Straight Arm Pulldowns with bands
Description : Straight arm pull downs with a band is a great prep exercise for back and core strengthening. It trains scapula (shoulder blade) retraction and challenges neutral spine through the entire range. Not to mention it's a great movement pattern to train for swimming. Doing them on one leg brings the difficulty up and works the stabilizer muscles around the hip, knee, and ankle. Learn how to perform this exercise in this training video brought to you by Inflict Training!
Tag : New exercises, Training ballasting, Physical education, Flexibility, Fitness training, Strength training, Power, Iron, Weightlifting, Endurance, Recent exercises, Biceps, Chest, Triceps, Aerobic, Back muscles, Abdominal muscles, Shoulder muscles, Quadriceps, Leg muscle
Fitness Articles and Tips
How to start Every Workout
The other day I was beginning a session with a client and this was at the time when the gym was just opening. Yep, right at 530 am. This time of year when there is some light it's not so bad. But in the middle of winter when it's still dark and cold that's another thing altogether.
Anyways, as we were warming up I was able to notice what everyone else does when they get to the gym. It's much easier to notice this at 530 am because every new person you see has just walked in the door. And here's the thing. People tend to do just dive straight in to the regular workouts.
If they are cardio people then head straight for their machine of choice, key in the program they want to follow and get started.
And if they're people who lift weights then they will go straight to their exercise of choice and start loading weight on the bar for their first set.
And the yoga people throw their mats down, turn the lights in the group fitness room and go to sleep. Well, not really but pretty close.
But here's the thing, when you go skiing do you do a few warm up runs before you tackle the moguls and advanced runs? When you go golfing do you do a few practice swings and maybe a few stretches before teeing one up on the 1st tee? And if you play rec league basketball, soccer or volleyball do you shoot a few free throws, dribble or pass the ball around before game time?
Absolutely you would. So why wouldn't we take some time to warm-up before our workouts? Besides increasing our core temperature, activating the core and mobilizing key joints a proper warm-up helps us perform better during our workout. And you will reducing the chance of injury and enhancing your ability to recover when you warm-up properly.
Not sure what to do for a proper warm-up? Well here's what we include for our athletes and clients.
1. Tennis ball roll. Rub the bottom of the foot, without shoes, on a tennis ball. This helps awaken proprioceptors in the foot and as the muscles are connected by fascia it helps to recruit the musculature throughout the lower extremities and towards the glutes and hips.
2. A general warm-up. This may be a light jog if outdoors or a few minutes on a cardio machine to get a sweat on.
3. Run through a dynamic warm-up. The keys are to get the body moving but start slow to fast, no rotation to rotation, small level changes to larger level changes, small ranges of motion to greater ranges of motion. If you're not sure how to set up a dynamic warm-up let me know and I'll send you one.
4. Lateral tube walking. We want to get the glutes firing. This is a great staple of our program and a great drill to make your knees really stable.
5. Med ball chops. We use a med ball to increase loading through the core and increase mobility through the thoracic spine.
6. Wall slides. Most people have over active upper traps and this drill helps to reverse this.
7. Ankle mobilizations. Most people tend to lack ankle mobility. And what we lack at one joint will be accessed from another. Unfortunately for many this ends up being the low back which shouldn't be moving around a lot.
8. Scapular push-ups. The more we do these the less shoulder issues I've seen with our clients and athletes. And it transfers very well to the technique we want them to use when doing any kind of horizontal pressing.
Well that's how we warm-up. 8 drills or exercises that take approximately 10-15 minutes. It gets the body warm, fires up the nervous system and get the key area activated, mobilized and ready for work.
If you want to see and experience this warm-up come out to our group fitness workout on Sat @ 9 Am. The first one if always on us and there is no further obligation.
How to start Every Workout
The other day I was beginning a session with a client and this was at the time when the gym was just opening. Yep, right at 530 am. This time of year when there is some light it's not so bad. But in the middle of winter when it's still dark and cold that's another thing altogether.
Anyways, as we were warming up I was able to notice what everyone else does when they get to the gym. It's much easier to notice this at 530 am because every new person you see has just walked in the door. And here's the thing. People tend to do just dive straight in to the regular workouts.
If they are cardio people then head straight for their machine of choice, key in the program they want to follow and get started.
And if they're people who lift weights then they will go straight to their exercise of choice and start loading weight on the bar for their first set.
And the yoga people throw their mats down, turn the lights in the group fitness room and go to sleep. Well, not really but pretty close.
But here's the thing, when you go skiing do you do a few warm up runs before you tackle the moguls and advanced runs? When you go golfing do you do a few practice swings and maybe a few stretches before teeing one up on the 1st tee? And if you play rec league basketball, soccer or volleyball do you shoot a few free throws, dribble or pass the ball around before game time?
Absolutely you would. So why wouldn't we take some time to warm-up before our workouts? Besides increasing our core temperature, activating the core and mobilizing key joints a proper warm-up helps us perform better during our workout. And you will reducing the chance of injury and enhancing your ability to recover when you warm-up properly.
Not sure what to do for a proper warm-up? Well here's what we include for our athletes and clients.
1. Tennis ball roll. Rub the bottom of the foot, without shoes, on a tennis ball. This helps awaken proprioceptors in the foot and as the muscles are connected by fascia it helps to recruit the musculature throughout the lower extremities and towards the glutes and hips.
2. A general warm-up. This may be a light jog if outdoors or a few minutes on a cardio machine to get a sweat on.
3. Run through a dynamic warm-up. The keys are to get the body moving but start slow to fast, no rotation to rotation, small level changes to larger level changes, small ranges of motion to greater ranges of motion. If you're not sure how to set up a dynamic warm-up let me know and I'll send you one.
4. Lateral tube walking. We want to get the glutes firing. This is a great staple of our program and a great drill to make your knees really stable.
5. Med ball chops. We use a med ball to increase loading through the core and increase mobility through the thoracic spine.
6. Wall slides. Most people have over active upper traps and this drill helps to reverse this.
7. Ankle mobilizations. Most people tend to lack ankle mobility. And what we lack at one joint will be accessed from another. Unfortunately for many this ends up being the low back which shouldn't be moving around a lot.
8. Scapular push-ups. The more we do these the less shoulder issues I've seen with our clients and athletes. And it transfers very well to the technique we want them to use when doing any kind of horizontal pressing.
Well that's how we warm-up. 8 drills or exercises that take approximately 10-15 minutes. It gets the body warm, fires up the nervous system and get the key area activated, mobilized and ready for work.
If you want to see and experience this warm-up come out to our group fitness workout on Sat @ 9 Am. The first one if always on us and there is no further obligation.
Straight Arm Pulldowns with a Band
Tag : New exercises, Training ballasting, Physical education, Flexibility, Fetness training, Strength training, Power, Iron, Weightlifting, Endurance, Recent exercises, Biceps, Chest, Triceps, Aerobic, Back muscles, Abdominal muscles, Shoulder muscles, Quadriceps, Leg muscle
Description : Straight arm pull downs are a good back and core strengthening exercise. It trains scapula (shoulder blade) retraction and challenges neutral spine through the entire range. Not to mention it's a great movement pattern to train for swimming. Learn how to perform this exercise in this training video brought to you by Inflict Training!
Fitness Articles and Tips
Train when Injured?
In my last few articles I've talked about monitoring the signs of overtraining and listening to your body. I alluded to the fact that last week I felt my own body tighten up during a workout but was able to manage this, work around it and return to training more quickly and at a higher level than if I had pushed on.
So the question becomes what should we do when we feel strain? The first thing I have to mention is that this is not medical advice. This is not meant to serve as a diagnosis of any type of musculoskeletal injury. If you have suffered a serious injury then you should seek medical attention.
Whenever we feel a strain or something more we should be asking ourselves why this happened? Our bodies gives us purposeful feedback and warnings to prevent further damage. Some questions to ask to determine the cause of the discomfort include:
* Have I started a new activity or program lately? Even when we are in shape the first time we try a new activity or sport we will feel it the days that follow.
* In my previous workouts did I warm-up adequately? Did I cool down and stretch out enough? Was my technique optimal throughout all lifts?
* What was I doing prior to my workouts? Have I been sitting at the computer for hours on end before attempting a max deadlift? Was I driving cross-country on a business trip? Have I been doing heavy manual labour? Basically have I been overly static or active in the lead up to training?
* Have I recently upped the frequency, intensity or duration of my workouts?
* Lastly, have I noticed bilateral differences in my body? In other words are there diffences between the left and right sides of my body? When warming up did I feel tighter on one side? When lifting was the bar travelling in an even path or was it off-balance or rotating? When stretching out could I get a release more easily on one side than the other?
If we try and answer the above questions we can do a little bit better job to stay on top of potential injuries.
But once we're injured we need a plan. Here's what I've found works well. Again, to reiterate, this is not to replace any type of medical attention or treatment.
1. The puddle often is not the source of the leak. Many times we suffer an injury at a particular joint and we look to address the problem by zeroing in on this area. But sometimes a knee injury might be due to an issue with the glutes. Or a low back issue might be related to improper posture and function of the scapula (shoulder blades). The point here is to avoid having tunnel vision and look to see how the body works as a whole to determine why there is a problem.
2. Continuing with the previous point don't be overly aggressive at the source of the injury. What I mean is that if I have a low back injury I don't necessarily want to work on this area too much. Instead look above and below the source, in this case the low back, and look to increase stability or mobility at the neighbouring joints. For example in this case, we would look to increase the mobility at the hips and thoracic spine to help relieve some of the strain on the low back.
3. Keep moving. When there is strain sometimes our instinct is to lessen our movement. And while we do want to be smart about our movement we can recover more quickly when we initiate activity. And what do I recommend for most as the best way to initiate some activity? Swimming. Especially if the joint in question is load-bearing joint. Placing the body in a horizontal position takes some of the strain of a normally vertical body position. Plus the water itself helps to support the body and allows the limbs to generate a force against the water and thus help stabilize the trunk.
4. As we resume our training it must be with modifications. This may involve reducing the load, the volume or both. If the injury is with the upper body look to add in more lower body exercises. And finally for wherever the injury occurred look to incorporate more lifts to the opposite side of the body. A quick example is for someone who has anterior (front side) shoulder pain whenever they bench should look to incorporate more pulling exercises such as a seated row.
The key here is that injuries and strain do happen from time to time. While we may take time off a particular exercise or activity, such as not doing the bench press when this irritates the shoulder, we should avoid doing nothing altogether. Remember to listen to your body, ask yourself the questions above then apply the 4 suggestions listed to ensure you return to full, pain-free activity as soon as possible.
Train when Injured?
In my last few articles I've talked about monitoring the signs of overtraining and listening to your body. I alluded to the fact that last week I felt my own body tighten up during a workout but was able to manage this, work around it and return to training more quickly and at a higher level than if I had pushed on.
So the question becomes what should we do when we feel strain? The first thing I have to mention is that this is not medical advice. This is not meant to serve as a diagnosis of any type of musculoskeletal injury. If you have suffered a serious injury then you should seek medical attention.
Whenever we feel a strain or something more we should be asking ourselves why this happened? Our bodies gives us purposeful feedback and warnings to prevent further damage. Some questions to ask to determine the cause of the discomfort include:
* Have I started a new activity or program lately? Even when we are in shape the first time we try a new activity or sport we will feel it the days that follow.
* In my previous workouts did I warm-up adequately? Did I cool down and stretch out enough? Was my technique optimal throughout all lifts?
* What was I doing prior to my workouts? Have I been sitting at the computer for hours on end before attempting a max deadlift? Was I driving cross-country on a business trip? Have I been doing heavy manual labour? Basically have I been overly static or active in the lead up to training?
* Have I recently upped the frequency, intensity or duration of my workouts?
* Lastly, have I noticed bilateral differences in my body? In other words are there diffences between the left and right sides of my body? When warming up did I feel tighter on one side? When lifting was the bar travelling in an even path or was it off-balance or rotating? When stretching out could I get a release more easily on one side than the other?
If we try and answer the above questions we can do a little bit better job to stay on top of potential injuries.
But once we're injured we need a plan. Here's what I've found works well. Again, to reiterate, this is not to replace any type of medical attention or treatment.
1. The puddle often is not the source of the leak. Many times we suffer an injury at a particular joint and we look to address the problem by zeroing in on this area. But sometimes a knee injury might be due to an issue with the glutes. Or a low back issue might be related to improper posture and function of the scapula (shoulder blades). The point here is to avoid having tunnel vision and look to see how the body works as a whole to determine why there is a problem.
2. Continuing with the previous point don't be overly aggressive at the source of the injury. What I mean is that if I have a low back injury I don't necessarily want to work on this area too much. Instead look above and below the source, in this case the low back, and look to increase stability or mobility at the neighbouring joints. For example in this case, we would look to increase the mobility at the hips and thoracic spine to help relieve some of the strain on the low back.
3. Keep moving. When there is strain sometimes our instinct is to lessen our movement. And while we do want to be smart about our movement we can recover more quickly when we initiate activity. And what do I recommend for most as the best way to initiate some activity? Swimming. Especially if the joint in question is load-bearing joint. Placing the body in a horizontal position takes some of the strain of a normally vertical body position. Plus the water itself helps to support the body and allows the limbs to generate a force against the water and thus help stabilize the trunk.
4. As we resume our training it must be with modifications. This may involve reducing the load, the volume or both. If the injury is with the upper body look to add in more lower body exercises. And finally for wherever the injury occurred look to incorporate more lifts to the opposite side of the body. A quick example is for someone who has anterior (front side) shoulder pain whenever they bench should look to incorporate more pulling exercises such as a seated row.
The key here is that injuries and strain do happen from time to time. While we may take time off a particular exercise or activity, such as not doing the bench press when this irritates the shoulder, we should avoid doing nothing altogether. Remember to listen to your body, ask yourself the questions above then apply the 4 suggestions listed to ensure you return to full, pain-free activity as soon as possible.
Straight Arm Pulldowns
Description : Straight arm pull downs are a good back and core strengthening exercise. It trains scapula (shoulder blade) retraction and challenges neutral spine through the entire range. Not to mention it's a great movement pattern to train for swimming. Learn how to perform this exercise in this training video brought to you by Inflict Training!
Tag : New exercises, Training ballasting, Physical education, Flexibility, Fitness training, Strength training, Power, Iron, Weightlifting, Endurance, Recent exercises, Biceps, Chest, Triceps, Aerobic, Back muscles, Abdominal muscles, Shoulder muscles, Quadriceps, Leg muscle
Fitness Articles and Tips
5 Step Fat Loss Experiment
I really like common sense approaches to things. One thing that always makes sense to me is to use a scientific approach to discovery and problem solving. Rather than letting spontaneous decisions or random occurrences account for the results we achieve it is much more efficient and effective to plan out and have some control over our health. Here are 5 ways you can set up your day-to-day living as a mini experiment to achieve the best health.
Step 1 - Know what the end product is. We have to be really specific here. We can't just say 'lose a few pounds' or 'tone up'. We need to have an exact number in mind and be specific with describing it. For example you might say 'I want to lose 9 pounds by April 1 but lose no muscle mass'. This is very specific, it has a time component and puts restrictions of the type of weight loss allowed.
Step 2 - Look at what you are currently doing and see if you are the fittest, leanest, healthiest person you know. If you answered yes, find healthier, leaner friends. Only somewhat joking about the last part. But seriously, if you aren't 100% happy with the way you look, feel and perform than you need to identify what it is you are currently doing related to your nutritional plan, your exercise and your rest. And you'll need to change at least one of these three.
Step 3 - Identify the weak link with respect to your nutrition, your training and your rest. If it is your rest aim to get 8-9 hours of sleep a night, be in bed by 10 pm. Go to bed and rise at the same time every day. Likewise if your weak link is your training or nutritional approach then you need to put together a new plan related to these. This I can help you with.
Step 4 - Implement the change for 2 weeks and record the results. In terms of results I mean your tape measures (waist, hips, chest, arms, legs), your photos, your scale weight, your strength, your quality of rest etc. Draw up a list with as many different parameters as possible and track these. After two weeks make note of your observations.
Step 5 - Be very thorough with your observations. I really have to thank HG, my grad school advisor in Regina, for drilling this into me. Log, record, write down everything. You don't know right now what information is useful so record everything. As well, only make one change at a time so it becomes easier to see which change you made gave the best response. For example, if you lose 3 pounds you want to be able to see if that was during the 2 weeks you reduced your carb intake later in the day or when you upped your intake of protein. Don't guess. Let the results guide you.
While my grad school advisor might be proud of me for remembering some of what he drilled into me, my high-school teacher might fail me for my recollection of the scientific method. This approach is meant to be a quick, no-frills approach to allow you to see how your body responds to the various changes you put upon it. In the research a paper may get dismissed if the experiment didn't run for at least 8 weeks to allow for a physiological adaptation. Don't worry about this. You will learn a lot about your health and how to improve it by following these 5 steps.
Now go experiment. And remember to record the results, good or bad.
5 Step Fat Loss Experiment
I really like common sense approaches to things. One thing that always makes sense to me is to use a scientific approach to discovery and problem solving. Rather than letting spontaneous decisions or random occurrences account for the results we achieve it is much more efficient and effective to plan out and have some control over our health. Here are 5 ways you can set up your day-to-day living as a mini experiment to achieve the best health.
Step 1 - Know what the end product is. We have to be really specific here. We can't just say 'lose a few pounds' or 'tone up'. We need to have an exact number in mind and be specific with describing it. For example you might say 'I want to lose 9 pounds by April 1 but lose no muscle mass'. This is very specific, it has a time component and puts restrictions of the type of weight loss allowed.
Step 2 - Look at what you are currently doing and see if you are the fittest, leanest, healthiest person you know. If you answered yes, find healthier, leaner friends. Only somewhat joking about the last part. But seriously, if you aren't 100% happy with the way you look, feel and perform than you need to identify what it is you are currently doing related to your nutritional plan, your exercise and your rest. And you'll need to change at least one of these three.
Step 3 - Identify the weak link with respect to your nutrition, your training and your rest. If it is your rest aim to get 8-9 hours of sleep a night, be in bed by 10 pm. Go to bed and rise at the same time every day. Likewise if your weak link is your training or nutritional approach then you need to put together a new plan related to these. This I can help you with.
Step 4 - Implement the change for 2 weeks and record the results. In terms of results I mean your tape measures (waist, hips, chest, arms, legs), your photos, your scale weight, your strength, your quality of rest etc. Draw up a list with as many different parameters as possible and track these. After two weeks make note of your observations.
Step 5 - Be very thorough with your observations. I really have to thank HG, my grad school advisor in Regina, for drilling this into me. Log, record, write down everything. You don't know right now what information is useful so record everything. As well, only make one change at a time so it becomes easier to see which change you made gave the best response. For example, if you lose 3 pounds you want to be able to see if that was during the 2 weeks you reduced your carb intake later in the day or when you upped your intake of protein. Don't guess. Let the results guide you.
While my grad school advisor might be proud of me for remembering some of what he drilled into me, my high-school teacher might fail me for my recollection of the scientific method. This approach is meant to be a quick, no-frills approach to allow you to see how your body responds to the various changes you put upon it. In the research a paper may get dismissed if the experiment didn't run for at least 8 weeks to allow for a physiological adaptation. Don't worry about this. You will learn a lot about your health and how to improve it by following these 5 steps.
Now go experiment. And remember to record the results, good or bad.
Single Leg Straight Arm Pulldowns
Description : Straight arm pull downs are a good back and core strengthening exercise. It trains scapula (shoulder blade) retraction and challenges neutral spine through the entire range. Not to mention it's a great movement pattern to train for swimming. Doing them on one leg brings the difficulty up and works the stabilizer muscles around the hip, knee, and ankle. Learn how to perform this exercise in this training video brought to you by Inflict Training!
Tag : New exercises, Training ballasting, Physical education, Flexibility, Fitness training, Strength training, Power, Iron, Weightlifting, Endurance, Recent exercises, Biceps, Chest, Triceps, Aerobic, Back muscles, Abdominal muscles, Shoulder muscles, Quadriceps, Leg muscle
Fitness Articles and Tips
Flatter Firmer Stomach
Everyone's dream, and for so few a reality. It doesn't have to be that hard. A flat firm stomach, or rock hard abs if you so desire, are achievable. Yes, that's what I said, they are achievable!
However, if you have been doing sit ups continually for months and are wondering why you have not achieved your desired 6 pack, then listen up.
First things first, if you have excess abdominal fat, it is not only a serious health risk (think high cholesterol, high blood pressure, increased risk of heart disease) but also, there is no way any amount of crunches is going to give you a flat stomach. You need to reduce the excess fat around your mid section first!
So how do you do this? The best way is through a combination of healthy eating (I hate the word diet) and exercise. You need a program specifically designed with this in mind - not one that is designed to develop a six pack on an already stick thin individual.
Your exercise program should include a combination of resistance training and cardio / aerobic exercise.
Weight training will help increase your lean muscle tissue, tone your muscles, and has the benefit of increasing your metabolism for hours after you've stopped exercising. However, don't focus all of your attention on your mid section or abs! Certainly, that can be one of the areas of focus, but in order to have a strong healthy body you need to have a strong core, back, arms, shoulders etc. This means that you should complete a solid 'whole of body' workout that incorporates a regular abdominal component. Your flat stomach will come - don't you worry about that.
Cardio exercise is important as it will help you burn heaps of calories, and will start to get rid of the subcutaneous fat you have around that 'soon to be flat' stomach of yours.
Single Leg 2 Dumbbell Row
Description : Single leg, two dumbbell rows will work on balance and stability through your legs as well as overall back strength. This is a good, challenging, strength based functional movement exercise. Learn how to perform them in this training video brought to you by Inflict Training.
Tag : New exercises, Training ballasting, Physical education, Flexibility, Fitness training, Strength training, Power, Iron, Weightlifting, Endurance, Recent exercises, Biceps, Chest, Triceps, Aerobic, Back muscles, Abdominal muscles, Shoulder muscles, Quadriceps, Leg muscle
Fitness Articles and Tips
Finding the Right Personal Trainer
Some people think that only the rich and famous hire personal trainers, but in fact you don’t need stacks of cash to hire the service of a personal trainer. They can help you to achieve the fitness goals you want. The fitness industry is a big business and more and more people are using the services of a gym to find a personal trainer or to embark on a personal training program. These days hiring a personal trainer is a more affordable proposition!
One of the main reasons anyone hires a personal trainer is to enable them to stay on track with their fitness and healthy lifestyle. Many people want to lose weight, maintain a healthy way of life and generally be more active, which is where your gym can help you. With your own commitment and a training program tailored to your needs you will find it easier to achieve your goals than if you tried to go it alone.
Finding a personal trainer is not difficult, these days the fitness market is flooded with people offering this type of service. But you should look for some who is qualified and experienced, as well as being able to fit in with your work or personal life. Personality is also important as you need to be able to communicate with them, feel comfortable around them and confident in their expertise. It is therefore advisable to meet with several personal trainers before deciding on who is best for you.
You can obtain a list of qualified or certified personal trainers from your local gym or health club. Established clubs and organizations are always best for referrals for a personal trainer because they would not hire anyone who did not have the right qualifications. Your personal trainer needs to understand how exercise affects the body, how the body works and how to design fitness programs suitable to a range of fitness needs.
When you meet with a personal trainer for the first time you need to ask them plenty of questions about their experience and qualifications, and the types of programs they run. Some personal trainers will only work with people who already have a high fitness level, whilst others are happy to work with beginners and people of all fitness levels. You also need to discuss with them how often you need to train and if they can design a program you can do on your own when they are not present.
Before you talk to any personal trainer it can be a good idea to know what it is you want from your fitness program and your long term goals. This will help them to talk with you about a fitness program which will help you to achieve your goals and to maintain them afterwards. You may want to train for something specific such as a marathon, or loose weight, or shape up after having a baby. Knowing what you want from your training program helps to make the time spent with your personal trainer more effective.
Finding the Right Personal Trainer
Some people think that only the rich and famous hire personal trainers, but in fact you don’t need stacks of cash to hire the service of a personal trainer. They can help you to achieve the fitness goals you want. The fitness industry is a big business and more and more people are using the services of a gym to find a personal trainer or to embark on a personal training program. These days hiring a personal trainer is a more affordable proposition!
One of the main reasons anyone hires a personal trainer is to enable them to stay on track with their fitness and healthy lifestyle. Many people want to lose weight, maintain a healthy way of life and generally be more active, which is where your gym can help you. With your own commitment and a training program tailored to your needs you will find it easier to achieve your goals than if you tried to go it alone.
Finding a personal trainer is not difficult, these days the fitness market is flooded with people offering this type of service. But you should look for some who is qualified and experienced, as well as being able to fit in with your work or personal life. Personality is also important as you need to be able to communicate with them, feel comfortable around them and confident in their expertise. It is therefore advisable to meet with several personal trainers before deciding on who is best for you.
You can obtain a list of qualified or certified personal trainers from your local gym or health club. Established clubs and organizations are always best for referrals for a personal trainer because they would not hire anyone who did not have the right qualifications. Your personal trainer needs to understand how exercise affects the body, how the body works and how to design fitness programs suitable to a range of fitness needs.
When you meet with a personal trainer for the first time you need to ask them plenty of questions about their experience and qualifications, and the types of programs they run. Some personal trainers will only work with people who already have a high fitness level, whilst others are happy to work with beginners and people of all fitness levels. You also need to discuss with them how often you need to train and if they can design a program you can do on your own when they are not present.
Before you talk to any personal trainer it can be a good idea to know what it is you want from your fitness program and your long term goals. This will help them to talk with you about a fitness program which will help you to achieve your goals and to maintain them afterwards. You may want to train for something specific such as a marathon, or loose weight, or shape up after having a baby. Knowing what you want from your training program helps to make the time spent with your personal trainer more effective.
Single Leg 1 Dumbbell Row
Description : Single leg, single dumbbell rows are a great balance and stability exercise to strengthen the tendons and smaller stabilizer muscles in the leg, hip, and back. You'll feel it in your glutes and core, too. Learn how to perform them in this training video brought to you by Inflict Training.
Tag : New exercises, Training ballasting, Physical education, Flexibility, Fitness training, Strength training, Power, Iron, Weightlifting, Endurance, Recent exercises, Biceps, Chest, Triceps, Aerobic, Back muscles, Abdominal muscles, Shoulder muscles, Quadriceps, Leg muscle
Fitness Articles and Tips
Finding the Time to Work Out
Time - It seems as if as we age until retirement there is always more expected of us with less time to do it in. There are more demands on our time from our families and our employers. And these are both important. Add to this that we each have to do our part within society by volunteering or sitting on councils, going to meeting, coaching amateur sports or whatever that is important and we are left with even less time.
Previously I mentioned determining your priorities, putting them in the correct order and assigning time to each accordingly. I won't repeat these points as you've heard them all before. But here's a new angle on this.
Try and figure out what is absolutely essential that you do. For me I don't need to be the one doing any of the following:
* banking
* mailing
* taxes
* GST
* advertising
* marketing
* checking email and voice mail
This is just a sample list. There are lots more things I could add to this list that are business related such as:
* grocery shopping
* paying bills
* housework
* yard work
* meal preparation
The point is that I could quickly and easily find 5-10 hours a week between all the things I do that don't absolutely have to be done by me. A colleague refers to this as figuring out what is your '5%'. What he means is that as soon as you determine what is essential that you do, this is your 5%.
And you know what is interesting about figuring out your 5%? There are probably things on your list that you think absolutely have to be done by you but don't need to be. So your 5% may in fact be your 25 or 50%. Whatever. The point is you can find someone else to help you or you can hire some to do a lot of the things on your plate to free up some time.
Nutrition - This is where most fail. And for a couple of main reasons. One is that they don't know what to eat so they choose poorly. Or they know what to eat yet for whatever reason choose poorly anyway. The solution to both is the same.
Having a meal plan prevents you from not knowing what to eat. It prevents you from going to the grocery store and aimlessly searching the aisles for healthy food that will jump into your cart. It prevents you from getting home from work every day and not knowing what you will have for dinner. It prevents you from going to work without a healthy lunch. It prevents you from wasting time on prepping foods that could be used for multiple meals throughout the week. For example vegetables chopped and prepped on Sunday can be used for salads every night the following week. As well, they can be added to a stir fry. And the chicken you grill while chopping vegetables can be served as a grilled breast one night and chopped up for the stir fry later in the week.
You've probably heard the expression 'prior planning prevents poor performance'. Well this holds true with nutrition as well. Know which day of the week you do your grocery shopping. Know which meals you are going to make. Buy the foods for these meals and do as much of your prep work at this time as well. It will pay itself back in time savings and better nutritional choices during the week many times over.
Training - This is very similar to the nutritional example. Sometimes we are like sheep. If we walk into the gym without a plan we will simply do what everyone else is doing. Which if you go to a gym like a I do you don't want to look like everyone else. This is what a colleague refers to as the 180 Principle. If the members of your gym are not the physical specimens gracing the covers of fitness magazines then do the opposite of what they are doing. For example:
* If everyone is doing cardio then lift weights.
* If everyone is using machines then use free weights.
* If everyone is doing slow, low-intensity training look to up the tempo and be explosive.
* If everyone is moving forward and back (sagittal plane) look to move side to side or rotate (frontal and transverse planes).
Make sense?
And you know what else? Consistency will get you results. If you have a program that you follow consistently and work at it you will get better results than not following a program and being inconsistent with your training.
Two of the three points above are provided to everyone in the Year Long Training Program. Each of them has 2 weeks full of meals to follow so as to never wonder what they will eat. As well, they all have 5 days per week of progressive gym workouts that guide them safely towards their goals.
In the next week I will be sending out the next phase of the Year Long Training Program workouts. This is a 12 week training program that includes whole body workouts to add lean mass and burn fat.
If you are interested in getting on board with the Year Long Training Program let me know.
All the best.
Finding the Time to Work Out
Time - It seems as if as we age until retirement there is always more expected of us with less time to do it in. There are more demands on our time from our families and our employers. And these are both important. Add to this that we each have to do our part within society by volunteering or sitting on councils, going to meeting, coaching amateur sports or whatever that is important and we are left with even less time.
Previously I mentioned determining your priorities, putting them in the correct order and assigning time to each accordingly. I won't repeat these points as you've heard them all before. But here's a new angle on this.
Try and figure out what is absolutely essential that you do. For me I don't need to be the one doing any of the following:
* banking
* mailing
* taxes
* GST
* advertising
* marketing
* checking email and voice mail
This is just a sample list. There are lots more things I could add to this list that are business related such as:
* grocery shopping
* paying bills
* housework
* yard work
* meal preparation
The point is that I could quickly and easily find 5-10 hours a week between all the things I do that don't absolutely have to be done by me. A colleague refers to this as figuring out what is your '5%'. What he means is that as soon as you determine what is essential that you do, this is your 5%.
And you know what is interesting about figuring out your 5%? There are probably things on your list that you think absolutely have to be done by you but don't need to be. So your 5% may in fact be your 25 or 50%. Whatever. The point is you can find someone else to help you or you can hire some to do a lot of the things on your plate to free up some time.
Nutrition - This is where most fail. And for a couple of main reasons. One is that they don't know what to eat so they choose poorly. Or they know what to eat yet for whatever reason choose poorly anyway. The solution to both is the same.
Having a meal plan prevents you from not knowing what to eat. It prevents you from going to the grocery store and aimlessly searching the aisles for healthy food that will jump into your cart. It prevents you from getting home from work every day and not knowing what you will have for dinner. It prevents you from going to work without a healthy lunch. It prevents you from wasting time on prepping foods that could be used for multiple meals throughout the week. For example vegetables chopped and prepped on Sunday can be used for salads every night the following week. As well, they can be added to a stir fry. And the chicken you grill while chopping vegetables can be served as a grilled breast one night and chopped up for the stir fry later in the week.
You've probably heard the expression 'prior planning prevents poor performance'. Well this holds true with nutrition as well. Know which day of the week you do your grocery shopping. Know which meals you are going to make. Buy the foods for these meals and do as much of your prep work at this time as well. It will pay itself back in time savings and better nutritional choices during the week many times over.
Training - This is very similar to the nutritional example. Sometimes we are like sheep. If we walk into the gym without a plan we will simply do what everyone else is doing. Which if you go to a gym like a I do you don't want to look like everyone else. This is what a colleague refers to as the 180 Principle. If the members of your gym are not the physical specimens gracing the covers of fitness magazines then do the opposite of what they are doing. For example:
* If everyone is doing cardio then lift weights.
* If everyone is using machines then use free weights.
* If everyone is doing slow, low-intensity training look to up the tempo and be explosive.
* If everyone is moving forward and back (sagittal plane) look to move side to side or rotate (frontal and transverse planes).
Make sense?
And you know what else? Consistency will get you results. If you have a program that you follow consistently and work at it you will get better results than not following a program and being inconsistent with your training.
Two of the three points above are provided to everyone in the Year Long Training Program. Each of them has 2 weeks full of meals to follow so as to never wonder what they will eat. As well, they all have 5 days per week of progressive gym workouts that guide them safely towards their goals.
In the next week I will be sending out the next phase of the Year Long Training Program workouts. This is a 12 week training program that includes whole body workouts to add lean mass and burn fat.
If you are interested in getting on board with the Year Long Training Program let me know.
All the best.
Band Single Leg Row with Bands
Description : Single leg band rows are a great prep, balance and stability exercise to strengthen the tendons and smaller stabilizer muscles in the leg, hip, and back. You'll feel it in your gluts and core, too. Learn how to perform them in this training video brought to you by Inflict Training.
Tag : New exercises, Training ballasting, Physical education, Flexibility, Fitness training, Strength training, Power, Iron, Weightlifting, Endurance, Recent exercises, Biceps, Chest, Triceps, Aerobic, Back muscles, Abdominal muscles, Shoulder muscles, Quadriceps, Leg muscle
Fitness Articles and Tips
Overcoming Obstacles to Fat Loss
The majority of my clients come to me because they have a desire to make a change in their lives and physique; often, there will be a specific target (invariably weight loss) that jolts them into action but, in the main, I recognise a desire to improve their lifestyle above and beyond fitting into a smaller dress.
With all clients, I am happy to spend the time explaining to them that making changes to their lifestyle is an intrinsic part of achieving sustained fat loss because, if your cellular function is corrupted and lacking in essential nutrients, you cannot influence their actions and therefore cannot control your metabolism. Fat loss
will be minimal.
However, there remains a significant minority of clients whose expectations are totally out of sync with reality and think they can achieve a sculpted body and balanced mind by simply amending their workout! These clients will present themselves in desperate need of a change to their daily routine, typically dehydrated, sleeping badly, over-stressed and a distinct lack of energy; the next step is to ask me what exercises will fix these problems. If your sleep, stress, digestion and energy patterns are shattered, then no matter how well I refine your deadlift, it’s not going to do squat!
To change the state of your body, it helps to have a basic understanding of the way it functions and, most importantly, what its requirements are. Fat is burnt inside the mitochondrion of each cell in a process called the Krebs Cycle, which will metabolise substrates of protein, fat and carbohydrates depending on circumstances. These circumstances include the availability of these fuels (which relates to the amount of each nutrient consumed in the diet), the energy requirement of the body at the time (which relates to the intensity and type of exercise) and the cellular conditions that permit such reactions to take place. This last point refers to a number of requirements that have been sculpted over millions of years of evolution.
Areas to look at fully include:
Hydration
Sleep
Digestion
Stress load
Toxic load
Diet balance
Hormonal balance
If one of these is out of kilter, others will be too. Just as in the Stone Age, your body’s cells can only operate the way nature intended when the body receives sufficient quantity and quality of sleep, sufficient water to bathe the cells with enough fluid for metabolic reactions to occur, healthy stress patterns to balance hormonal patterns and immune system reactions throughout the body and, amongst other things, effective digestive function. To get deep and refreshing sleep, to maintain mineral balance to retain water in the correct places, to sustain and support healthy adrenal function and balance the immune system, etc, your body has a never-ending demand for a wide array of essential nutrients (eg. vitamins and minerals, amino acids, essential fats, etc).
If your diet is not providing these nutrients required, you will not function the way you should and you will not burn fat the way you should. If you do put these vitamins and minerals into your body but then compromise your digestive system with an excessive stress load, you will leave your body short in a similar way. Caffeine, alcohol, drug and sugar intake are all suitable ways to drain your body’s stores of nutrients, thus directly working against sensible steps such as vitamin supplementation.
In an age where our foods are regularly exposed to pesticides, fungicides, herbicides and the average individual eats their own body weight in food additives each year, a high-potency multivitamin is an essential – but on its own is unlikely to be enough if your lifestyle is constantly draining your body’s resources. If you do not have sufficient sleep, your stress hormones will be elevated for the whole of the days that follows, draining your sotres of important nutrients (like Magnesium). If you drink your fair share of coffee, the caffeine will drain you of Potassium and Magnesium (meaning dehydration is inevitable) and the oxylic acid will ruin protein digestion in the stomach, with dire consequences further down the digestive tract. There are many ways in which you can disrupt your body's natural balance but, in any case, an imbalance in diet or lifestyle will lead to an imbalance in the body’s function.
It is not necessary to move into the mountains and take up yoga, neither is it necessary to live on organic mung-bean soup and spirulina. However, finding a regime that works for you and allows you to get good sleep, eating high-quality unprocessed food that nature intended, and making the changes needed to keep a cap on stress levels, and ensuring you deliver the right level of essential nutrients to support the hydration and the metabolic needs of your body’s cells should not be beyond anyone.
Most clients who think they ‘only had time for a microwave meal’ really did have time to put something undamaging together – only they chose not to make time. In any case, genuine time restraints will breed efficient behaviour (making a tuna salad takes seconds, after all) except in those cases where diet and lifestyle leave energy levels ineffectively low. Not making time for your body’s needs is false economy with time.
Whilst it clearly requires a conscious effort to make changes, it is absolutely essential that the major parts of the lifestyle are addressed if long-term progress is to be achieved. Cellular function will be sensitive to many changes within the body and, in many cases, represents an immovable obstacle in the path of progress. My job is to help clients remove these obstacles so that, when I give them an exercise programme geared specifically for their current level of conditioning and personal aims, it has the impact that it deserves.
Overcoming Obstacles to Fat Loss
The majority of my clients come to me because they have a desire to make a change in their lives and physique; often, there will be a specific target (invariably weight loss) that jolts them into action but, in the main, I recognise a desire to improve their lifestyle above and beyond fitting into a smaller dress.
With all clients, I am happy to spend the time explaining to them that making changes to their lifestyle is an intrinsic part of achieving sustained fat loss because, if your cellular function is corrupted and lacking in essential nutrients, you cannot influence their actions and therefore cannot control your metabolism. Fat loss
will be minimal.
However, there remains a significant minority of clients whose expectations are totally out of sync with reality and think they can achieve a sculpted body and balanced mind by simply amending their workout! These clients will present themselves in desperate need of a change to their daily routine, typically dehydrated, sleeping badly, over-stressed and a distinct lack of energy; the next step is to ask me what exercises will fix these problems. If your sleep, stress, digestion and energy patterns are shattered, then no matter how well I refine your deadlift, it’s not going to do squat!
To change the state of your body, it helps to have a basic understanding of the way it functions and, most importantly, what its requirements are. Fat is burnt inside the mitochondrion of each cell in a process called the Krebs Cycle, which will metabolise substrates of protein, fat and carbohydrates depending on circumstances. These circumstances include the availability of these fuels (which relates to the amount of each nutrient consumed in the diet), the energy requirement of the body at the time (which relates to the intensity and type of exercise) and the cellular conditions that permit such reactions to take place. This last point refers to a number of requirements that have been sculpted over millions of years of evolution.
Areas to look at fully include:
Hydration
Sleep
Digestion
Stress load
Toxic load
Diet balance
Hormonal balance
If one of these is out of kilter, others will be too. Just as in the Stone Age, your body’s cells can only operate the way nature intended when the body receives sufficient quantity and quality of sleep, sufficient water to bathe the cells with enough fluid for metabolic reactions to occur, healthy stress patterns to balance hormonal patterns and immune system reactions throughout the body and, amongst other things, effective digestive function. To get deep and refreshing sleep, to maintain mineral balance to retain water in the correct places, to sustain and support healthy adrenal function and balance the immune system, etc, your body has a never-ending demand for a wide array of essential nutrients (eg. vitamins and minerals, amino acids, essential fats, etc).
If your diet is not providing these nutrients required, you will not function the way you should and you will not burn fat the way you should. If you do put these vitamins and minerals into your body but then compromise your digestive system with an excessive stress load, you will leave your body short in a similar way. Caffeine, alcohol, drug and sugar intake are all suitable ways to drain your body’s stores of nutrients, thus directly working against sensible steps such as vitamin supplementation.
In an age where our foods are regularly exposed to pesticides, fungicides, herbicides and the average individual eats their own body weight in food additives each year, a high-potency multivitamin is an essential – but on its own is unlikely to be enough if your lifestyle is constantly draining your body’s resources. If you do not have sufficient sleep, your stress hormones will be elevated for the whole of the days that follows, draining your sotres of important nutrients (like Magnesium). If you drink your fair share of coffee, the caffeine will drain you of Potassium and Magnesium (meaning dehydration is inevitable) and the oxylic acid will ruin protein digestion in the stomach, with dire consequences further down the digestive tract. There are many ways in which you can disrupt your body's natural balance but, in any case, an imbalance in diet or lifestyle will lead to an imbalance in the body’s function.
It is not necessary to move into the mountains and take up yoga, neither is it necessary to live on organic mung-bean soup and spirulina. However, finding a regime that works for you and allows you to get good sleep, eating high-quality unprocessed food that nature intended, and making the changes needed to keep a cap on stress levels, and ensuring you deliver the right level of essential nutrients to support the hydration and the metabolic needs of your body’s cells should not be beyond anyone.
Most clients who think they ‘only had time for a microwave meal’ really did have time to put something undamaging together – only they chose not to make time. In any case, genuine time restraints will breed efficient behaviour (making a tuna salad takes seconds, after all) except in those cases where diet and lifestyle leave energy levels ineffectively low. Not making time for your body’s needs is false economy with time.
Whilst it clearly requires a conscious effort to make changes, it is absolutely essential that the major parts of the lifestyle are addressed if long-term progress is to be achieved. Cellular function will be sensitive to many changes within the body and, in many cases, represents an immovable obstacle in the path of progress. My job is to help clients remove these obstacles so that, when I give them an exercise programme geared specifically for their current level of conditioning and personal aims, it has the impact that it deserves.
Lat Pulldowns with Handles
Description : Lat pulls with a nuetral grip are a standard lat (upper back), rhomboid (muscles between your shoulder blades) and chest strengthening exercise. Be careful not to go too heavy that you lose form. You want to maintain neutral spine through the entire exercise. Learn how to perform this exercise in this training video brought to you by Inflict Training!
Tag : New exercises, Training ballasting, Physical education, Flexibility, Fitness training, Strength training, Power, Iron, Weightlifting, Endurance, Recent exercises, Biceps, Chest, Triceps, Aerobic, Back muscles, Abdominal muscles, Shoulder muscles, Quadriceps, Leg muscle
Fitness Articles and Tips
2010 Fitness Predictions
Last year at this time I came out with my list of Fitness Predictions for 2009. Jessica Samuels, am1150.ca, took some time on her radio show to look back at how accurate I was. I hit the mark on most of my predictions and a few are maybe just a little ahead of the time. Either way it was a lot of fun and so here again are my Fitness Predictions for 2010.
1. Barefoot Running - As the modern running shoe took off in popularity so has the increase incidence of running related injuries. We were never meant to heel strike. Think about it. If you ran barefoot across a parking lot, what technique would you use? I don't think I'd be over striding while smashing my heel into the pavement. Look for more people to get away from the elevated heel style shoes, to get away from over striding and heel striking and to a whole new wave of people trying out barefoot running.
2. Recovery & Regeneration - When we are tired from training is it because of overtraining or under recovering? It could be both actually but for the average person 3 days per week of activity shouldn't burn you out. But not having enough rest in between, not providing proper fuel and not balancing out the stressors in the body probably means we aren't recovering properly. Look for people to become more aware of the various ways to rest, regenerate and recovery more optimally this year. It's one way we can get more out of our workouts without extra time working out.
3. New Cardio Programs, Equipment and Classes - A barbell is roughly 7 feet long and weighs approximately 45 lbs. A squat looked the same last year as it did this year and will in 2010. When things work we don't need to do a lot to change them. Long, slow-steady state cardio doesn't work and never will. So what do we do? We find a new cardio machine, create a new class or do something that allows us to train at the same, low intensity for about an hour or so and hope the pounds will magically evaporate. Sadly, they will not.
4. Saving Time & $$$ - With a more competitive market place people are seeking value. And they work hard for the money so when they have time to themselves they the ultimate in efficiency. We are getting more bogged down in delays, traffic jams, airport line-ups so that what little time left we have we protect. The Four Hour Work Week described the plan for taking control of your life and having it all. I believe people will extend the principles of efficiency and results to their workouts and look to get the best services, programs for the best return on their time and financial investment.
5. Online Training Programs - This is going to be huge. Five years ago I don't know of anyone that was looking online for a training program. They either consulted with a fitness professional in their local gym, followed a cookie-cutter program in a fitness magazine or attempted to navigate their way solo. A couple of years ago I knew maybe a few people who had invested in online training programs. Now it seems more and more people are feeling comfortable searching and purchasing online. Did I mention we have a Year Long Training Program available online? :)
6. Technology - Technology and fitness are becoming more and more tightly connected. Exergaming probably wasn't a word a few years ago but now with the Wii Fit and Dancetown everyone seems to be familiar with this way of working out. Add to this the number of apps you can download for fitness and nutrition, the number of people using heart rate monitors, GPS and caloric expenditure tools and technology is everywhere in fitness.
7. Decrease in Bootcamps - Don't confuse this one with group fitness training. I see a reduction in the drill sergeant, in your face, no assessment, one size fits all style of training. As the market place becomes more savvy they will begin to weed out the posers and make better informed decisions. The average bootcamper will realize your knees, back and shoulders don't have to hurt in order to lose 10 lbs.
8. Increase of Alkaline Foods - Our bodies our slightly on the basic side of the pH scale. Yet many of the foods we eat push us lower down the scale towards acidity. In order to balance this out I see people making more of an effort to increase their consumption of alkaline foods.
9. More Meals at Home - The only way to truly control what you put in your mouth is to make it yourself. Whenever we eat out we are at the mercy of the chef in the kitchen. At a recent seminar I explained how I ordered a salmon dinner to be healthy to only realize later that this meal had over 1800 calories not counting the drinks, appies and dessert. So during a down economy when people want to control portion, quality of ingredients and style of preparation many will look to eat at home.
10. More Preventative Less Reactionary Efforts - In the past when someone hurt their back they would go see a medical specialist, maybe take some painkillers and ease up on their activity level. Or if they had a digestive disorder they seek out an over the counter remedy to give them relief. People are now taking control of their health more than ever before. They are performing whole body, resistance based workouts to keep their core strong and stable. They are eating a wide range of healthy nutrients and drinking water to prevent the previous disorders they may have experienced. Rather than wait for the problem to happen they are being proactive and addressing the weak links in their health.
11. Educated and Experienced Fitness Professionals - Whenever we hire someone for a service we expect a positive experience. We expect to be treated with a courteous, positive attitude. This much is a given. No one wants to work with the really nice guy or girl who doesn't know how to safely coach a squat or a deadlift. As well, many people at the highest level are seeking practitioners who have seen and worked with what they need and will not be figuring it out as they go. Expect to see the marketplace seek out passionate, educated and certified people who live the life they preach.
Well there you have it. My Fitness Predictions for 2010. Follow along during the year to see how I do. And feel free to let me know if you agree or see something coming down the line in 2010 that I haven't included.
2010 Fitness Predictions
Last year at this time I came out with my list of Fitness Predictions for 2009. Jessica Samuels, am1150.ca, took some time on her radio show to look back at how accurate I was. I hit the mark on most of my predictions and a few are maybe just a little ahead of the time. Either way it was a lot of fun and so here again are my Fitness Predictions for 2010.
1. Barefoot Running - As the modern running shoe took off in popularity so has the increase incidence of running related injuries. We were never meant to heel strike. Think about it. If you ran barefoot across a parking lot, what technique would you use? I don't think I'd be over striding while smashing my heel into the pavement. Look for more people to get away from the elevated heel style shoes, to get away from over striding and heel striking and to a whole new wave of people trying out barefoot running.
2. Recovery & Regeneration - When we are tired from training is it because of overtraining or under recovering? It could be both actually but for the average person 3 days per week of activity shouldn't burn you out. But not having enough rest in between, not providing proper fuel and not balancing out the stressors in the body probably means we aren't recovering properly. Look for people to become more aware of the various ways to rest, regenerate and recovery more optimally this year. It's one way we can get more out of our workouts without extra time working out.
3. New Cardio Programs, Equipment and Classes - A barbell is roughly 7 feet long and weighs approximately 45 lbs. A squat looked the same last year as it did this year and will in 2010. When things work we don't need to do a lot to change them. Long, slow-steady state cardio doesn't work and never will. So what do we do? We find a new cardio machine, create a new class or do something that allows us to train at the same, low intensity for about an hour or so and hope the pounds will magically evaporate. Sadly, they will not.
4. Saving Time & $$$ - With a more competitive market place people are seeking value. And they work hard for the money so when they have time to themselves they the ultimate in efficiency. We are getting more bogged down in delays, traffic jams, airport line-ups so that what little time left we have we protect. The Four Hour Work Week described the plan for taking control of your life and having it all. I believe people will extend the principles of efficiency and results to their workouts and look to get the best services, programs for the best return on their time and financial investment.
5. Online Training Programs - This is going to be huge. Five years ago I don't know of anyone that was looking online for a training program. They either consulted with a fitness professional in their local gym, followed a cookie-cutter program in a fitness magazine or attempted to navigate their way solo. A couple of years ago I knew maybe a few people who had invested in online training programs. Now it seems more and more people are feeling comfortable searching and purchasing online. Did I mention we have a Year Long Training Program available online? :)
6. Technology - Technology and fitness are becoming more and more tightly connected. Exergaming probably wasn't a word a few years ago but now with the Wii Fit and Dancetown everyone seems to be familiar with this way of working out. Add to this the number of apps you can download for fitness and nutrition, the number of people using heart rate monitors, GPS and caloric expenditure tools and technology is everywhere in fitness.
7. Decrease in Bootcamps - Don't confuse this one with group fitness training. I see a reduction in the drill sergeant, in your face, no assessment, one size fits all style of training. As the market place becomes more savvy they will begin to weed out the posers and make better informed decisions. The average bootcamper will realize your knees, back and shoulders don't have to hurt in order to lose 10 lbs.
8. Increase of Alkaline Foods - Our bodies our slightly on the basic side of the pH scale. Yet many of the foods we eat push us lower down the scale towards acidity. In order to balance this out I see people making more of an effort to increase their consumption of alkaline foods.
9. More Meals at Home - The only way to truly control what you put in your mouth is to make it yourself. Whenever we eat out we are at the mercy of the chef in the kitchen. At a recent seminar I explained how I ordered a salmon dinner to be healthy to only realize later that this meal had over 1800 calories not counting the drinks, appies and dessert. So during a down economy when people want to control portion, quality of ingredients and style of preparation many will look to eat at home.
10. More Preventative Less Reactionary Efforts - In the past when someone hurt their back they would go see a medical specialist, maybe take some painkillers and ease up on their activity level. Or if they had a digestive disorder they seek out an over the counter remedy to give them relief. People are now taking control of their health more than ever before. They are performing whole body, resistance based workouts to keep their core strong and stable. They are eating a wide range of healthy nutrients and drinking water to prevent the previous disorders they may have experienced. Rather than wait for the problem to happen they are being proactive and addressing the weak links in their health.
11. Educated and Experienced Fitness Professionals - Whenever we hire someone for a service we expect a positive experience. We expect to be treated with a courteous, positive attitude. This much is a given. No one wants to work with the really nice guy or girl who doesn't know how to safely coach a squat or a deadlift. As well, many people at the highest level are seeking practitioners who have seen and worked with what they need and will not be figuring it out as they go. Expect to see the marketplace seek out passionate, educated and certified people who live the life they preach.
Well there you have it. My Fitness Predictions for 2010. Follow along during the year to see how I do. And feel free to let me know if you agree or see something coming down the line in 2010 that I haven't included.
Reverse Grip Pulldowns
Description : Lat pulls with a reverse grip are a standard lat (upper back), rhomboid (muscles between your shoulder blades) and chest strengthening exercise. Be careful not to go too heavy that you lose form. You want to maintain neutral spine through the entire exercise. Learn how to perform this exercise in this training video brought to you by Inflict Training!
Tag : New exercises, Training ballasting, Physical education, Flexibility, Fitness training, Strength training, Power, Iron, Weightlifting, Endurance, Recent exercises, Biceps, Chest, Triceps, Aerobic, Back muscles, Abdominal muscles, Shoulder muscles, Quadriceps, Leg muscle
Fitness Articles and Tips
The Story of Athletic Amputee Sarah Reinertsen
Sarah Reinertsen is an athlete known by many. She likes to say that she is part human, part machine: this 34 year old inspiration to all amputees. What makes her unique is that she is a one legged triathlete training for a two legged marathon. Reinertsen is the first female amputee to have ever won an Ironman. But this is only one of many of her accomplishments.
The first ever female amputee to win an Ironman competition; Sara Reinertsen is a force not to be reckoned with. She first gained fame for her feats on the popular television show, The Amazing Race. During the 10th season of the show, Reinertsen climbed the Great Wall of China, and scaled an enormous cliff in Vietnam. But Sara Reinertsen didn’t just do all that training for television. If you can’t find her biking, running or swimming, she is most likely trying out the latest artificial limbs or rallying soldiers who have lost their limbs due to war.
She now has a new book out telling the story of her life titled: In a Single Bound. In her book she talks about the non-hereditary birth defect called proximal focal deficiency, that she has had all her life. The book covers the story of her growing up as an amputee since the age of 7, and how she overcame the struggles she went through as a child, teenager, and adult amputee.
A brief look at Sarah Reinertsen’s story:
After realizing at the age of 11 that she could run relays Sarah went home and put her sneakers on; only to become the woman she is today. At age 16 she was competing in the Paralympics in Barcelona, and today she climbed the Great Wall of China.
But there were times in her life where Reinertsen struggled with her goals. At the Paralympics Games in Barcelona she tripped at the gate, and stopped running for 2 years. After going to college and going through a period of not being comfortable in her own skin, she decided that she missed running and turned to marathons. She enjoyed watching them on television so much that it became an obsession until she decided to pursue her ultimate goal of doing an Ironman.
After 12 years of training, Sarah Reinertsen felt she was ready. However, her first attempt at Ironman Hawaii in 2004 landed her an exit slip. She missed the biking time by about 15 minutes. But, Sara signed up the next year in 2005, where she finished the race in 15 hours and 5 minutes, with over 400 2-legged people behind her still.
The Story of Athletic Amputee Sarah Reinertsen
Sarah Reinertsen is an athlete known by many. She likes to say that she is part human, part machine: this 34 year old inspiration to all amputees. What makes her unique is that she is a one legged triathlete training for a two legged marathon. Reinertsen is the first female amputee to have ever won an Ironman. But this is only one of many of her accomplishments.
The first ever female amputee to win an Ironman competition; Sara Reinertsen is a force not to be reckoned with. She first gained fame for her feats on the popular television show, The Amazing Race. During the 10th season of the show, Reinertsen climbed the Great Wall of China, and scaled an enormous cliff in Vietnam. But Sara Reinertsen didn’t just do all that training for television. If you can’t find her biking, running or swimming, she is most likely trying out the latest artificial limbs or rallying soldiers who have lost their limbs due to war.
She now has a new book out telling the story of her life titled: In a Single Bound. In her book she talks about the non-hereditary birth defect called proximal focal deficiency, that she has had all her life. The book covers the story of her growing up as an amputee since the age of 7, and how she overcame the struggles she went through as a child, teenager, and adult amputee.
A brief look at Sarah Reinertsen’s story:
After realizing at the age of 11 that she could run relays Sarah went home and put her sneakers on; only to become the woman she is today. At age 16 she was competing in the Paralympics in Barcelona, and today she climbed the Great Wall of China.
But there were times in her life where Reinertsen struggled with her goals. At the Paralympics Games in Barcelona she tripped at the gate, and stopped running for 2 years. After going to college and going through a period of not being comfortable in her own skin, she decided that she missed running and turned to marathons. She enjoyed watching them on television so much that it became an obsession until she decided to pursue her ultimate goal of doing an Ironman.
After 12 years of training, Sarah Reinertsen felt she was ready. However, her first attempt at Ironman Hawaii in 2004 landed her an exit slip. She missed the biking time by about 15 minutes. But, Sara signed up the next year in 2005, where she finished the race in 15 hours and 5 minutes, with over 400 2-legged people behind her still.
Pulldowns at Lat Machine
Description : Lat pulls are a standard lat (upper back) and rhomboid (muscles between your shoulder blades) strengthening exercise. If done correctly it's a great way to train the same pattern used when performing pull ups. Learn how to perform this exercise in this training video brought to you by Inflict Training
Tag : New exercises, Training ballasting, Physical education, Flexibility, Fitness training, Strength training, Power, Iron, Weightlifting, Endurance, Recent exercises, Biceps, Chest, Triceps, Aerobic, Back muscles, Abdominal muscles, Shoulder muscles, Quadriceps, Leg muscle
Fitness Articles and Tips
Don't be Hating on the Scale
This is the time of year of a number of firsts. First month of the year, first days back to work and school, and for many it's the first step towards better health and fitness. This should come as no surprise as every gym is packed these days with people aspiring towards a leaner physique, a flatter tummy, six pack abs or whatever the goal is.
And as many put in the efforts towards better health there is one measure that ultimately reinforces and motivates or demoralizes and derails the progress. This measure is the scale. People can be fitting into their jeans more easily, waking up without knee pain, sleeping better through the night and getting their blood sugar under control all by simply adding in some resistance based workouts. However one step on the scale where the needle didn't drop from the last visit and we're ready to give up. But should we?
The first phase of a new program will elicit some neurological adaptations. This is a fancy way of saying that our body gets better at sending and receiving the message from our nervous system while working out. And as a result of this and later physiological adaptations we are going to stimulate lean body mass. Translation = we will add muscle to our frames.
Now over time we do want and expect to see a 'net' weight loss. I put net in quotation marks because there is both a gain and a loss of body mass during the initial phase. Suppose we gain 5 lbs of muscle mass and lose 10 lbs of fat in the first 6 weeks. This would be represented as a net loss of 5 lbs.
Unfortunately, some people will have been putting in honest efforts in both their workouts and their nutrition during these 6 weeks and feel ripped off at having only lost 5 lbs. But here's the catch.
In the first phase of the training you may perform a squat or a deadlift and stimulate your body to produce lean body mass. And perhaps on day one we used a bar weighing 45 lbs and at week 6 you are using 150 lbs for the same lift. Over a 300% increase! Do you think this rate of muscle and strength increase will continue like this every 6 weeks? Or do you think it's possible that after a period of time your strength levels off? Most likely it's the second scenario.
So over time you will gradually taper off on your strength gains but will continue to burn calories during your workouts. Soon the energy balance begins to swing in your favour and you realize pounds coming off more quickly. For example in weeks 7-12 you may gain 2 lbs of muscle but lose 8 pounds of fat for net weight loss of 6 pounds.
The take home message here involves a number of points:
* be patient with your weight loss
* track your results with a number of measures such as tape measures, waist to hip ratio, strength levels, joint function, insulin sensitivity, how your best pair of jeans fit, body fat, pictures, blood work
The more measures you have the more easily you can determine if your efforts were successful. If all the measures listed are going in the right direction and you lost one lbs don't give up. You are on the right track.
In a subsequent article I'll explain how you adjust your nutrient intake as you begin to make progress.
Don't be Hating on the Scale
This is the time of year of a number of firsts. First month of the year, first days back to work and school, and for many it's the first step towards better health and fitness. This should come as no surprise as every gym is packed these days with people aspiring towards a leaner physique, a flatter tummy, six pack abs or whatever the goal is.
And as many put in the efforts towards better health there is one measure that ultimately reinforces and motivates or demoralizes and derails the progress. This measure is the scale. People can be fitting into their jeans more easily, waking up without knee pain, sleeping better through the night and getting their blood sugar under control all by simply adding in some resistance based workouts. However one step on the scale where the needle didn't drop from the last visit and we're ready to give up. But should we?
The first phase of a new program will elicit some neurological adaptations. This is a fancy way of saying that our body gets better at sending and receiving the message from our nervous system while working out. And as a result of this and later physiological adaptations we are going to stimulate lean body mass. Translation = we will add muscle to our frames.
Now over time we do want and expect to see a 'net' weight loss. I put net in quotation marks because there is both a gain and a loss of body mass during the initial phase. Suppose we gain 5 lbs of muscle mass and lose 10 lbs of fat in the first 6 weeks. This would be represented as a net loss of 5 lbs.
Unfortunately, some people will have been putting in honest efforts in both their workouts and their nutrition during these 6 weeks and feel ripped off at having only lost 5 lbs. But here's the catch.
In the first phase of the training you may perform a squat or a deadlift and stimulate your body to produce lean body mass. And perhaps on day one we used a bar weighing 45 lbs and at week 6 you are using 150 lbs for the same lift. Over a 300% increase! Do you think this rate of muscle and strength increase will continue like this every 6 weeks? Or do you think it's possible that after a period of time your strength levels off? Most likely it's the second scenario.
So over time you will gradually taper off on your strength gains but will continue to burn calories during your workouts. Soon the energy balance begins to swing in your favour and you realize pounds coming off more quickly. For example in weeks 7-12 you may gain 2 lbs of muscle but lose 8 pounds of fat for net weight loss of 6 pounds.
The take home message here involves a number of points:
* be patient with your weight loss
* track your results with a number of measures such as tape measures, waist to hip ratio, strength levels, joint function, insulin sensitivity, how your best pair of jeans fit, body fat, pictures, blood work
The more measures you have the more easily you can determine if your efforts were successful. If all the measures listed are going in the right direction and you lost one lbs don't give up. You are on the right track.
In a subsequent article I'll explain how you adjust your nutrient intake as you begin to make progress.
Wide Pulldowns at Lat Machine
Description : Lat pulls are a standard lat (upper back) and rhomboid (muscles between your shoulder blades) strengthening exercise. If done correctly it's a great way to train the same pattern used when performing pull ups. Learn how to perform this exercise in this training video brought to you by Inflict Training!
Tag : New exercises, Training ballasting, Physical education, Flexibility, Fitness training, Strength training, Power, Iron, Weightlifting, Endurance, Recent exercises, Biceps, Chest, Triceps, Aerobic, Back muscles, Abdominal muscles, Shoulder muscles, Quadriceps, Leg muscle
Fitness Articles and Tips
How to Make Success Inevitable
How many of the top athletes in the world have couch potato friends? How many financially successful people have friends working minimum wage or are on welfare? How many academics hang out with people who don't go to libraries or book stores? Probably not a lot.
In chemistry there is a term 'like dissolves like'. This means that two solutions will mix and interact if they are either both polar (like water) or non-polar (like oil). Oil and water don't mix for this reason.
Now think of all the different relationships, arrangements, situations and aspects of your life and consider if they mix or not? For example...
Of your closest friends and family how many of them workout and get physical exercise every day? How many them when they do workout train with intensity and focus? How many of them see health and fitness as a direction rather than a destination?
Is your home set up to ensure success for your health? Are there foods in the fridge or cupboard that bring you closer or take you further from your goal? Do you have healthy food items to go for days when there isn't time to sit and prepare meals?
Does your employer support your efforts towards a healthy lifestyle? Is there a gym at work? Are there showers? Do your coworkers enter teams in rec sports leagues? Are there other people working towards the same goal that would support you in your efforts? Would there be a potential training partner at work? Could the staff lunchroom be stocked with healthy food choices and water instead of chocolate, candy and chips?
Without a lot of effort we can quickly change the perspective from which we begin each day. Make it one surrounded by individuals who support and believe in your goals. Make it one where healthy foods choices are automatic and temptations are removed. And lastly, see and believe yourself realizing your goal.
Take a few minutes to brainstorm and figure how you can make your home, your work and your social life more positively suited towards success. As soon as we can eliminate some of the negatives, making positive choices becomes a whole lot easier.
How to Make Success Inevitable
How many of the top athletes in the world have couch potato friends? How many financially successful people have friends working minimum wage or are on welfare? How many academics hang out with people who don't go to libraries or book stores? Probably not a lot.
In chemistry there is a term 'like dissolves like'. This means that two solutions will mix and interact if they are either both polar (like water) or non-polar (like oil). Oil and water don't mix for this reason.
Now think of all the different relationships, arrangements, situations and aspects of your life and consider if they mix or not? For example...
Of your closest friends and family how many of them workout and get physical exercise every day? How many them when they do workout train with intensity and focus? How many of them see health and fitness as a direction rather than a destination?
Is your home set up to ensure success for your health? Are there foods in the fridge or cupboard that bring you closer or take you further from your goal? Do you have healthy food items to go for days when there isn't time to sit and prepare meals?
Does your employer support your efforts towards a healthy lifestyle? Is there a gym at work? Are there showers? Do your coworkers enter teams in rec sports leagues? Are there other people working towards the same goal that would support you in your efforts? Would there be a potential training partner at work? Could the staff lunchroom be stocked with healthy food choices and water instead of chocolate, candy and chips?
Without a lot of effort we can quickly change the perspective from which we begin each day. Make it one surrounded by individuals who support and believe in your goals. Make it one where healthy foods choices are automatic and temptations are removed. And lastly, see and believe yourself realizing your goal.
Take a few minutes to brainstorm and figure how you can make your home, your work and your social life more positively suited towards success. As soon as we can eliminate some of the negatives, making positive choices becomes a whole lot easier.
Lat Pulldowns (Doubles)
Description : Double lat pulls are a tough endurance back exercise. It demands good form and smooth rhythm. Lat pulls in general are a standard lat (upper back) and rhomboid (muscles between your shoulder blades) strengthening exercise. If done correctly it's a great way to train the same pattern used when performing pull ups. Learn how to perform this exercise in this training video brought to you by Inflict Training!
Tag : New exercises, Training ballasting, Physical education, Flexibility, Fitness training, Strength training, Power, Iron, Weightlifting, Endurance, Recent exercises, Biceps, Chest, Triceps, Aerobic, Back muscles, Abdominal muscles, Shoulder muscles, Quadriceps, Leg muscle
Fitness Articles and Tips
Benefits to Short Intense Workouts
While the evidence from the research continues to accumulate regarding the benefits of short intense exercise there are some people who go the other way with their fitness efforts. A quick step into any fitness facility these days will show more and more people lining up to get on the rows of treadmills, elliptical trainers and bikes. Don't get me wrong there are benefits to cardiovascular exercise. I'm just not a big proponent of long, slow, stead-state cardio workouts. I can summarize these in one word...boring.
Why do I care so much about short, intense workouts? Here are my top 6 reasons.
1. Time - The most obvious benefit of short, intense workouts is that they don't take as long. This is one precious commodity that you should value as much as anything. So anywhere in your life where you can make a change from your routine that frees up time for you and your family would seem like a great idea. And your workout is a great place to start.
2. Better ROI - I like using financial terms to make a point. MG always laughs at my analogies but hey they work and people remember them.
Whenever you put up some of your time or money in something you are making an investment. Sometimes there is no expectation of a return, such as a donation to a charity, and other times you care deeply what kind of a return you get. Imagine the second scenario and you are investing a large chunk of your life savings into some investments. You are going to be particularly concerned with how well this investment performs and what kind a return you will see. And we all want to see a growth and return on our investment.
We should take a similar view of our efforts in the gym. If you are investing time, money and sweat to achieve your goals, you want to know your efforts paid off. You don't want to fail or feel that there was minimal positive change after a lengthy effort.
With short intense, workouts the return on your investment is better than slow, low intensity exercise. You make better gains in terms of your fitness and physiological health.
3. Interest - Ever notice what the 'play of the day' always has in common on the sports show? I mean besides when the kissing bandit plants one on a pitcher or a streaker runs across the field. They are all explosive plays. Big hits, homeruns, slam dunks, one-timers...the plays that are deemed the best of the day are the powerful ones. Not only is it more fun to watch intense, explosive plays it is more fun to do them as well.
4. Performance - We already saw that the best play of the day is an example of intense activity. Well practicing for your sport in the same way gives you an advantage over your competitor. It's not necessarily the player who is the best jumper but the one who gets off the ground the quickest. Or maybe it's not the player who can go forever but the one who can win every ball. Short, intense exercise sets the foundation for being able to dominate in your sport.
5. Ease of practice - It's much easier to perform a short, intense workout. Jumps can be done just about anywhere. Med ball tosses can be performed against a wall. Olympic lifts need only a bar or a dumbbell. Slow, steady-state workouts need either a machine or a lot of space.
6. Longevity - As we age we lose the ability to generate force quickly. This lack of force production is sometimes attributed to the falls we see in the elderly. Performing short, intense workouts helps us train this capacity that we tend to lose naturally with age. As the saying goes 'if you don't use it, you lose it'.
While short, intense exercise is highly beneficial and fairly simple it is not easy. You definitely need to be in shape before you attempt to train explosively. And the physical discomfort that accompanies some of these workouts can be quite high. But when properly planned and coached they can result it all the benefits listed above.
Benefits to Short Intense Workouts
While the evidence from the research continues to accumulate regarding the benefits of short intense exercise there are some people who go the other way with their fitness efforts. A quick step into any fitness facility these days will show more and more people lining up to get on the rows of treadmills, elliptical trainers and bikes. Don't get me wrong there are benefits to cardiovascular exercise. I'm just not a big proponent of long, slow, stead-state cardio workouts. I can summarize these in one word...boring.
Why do I care so much about short, intense workouts? Here are my top 6 reasons.
1. Time - The most obvious benefit of short, intense workouts is that they don't take as long. This is one precious commodity that you should value as much as anything. So anywhere in your life where you can make a change from your routine that frees up time for you and your family would seem like a great idea. And your workout is a great place to start.
2. Better ROI - I like using financial terms to make a point. MG always laughs at my analogies but hey they work and people remember them.
Whenever you put up some of your time or money in something you are making an investment. Sometimes there is no expectation of a return, such as a donation to a charity, and other times you care deeply what kind of a return you get. Imagine the second scenario and you are investing a large chunk of your life savings into some investments. You are going to be particularly concerned with how well this investment performs and what kind a return you will see. And we all want to see a growth and return on our investment.
We should take a similar view of our efforts in the gym. If you are investing time, money and sweat to achieve your goals, you want to know your efforts paid off. You don't want to fail or feel that there was minimal positive change after a lengthy effort.
With short intense, workouts the return on your investment is better than slow, low intensity exercise. You make better gains in terms of your fitness and physiological health.
3. Interest - Ever notice what the 'play of the day' always has in common on the sports show? I mean besides when the kissing bandit plants one on a pitcher or a streaker runs across the field. They are all explosive plays. Big hits, homeruns, slam dunks, one-timers...the plays that are deemed the best of the day are the powerful ones. Not only is it more fun to watch intense, explosive plays it is more fun to do them as well.
4. Performance - We already saw that the best play of the day is an example of intense activity. Well practicing for your sport in the same way gives you an advantage over your competitor. It's not necessarily the player who is the best jumper but the one who gets off the ground the quickest. Or maybe it's not the player who can go forever but the one who can win every ball. Short, intense exercise sets the foundation for being able to dominate in your sport.
5. Ease of practice - It's much easier to perform a short, intense workout. Jumps can be done just about anywhere. Med ball tosses can be performed against a wall. Olympic lifts need only a bar or a dumbbell. Slow, steady-state workouts need either a machine or a lot of space.
6. Longevity - As we age we lose the ability to generate force quickly. This lack of force production is sometimes attributed to the falls we see in the elderly. Performing short, intense workouts helps us train this capacity that we tend to lose naturally with age. As the saying goes 'if you don't use it, you lose it'.
While short, intense exercise is highly beneficial and fairly simple it is not easy. You definitely need to be in shape before you attempt to train explosively. And the physical discomfort that accompanies some of these workouts can be quite high. But when properly planned and coached they can result it all the benefits listed above.
Negative Pull-ups
Description : Negative pull-ups are a tough body weight exercise that will strengthen lats, rhomboids, abs, and hip flexors. Perform this exercise at a cable rack with a set of handles fed through the lowest pull-up grips. Learn how to perform it in this training video brought to you by Inflict Training.
Tag : New exercises, Training ballasting, Physical education, Flexibility, Fitness training, Strength training, Power, Iron, Weightlifting, Endurance, Recent exercises, Biceps, Chest, Triceps, Aerobic, Back muscles, Abdominal muscles, Shoulder muscles, Quadriceps, Leg muscle
Fitness Articles and Tips
Olympics: America's Lindsey Vonn Going for the gold
She is attractive, strong, and full of energy: ski-Star Lindsey Vonn dominated the ski hills last year with her training. Her record stands: the overall World Cup champion, two world championship medals and a total of twelve and six downhill super-G victories. But Lindsey Vonn does not hold back - for the new season has started, it she has much larger ambitions: going for the gold! And to get there she knows she must train hard every day.
"Work hard and it pays off!" It is this philosophy of life that dominates Lindsey Vonn. The 25-year-old skier is a world leader – and today is perhaps the best racer in the world. But what looks easy and relaxed on the slopes, is the result of a long preparation and intensive training. Lindsey Vonn’s success is driven by hard work, discipline and dedication.
Lindsey Vonn grew up as a skiier. She was born in Minnesota, which is fairly flat, and not somewhere you would expect an Olympic skiier to be raised. Nevertheless, her father introduced her to the sport of skiing. Lindsey Vonn's father, who had once won the U.S. Junior Championships, recognized the exceptional talent of his daughter quickly. Every year in the winter time, he would send her to Colorado, where she participated in special training camps. As Lindsey Vonn reached the age of eleven, she pulled her entire family to the Vail ski resort in Colorado. This is the biggest ski area in the U.S., and where her talent and career was started.
The move of the family managed to pay off: at 15, Lindsey celebrated her first major success as U.S. Vice-Champion in downhill. Lindsey Vonn had her breakthrough at the Olympic Games in Salt Lake City: coming in sixth place in the combination, she surprised the competition. From then on, her career blossomed: many rankings, victories, and then last winter came the best and most successful season of her career.
After Lindsey’s success, she continued in the new season, and during the summer break worked on her body and fitness levels. After her last race in March, her American trainer gave himself only a short breather before they began to prepare: in May, the starting signal was given for the upcoming season. Lindsey Vonn started the year training in the U.S., followed by units in Austria and New Zealand in September and then a training camp in Chile, where she took the final touches for the World Cup opener in Soelden.
"Get up when you fall – and want it more than ever." It is probably this second life philosophy that Lindsey Vonn describes as her motivational tool. Even during the summer training, her goals were clear in her mind. The 25-year-old works hard for months of preparation to succeed in the winter races. Lindsey can therefore be found in the fitness studio throughout the summer regularly for daily units to strengthen the body. In order to be a powerful racer on the slopes you need body mass. The stronger you are, the faster you are, says Lindsey Vonn. In addition to endurance strength training and on the bike, she will play tennis.
With 120 miles an hour down the runway - strength and endurance are one priority, mental strength and good nerves are the others. Every night she tries to relax for at least nine hours sleep, or drifts off to her favorite television series "Law & Order" which is one of her and her families weaknesses.
Olympics: America's Lindsey Vonn Going for the gold
She is attractive, strong, and full of energy: ski-Star Lindsey Vonn dominated the ski hills last year with her training. Her record stands: the overall World Cup champion, two world championship medals and a total of twelve and six downhill super-G victories. But Lindsey Vonn does not hold back - for the new season has started, it she has much larger ambitions: going for the gold! And to get there she knows she must train hard every day.
"Work hard and it pays off!" It is this philosophy of life that dominates Lindsey Vonn. The 25-year-old skier is a world leader – and today is perhaps the best racer in the world. But what looks easy and relaxed on the slopes, is the result of a long preparation and intensive training. Lindsey Vonn’s success is driven by hard work, discipline and dedication.
Lindsey Vonn grew up as a skiier. She was born in Minnesota, which is fairly flat, and not somewhere you would expect an Olympic skiier to be raised. Nevertheless, her father introduced her to the sport of skiing. Lindsey Vonn's father, who had once won the U.S. Junior Championships, recognized the exceptional talent of his daughter quickly. Every year in the winter time, he would send her to Colorado, where she participated in special training camps. As Lindsey Vonn reached the age of eleven, she pulled her entire family to the Vail ski resort in Colorado. This is the biggest ski area in the U.S., and where her talent and career was started.
The move of the family managed to pay off: at 15, Lindsey celebrated her first major success as U.S. Vice-Champion in downhill. Lindsey Vonn had her breakthrough at the Olympic Games in Salt Lake City: coming in sixth place in the combination, she surprised the competition. From then on, her career blossomed: many rankings, victories, and then last winter came the best and most successful season of her career.
After Lindsey’s success, she continued in the new season, and during the summer break worked on her body and fitness levels. After her last race in March, her American trainer gave himself only a short breather before they began to prepare: in May, the starting signal was given for the upcoming season. Lindsey Vonn started the year training in the U.S., followed by units in Austria and New Zealand in September and then a training camp in Chile, where she took the final touches for the World Cup opener in Soelden.
"Get up when you fall – and want it more than ever." It is probably this second life philosophy that Lindsey Vonn describes as her motivational tool. Even during the summer training, her goals were clear in her mind. The 25-year-old works hard for months of preparation to succeed in the winter races. Lindsey can therefore be found in the fitness studio throughout the summer regularly for daily units to strengthen the body. In order to be a powerful racer on the slopes you need body mass. The stronger you are, the faster you are, says Lindsey Vonn. In addition to endurance strength training and on the bike, she will play tennis.
With 120 miles an hour down the runway - strength and endurance are one priority, mental strength and good nerves are the others. Every night she tries to relax for at least nine hours sleep, or drifts off to her favorite television series "Law & Order" which is one of her and her families weaknesses.
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