Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Twist - Supine on SB with MB

Try this exercise to improve core strength and stability!





Difficulty Level : Advanced
Muscle Group(s) : Core, Abdominals, Obliques
Modality : Stability, Balance
Equipment : Stability Ball (SB), Medicine Ball (MB)

Benefits :
  • Increased integrated rotational (transverse plane) core strength and stability.
Pre-Requisites :
  • The client must have adequate flexibility at the hip flexors in order to assume this position without compensation to the low back.
Preparation :
  • From a seated position, slowly roll down the ball while comfortably placing your head and neck on the ball.
  • Lift your hips up until they are in line with your knees and shoulders.
  • Raise arms and medicine ball perpendicular to your torso.
Movement :
  • Maintaining a stable pelvis, slowly rotate trunk to each side.
  • As strength develops, increase range of motion and speed.
  • Maintain proper spinal alignment!
  • Do not allow hips to drop while rotating.

Why Stress Is Making You Fat!

I often talk to people about stress during the Bioage assessment and during training if I suspect that stress is playing a big role in someone's life.  I don't do this just because I'm nosey (even though I am) that's not the main reason I ask about it. The main reason is that stress will work against your efforts in the gym by stealing your energy and making it so much harder to lose fat from around your middle.  I found this great article on the subject which I recommend you read to help you understand the importance of managing stress.


Stress less to lose weight

IF your excess weight won’t budge, getting your anxiety levels under control could help.
A bit of stress every now and again is normal, but living with continual stress can have a major impact on your health, wellbeing and weight. Dr Amanda Sainsbury-Salis, a Garvan Institute weight-loss researcher, says that stress normally adversely affects your weight.

“Don’t worry about short-term stresses,” she says. “They’re normal and usually help us lose weight if anything. But long-term stresses, such as a negative job or relationship problems, can affect your weight from the ground up.”

Cortisol connection
“One of the things that stress does is release stress hormones cortisol and neuropeptide Y,” Dr Sainsbury-Salis says. “Cortisol acts directly on your fat deposits, causing you to gain fat around the belly.”
Start of sidebar.

When we experience stress our adrenal glands trigger the fight or flight response, which sends messages to the cortisol receptors in our abdomen. This is like a red alert for the body and all functions are put on standby to prepare for danger: fat is stored around our abdomen to ensure there’s enough food in case of famine or another life-threatening situation.

And when it comes to the cravings we experience during times of stress, it’s our stress hormones at work again.

“Cortisol gives you a higher preference for addictive behaviours and makes high-fat and high-sugar foods much more attractive,” Dr Sainsbury-Salis says. “It also acts on the hypothalmus in your brain, increasing your hunger and driving you to eat in times of stress.”

While our ancestors had a clearly defined beginning and end to their stressful periods, many of us don’t, which is why our bodies can react in such an extreme fashion. Some of us are living in a constant state of stress and our bodies just aren’t coping.

Stress and fat cells
Garvan Institute researchers recently found that neuropeptide Y acts directly on fat cells. “It causes the birth of new fat cells, increases new blood vessels to the cells and generally helps promote their growth and development,” says Dr Sainsbury-Salis. Interestingly, this response was only displayed when the animals in the experiments ate high-fat, high-sugar diets.

Clinical psychologist Louise Adams says that how we cope with stress is very individual. “People have different tolerance levels, but when it starts to affect your quality of life then it’s time to act,” she says.

When stress is only short-term and irregular, our body can cope with it. Long-term stress places our body in a constant state of panic, slowing our metabolism, increasing cravings and storing fat for the future.

Adams says we need to learn to recognise our physical responses to stress: do your shoulders tense up, heart pound or breath become short? Learn some breathing exercises. When you start to experience these signs, distract yourself. Walk away and do something else for five minutes or call a friend – anything to calm yourself down.

Define your problem
“If work is what’s causing you stress, put boundaries around it. Take meals and snacks away from your desk and make sure you leave the building at least once a day,” Adams says. “If you have a BlackBerry or iPhone, switch off the email function at the end of the day and set some clearly defined work hours for yourself.”

Exercise and stress
“Vigorous exercise can also help by releasing endorphins, which help calm and reduce the stress hormones in your body,” Adams adds. “Unwinding at the end of the day by going for a walk can really help.” Yoga and meditation also help you switch off.

Just as how we deal with stress is individual, so are the ways in which we can resolve it.  Whether it’s taking a real holiday, learning time-management skills or working to resolve the underlying issues in your relationship that lead to friction, find what works for you.

If your stress levels are overwhelming, consulting a psychologist can teach you problem-solving skills and techniques to help bring your stress levels under control.

Steps to food control
Accredited practising dietitian Julie Gilbert, from Solutions Food Management, offers the following tips to deal with stress eating:

•    Keep a diary to focus on whether you’re actually hungry, or just eating because you’re stressed. If you’re stressed, look at non-food rewards to help you cope. For example, get out for a brisk 10-minute power walk.
•    Have plenty of small, healthy snacks to hand; high-fibre muesli bars, nuts and dried fruit will quell your cravings and your hunger.
•    If you’re craving something sweet, try jam on a cracker or honey on toast. Don’t always reach for the high-fat, high-sugar option.
•    Don’t get hungry: eat every three hours to stop your blood sugar plummeting and the stress cravings from rising.
•    Have a little bit of what you fancy. Take a sliver of cake, put it on a plate and take yourself away from the source of stress to eat. Nibble it slowly for about 20 minutes and quietly enjoy every mouthful.
Stress less to lose weight

If your excess weight won’t budge, getting your anxiety levels under control could help.

By Linda Drummond
June 06, 2010 12:12AM 


If anyone wants to discuss strategies for handling stress, feel free to contact me directly on 0411951661 or freetobeyou@optusnet.com.au.  I can also strongly recommend going to see Galia Atteslander at the Caulfield Natural Health Clinic on 9528 3994.  Galia is an Integrative Naturopathic Physician who can assist with a range of health issues, including stress management and healthy weight loss nutrition.  Galia has kindly offered to provide a free over the phone consultation to all my existing clients.  She will also be posting articles on my blog on a range of health related matters so stay tuned.  Galia really knows her stuff and is as passionate about promoting health and well-being as I am.

Welcome to Free To Be You - Health & Fitness

Hi,

What I have found is that the more contact I have with my clients, the better the results they get.  Pure and simple.  Not everyone can see me 2 or 3 times a week so I have decided to start a blog as a means of staying in contact and helping you get the changes you want to see.  In the following  months I will be posting a series of articles on a range of health & fitness related topics, testimonials, exercise techniques, special announcements and offers, all designed to inspire you to get up and get moving.  I also want to celebrate the achievements of my hard-working clients who have achieved some amazing results.  By sharing each other's successes, I hope to inspire each and every one of you to set your bar higher, go for it and surprise yourselves with what you can accomplish.  I also encourage everyone to comment on the posts and ask any questions you may have along the way.

Just to get you going, take a look at this video clip of Wendy floating like a butterfly and stinging like a bee.  Wendy is not only a one-woman army, she is also a grandmother who has lived with arthritis and osteoporosis. Before she came to train with me she couldn't even do 1 push-up.  Check her out in this short clip for a shot of inspiration.  Can your grandmother do this?







Great stuff don't you think?  By the way, for those who are wondering, Wendy is 57 years old.  I showed this to Wendy and she passed it on to her family.  As expected, they were all blown away by her speed, skill and tenacity on the pads.  My partner Jenn yelled out a very loud "Woohoo!!  Go Wendy!" when you she saw it.  You know who was the only person not blown away by the video clip, yep, you guessed it, Wendy.  This is a little insight into why progress in gym and frankly in pretty much all areas of life is so much more about the mind than the body.  If the head is right, the body will follow. 

Wendy - "Oh!  Is that what I look like?  I thought I was faster than that.  I'm not ducking properly and my hands aren't coming back to my face after each punch fast enough". 

Josh - "Wendy.  This video was a celebration of how far you've come.  It's ok to feel good about it you know"

Wendy - "I know.  But I can see all the things I need to work on now.  I want to be even better than that."

I rest my case.