Applied Physiology, found that “a substantial number” of the experiments did not find “detrimental effects associated with prior static stretching,” especially if the stretches were “of short duration” or were stopped before “the point of discomfort.” And a new study of well-trained female collegiate runners undertaken at Florida State University and published last month in The Journal of Strength & Conditioning Research, showed that a static-stretching routine consisting of five leg-muscle stretches, each held for 30 seconds and repeated four times, “did not have an adverse effect” on the women’s performance in a timed treadmill running test.

Of course, conclusions like “no detrimental effect” or “did not have an adverse effect” are not ringing endorsements of static stretching and beg the obvious question: if brief stretches aren’t bad for us, are they actively good? Should we, in other words, be making an effort to stretch before we exercise?

That question, most of today’s stretching researchers say, remains difficult to answer. “Several studies have revealed that stretching,” even of short duration, “increases the range of motion about a joint and reduces the stiffness of the muscle,” Anthony Kay, a senior lecturer in sport and exercise biomechanics at the University of Northampton and the lead author of the latest review, told me. “Both of these,” he explained, reduce “the risk of muscle strain injury,” though muscle strains are not a top concern for many of us.

“Muscle strains are uncommon in activities such as jogging,” cycling or swimming, said Malachy McHugh, the director of research at the Nicholas Institute of Sports Medicine and Athletic Training at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York, who has extensively studied stretching. Runners, swimmers and cyclists are more prone to overuse injuries, Dr. McHugh said, and the newest studies and reviews have not found that stretching reduces the risk of overuse injuries.

On the other hand, “if you are involved in a sport that demands a great extent of static flexibility,” such as “holding a split position” during gymnastics or dropping into the ungainly crouch of “an ice hockey goalie,” then “you may need to add some static stretching,” said David Behm, the associate director of graduate studies and research at Memorial University of Newfoundland and lead author of the European journal review of stretching.

So there you have the state of the science on stretching. Hockey goalies, gymnasts, cheerleaders and dancers should be stretching before workouts or performances. The rest of us are unlikely, the latest findings show, to sustain any harm from brief spurts of static stretching — but equally unlikely to gain much advantage.

So if you stretch now before exercising and enjoy it, continue. “The negative psychological impact of altering precompetition routine may outweigh any possible benefit associated with removing” static stretching, the study of female runners concluded. But if you don’t stretch, don’t sweat it. “I would say there is no rationale” for most of us to practice “short duration static stretches,” Dr. McHugh said.

ROD 062311

ROD

Thursday, 23Jun11

 

NLP Time

Seven rounds for time at 21-18-15-12-9-6 and then 3 reps of:

Kettlebell swings
Push-ups
Sit-ups
Squats

Post time to comments.

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Do You Consume Enough Of This Internal Sunscreen?

Skin Cancer is a very big problem nowadays, and a big emphasis is put on using sunscreen and protecting your skin.  Did you know that there is a nutrient that acts as an internal sunscreen?

It also lends itself to numerous other skin health benefits such as wrinkles, age spots, and dry skin.  

For years now, we have known about naturally occurring pigments called carotenoids and how they help protect our skin and give it that healthy look.  There are actually hundreds of carotenoids, but we tend to focus on only a couple such as Beta-Carotene.  

These naturally occurring carotenoids protect organisms such as plants from damage by light or oxygen.   They also give vegetables and grasses their wonderful red, yellow, and orange colors.  

When we eat those vegetables, we absorb those same carotenoids that have been protecting that vegetable.  The benefits of these are then passed along to us and they help to protect us from the damage caused by sunlight.  

One carotenoid that has been gaining a lot of steam, thanks to numerous clinical studies, is something called Astaxanthin.  It has numerous other benefits such as eye health, immune system booster, reduce inflammation, etc., but we won’t discuss those today.  

What is of interest today is its ability to provide protection from the sun, and potentially reduce the signs of aging.  

Why we haven’t heard much about this nutrient until recently is because it isn’t easily obtainable.  The two main sources of this nutrient comes from the microalgae that create it and a few marine life that consume this algae.  That marine life is krill, salmon, and some shellfish.  

We know that beta-carotene, lycopene, and other carotenoids are strong nutrients that help protect our skin, but astaxanthin is significantly more powerful.  The benefits are free radical activity that protects your body from oxidative damage and oxidative stress.


When it comes to free radical activity, astaxanthin is more than 50 times more powerful than beta-carotene and more than 10 times more powerful than vitamin E.

Another very powerful benefit is that astaxanthin crosses the blood brain barrier, which very few nutrients are able to do.  Beta-carotene isn’t able to do this so this allows astaxanthin to provide an anti-inflammation benefit to your eyes, brain, and reduce your risk for various eye diseases.

The Facts Behind The Power Of Astaxanthin

A research study was conducted by an independent research lab to measure the skin’s ability to resist UVA and UVB light before and after astaxanthin supplementation.  What they found was that when the subjects took 4mg of astaxanthin per day for only 3 weeks, there was a significant increase in the amount of time for UV radiation to start damaging the skin.


Other studies, including the one published in the Journal of Dermatological Sciences, have shown that astaxanthin has been able to protect against changes in DNA that were the result of ultraviolet light.  

A third study, conducted in Japan, looked at women who consumed 2mg of astaxanthin daily for 4 weeks.  What surprised them was that after only 2 weeks, the women’s skin had improved on multiple levels; and, after 4 weeks, there was continued improvement.  

Some of the benefits were: increased skin tone and elasticity, and smoother surface and better moisture.  

Now, this doesn’t mean that you stop using sunscreen and doing what is necessary to protect yourself from the sun’s harmful ways, but why not boost your internal sunscreen protection and improve numerous other health markers that astaxanthin can provide.  

WARNING: Don’t Be Fooled By Synthetic Forms Of Astaxanthin. Only Use Natural Forms Of Astaxanthin >>

References:

Modulatory effects of an algal extract containing astaxanthin on UVA-irradiated cells in culture  Nicole M. Lyons, Nora M. O’Brien * Department of Food Science, Food Technology and Nutrition, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland   Journal of Dermatological Science 30 (2002)

http://www.cyanotech.com/pdfs/bioastin/batl33.pdf  Clinical Trial Indicates Sun Protection from BioAstin

Yamashita, E. (2002). “Cosmetic Benefit of Dietary Supplements Containing Astaxanthin and Tocotrienol on Human Skin.” Food Style. 21 6(6):112-17

http://www.fujihealthscience.com/study-references.html

ROD 060611

ROD

Monday, 06Jun11

 

Monday Classic Static

40 seconds work/20 seconds rest for 5 rounds

  • Squat hold w/med ball
  • Bent over row hold w kb or db
  • Superman hold (thumbs up)
  • Seated (legs locked out together) over head hold w/kb or db
  • Plank hold w opposite arm & leg extended (left arm straight, right leg off ground)

We’ll rest for one minute between rounds.

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Weight Loss Supplements: Good and BadWritten

by Mark Juffersen 

The only way to really lose weight is with a healthy diet and active lifestyle. Very few of the overhyped supplements on the market are actually effective. However, a few of them are and might be a good addition to your dieting strategy.

The Good

A few good weight loss supplements include apple cider vinegar and green tea. Now, green tea probably doesn’t actually contribute much in actual amount of fat loss. It is often hyped as a way to lose weight, and it’s true that it increases metabolism, but the effect is very slight. However, it might still be a useful addition to a weight loss plan because of its cholesterol lowering effects, and because even a slight increase in metabolism, safely, as this supplement does, will help in its own small way.

Apple cider vinegar, on the other hand, might actually help you lose weight. This is a bit surprising, as ACV has often been touted as a remedy for all sorts of stuff and so seems an unlikely candidate for anything actually useful. But scientific research on both animals and people has shown support for the fact that it can, in fact, contribute to the amount of weight you lose while dieting. With apple cider vinegar, weight loss is a benefit as well as lowered cholesterol, just like with green tea.

Another supplement that may actually work is Alli (generic drug name is orlistat), an over the counter drug (in the US) that has been shown to be effective in causing a slight amount of weight loss over control subjects.

That’s about it for stuff that actually works. Now…

The Bad

One popular weight loss treatment is a pregnancy hormone (the one used in pregnancy tests) called hCG (human corionic gonadotropin). This has been popular for fifty years as a way to suppress appetite and increase the amount of fat lost while on a very low calorie diet. The problem with it is that it hasn’t been shown to be effective in research studies, and most doctors will not prescribe it for weight loss. So hCG weight loss might be ineffective and is difficult to get, not to mention you have to eat a very small number of calories so it certainly isn’t anything magical.

Hoodia is an herbal supplement that might help suppress appetite, but there are a few problems with it. Not many studies have been done on it, so the jury is still out as to its effectiveness and long term safety. Also, there is some evidence that the active chemical in it might not be in concentrations large enough to have any effect in most supplements on the market.