The Five Biggest Fat Loss Mistakes and How You Can Easily Avoid Them
Posted by este in Health and Fitness, Weight Loss on November 9, 2011
Do you feel overwhelmed by information on what to eat and how to exercise to lose weight and get the body you have always wished for?
Well, you’re not alone!
The media throws out information and, more frequently, misinformation on a regular basis – as it is what sells papers, magazines and diet books! You need to be a little more discerning to be able to filter the bad advice from the good, and that is where I am here to help!
Biggest Fat Loss Mistakes: Number 1 – Believing Everything You Read!
Rather than worry about dieting, you should go on a media diet instead! That will stop the incessant noise that is telling you to ‘eat this’ and ‘do that’ which really means ‘buy these useless products’!
Although in reality, that is easier said than done, as the misinformation is shouting at you from supposedly healthy food packaging (a contradiction in terms!) and from supermarkets insisting that you must buy more of their healthy products to lose weight (another contradiction in terms – since when did eating more of anything encourage weight loss?!)
When it comes to articles in the press, don’t forget, that the journo is simply a journo – they are not an expert! Even if they are referencing some out of context study, any link to ‘science’ is usually distant and used to give their statements more credibility. Their agenda – to write something exciting enough to be read but mainstream enough to be accepted. Controversy or something ‘flashy’ is what sells more products. The truth is not so sellable as everyone is after the ‘miracle cure’.
Biggest Fat Loss Mistakes: Number 2 – Searching for a Miracle Cure or Magic Pill!
The internet has a lot to answer for here – as it’s all to easy to start googling ‘fat loss’ and end up in that crazy, mesmirised state of ‘browsing’ where you end up believing claims that some incredible Amazonian berry is the previously unknown answer to all you needs.
Somehow, it’s just so, well, compelling….
The simple fact is that in fat loss, as in life, you get back what you put in. You put the effort in with sound and regular training and cleaning up your diet, and results will ‘miraculously’ appear!
Take the easy route and don’t put in the work, and suddenly it all seems so hard.
Take responsibility and consistent action and things fall into place – you can get incredible results, but the ‘Miracle Cure’ you’re searching for is all within you. You are the key, you have to do what needs to be done, and keep doing it!
Biggest Fat Loss Mistakes: Number 3 – You Think Aerobics is for Fat Loss
The media are obsessed with spouting the same, tired and out-dated concepts, leaving you to suffer the consequences of not getting the results you deserve!
Take advice, instead, from people who get results day after day with clients – and whose livelihoods depend on it.
Full body exercises allow your body to move all of its 600 muscles in a workout. You can generate resistance through your own bodyweight or by adding dumbbells or kettlebells to the mix.
Performing these kinds of exercises in a superset or circuit format, with minimal rest, can get your heart rate up as much, if not more, than plodding away on the cross trainer for another soul-destroying hour.
But there is more to it than that.
Full body movements are the movements we use in real, day to day life. And also in sports and other activities we may engage in from time to time. If you give your body the opportunity to perform these movements regularly, you’ll be fit enough for anything that comes your way!
Steady, long duration cardio is repetitive and can cause imbalances as well as make any underlying imbalance or injury worse. Full body resistance style workouts get you stronger and leaner, and reduce injuries linked to imbalances.
Steady state cardio or aerobics is very easy to adapt to, so you get fitter to start with, but then your body gets used to what you are doing. This goes for many popular gym classes – they simply do not progress you as you get fitter. You just need to wait outside a studio in your local gym to see that despite almost religious attendance, very few people actually get results.
Biggest Fat Loss Mistakes: Number 4 – You Think You Can Out-train a Bad Diet
This is the biggest myth out there!
As a personal trainer, I get clients coming to me all the time who think they are just coming to me for some exercise – ‘my diet’s fine, I just need some exercise and the weight will just drop off’ is a typical comment.
But, without looking at the nutrition side of things, you will not get results, or you will get slow and uninspiring progress at best! Some people even go backwards, as they subconsciously think they need more calories to make up for all their hard work in the gym! Or they increase the frequency of ‘treats’ as their regular training habit makes them feel so virtuous. Make sure you are making changes to your nutrition and build up over time if a big overhaul seems to much to take on. Why waste all your effort training hard only to put the wrong fuel in the tank?!
People comment to me all the time ‘I bet you can eat what you like, doing all that exercise’. Well, er, no. Us trainers have to be super careful – being busy and active all day and needing to be on form and energetic all day long means it can be even harder to get the calorie balance right. But we also know that we need to eat great quality foods, to keep us feeling and performing on top form. As much as we are human and certain things tempt us as much as they tempt you, we know how bad the wrong choices make us feel, so choose better choices more often because we want to!
It is about QUALITY and QUANTITY. Simply reducing calories and paying no attention to where they are coming from wreaks havioc with your blood sugar, creates cravings and increases the likelihood of binges, and messes up the vital hormones that regulate fat burning and fat storage, as well as energy and mood.
But you can also eat too much of the right stuff – so you do need to get the balance right. If you are gorging on nuts, drowning salads in olive oil or whatever, you may feel great, get fitter and look better, but the fat won’t be burned unless you need to burn it for fuel!
Work on the quality first, and remember that veggies are the cornerstone. If I was only allowed 3 words of advice on nutrition, it would be ‘eat more veg’! Well, maybe, ‘quit processed food’. Hmmmm…. 3 words just isn’t quite enough.
Anyway, make sure you take nutrition into account alongside your training – they are partners that will, when combined, skyrocket your results. Any programme that promises results without taking both elements into account will not get the best results possible, but even more importantly, will not get results that you can maintain for life.
And surely that is what you want, right?
Biggest Fat Loss Mistakes: Number 5 – You Forget that the End Goal is Maintenance
When we set goals we focus on achieving a number on a scale (usually arbitrary and meaningless) or achieving a certain size (a better goal!) and think that when we get there, we can finally stop our quest and relax, satisfied with a job well done.
Unfortunately, the way we maintain the results is by continuing to practice the new habits and behaviours that we learned along the way! Which is why overly restrictive or unrealistic temporary methods will never work for the end result – maintaining what you have achieved.
It’s so easy to slip into the old bad habits – and it’s these habits that led to the weight gain in the first place.
Training, good nutrition and a healthy lifestyle is what gives you the results – you’re a product of your habits. Make sure that when you’re embarking on your fat loss and health journey you’re thinking about how these new habits will fit into your life – for good! When you get to your goal you can ease off a bit and indulge a little more often, but the general, day to day habits really need to stay the same.
If you take all these factors into account, your success is guaranteed!
Get Motivated and Get Moving
Posted by este in Exercise, Health and Fitness on November 3, 2011
Americans need to get moving and become fitter. As per estimates released by leading world health organizations, all Americans will be overweight by 2048 – that is, if we keep doing things the way we are. Americans must realize that all hope is not lost — yet. If we get together now and shake off our collective procrastination, we can become fitter, leaner and healthier. Achieving optimum fitness is good for our health – it rids our body of diseases and helps us enjoy life. So, if you want to get off that couch and start working out, now is the time to get started. Here are a few motivation techniques that will help you get going:
Fitness-motivation techniques from experienced physical trainers
1. Take part in a reality show (local or on TV) that rewards people if they shed weight. If there’s no such show around, start a local competition yourself and have some prizes sponsored by the neighboring gyms and health stores. Alternately, create a game with your family – whoever exercises the most in a span of 30 minutes gets a prize, or something like that.
2. Get a gym buddy. When you work out with a friend, time will fly even before you know it. Gymming will no longer be a daily routine – it will be a fun thing to do, just like watching football, and you will feel your fitness levels increase very soon. Remember to focus more on cardio workouts than strength training.
3. Take up a sport if you don’t prefer to gym it out. Sports enhance fitness levels and also help you increase your competitive quotient and make some cool friends as well. Take up tennis or squash if you want to lose weight fast.
4. No matter what, always stay dedicated and follow your schedule. If you harden your mental makeup and exercise regularly (at least 4 times in a week, and at least for 30 minutes daily), you will see some results within a month, and once you see results, that will be motivation enough to keep you going.
5. Set goals and rewards. The goal can be something like losing 1 pound in 7 days and the reward can be a treat for two at a football match or a movie or whatever it is you like. Just ensure that your reward does not allow you to gorge on food – a nibble here and there is okay though.
6. Pick up a few fitness magazines and see how fit people look like. Read about their lifestyle, eating habits and regimen. This can inspire you to do much more than you are currently doing. Imagine yourself completely fit and you’ll notice that just the thought of being fit brings a smile to your face and a proud feeling in your heart!
7. On the other side, imagine yourself to be a sick person and read up on what happens to overweight and obese people. Make fear your motivator because it can help you achieve take-off right into your fitness program.
These were a few motivational tips that will get you going straight into a fitness program. Enjoy what you do, knock off the extra kilos, and watch the sunlight stream right back into your life. Here’s to a fitter you!
The World of Sports Nutrition
Posted by este in Health and Fitness, Nutrition on October 29, 2011
Advancements in medicine and an increase in capitalism in the world as well as other factors all contributed to the development of the field of sports nutrition.
As scientists learned more and more about our bodies and the optimum level of strength and physical fitness they can harbor, businessmen jumped the gun and manufactured products and services that actually help athletes meet these optimum levels. The media joined in the ruckus and published materials leading to the promotion of both the scientific and the commercial side of the field.
Sports nutrition has been changing through the years around the world. It’s not just that the topics are different – the emphasis and approach have also changed.
Peak Performance, a sports magazine carried an article on dehydration in runners on October 1990, its maiden issue. This article compared the benefits of plain water with those of dilute glucose solutions, which are more isotonic and therefore absorbed more rapidly.
Today, go into almost any supermarket, convenience stores and even school cafeterias and you’ll find a ready supply of sports drinks aimed at maintaining hydration just like glucose solutions.
The difference is that by using soluble long-chain glucose polymers instead of simple glucose, it’s now possible to create an isotonic drink that hydrates and also supplies significant amounts of carbohydrate to working muscles. And, the good thing is, sports drinks also taste better.
More than 10 years ago, it was made public that muscle damage brought about by free-radicals may be reduced by having supplements of antioxidant vitamins A; C and E. Years after, antioxidant supplementation became a norm in the world of sports nutrition.
Now, researchers are also beginning to understand that muscle damage is a more complex subject. It is difficult to assess free radical damage in athletes and it has been found out those large amounts of antioxidant nutrients may actually cause cellular damage and impair performance.
The carb loading technique has been widely used over the years by athletes all over the world. A carbohydrate-rich diet is important in maintaining muscle glycogen stores thus ensuring high endurance levels.
However, in the 1990′s it became clear that the glycemic index and release rate of different carbohydrates had important influence on when they should best be consumed in relation to physical activity.
The relationship of carbohydrates and proteins were also discovered namely that carbohydrates promote protein-sparing in the body. It was also discovered recently that consuming carbohydrates before and during prolonged bouts of strenuous exercise can help protect the immune system.
One of the most exciting recent developments in sports nutrition has been the rise of creatine supplementation. The use of creatine is now very common. Creatine renews the muscles essential energy source, ATP or adenosine triphosphate. Increased levels in muscles optimizes energy turnover meaning you’ll more energy for high power exercise and faster recovery during and after workouts. Creatine also increases the athlete’s maximum effort, delays fatigue and therefore prolongs endurance.
New wisdom and therefore new products have definitely enabled athletes to fuel themselves better, work harder, train longer and recover more rapidly. However, as in any kind of innovation there will always be downsides.
Nutritional supplements available to most athletes in the 80′s were very straightforward. Some athletes took drugs but the boundaries between nutritional supplements and drugs clear. Today, the race to find new formulas to boost performance has resulted to the availability of sports nutrition supplements which do not really occur naturally. The result is that the distinction between a nutrient and a performance-enhancing substance has become increasingly blurred.
Some of these supplements contain ingredients that can cause athletes to violate the rules and regulations governing their sport because of unintentional contamination by other, ‘exotic’, substances present in the supplement manufacturing environment.
More developments will be created in the world of sports nutrition and these will definitely spawn ethical questions. “Nutrigenomics”-the relationship between genetics and nutrition-will be more researched upon.
As scientists become more skilled at discovering the processes of our genes, it will be possible that rather than adopting a general approach for sports nutrition, athletes around the world will be genetically tested to help them determine precise individual requirements for optimum health.
The next years will predictably be more exciting for the world of sports nutrition.