Category: Weight Management

  • Six Tips to Snap Out of a Fitness Rut

    Six Tips to Snap Out of a Fitness Rut

    No matter what the fitness level of an individual, we can all get stuck in a rut from time to time.  There are lots of different things that can slow us down, but fortunately there are also lots of ways to spark your workouts again.

    Variety is the spice of life and is a great way to improve your fitness outlook.  People should try to change up the way they exercise now and then to avoid plateaus, boredom and just to give muscles a break from being used the same way over and over.

    Here’s a six-pack of tips to snap out of a fitness rut:

    Keep a workout log – This is a workout must.  If you log your workouts it will allow you to follow a plan, chart your progress and be able to look back over the workouts and feel good about yourself.  It can help you adjust better as you go along – determine what’s working and what isn’t – and also serve as motivation.

    Seek variety – Seek ways to cross train and vary the number of reps you do and how you do them to change things up.  Mixing different types of interval training is a great way to keep your cardio workouts more enjoyable and challenging.

    When it comes to running and/or walking, change the course you exercise on.  A change of scenery could help re-energize you.

    If you train mostly on a treadmill, you can still change things up.  Switch the pre-programmed workout you do, or change surroundings by doing things such as playing different music or what you watch on TV if one is near your machine.

    Set goals – It’s important to set a long-term goal, such as run a 5K race or lose 15 pounds.  People should also set short-term goals, such as simply to make sure they work out three times in the coming week or that they do 20-30 minutes of cardio at least twice a week.

    Find a training partner – A reliable family member or friend to work out with can help make it a lot more fun and also help keep you more motivated and accountable.

    Schedule time for fitness – We’re careful to schedule and keep appointments with the doctor or auto mechanic.  Shouldn’t finding time to exercise also be something important enough to block off time on our weekly calendar for?

    Buy something new – If you’re stuck in a rut, perhaps buying a new piece of fitness equipment for your home gym or new workout clothes will help motivate you.  Reward yourself for working to stay fit!  Knowing you have the new item should make you want to use it for exercise.

  • Children Are Fat, And Getting FATTER!

    Children Are Fat, And Getting FATTER!

    Back-to-school season is usually a time for parents to begin worrying about whether Johnny and Jane are being adequately taught to read, write and do math.  But recent studies tell parents they should be just as concerned about how their children are developing in places other than the brain.  To put it bluntly, our kids are fat and getting fatter, and less and less physically active.  Research shows that a high percentage of overweight children carry their excess pounds into adulthood, putting them at risk of premature death, chronic disease and disability.  Doctors are already seeing a rise in Type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure,  and cholesterol in children.  Dr. Andrew Pipe, director of the Prevention and Rehabilitation Center at the University of Ottawa Heart Institute, and a leading expert in this field, calls the rise in obesity among children “nothing short of a public health disaster.”

    Even children and youth who are not overweight may be at risk due to physical inactivity.  The Canadian Fitness and Lifestyle Research Institute has determined that three out of five Canadian children (aged 5 to 17) are not active enough for optimal growth and development.  That means they are doing less than it takes to walk an hour a day plus half an hour of vigorous activity like soccer, hockey, dance or martial arts — hardly a large amount for young, growing bodies.  There are three major reasons for this trend.  First, our kids are too sedentary.  They spend too much time on the computer and watching television, which has been linked to obesity.

    Second, they are not active enough.  They don’t walk or bike to school any more, they ride the bus.  When they are in school, they don’t spend enough time in the gym or on the playground.  At home, concerns about safety keep many parents from sending their children outside to play.  Last, children eat too much junk food, and not enough healthy foods.

    The bottom line is we’re not doing our children any favors.  In fact, we’re playing Russian roulette with their lives.  What can we do?  Getting our children to eat properly and be physically active is not rocket science, but it is not as easily accomplished as we might think.  Recent guidelines recommend that inactive children and youth start increasing the time they currently spend being physically active by at least 30 minutes a day.  This should include a combination of both moderate activity, such as walking and biking, and vigorous activity, such as running and playing soccer.

    The Center of Disease Control has published basic guidelines for maintaining an active lifestyle for children.  These guidelines include:

    • Children and adolescents should do 60 minutes (1 hour) or more of physical activity each day.
    • Encourage your child to participate in activities that are age-appropriate, enjoyable and offer variety.
    • Aerobic activity should make up most of your child’s 60 or more minutes of physical activity each day. This can include either moderate-intensity aerobic activity, such as brisk walking, or vigorous-intensity activity, such as running. Be sure to include vigorous-intensity aerobic activity on at least 3 days per week.
    • Include muscle strengthening activities, such as gymnastics or push-ups, at least 3 days per week as part of your child’s 60 or more minutes.
    • Include bone strengthening activities, such as jumping rope or running, at least 3 days per week as part of your child’s 60 or more minutes.

    Over several months, children should try to build up to at least 90 minutes more physical activity per day.  In time, this may help kids come to accept that physical activity is as important to protecting their health as wearing a seatbelt, and as routine as brushing their teeth.  For parents and care providers, it’s mostly common sense.  Enroll your children in their favorite sport, or try a new one.  Turn off the TV and computer and take them outside.  Hide the video games.  Go for a walk, a bike ride, a hike — anything that gets everyone moving.  Children learn what they see, and parents are their most important role models when it comes to being physically active.

    Recently, the Alberta, Canada government said it would make daily gym class mandatory in all elementary and secondary schools.  That’s something that all school districts should emulate.  As well, educators and parents need to understand that opportunities for physical activity should not end with a 40-minute gym class.  Some schools, in fact, have already learned that lesson.  Secord Elementary School in Toronto has received national recognition for its physical education program which offers students 150 minutes of activity every week.  Physical education is scheduled daily into the timetable of every class.  Use is also made of a multi-purpose room and a gym at a local community center.  The school also takes advantage of other community facilities, such as skating at the local outdoor arena and running at a local park.

    These efforts are welcome, but in isolation they won’t solve the overall problem.  Parents and schools alone can’t end the growing epidemic of childhood obesity and inactivity.  What is needed is for everyone who has an impact on children’s lives to play their part in a sustained, co-ordinated effort.  Parents, educators, health professionals, local, state, and federal governments — even fast food producers — need to think hard about what we’re doing to our children, or allowing them to do to themselves.

    Their lives literally depend on it.

  • The Truth About Fat Burners

    The Truth About Fat Burners

    Fat Burners refer to the hundreds of products on the market today that can be purchased over the counter. Their purpose is to somehow burn off the fat by speeding up metabolism, or blocking fat in foods, or other methods.

    The companies that sell these products employ savvy at marketing techniques to hook you, with bold print ads and sometimes less than believable before and after pictures.

    Are these products safe?

    Fat burners are not regulated by the FDA so companies can put whatever herb, vitamin, or mineral in them as long as the substance isn’t illegal. I don’t know of any long term studies on any one of the hundreds of fat burners on the market.

    Do they work?

    Many of these products have been shown to be effective for weight loss, though they may have negative side effects. Be aware these products can cause side effects such as rapid pulse, increased blood pressure, constipation, nervousness, sleeplessness, and lack of appetite.

    Are they healthy to you and your weight loss goals?

    The jury is still out on the health benefits of any fat burner. These products should be looked at as temporary fixes to weight loss. Most of them cause a decrease in appetite, which can lead you into a situation of not consuming enough calories on a daily basis.  Fat Burners ARE NOT a replacement for a sound nutrition and exercise plan.

    If you aren’t eating enough daily calories, your body responds by slowing your metabolism, storing fat, and using muscle for metabolism. This can result in you losing weight, but muscle weight instead of fat. The goal in any weight loss program should be to keep the muscle, lose the fat.

    Fat burners might help you lose some weight in the short term, but once you stop taking them you run a high probability of gaining the weight back, especially if you aren’t following a healthy eating plan and moderate exercise program.

  • Cycling For Weight Loss

    Cycling For Weight Loss

    Losing weight cycling is a fun and enjoyable way to improve your health and to make you feel better. Pedaling down a rural road or through a city park rouses your spirit and awakens your senses.

    One of the most powerful arguments for encouraging more people to cycle is that it leads to considerable improvements in public health.   A regular routine to lose weight cycling can reduce the risk of serious conditions such as heart disease, high blood pressure and obesity.

    Cycling is also a good way to improve your balance and co-ordination.   They say once you learn to ride a bike you never forget and that is true. The motion and balance come back to you very quickly. If you’re looking to get outside more often and improve your fitness, biking is the answer.  It enhances your general well-being and promotes mental health. Beyond the health benefits, it’s an enjoyable way to get around.

    Getting on your cycling bike regularly can also be an effective form of aerobic exercise.  A recent study found that even a small amount of cycling for weight loss can lead to a significant fitness gain. Aerobic fitness was boosted by 11 percent after just 6 weeks of cycling short distances four times a week. 

    Cycling can have positive effects on how we feel too.  Moderate exercise has been found to reduce levels of stress and depression, improve mood and raise self esteem. It has also been found, in some instances, to relieve symptoms of PMS.  Benefits in strength and agility can come from regular cycling also. There are no real-age barriers to cycling and people at almost any fitness level can begin slowly and gently if necessary.

    Physically active older people can reduce the rate of hip fractures with regular cycling exercise. Most of the negative things we associate with aging aren’t a result of chronological aging but rather a lack of physical activity.  Cycling is as gently on your body as a sport can be. It is a non weight bearing exercise so it’s easy on your joints, even the achy ones. It can be a wonderful way to get exercise and lose weight without pain.

    If your looking to lose weight cycling, jump on your bike and leave your worries and stress at home. Enjoy your ride. Just think you could be at work instead.

    If you are interested in starting a weight loss plan, or interested in cycling basics, please contact Total Human Performance for a free consultation by using our contact form located at http://www.totalhumanperformance.net/about-us/contact-us/ today!

  • Choosing a Fitness Trainer and Nutrition Consultant

    Choosing a Fitness Trainer and Nutrition Consultant

    A personal fitness trainer and nutrition consultant can help you enter a race where there’s no engraved cup or money award at the finish line. Unlike the Thoroughbreds racing at the local park, you will be running for your very life instead. Fitness and nutrition are the keys to a quality long life.

    Racing for Fitness

    Almost 60% of people in the United States are overweight or obese. The consequences of having too much fat on your body can be severe. Obesity is a major cause of many serious illnesses including Type 2 diabetes, coronary heart disease, high blood pressure and even certain forms of cancer.

    It’s hard to maintain a fitness routine on your own. On top of that you are bombarded with advertisements selling unhealthy food and gadgets and inventions that actually result in less physical activity. The perfect examples are kids playing electronic games for hours instead of baseball or soccer. There are bigger and better computers and TVs promoting lifestyles with little exercise time included.

    Sedentary lifestyles are not good for the body, and neither is junk food. But everyone lives extremely busy lives and fitness and nutrition often take a low priority. A personal fitness trainer and nutrition consultant can help you rearrange your priorities so you place your health top of the list.

    When you are young, it’s easy to believe good health is forever.  But as you age, the truth is slowly revealed. Metabolisms slow naturally. Fat accumulates after years of eating meals with little nutritional value.

    Free radicals form unimpeded because the diet has consistently lack antioxidants found in fruits and vegetables. Other diseases eventually take root. For example, lack of exercise increases the chances of developing osteoporosis.

    Finding Your Stride

    A personal fitness trainer and nutrition consultant can assist you in a number of ways beginning with an assessment of your current fitness level. A personal trainer will work with to establish mutual goals including measures of progress such as weight loss or inches loss.

    Personal fitness and nutrition consultation includes the following:

    • Evaluating current dietary habits and making necessary changes
    • Calculating the body mass index (BMI)
    • Establishing an exercise routine that fits your lifestyle
    • Develop a strength training program
    • Tracking progress and making necessary adjustments as you progress

    Using a personal fitness trainer and nutrition consultant can help you stay motivated as you begin the race for your life. The quality of your life in your senior years is directly related to the level of fitness you maintain in your younger years. It becomes clearer with each medical study that problems associated with aging are as much a consequence of poor nutrition as they are of the aging process itself.

    Utilizing the services of a personal fitness trainer and nutrition consultant only makes sense if you’re ready to get serious about your health. Racing for the grand prize of good health means finding your “fitness stride”.

    You don’t have to work out 8 hours a day to stay fit and healthy. You do have to exercise regularly and watch what you eat. A personal fitness trainer and nutrition consultant can be the key to your success.

    To start your adventure on the right path to fitness, please contact Total Human Performance for a free fitness consultation by using our contact form located at http://www.totalhumanperformance.net/about-us/contact-us/ today!

  • Do Low Carbohydrate Diets Lead to Weight Loss Success?

    Do Low Carbohydrate Diets Lead to Weight Loss Success?

    So your neighbor, co-worker, best friend, whoever just lost 10 pounds in only two weeks following the latest in high protein low carbohydrate diets. And now you’re thinking you should give it a go — have even started the search for high protein low carbohydrate recipes? True, high protein low carb diets seem to be leading many people to weight loss success. Trouble is, they seemed to do it 30 years ago, too. They were the rage in the early 70s, and look where many of us are today: growing fatter with each decade.

    The bottom line: Diets — low carb diets or not — simply don’t work for the vast majority of people. If that doesn’t convince you, look at some of the reasons why high protein low carbohydrate diets seem to create weight loss success stories — but really don’t.

    “I’m not hungry when I eat high protein low carb diets.”

    Many people say they feel more satisfied eating low carbohydrate diets. And indeed, studies show protein is the most satiating nutrient. Proteins and fat (which is usually in high protein low carbohydrate foods) cause your body to release cholecystokinin, a hormone that contributes to the feeling of fullness. Some protein in meals and even snacks may help us feel more satisfied and go longer between eating. But the key word is “some.” We don’t need an excess of protein, or low carb diets, to get these effects. By just eating balanced meals that contain grain/starchy foods, protein foods, vegetables and/or fruits and some fat, most people can achieve the same satiety. One other important note is that hunger control with low carbohydrate diets is often the result of ketosis (when your body burns fat for fuel.) Ketosis is very unhealthy, causing nausea, headaches, fatigue, even coma.

    “Results are results – I saw successful weight loss, didn’t I?”

    Many people do lose weight on high protein low carb diets. Instead of fat, however, they’re initially losing more water than anything else — and it quickly returns once off low carb diets. They seem to see successful weight loss, too, because low carb diets restrict many foods, resulting in eating less than usual.

    The big question is: Is it really successful weight loss if it doesn’t stay off? For most people, if weight loss is achieved quickly and with a restrictive method such as a diet that does not allow for individual likes and dislikes, then the lost pounds will return, along with discouragement, defeat and even more pounds than before. What’s more, high protein low carb diets may also increase risk for health problems such as osteoporosis, cancer, even heart disease. A healthy intake of whole grain foods, fruits and vegetables — often on the “avoid” list in high protein low carb diets – appears to help reduce this risk, and is the mainstay of a sensible plan to achieve weight loss success.

    Create your own weight loss success story.

    Despite what you hear about high protein low carb diets, there’s little evidence that weight loss success is truly (permanently) achieved. What’s more, disordered eating behaviors are usually reinforced by high protein low carb diets, adding to the struggles that low carbohydrate diets and other diets are supposed to solve. Stop dieting now and start living a healthy lifestyle that truly leaves you feeling good!

  • The Extinction of Health

    The Extinction of Health

    Excerpt from the Article “The Extinction of Health” –

    “Knowing is not enough, you must apply; willing is not enough, you must do.” —Bruce Lee

    “Everything has gone haywire—the educational system, books, the media, the internet. We’re on a blind search for healthier lives, choices, and bodies, but we don’t know where to start because there’s so much irrelevant information out there. We choose to look past the basics of a healthier life or at least refuse to try what really will have an impact. ”

    “There aren’t any supplements, diets, exercise programs, pills, electromagnetic bedding, doctors, chiropractors, trainers, dieticians, books, or anything else that will help you get to where you desire to go unless you decide to go and do. Want to get in shape and stay in shape? Then move your butt.”

    Move your butt. That about sums it up. People are so hung up on all of the mechanics of doing this workout, taking this supplement, following this diet that they forget about the key elements of proper health.

    These elements include:

    • Stop Eating Garbage Foods
    • Stop indulging in alcohol
    • Drink lots of water
    • Get adequate rest
    • Eat a balanced diet
    • And most importantly – MOVE YOUR BUTT!!!

     

    The full article can be found Here at EliteFTS

  • Healthy Snacks for Kids

    Healthy Snacks for Kids

    Snack foods too often result in the downfall of good nutrition and ideal weight. The snacks one eats often lead to undesirable weight gains in youngsters and adults. So snacks need to be considered from the viewpoint of nutritional value, calorie count, and the activity of the person eating them. Without an adult’s teaching them the benefits of good nutrition and guiding them in their eating habits, youngsters often tend to want snacks that aren’t beneficial to their health and weight.

    Factors to Consider
    – Generally an active person burns more calories in a day so can eat more snacks in addition to meals without gaining weight. A less active person has to eat lower calorie snacks or fewer snacks.

    – Too often candy, cake, cookies, potato chips, and soda top the list of after school or recess snacks. Teach children to eat these in moderation for they’re generally high in calories and lower in nutrition.

    – Foods high in sugar content have quick energy, but their nutritional value is not as high as many other snacks.

    Desirable Snacks
    – Fruits rate high on the list of desirable snack foods – apples, oranges, bananas, peaches, pears, plums. Use canned or dried fruits when fresh ones aren’t in season.

    – Fruit juices are better than soda for a refreshing drink. Milk is good, too. However, remember, when you use flavorings, such as chocolate and strawberry, you add calories to the drink.

    – Water is a very good beverage and necessary to maintain life and good health.

    – Although carrot sticks and celery sticks aren’t always a favorite on the snack list, they can be enhanced in appeal when accompanied by cheese and peanut butter. (There also are lower fat types of these spreads.)

    – Raisins and peanuts are good snack foods full of nutrition. Of course, the dry roasted peanuts are lower in calories than those roasted in oil.

    Snacks Before Dinner
    If it will be awhile before dinner, when a youngster gets home from school starved, try a sandwich instead of sweets. Sandwich fillings such as tuna fish, cheese, peanut butter (without much jelly), or egg will supply protein.

    Or serve crackers with peanut butter or cheese. If cookies have big appeal as a snack, try making types with the most food value and nourishment. Cookies with cereal ingredients, such as oatmeal and crispy rice, generally have more nutritional value than rich chocolate brownies and chocolate chip cookies. Adding wheat germ to the cereal cookie recipe also gives additional nutrition.

    Icy Banana Shakes have nutritional value. Blend in a mixer until smooth: 3 cubes ice, 3/4 cup milk, 1 tablespoon sugar, 1/2 teaspoon vanilla, and 1 ripe banana.