Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Cut Your Workout In Half With Interval Training

Friday, July 9th, 2010

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We’ve discussed the merits of interval training in the past. We’re strong advocates that varied, and anaerobic, exercises produce the best results. Standing around the gym for 10 minutes between sets will barely break a sweat, or put a dent in your beer gut. Fox News tells us that interval training is not only effective, but cuts your workout time in half.


Some experts say intense exercise sessions could help people squeeze an entire week’s workout into less than an hour. Intense exercise regimens, or interval training, was originally developed for Olympic athletes and thought to be too strenuous for normal people.

But in recent years, studies in older people and those with health problems suggest many more people might be able to handle it. If true, that could revolutionize how officials advise people to exercise — and save millions of people hours in the gym every week. It is also a smarter way to exercise, experts say.

“High-intensity interval training is twice as effective as normal exercise,” said Jan Helgerud, an exercise expert at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology. “This is like finding a new pill that works twice as well … we should immediately throw out the old way of exercising.”

Intense interval training means working very hard for a few minutes, with rest periods in between sets. Experts have mostly tested people running or biking, but other sports like rowing or swimming should also work.

Helgerud recommends people try four sessions lasting four minutes each, with three minutes of recovery time in between. Unless you’re an elite athlete, it shouldn’t be an all-out effort.
“You should be a little out of breath, but you shouldn’t have the obvious feeling of exhaustion,” Helgerud said.

In Britain and the U.S., officials recommend that people get about two and a half hours each week of moderate exercise.

Helgerud says that time could be slashed dramatically if people did interval training instead. He said officials have been too afraid of recommending intense training, fearing it might be too much for some people.

“I’m much more afraid of people not exercising at all,” he said. “Inactivity is what’s killing us.”

When compared to people on a normal exercise routine, like jogging, research has shown those doing interval training can double their endurance, improve their oxygen use and strength by more than 10 percent, and their speed by at least 5 percent. Even studies in the elderly and in heart patients found they had better oxygen use and fitness after doing interval training.
Still, most studies have been done in young, healthy adults, and experts advise people to consult a doctor before starting any fitness program.

For Adamson Nicholls, a 36-year-old Londoner and martial arts enthusiast, interval training is a way to boost his endurance so he can outlast sparring opponents. “It’s a shortcut to explosive fitness,” he said, adding the training results in snappier and heavier punches.

Using interval training, Nicholls got into top shape last year in about six weeks, using weekly 45-minute sessions. He estimates the same level would have taken about three months via regular training.
Experts say that’s because intense bursts of activity are precisely what the body needs to build stronger muscles. Traditional workouts lasting an hour or more simply don’t push the body enough.
People who complain they have no time to exercise may soon need another excuse.

Some experts say intense exercise sessions could help people squeeze an entire week’s workout into less than an hour. Intense exercise regimens, or interval training, was originally developed for Olympic athletes and thought to be too strenuous for normal people.

But in recent years, studies in older people and those with health problems suggest many more people might be able to handle it. If true, that could revolutionize how officials advise people to exercise — and save millions of people hours in the gym every week. It is also a smarter way to exercise, experts say.

“High-intensity interval training is twice as effective as normal exercise,” said Jan Helgerud, an exercise expert at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology. “This is like finding a new pill that works twice as well … we should immediately throw out the old way of exercising.”

Intense interval training means working very hard for a few minutes, with rest periods in between sets. Experts have mostly tested people running or biking, but other sports like rowing or swimming should also work.

Helgerud recommends people try four sessions lasting four minutes each, with three minutes of recovery time in between. Unless you’re an elite athlete, it shouldn’t be an all-out effort.
“You should be a little out of breath, but you shouldn’t have the obvious feeling of exhaustion,” Helgerud said.

In Britain and the U.S., officials recommend that people get about two and a half hours each week of moderate exercise.

Helgerud says that time could be slashed dramatically if people did interval training instead. He said officials have been too afraid of recommending intense training, fearing it might be too much for some people.

“I’m much more afraid of people not exercising at all,” he said. “Inactivity is what’s killing us.”

When compared to people on a normal exercise routine, like jogging, research has shown those doing interval training can double their endurance, improve their oxygen use and strength by more than 10 percent, and their speed by at least 5 percent. Even studies in the elderly and in heart patients found they had better oxygen use and fitness after doing interval training.

Still, most studies have been done in young, healthy adults, and experts advise people to consult a doctor before starting any fitness program.

For Adamson Nicholls, a 36-year-old Londoner and martial arts enthusiast, interval training is a way to boost his endurance so he can outlast sparring opponents. “It’s a shortcut to explosive fitness,” he said, adding the training results in snappier and heavier punches.

Using interval training, Nicholls got into top shape last year in about six weeks, using weekly 45-minute sessions. He estimates the same level would have taken about three months via regular training.

Experts say that’s because intense bursts of activity are precisely what the body needs to build stronger muscles. Traditional workouts lasting an hour or more simply don’t push the body enough.
“A lot of the (benefits) from exercise are due to a stress response,” said Stephen Bailey, a sports sciences expert at the University of Exeter. “If you disturb your muscles, there’s an imbalance created and your body will start signaling pathways that result in adjustments.”

Bailey said intense bursts of exercise help the body to convert one type of muscle fiber into another type that uses oxygen more efficiently and is capable of exercising a lot longer. Even though interval training only takes a few minutes, its effects last for hours.

“You’ve exercised at such a high intensity that you’re going to create a massive disturbance in your muscles,” Bailey said. That creates a higher metabolism for several hours afterward, which the body will bring down by burning fat and carbohydrates.

Helgerud and others predicted that as further studies confirm interval training is safe for wider populations, authorities will include it in their exercise guidelines.

“This is definitely the way forward to save time on your exercise,” Nicholls said. “The results are worth it.”

“A lot of the (benefits) from exercise are due to a stress response,” said Stephen Bailey, a sports sciences expert at the University of Exeter. “If you disturb your muscles, there’s an imbalance created and your body will start signaling pathways that result in adjustments.”

Bailey said intense bursts of exercise help the body to convert one type of muscle fiber into another type that uses oxygen more efficiently and is capable of exercising a lot longer. Even though interval training only takes a few minutes, its effects last for hours.

“You’ve exercised at such a high intensity that you’re going to create a massive disturbance in your muscles,” Bailey said. That creates a higher metabolism for several hours afterward, which the body will bring down by burning fat and carbohydrates.

Helgerud and others predicted that as further studies confirm interval training is safe for wider populations, authorities will include it in their exercise guidelines.

“This is definitely the way forward to save time on your exercise,” Nicholls said. “The results are worth it.”


Medicine Ball Workout

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

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Sculpt those abs with the Medicine Ball workout you’ll find in the video below.

Bike For Your Health

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

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It’s hot in NYC; we’re talking 100 degrees hot. And humid! So why don’t we enjoy this lovely weather by getting outside and biking to work. Trust me, it beats sitting on the subway platform(aka the inferno) waiting for the 6 train.

CNN has a new article up highlighting a study that shows how effective just 5 minutes of biking can be for a woman’s overall health.

Who wants to sit in traffic when you can save time and burn calories by hitting the bike?


Biking for as little as five minutes a day can help women minimize weight gain as they enter middle age, especially if they’re overweight to begin with, a new study suggests.

The study followed more than 18,000 premenopausal women between the ages of 25 and 42 for 16 years. During that time, the women gained an average of about 20.5 pounds.

Women who started biking for just five minutes a day gained about 1.5 fewer pounds over the course of the study than similar women who didn’t take up biking, the researchers found. Women who increased their daily biking by 30 minutes during the study kept even more weight off, gaining about 3.5 fewer pounds than those whose biking habits stayed the same.

“Bicycling is an answer to weight control,” says the lead author of the study, Dr. Anne Lusk, Ph.D., a research fellow in nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health, in Boston. “Walking is not necessarily an answer, unless the person is walking briskly.”

Indeed, Lusk and her colleagues found that women who increased the time they spent walking briskly by 30 minutes per day during the study gained about four pounds less than their peers who didn’t increase their walking. (A “brisk” pace is three miles per hour or more.) On the other hand, women who only walked slowly did not manage to prevent any weight gain.

Women who were overweight or obese at the start of the study experienced even better results than normal-weight women when they increased their daily physical activity. Overweight women who biked for 30 extra minutes per day over the course of the study gained about seven pounds less than those who didn’t, for instance.

The findings should encourage overweight women to not give up on exercise, says Dr. Suzanne Steinbaum, D.O., director of Women and Heart Disease at Lenox Hill Hospital, in New York City. “People tend to say, ‘I’m too fat. I can’t do it. It’s too difficult.’ A study like this reminds them not to give up. Do something.”

The study appears this week in the Archives of Internal Medicine. Previous research has shown the weight benefits of daily walking, but few studies have focused specifically on biking and none have compared walking with biking.

“A lot of information on physical activity provided to women is very general, encouraging daily activity, but not specifically what kind,” says Keri Gans, a spokesperson for the American Dietetic Association.

“This study encourages an activity that is not expensive and that almost all women can easily engage in. And if a woman is presently a walker, it’s good to know that she must pick up her pace.”

Biking and walking are easier than many other forms of exercise to incorporate into everyday life, Lusk points out.

“[They] can be a routine part of the day, so you can get your physical activity as a normal part of the day,” she says.
The study participants were all nurses and are part of a larger, national study on health and lifestyle that began in 1989. Women with physical problems that make regular exercise difficult were excluded from the current study, as were women who reported chronic health conditions such as heart disease, diabetes, or cancer.

At the start of the study, half of the participants reported walking slowly, 39 percent said they walked briskly, and 48 percent said they biked (including working out on a stationary bike).

By 2005, the average physical activity had increased slightly but remained very low overall. Participants walked briskly for just one hour per week, on average, and biked for only about 18 minutes per week. Meanwhile they sat around the house for about 2.5 hours a day.

Current guidelines recommend that adults get at least 30 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise on most days of the week, a goal that many women in the study appear to be well below.

Individuals can’t bear all of the blame for that inactivity, Lusk and her colleagues suggest. Their physical surroundings may also be partly responsible.

Although some cities and towns have encouraged walking and biking (by adding sidewalks and bike lanes, for instance), the U.S. remains a “car-centric nation,” they write.

Nine percent of commuters in the U.S. walk to work and just 0.5 percent bike, according to data cited in the study. By contrast, in the Netherlands, where the roads are more bike-friendly, 22 percent of commuters walk to work and 27 percent bike.

“We need to provide the infrastructure or facilities so that more people could comfortably bicycle,” Lusk says. “In the U.S., the emphasis has been on the walking environment and not on the bicycling environment.”


Speed Ladder Drills

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

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You can do a lot with a speed ladder. There’s a reason NFL guys work these all the time.

Speed Ladders are great for explosion, agility, and endurance. Watch the video below for a quick glance on a number of drills you can perform using a speed ladder.

Home Workout Video

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

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New Bodyrocktv home workout video. Once again, no gym is needed. If you’ve got a living room, or a bedroom, you’ve got a place to workout.

The Crossfit Squat

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

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One of the pillars of the Crossfit workout is the air squat. No weights, just a body weight squat in proper form. The key word there is proper form. Not too many people do these correctly.

With that in mind we’ve found a video that does a very good job demonstrating how to perform the perfect air squat. Try 100 of these and see how you feel in the morning. Who needs heavy weights?

Are You Overtraining?

Monday, June 28th, 2010

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Everyone hits a wall in their training. Sometimes its a plateau, sometimes its exhaustion, and sometimes it’s from doing too much. Overtrainig is very real and something that too few people pay attention to. If you’re in the gym for 3-4 hours a day, you’re wasting your time, and most likely causing more harm then good. Bodybuilding.com enlightens us. All you need is 3 minutes….


There is a question that I would like to ask you to ask yourself: Are you wasting too much of your valuable time by going to the gym to lift weights? Are you trying to convince yourself that the more time you spend in the gym working out, the better off your results will be?

The Biggest Misconception

One of the biggest misconceptions I deal with each and every day as a personal trainer is the belief people have that it takes hours in the gym lifting weights to produce a fit and toned body. I have some (good) news for you. What if I told you that only 20% of your total fitness results will come from the time you spend lifting weights.

What if I told you that 80% of your weight loss or weight management results come from the time you spend OUT OF THE GYM! How much time do you really need to spend lifting weights to get a great body and be in great shape?

What if I said only 3 minutes a day, 3 times a week, for a TOTAL of 9 minutes A WEEK! (Are you scratching your head yet or calling me names?) I am willing to bet money that you are spending a lot more than 9 minutes a week on weight lifting and I am also willing to bet you are not totally happy with your results.

Before totally labeling me crazy, let me explain. Let’s take a visit to the gym for a moment, and join up with yourself in a workout. Today is “chest day” for your workout. Let’s assume that for each exercise, you perform the standard norm of 10 repetitions per set. So, if you do a bench press, you probably do 10 reps.

Actual Time Lifting

That, my friend, amounts to about 10 seconds of time that you are actually physically moving the weight. Next time you are in the gym, time yourself and see how long it takes to perform a set of 10 reps. (Please do not look at your watch while doing the exercise!) Let me save you the time – it takes 10 seconds. If you perform 3 sets, which most people do, you are now up to 30 seconds (3×10) of actual lifting movement.

If you do 3 exercises for each muscle group (for the chest we can do bench press, incline dumbbell press, and dips) you are now only up to 90 seconds, or 1 1/2 minutes. So far, so good?
Let’s assume you do two muscle groups per workout (let’s say chest and back). You have doubled your 1 1/2 minutes to 3 minutes. 1 1/2 minutes spent on chest actually physically lifting the weights and 1 1/2 minutes spent working out your back, actually physically lifting the weights.

Total time=3 minutes.

All of the other time you are spending can be put into one of these other categories:
• Resting Between Sets
• Wasted Time

Hopefully, most of the time that you are not actually lifting is spent in category #1, rest. Waiting between sets, walking around a bit, getting a drink of water. But this should only amount to 1-2 minutes between sets. So, what does all of this mean?

You have 3 minutes to make or break your results.

Three Minutes

Three minutes to give everything you can give while in the gym. Treat it like the last 3 minutes you will ever have (you never really know when it will be) and I absolutely bet that you will have an incredible workout and will soon be reaping incredible results. Remember I said at the beginning that 20% of your results come from the time spent in the gym lifting weights and the other 80% comes from time spent out of the gym.

If you are spending only 3 minutes total each workout and 9 minutes total each week actually moving the weights up and down, shouldn’t it stand to reason that most of your results will come from outside of this 3-9 minute time period, outside of the gym? The time you spend in the gym is meant to accomplish one thing. Muscle stimulation. Period.

The time spent in the gym lifting weights is for muscle stimulation, which in turn, will lead to muscle growth and improved muscle strength. I hope you weren’t thinking fat loss.

You cannot burn body fat during the lifting process, lifting is anaerobic, not aerobic. Don’t worry though, weight training is probably THE BEST investment for future fat-burning capabilities! Your time spent lifting should focus on muscle stimulation by progressively lifting heavier weights so that your muscles become stronger and bigger.

The other 80% of your results come from:
• Proper rest outside of the gym
• Proper nutrition to support muscle growth
• Intense, yet brief aerobic/cardio exercise

If either of these three areas are compromised, results are minimal. All of the weight lifting in the world will bring about nothing positive if you are not recovering properly between workouts,are not eating to support muscle growth and fat loss, and are not performing aerobic activity to help the heart and also aid in fat loss.

Focus Your Efforts

Focus and direct your efforts on making sure these three criteria are being met and I guarantee you will see positive results. In conclusion, because you are only spending 3 minutes of actual weight lifting time each and every day, do you see areas in your own routine that can be cut down to become more efficient? Are you spending way too much time in search of those elusive results you’re after, all the while unsure if what you are doing is even the right thing?

I know this much for sure. There is no universal law that states if you double your time spent in the gym, you double your results. Quite the contrary. I see many people spend needless hours in the gym, not changing their physique a bit. I also see people that change quite dramatically by losing fat and gaining muscle.

I know for sure that these people are making that 3 minutes of each workout the best possible 3 minutes they can give. It is not the time that matters, it is how well you spend that time. Make your 3 minutes of your workout the most intense, focused 3 minutes you possibly can and I guarantee you will start to see better results.

So, the next time someone asks you how long you work out for each day with weights, you can tell them, with confidence, that it only takes 3 minutes a day to get a great, muscular and toned physique. Everything else is either rest or time wasted.

Landon Donovan’s Greatest Highlights

Friday, June 25th, 2010

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By now everyone in the country knows Landon Donovan; the hero of the USA soccer team who scored the goal to propel the USA onto the next round in the World Cup.

I don’t know anything about soccer. I don’t think I’ve ever even watched a game, but I did see that goal and now, like the rest of the country, I’m Landon Donovan’s and Team USA’s biggest fan. Let’s see if we can take this sucker.

In the meantime check out the video that shows some of the best goals of Donovan’s career. Pretty impressive. We’ve got some more to add to this before the World Cup is over.

A Healthy 4th of July

Thursday, June 24th, 2010

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The 4th of July rapidly approaching. Fireworks, beaches, parades, American flags, and lots of unhealthy food! Well we did some searching this morning to help you find some healthier alternatives for your barbecues. We went to Runners World to highlight for you some healthy 4th of July recipes.

“Fried” Chicken

Baking (not frying) keeps the fat in check. Cook extra for leftovers.

4 3-ounce skinless chicken breasts
1 cup buttermilk, with salt and pepper
1/2 cup seasoned bread crumbs
1/2 cup oat bran

Pour buttermilk over chicken; let sit one hour in fridge. Line baking sheet with foil. Put dry ingredients in a plastic bag. Place one chicken breast in bag; close and shake to cover chicken. Place chicken on baking sheet. Repeat for other pieces. Cover with foil; bake 40 minutes at 375° F. Remove foil and bake 15 minutes.

Serves four.

CALORIES PER SERVING: 245
CARBS: 19G
PROTEIN: 29G
FAT: 5G

Potato Salad

Fennel adds crunch, a hint of licorice, and loads of antioxidants.

2 pounds red potatoes, quartered
2 tablespoons low-fat mayonnaise
1 tablespoon vinaigrette (try one with balsamic vinegar)
3 scallions, thinly sliced
2 celery stalks, diced
1/4 fennel bulb, diced
1/4 cup flat-leafed parsley, chopped Salt and pepper to taste

Boil potatoes in water until tender (about 12 minutes). Drain and allow to cool. In a mixing bowl, combine the next six ingredients. Then add potatoes, salt, and pepper. Mix gently, being sure to integrate all the ingredients. Chill one hour in fridge, then stir again.

Serves six.

CALORIES PER SERVING: 140
CARBS: 26G
PROTEIN: 3G
FAT: 3G

Strawberry Shortcake

Using Greek yogurt instead of whipped cream makes a high-protein dessert.

1 1/2 cups flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 tablespoon sugar
1/2 tablespoon salt
3 tablespoons trans-fat-free, reduced-fat margarine
2/3 cup low-fat buttermilk
2 pints strawberries, hulled and sliced
2 cups Greek yogurt with honey

Combine first five items in a bowl. Cut in margarine until crumbly. Stir in milk. Knead dough on floured board; shape into a rectangle; cut into biscuit rounds. Place on greased baking sheet. Bake at 425° F for 10 minutes. Split biscuits in half, filling middle with berries. Top with more berries and yogurt.

Serves six.

CALORIES PER SERVING: 285
CARBS: 46G
PROTEIN: 9G
FAT: 8G

Rocky Balboa Workout

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

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Rocky Balboa was the last in the epic Rocky movies. When Stallone made this he was 62. 62! Did you see what type of shape he was in? Watch the video below to see how Stallone trained for the movie. And then remind yourself, that this man is 62 years old.