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Why Exercise Won't Make You Thin

As I write this, tomorrow is Tuesday, which is a cardio day. I'll spend five minutes warming up on the VersaClimber, a towering machine that requires you to move your arms and legs simultaneously. Then I'll do 30 minutes on a stair mill. On Wednesday a personal trainer will work me like a farm animal for an hour, sometimes to the point that I am dizzy — an abuse for which I pay as much as I spend on groceries in a week. Thursday is "body wedge" class, which involves another exercise contraption, this one a large foam wedge from which I will push myself up in various hateful ways for an hour. Friday will bring a 5.5-mile run, the extra half-mile my grueling expiation of any gastronomical indulgences during the week.
Read the entire story via time.com

 

Filed under  //   Exercise   Personal Trainer  
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A CEO Steps Up Weight Loss By Exercising His Inner 'Rocky'

“If someone says you can lose 20 pounds in the course of a year by punching a bag, then I’m signing up,” says Stephen Stoute, the 39-year-old chief executive of Carol’s Daughter beauty and skin-care line. “There’s a Rocky in all of us.”

Mr. Stoute did just that—except he dropped nearly 100 pounds over the course of nine years.

Mr. Stoute was in top shape in his teens and early 20s, playing football in both high school and college. “Once I got into the professional world, health was not at the forefront of things on my mind,” says Mr. Stoute, who was executive vice president of Interscope Geffen A&M Records. The pounds slowly started to creep on and by age 30 he weighed 315 pounds.

“I was avoiding mirrors and ignoring it,” he says. But when he turned 30 he realized he couldn’t turn a blind eye to his weight anymore: “I knew it would end badly.”

Mr. Stoute started boxing sporadically and lost 50 pounds in about five years. After that, he hit a plateau. So two years ago, he decided to step it up a notch by doing high-intensity boxing four to five times a week, losing another 40 pounds to reach his current weight. In May, the 6-foot-tall executive hit 225 pounds on the scale. “In the past I felt like my body always just wanted to be fat,” he says, “but now I feel like I’m at a healthy weight that I can stay at without any crash diet.”

Read more via online.wsj.com

 

Filed under  //   Exercise   Weight Loss  
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Improve Your Life With Yoga Excercises

The word "yoga" means "union". Yoga exercises are based on the belief that the body and breath are intimately connected with the mind. By controlling the breath and holding the body in steady poses, or "asanas", yoga creates harmony. Yoga is not, however, magic.

Yogis (masters of yoga) do not have the ability to vanish into thin air or levitate off the ground. But they have been known to perform extraordinary feats more than once, such as holding their breath for hours on end, or slowing down their heartbeat in order to imitate conditions of death.

Yoga practice consists of 5 key elements: proper breathing, exercise, relaxation, diet, positive thinking, and meditation. The yoga exercises -- or asanas -- are designed to ease tense muscles, tone up the internal organs, and improve the flexibility of the body's joints and ligaments.
Read the details via askmen.com


Filed under  //   Diet   Exercise   Fitness   Health   Meditation   Relaxation   Yoga  
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Evan Longoria's Eight-Week Plan

"Whether riding a bike for 10 minutes or getting a 30-minute workout, never shut yourself down," says Longoria, who went on to become the 2008 American League Rookie of the Year. He continued his morning maintenance during the offseason when he also hit the gym three times a week, working through a series of exercises that improve strength, agility, and core strength.
Longoria's entire eight-week off-season training plan can be downloaded and printed below via mensfitness.com


Filed under  //   Exercise   Fitness   Gym   Health   Workout  
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Workouts on the Web

Streaming workout videos -- for cardio, Pilates, strength training, yoga and more -- are now available on dozens of sites for absolutely nada. The only thing they'll cost you is your patience: Most have less-than-perfect picture quality, a barrage of advertising and the occasional broadband hiccup or video lag to contend with.

But for the time-strapped individual who doesn't mind doing a squat thrust in front of a computer, these workouts are a perfect way to squeeze in a few minutes of exercise at home or in a hotel room, says Gregory Florez, chief executive of health coaching service fitadvisor.com and spokesman for the American Council on Exercise.
Read on for a sampler of some of the best Web workout sites and what you can expect from them via latimes.com


Filed under  //   Exercise   Fitness   Health   Pilates   Workout   Yoga  
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Healthy Living: 5 mostly free ways to get in shape this spring

While the basic premise for any get healthy now article is the same; eat right, exercise more, and avoid fad diets I've found a few cool new tools and tips to help you, and me, get in shape.
Get the details via walletpop.com


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A spring purge of 10 exercise myths

via nationalpost.com

Devon McGregor, National Post

It's a common fitness myth that resistance training creates bulky muscles in women and men — it can actually help the body get leaner and burn fat more efficiently.Dave Sidaway / Canwest News ServiceIt's a common fitness myth that resistance training creates bulky muscles in women and men — it can actually help the body get leaner and burn fat more efficiently.

Spring is finally here and many of us will use this as an opportunity ship out the old and begin anew. Before you embark on a spring training routine, however, there are are several myths you will want to clean out first. Herewith, 10 common fitness myths:

1. Lifting lighter weights will make your muscles more defined and toned.

Wrong: Muscles respond to overload. When we perform resistance training with sufficient intensity, we create small tears or fissures in muscle tissue. When the muscle recuperates, it will become tighter (more dense) and stronger.

It is important, however, that your nutritional program support your workouts. Reduced body fat is what creates the "lean and tight" look, not a high number (15+) of reps. Higher reps increase muscular endurance. There are three factors that influence body fat levels: Efficient, effective resistance training, proper cardiovascular exercise (including duration, intensity and frequency) and a nutrition pattern that allows you to effectively burn up excess fuel, while providing the correct nutrients to rebuild muscles and other cells.

2. You can successfully lose (and keep off) body fat by only doing cardio.

Nope. Muscles are like horsepower in a car. The more horsepower you have, the faster you burn fuel. The same goes for your body: The more muscles you have, the faster it burns fat, which is one of the body's fuel sources. If your reason for doing cardio is to lose weight, you will. Be aware, however, that you may also lose as much muscle as fat. The problem becomes that you are lowering your own ability to burn fat.

One pound of muscle is equal to 35-50 additional calories burned per day. If you strip muscle tissue, all you accomplish is sabotaging your efforts to efficiently reduce body fat. If you want to lose weight, focus on burning and not only reducing calories. Calories not burned translates into calories stored, primarily as fat. Lowering your weight by reducing muscle mass only obstructs your own ability to burn calories. And it's a vicious cycle.

3. Cutting calories is enough to lose body weight.

I once heard a doctor say, "I won't be so arrogant as to think I know how the body does what it does." I was amazed by the statement, especially coming from a doctor. But, I also think that what she said is quite profound. Everyone is unique, with their own dietary needs and restrictions.

But there are a few simple rules that, if we understand and master them, will keep us from getting frustrated, trying desperately to catch up, running from one diet fad to another fitness trend. Treat building a dietary plan the same as creating a wardrobe. First, select some essentials. A closet full of jeans and T-shirts probably won't get you a corporate job. Likewise, a diet that is limited to just reducing calories isn't equipped with the essentials - carbohydrates, proteins and fats - to create a healthy body. Like your closet, your diet must have a well-rounded assortment of items that allow you to meet the demands of varying conditions.

4. Muscle mass weighs more than fat.

It's an age-old question, which weighs more: A pound of gold or a pound of feathers? They both weigh the same. Total volume and area covered are where the differences are. Muscle is more dense than fat, but fat covers more area - up to three times more.

5. Just follow the perfect workout routine, and you'll be fine.

There is probably no question that I answer more often than "what is the best exercise for ...?" There is no program I can create for you that would work exactly the same for someone else. There is no best cardio machine, abdominal exercise, routine for the butt or even philosophy. I tell people that all of it works ... depending, of course, on frequency, intensity, duration or the type of activity.

Personally, I dislike the idea of routinized exercise. Performing the same routine each time you train will quickly cease to have any great benefit, a phenomenon we refer to as plateau. The body will adapt to any exercise routine in four to six weeks, and the mind will experience boredom if you stay with the same routine for too long.

When beginning a fitness program, focus on first learning the fundamentals. This will allow you to create a foundation, building on what your body has learned. As you progress, accomplishments will be real, and much more sustainable. As with any foundation, one built poorly will eventually bring all your efforts down.

6. Ladies who lift weights will create bulky muscles.

This one always makes me smile. Firstly, I understand: You want to be lean, muscular - but not too muscular - with a six-pack and a tight butt. I get it! But not so fast.

There is one reason why it is not so easy for women to bulk up: Testosterone. Women's testosterone levels are much lower than men's. The hormone affects muscle size and strength, the size of the heart, the amount of oxygen-carrying blood cells in the body, and our percentage of body fat. Men's skeletal muscles, which do work during exercise, are bigger - factors which gives men a performance edge, making us stronger and faster.

It is more likely that women will tone up and get leaner from strength training rather than bulk up. Resistance training can add up to 30% lean muscle, creating a thinner, stronger and firmer body.

It is a terrible myth that associates weight training with oversized muscles. It is challenging for both men, and especially women, to actually increase muscle mass. In fact, women who choose not to weight train are at a disadvantage when it comes to their health. The problem most women run into isn't building too much muscle, but not building enough. Low muscle mass places women at an increased risk of osteoporosis, as well as a reduction in muscle mass of about 2% to 5% per year, which has an adverse affect on metabolism (and can result in weight gain). In essence, the very thing that women are trying to avoid is accelerated by choosing not to introduce resistance training. Instead, think of it as a trade off - fat for muscles.

7. The best way to lose fat is to eat fewer calories.

The human body, even as a fetus, craves nutrients. Nothing matters to it more than staying alive. It has no higher purpose, and will shut down anything that tries to supersede that, even if it means making you sick in the process.

There is a phenomenon commonly referred to as "starvation mode," a process where the body becomes hyper-efficient at converting all consumed calories into other, more sustainable forms of fuel. To accomplish this, our body will lower its metabolic rate, leading to a loss of muscle so that the body requires fewer calories to subsist, causing weight loss to slow down. It explains why some of your friends, though otherwise thin, have a protruding stomach. Their bodies believe that they are in a famine situation. That makes it difficult to lose those unwanted pounds.

An ongoing calorie reduced diet (less than 1,200 calories for most people), causes the body to perceive an emergency. It doesn't understand your reasons for starving it, only that it needs to save every calorie, and will accommodate you by holding on to stored body fat.

8. You can target weight loss to one part of the body.

The bad news: Typically, the first place you tend to gain is the last place you will lose. It is physiologically impossible to spot reduce. The best thing you can do for a stubborn area is to be patient. Again, the best route to success for those stubborn hips is resistance exercise, cardio and a balanced, nutrient-rich diet.

9. Sweating is indicates a good hard workout.

Sweating is one of several ways our body cools itself down. Internal body and ambient temperature, the clothes we are wearing and genetics are only some of the factors that determine how much you sweat. Hard work is not one of them.

10. Yoga will make you long and lean.

This is a tricky one for me, as my gym, Balance Fitness, offers several varieties of weekly yoga classes. Let me carefully say, I am not aware of a better training method than yoga for increasing flexibility. I also believe that yoga is an outstanding choice if you wish to improve your balance, static strength and breathing. However, my opinion is that the length of a muscle cannot change anymore than the skeletal structure it's attached to. I can understand that the increased flexibility from practising yoga causes people to feel "longer" and taller. But don't mistake the feeling of length for the actual fact.

As I have discussed above, creating lean muscles is a fine balance of nutrition, resistance and cardiovascular training. Yoga will contribute no more to being "lean" than any other activity using equivalent caloric expenditure. However, if doing yoga causes you to feel longer and leaner, but weight training doesn't, then you should do yoga.

-Devon McGregor, BFA, BSc, human kinetics, is a fitness expert with more than 18 years experience and co-founder of Balance (balancefit.com), a Toronto fitness centre.

info@balancefit.com

Filed under  //   Calories   Cardio   Exercise   Fitness   Health   Weight Loss   Weights   Yoga  
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Valerie Bertinelli's Diet and Fitness routine gets her back in Bikini for her 49th Birthday!

By Elizabeth Leonard

Valerie Bertinelli Back in Bikini for 49th Birthday!

The night before Valerie Bertinelli prepared to step out in public wearing a bikini – for the first time in nearly 30 years! – she found herself unable to sleep. As her mind raced with insecurity ("I thought, Am I really going to do this? Can I pull this off?" the actress admits), Bertinelli tried to summon up a pep talk, telling herself, "What am I so afraid of? Come on – it's just a bathing suit!"

And yet as any woman knows, those innocent-looking strips of Lycra can be a terrifying sight – especially for someone just shy of her 49th birthday (April 23), who only two years ago tipped the scales at 172 lbs. – more than 40 lbs. over her goal weight for her 5'4" frame. But after whittling herself down to 132 lbs. in about 9 months on Jenny Craig (for whom she serves as a company spokeswoman), Bertinelli, who had last worn a bikini when she was 20, was ready for a new challenge.

"I thought, If I'm so afraid of a bikini, there’s something wrong. And so I had to get back into one!," Bertinelli says in the new PEOPLE, available on newsstands Friday.

And so – after about a year of exercising on her own while losing weight, primarily by walking 10,000 steps a day – she hired a personal trainer in December. Before long she was running up to five times a week. During what she calls the bikini "homestretch" – the last three weeks – she trimmed her daily caloric intake from 1,700 to around 1,200, and gave up her regular "splurge" glass of champagne. "It was crunch time," she says, "like getting ready for your class reunion!"

The result? Bertinell says she is now in the best shape of her life. "I never, ever, ever had deltoids!” she says. "Oh my God, when I'm doing exercises and I see them pop out, I'm like, Yes!"

 

Filed under  //   Diet   Exercise   Fitness   Health   Personal Trainer   Valerie Bertinelli   Weight Loss  
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The 8 Most Overrated Health Trends

by Mike Howard

Before I unveil my list of the most overrated exercise and diet trends, I feel a disclaimer or two is in order:

  1. I'm in favor of anything that helps people become healthy or fit. The word "overrated" needs to be taken into context and is certainly open to interpretation.
  2. Just because I deem something to be overrated does not mean I don't think it has merit. I may feel something is "overrated" simply due to the amount of hype it gets or to the degree that its proponents revere it.

With those 2 things in mind, let's get going.

  1. Balls, BOSU's, balance boards, Oh my!: Walk into any gym facility and you are bound to see trainers and other gym goers alike performing squats, pushups and other circus-like maneuvers on balance implements. The truth is, plain old squats are far more functional and effective for the vast majority of people. These tools should really be used sparingly.
  2. Acai Berry Juice: You may have had some salesperson tell you of the magical powers possessed by this exotic berry. When tested for polyphenol content, Acai rates below concord grapes, red wine and blueberries. Stick with a variety of fruits and veggies here and save your cash.
  3. Yoga: I usually get ripped for this one but there is a geographical influence here. See where I live, Yoga reigns supreme and don't try and tell anyone differently. The truth is, Yoga can be helpful for many, but indiscriminate flexibility is not always the ideal prescription for everyone. If you have time left after weights, cardio and specific mobility work - or you are training for something that requires being in one spot for an hour - knock yourself out!
  4. Antioxidants: Especially when taken as supplements, vitamins C, E and Beta Carotene have proven utterly disappointing for preventing disease. It seems the whole, nutrient dense foods win out again.
  5. Detox and Cleansing: I can't see any justification for it - especially the more extreme ones. Eat healthily most of the time and there is no need to "cleanse" away your dietary sins. If you haven't been eating healthily, start eating healthily instead of subsisting on spiked water.
  6. CrossFit: CrossFit is a very intense training method that combines Olympic lifting, body weight and gymnastics-type exercise with little to no rest. Barbells, boxes, gymnastics rings, big lifts, no machines...love it. Arbitrary and extreme programming, no concept of progression, flimsy certification process, inadequate screening and rhabdomyolysis... not so good. Go with a coach/system that addresses the aforementioned.
  7. Nitric Oxide Supplements: When browsing a supplement store last week I noticed a lot of shelf space dedicated to Nitric Oxide and other blood flow enhancers. Many bodybuilding sites and other supplement gurus tout its benefits, but when put to clinical trials, NO has no effect compared to a placebo on body composition, insulin, carbohydrate uptake or muscle strength.
  8. The Biggest Loser: The fact that the reality (let's call it "unscripted") show is in its 7th season tells me that it is more popular than it should be. You could make the argument that people will be inspired by the show, but I would argue that it sets people up for unrealistic expectations. The premise of the show is completely flawed - promoting a "lose scale weight at all costs" mentality.

Which exercise and/or diet trends do you think are overrated?

 

Filed under  //   Acai Berry   Antioxidants   CrossFit   Diet   Exercise   Fitness   Health   Trends   Yoga  
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South Beach Diet doc talks diet, exercise and Miami

glehman@MiamiHerald.com

Dr. Arthur Agatston, cardiologist and South Beach Diet developer, talks about diet, exercise and Miami's new status as the nation's fattest city:

Q: In your newest book, The South Beach Diet Supercharged, you write that ''the diet debates are over.'' What do you mean?

A: The consensus is that we're beyond low-fat versus low-carb debates . . . The answer is healthy carbs -- nutrient-dense, high-fiber, vegetables, whole fruits, whole grains; the good fats -- omega-3 fish oils, olive oil . . . These principles are, I would say, set in stone.

Q: You also include exercise in Supercharged because you say there's new evidence about the best way to exercise. What is that?

A: The major thing is the benefits of interval exercise. . . . The analogy we use is driving a car. Doing highway driving at a steady speed, you burn less gas than if you are starting and stopping and accelerating. . . . Doing short bursts, from as little as 10-12 seconds to 30-second bursts of higher-intensity exercise, you get a lot more high-intensity exercise in than if you just sprinted, because [with sprinting] you'd get tired in no time.

It also appears that you get muscle adaptations where you burn more fat as well. And even given the same amount of total calorie burning, by doing episodes of high intensity, you burn more fat, you handle sugar and your insulin levels are improved.

Especially for everyone who's so busy, 20 minutes is totally adequate for the intervals.

Q: What about so-called core exercises, like Pilates?

A: For the ''Boomeritis'' problems, core training is very important. Just sitting slumped over a computer all day affects our core muscles between the shoulders and the pelvis. With the classic gym, you can get very big muscles and go home and lift something and have your back go out because your core is weak.

Q: Is there a difference in the kind of fat that's burned in interval exercise?

A: A study from [a scientific journal] took a group of untrained women -- a control group, steady-state exercisers and women doing interval training -- and the interval trainers burned more belly fat than the steady-state exercisers or the control group. They improved insulin levels as well. That does help you reduce the dangerous type of fat, the belly fat.

Q: How is belly fat different than other fat?

A: Belly fat is just metabolically different than other fat that accumulates under the skin. Belly fat surrounds the organs and accumulates in response to high insulin levels. It's the apple shape versus the pear shape.

Any exercise will help burn belly fat faster [than other fat]. Visceral fat goes down more easily. People with a pear shape . . . have to do a lot more exercise than somebody with predominantly belly fat.

But, a person with belly fat will also gain weight back more quickly. These are the people who can yo-yo more easily than someone who is ``fat and fit.''

Q: Are there other influences on how easily people gain or lose weight?

A: Different ethnic groups have different rates of what's called the ''thrifty gene,'' which is the gene for storing fat and for insulin resistence. Northern Mexicans have a big dose of that gene.

Q: Finally, what's your take on Men's Fitness magazine ranking Miami as the fattest city in the United States?

A: I was really kind of amazed at that. Just walking around Midwest airports and the deep South, those were, I thought, the fattest areas.

 

Filed under  //   Arthur Agatston   Diet   Exercise   Fitness   Health   South Beach  
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