Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Standing For What I Believe In

So, I'm not like many other fitness professionals. My clients don't generally live from one measurement to the next.
We know, as educated human beings, that being overweight is NOT the healthy way to live our lives. This is science. Risk of many, many diseases increases, quality of life changes, it is harder to complete activities of daily living while carrying a weight far and above your "healthy zone", which can differ from person to person. We, as animals, have bodies that are programmed to work at their best at a particular weight. These things we know. Without a doubt.
So why does our society attach the need to lose weight only with someone's aesthetic beauty?

I have a couple of statements to make.

If you don't love yourself fat, you won't love yourself thin.

Losing weight will not change your life.Give you money. Get you a hot guy. A new job.

I have yet to see a person who looks ugly in a weight loss before picture. Just bigger.


So, here's my point. Don't jump on every marketing ploy to make you feel bad about yourself, in order to make some fatcat (pun intended) even richer. Don't make changes to make yourself beautiful. Chances are you already have that covered.

Make nutritional and lifestyle changes because you deserve a life rich with experiences, as little pain, disease and injury as possible and because you know that you are worth being treated with love and respect by everyone you meet, especially yourself.

Our CORE clients have reported the following changes in their lives since starting to move with us:
- lower blood pressure
- the ability to look after their new baby grandson, rock him to sleep, stand up, and walk him up the stairs to his crib. Without waking him up. This lovely grandma is 88 yrs. old
- waking up pain free - and walking down the stairs without holding on
- buying a bikini!! and wearing it - in public!
- making consistent changes become habit - drinking water, moving every day
- less medication needed to control pre-existing conditions
- personal best result on a yearly medical test
- better mood, more able to cope with stress
- more energy
- sleeping better
- finding it easier to be organized

And a whole lot more.
And guess what - a funny by product happened. These people are all contributing to moving their bodies towards a healthy weight, if they haven't reached it already.
Pants fit differently. New clothes must be bought.
And the determination, hard work and desire to make these changes stick? That comes from looking inside, not dwelling on the outside.
Confidence comes, not from the physical changes, but from the traits that have developed and strengthened over the journey, and will continue for life.

After all, we see the beauty in each person who walks in our door. In that way, they never needed to change a thing.

Find Your CORE
.

Sunday, November 9, 2014

Top Fitness Trends of 2015

It's the time of year that I spend much of my time planning future group fitness classes, small group training methods, and innovative ways to engage my one on one clients. Although the basic components of fitness never change, really, the way we present it changes. Whether or not a particular class/method catches on with the public, becomes popular, stays popular or becomes part of our collective understanding depends on a number of factors.
I choose classes/formats/exercises for their function,safety, effectiveness and enjoyment. I also keep in mind ease of presentation. We are a small club and my personal mission is to have all my clients reproduce our workouts at home with little added expense or difficulty. So I tend towards small equipment or no equipment at all. I also ensure to include in our schedule/training programs a variety of classes that feed our bodies as a whole. I always make sure I have options that include all aspects of fitness to ensure that we are working towards our ultimate human goal - balance.

I was reading "A Worldwide Survey of Fitness Trends 2015" from ACSM (American College of Science and Medicine) Health and Fitness journal. To read the full article please click the link above. I always find it interesting what is catching the imagine of gym goers and exercises lovers. Below is the Coles Notes version of the Top 20 Fitness Trends of 2015:

1. Body weight training., people have been using their own body weight for centuries as a form of resistance training. Typical body weight training programs use minimal equipment, which makes it a very inexpensive way to exercise effectively. As the no. 2 position in the survey suggested last year, body weight training is a trend to watch for the future.
2. High-intensity interval training. Falling from the top spot in last year’s survey, high-intensity interval training typically involves short bursts of high-intensity exercise followed by a short period of rest or recovery and typically takes less than 30 minutes to perform (although it is not uncommon for these programs to be much longer in duration).
3. Educated, certified, and experienced fitness professionals.
4. Strength training. Strength training remains popular in all sectors of the health and fitness industry and for many different kinds of clients.
5. Personal training. As more professional personal trainers are educated and become certified (see trend no. 3), they are increasingly more accessible in all sectors of the health and fitness industry. Personal training has been in the top 10 of this survey for the past 9 years.
6. Exercise and weight loss. Exercise in weight loss programs has been a trend since the survey began. The combination of exercise and diet is essential for weight loss maintenance and can improve compliance to caloric restriction diets and in particular weight loss programs.
7. Yoga comes in a variety of forms including Power Yoga, Yogalates, and Bikram Yoga (the one done in hot and humid environments). Other forms of Yoga include Iyengar Yoga, Ashtanga, Vinyasa Yoga, Kripalu Yoga, Anuara Yoga, Kundalini Yoga, and Sivananda Yoga. Instructional tapes and books are abundant, as are the growing numbers of certifications for the many Yoga formats. Yoga seems to reinvent and refresh itself every year, making it a more attractive form of exercise.
8. Fitness programs for older adults. Health and fitness professionals can take advantage of this growing market by providing age-appropriate and safe exercise programs for the aging sector of the population. The highly active older adult (the athletic old) can be targeted by commercial and community-based organizations to participate in more rigorous exercise programs, including strength training and team sports. Even the frail elderly can improve their balance and ability to perform activities of daily living when provided appropriate functional fitness activities. Fitness programs for older adults will remain a strong trend for 2015.
9. Functional fitness. Replicating actual physical activities someone might do as a function of his or her daily routine, functional fitness is defined as using strength training to improve balance, coordination, force, power, and endurance to enhance someone’s ability to perform activities of daily living.
10. Group personal training. Group personal training will continue to be a popular trend in 2015. The personal trainer can continue to provide the personal service clients expect but now in a small group typically of two to four, offering potentially deep discounts to each member of the group and creating an incentive for clients to put small groups together.
11. Worksite health promotion. Designed to improve the health and well-being of employees, this is a trend for a range of programs and services that evaluate health, health care costs, and worker productivity. Once a need is determined, worksite health promotion professionals build programs based on greatest need.
12. Outdoor activities. Outdoor activities often include hiking, canoeing, kayaking, and games or sports. Outdoor activities also can include high-adventure programs such as overnight camping trips.
13. Wellness coaching. Wellness coaching integrates behavioral change science into health promotion, disease prevention, and rehabilitation programs. Wellness coaching often uses a one-on-one approach similar to a personal trainer, with the coach providing support, guidance, and encouragement. The wellness coach focuses on the client’s values, needs, vision, and goals.
14. Circuit training. Circuit training is a group of 6 to 10 exercises that are completed one after another and in a predetermined sequence. Each exercise is performed for a specified number of repetitions or for a set period before having a quick rest and moving on to the next exercise.
15. Core training. Core training stresses strength and conditioning of the stabilizing muscles of the abdomen, thorax, and back. It typically includes exercises of the hips, lower back, and abdomen, all of which provide support for the spine and thorax.
16. Sport-specific training. This trend incorporates sport-specific training for sports such as baseball and tennis, designed especially for young athletes. For example, a high school athlete might join a commercial or community-based fitness organization to help develop skills during the off-season and to increase strength and endurance specific to that sport, something like functional fitness for sport performance.
17. Children and exercise for the treatment/prevention of obesity. As public school systems continue to face the challenge of cutting programs such as physical education and recess to spend more time preparing for standardized testing, programs for youth is a potential new market for commercial and community-based organizations.
18. Outcome measurements. A trend that addresses accountability, these are efforts to define and track outcomes to prove that a selected program actually works. Measurements are necessary to determine the benefits of health and fitness programs in disease management and to document success in changing negative lifestyle habits.
19. Worker incentive programs. This is a trend that creates incentive programs to stimulate positive healthy behavior change as part of employer-based health promotion programming and health care benefits. Worker incentive programs are associated with the trend to provide worksite health promotion programs in an attempt to reduce health care costs. This trend represents a potential resurgence of corporate health promotion programs as a result of rising health care costs experienced by both small and large companies and corporations.
20. Boot camp. Boot camp typically is a high-intensity structured activity patterned after military-style training. Boot camp includes cardiovascular, strength, endurance, and flexibility drills and usually involves both indoor and outdoor exercises typically led by an enthusiastic instructor.

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

"Back In Black" Candy to Burpee Equivalents - Happy Halloween!

Getting back to blogging after a loooooonnnnnggggggg break. What better reason than to save you all from the meaningless calorie-fest coming this Friday - Halloween!
Reposting one of our favourite posts from October 27th last year:




Fuel Up Fridays - "I Want Candy"
Boo! What was that you ask? That was the voice of the gazillions of empty, hidden, sugary calories sneaking up behind you the week after Halloween - and landing squarely on your hips! Halloween is one of my favourite events - it's lighthearted and fun, all about the costumes and community bonding time together. The frights, the haunts, the howls! But there is a dark underbelly to all of this. The candy. The candy that sits in your bowl, calling your name every time you walk by it, mindlessly grabbing a "Fun Size" chocolate bar, realizing after 20 chocolate wrappers gather in your sweater pocket and your pants feel tighter that this size isn't quite so "fun" after all. Here are my favourite tips for avoiding HCT (Halloween Candy Traumatization) so that you can enjoy the little ghouls and goblins!
1.Start at the store. Avoid buying the Halloween candies you love. After the big night is over, I won't have a bunch of leftover candies that I know I will eat.
2.Out of sight, out of mind. Avoid setting the big bowl of Halloween loot on the kitchen counter where you can easily walk by and eat several pieces without even realizing it. Put the candy in the pantry or cupboard, and instead put sliced fruit or veggies on the counter.
3.Help friends & coworkers too. Avoid bringing all your extra candy to your workplace. If you really want to get rid of the candy, just throw it out. Yes, it may be wasteful, but it's better than you and your coworkers being "Waist-FULL".
4.Be real. Allow yourself some treats, but do so in moderation! Make a deal with yourself about how many treats you will allow yourself each day and account for those calories in your daily calorie plan or workout schedule.
5.If you do go overboard on Halloween treats, DO NOT beat yourself up about it! Avoid the negative thoughts about yourself. It doesn't mean that you are "weak" or "worthless". Avoid the all-or-nothing talk, like "I should just start my diet over again after the New Year." Try to stay on track. Just own it, move on, and stay focused one day at a time.
6.Use physical activity to help you through the Halloween munchies. Stay on track with your workouts/movement - your body will seek fuel to help it through - not empty nutrition like offered through mounds of candy.

If all else fails - use this handy CHART and before indulging decide whether it is worth all the burpees :) All times are extremely approximate, as are not based on YOUR individual statistics - but you get the point I think!

Candy Corn, 22 pieces = 140 calories - 10 Minutes of vigorous burpees
Fun Size Bars of Chocolate= 70-100 calories each - between 5 - 7 Minutes of vigorous burpees
Peanut M&M’s –2 Fun Size Packs = 180 calories - 12 Minutes of vigorous burpees
M&M’s – 2 Fun Size Packs = 140 calories - 10 Minutes of vigorous burpees
York Peppermint Pattie – 1 pattie = 70 calories - 5 Minutes of vigorous burpees
Milk Duds – 1 treat size box = 40 calories - just under 3 Minutes of vigorous burpees
SweetTarts – 1 treat size pack = 50 calories just under 4 Minutes of vigorous burpees
1 Tootsie Pop – 1 pop = 60 calories 4.5 Minutes of vigorous burpees
1 Tootsie Roll – 1 small roll = 13 calories just under 1 Minutes of vigorous burpees
Twizzlers – 1 treat size pack= 45 calories just over 3 Minutes of vigorous burpees

Gives it a whole new perspective, doesn't it?

FIND YOUR CORE - and Happy Halloween!

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

"Get Up, Stand Up, Don't Give Up The Fight"

Ever really not, I mean REALLY not wanted to do your workout?


Ever sat at work/home listing the extremely valid reasons you have for not doing it?

Does this happen often?

Well, join most of the population. I have yet to meet a person who 100% of the time is desperately looking forward to their workouts. When we lack motivation we can ALL come up with a thousand valid excuses NOT to work out, in fact - I have compiled the most oft heard reasons for skipping a workout/or not working out at all:

I don’t have the time to go to a health club or gym:
It’s true – we all lead very busy lives. However, exercising does not have to take up much time and eat away into your daily schedule. It can easily be built into your everyday life. Make your exercise as important as your scheduled TV viewing, housecleaning etc..and where possible include as many of your family members as possible to make you r time well spent in a multitude of ways. Be honest with yourself about how you spend your time - I am betting you can find half an hour to forty-five minutes a day that could be better spent by caring for your health.

I’m too tired to do exercise after work:
Sometimes, after a long day at work the last thing you might want to do is something physical because you feel too tired. Instead of reaching for the remote control and vegetating in front of the TV for the rest of the evening you can energize yourself by doing some exercise. You will be amazed to discover that being more active will actually raise your energy level. However, if you really are too tired after work then try to increase your activity at a time during the day when your energy levels are at their highest, such as mid-morning or lunchtime.

I'm too fat:
Low self esteem about how we look can be one of the biggest stumbling blocks. Let me put your mind at rest by reassuring you that you don’t have to wear a leotard to go to your local gym. In fact, most gyms set specific ‘women-only’ times so you needn't feel self conscious. If you go to these classes you will find that most women wear even a baggy t-shirt and leggings or baggy sweatpants. Dress comfortably and REALLY look at the people around you - you will see every size, shape and fitness level. And I'm willing to wager that most, if not all, are harbouring the same worries. Smile and be proud of your steps.

I can’t afford to exercise
Walking is great....and it’s free. You don’t need a special kit or uniform or buy expensive equipment. In fact there are many, many activities that you could do without spending a single cent, or very few at least.
- jogging
- cycling
- swimming
- at home exercise videos
- resistance bands and free weights (low $$ at wal-mart or Canadian Tire)

I suffer from back/knee/neck pain:
Rather than being something that prevents you from exercise, you will actually find that regular moderate exercise will strengthen the muscles that support your affected areas. Get advise from your chiropractor, physiotherapist, doctor or other qualified person and ask them what kind of exercise you should do. Swimming and cycling are very effective for people with joint pain. Your qualified expert will give you all of the advice you need, and a personal trainer is an AMAZING resource to get you started, keep you motivated and help you stay safe.

A couple of ways to make it happen:
- make it ifficial. Schedule it into your phone, tablet, daytimer, whatever way you keep yourself organized. Write it in pen - and don't schedule over it. If there is an unavoidable change - like a school concert or similar - you rejig your day to make it fit elsewhere as soon as your know.

- make it social. Grab a group of friends, make a weekly walking group, go to a class together, hire a personal trainer for all of you as a group. This will help keep you accountable - and will have you looking forward to your next workout, if only to discuss last night's Bachelor or book of the month.

- make it a habit. Schedule in your 3-5 bouts of movement per week, then promise yourself that you WILL commit to it for a period of time (my ideal is 3 weeks). If at that time, you feel worse, your life is too hectic, whatever, you can go back to your old habits. I can pretty guarantee you this will NOT be the case though. You are much more likely to be looking for ways to move MORE at this point.

-make your motivation important. Having a small waistline is not going to be sufficient to get you out of bed after a hectic day before, a late night and burning legs from leg day before. Choose instead, something that will NEVER fail to motivate you - your family, your health (I use my genetic disposition to diabetes as a reason to get up every day) a goal ie/hike to the entire length of your favourite trail.

- make it WHY - Not WHY NOT. As soon as the niggling excuses and reasons why you can't workout start to creep in, replace them with reasons why you can and must! No energy? exercise will help pick you up - and will help you be more productive. Grumpy? Getting out for a power walk will lift your spirits. You know the drill.... replace negative reasoning with postivive ones and you'll find yourself looking forward to and not dreading your workout any longer.


Exercise/Movement:
- reduces variable risk factors and can prevent/help to control/reduce up to 38 chronic conditions
- helps manage stress/emotional issues - improves mood
- helps maintain healthy heart function
- boosts sex drive
- promotes better sleep
- make you more able to think clearly, prioritize and make decisions
- aid in balance and everyday function, now and as we age
- reduce risk of bone disease, promote healthy joints and bone density
And the best benefit in my opinion, is that every time you purposefully move your body is an opportunity to know it better, to use it to it's potential, to be in tune with all it's cues, and best of all to LOVE it.

Get moving - we cannot afford NOT to!

Find Your CORE!




Wednesday, April 23, 2014

"My Pants Don't Fit" or "My Arse Is Too Big"

Yep - that's me. Progressively over the last couple of months my pants have been getting tighter. Like, pass me the vaseline and the shoe horn kind of tighter.
I work out 6 days a week with regularity and I average at least 22K running. I have a very physical job. I eat very healthily. And yet, since January, I have been feeling a change.
Now my workouts have been lower key - due to a bad back, no iron whatsoever and a serious lack of energy, but that shouldn't make a difference this distinct. For the first time in forever I have a legitimate reason to be uncomfortable in my own skin.

Three things are happening:
i) my health is out of whack. My levels are off and I'm exhausted all the time.
ii) I'm getting older. It is true (unfortunately) that as we get older our metabolism changes and we can't get away with occasional bad choices like we used to.
iii) I've forgotten to eat because I'm hungry and let my mood/boredom/the sun's presence in Jupiter/ all designate my eating habits.

Darn it. Home made crackers are healthy right? But, probably not 6 of them everytime I step in the kitchen. So I'm on crackdown. NO sugar (I felt great when I watched my sugar intake for 6 months last year). And no more mindless eating for me. It's a quick and easy trap to fall into - and I'm climbing out before this becomes a habit and my overlarge bottom gets me stuck.
Portion sizes, hunger cues, and overall my sense of how I feel in general will tell me if I am on the right track. And if my pants are still a bit tight when I'm sorted out and eating mindfully and happily again? Well, that's okay, that's meant to be. But I refuse to be less than 100% physically if I can help it. After all - I, like all of you, have loads of battles ahead to face, and I'll take them head on, at my best.

Now please, please, please hide all of your chocolate, ice cream and french bread if you see me coming. A girl only has so much self control, you know :)

Find Your CORE!

Saturday, April 19, 2014

"What I Know For Sure" Easter 2014 Edition

Hey blog readers. Thought I would share a short list of my observations and predictions for Easter 2014. Enjoy!

- the first little stems that poke up through the spring earth (or snow, as it was this year) are the GREENEST green ever!
- that my Lily Of The Valley plant completely changes location every single spring. I give it another 3 years until total world domination.
- bunnies, though cute, do not actually leave offerings of foil covers chocolate balls. They do, however, leave lots of other similarly coloured and shaped offerings pretty much everywhere. Not recommended for consumption.
- fear the wrath of the two frazzled looking Moms, both simultaneously leaping for the last packages of Peeps on the shelf on Easter "Eve".
- prepare to line up for.freakin.ever. pretty much anywhere the day before a stat holiday. Because these types of situations clearly invoke an oncoming apocolyptic type response in our world of plenty. Two shopping carts full of goods and food. Hey, I'm not judging. I know there will be a WHOLE 24 HOURS until they can shop again. Clearly a cause for panic.
- that we Canadians bear a striking resemblance to the Naked Mole Rat (see picture below) in the early days of spring weather,nervously stepping outside our winter cave, blinded by the sunshine, noses inquisitively twitching.
- above mentioned noses begin to smell the inevitable spring smells. Mud. Dog poop left from ALL winter long. Rain and worms.
- bird's singing IS truly the most beautiful song
- sunrises across farmers fields mingle with the early morning mist
- garbage hidden under 24 feet of winter snow,which, after the thaw, has become the outdoor decorating choice of all suburbia
- next to bird song, the most wondrous noises are made by children playing outside, road hockey sticks scraping, bicycle bells ringing, happy voices raised.


My predictions for the coming weeks:

- that my children, and children everywhere that Cadbury's has access to, will be on a sugar and fat high by 7am - Easter morning.
-that soon the stinky spring air will be replaced by the freshness of fresh grass, spring flowers, BBQ's grilling, and lilacs blossoming.
- that Canadian's will start to smile more readily and engage with each other
- that short sleeve tops and shorts will be brought out of storage and body image woes will elevate by exponential amounts
- that spring will proceed into glorious summer

Congratulations everyone - we survived winter. Cheers!


Friday, April 11, 2014

"Are the Voices in your Head"

People have told me that they hear my voice in their head, encouraging them to work harder, eat better, move more, not to skip the workout, keep smiling, well, if you'v ebeen to any of my classes, you know. "Get comfortable with being uncomfortable"!

This makes me shudder and terrifies me on many levels. First - I've heard my voice on tape - egads! Like nails on a chalkboard. Second, and more terrifying, I immediately think you hear MY voice (like the one in MY head). Then I panic and wonder which one, before realizing what you mean.

Yes, I have a voice or two (or ten but whose counting anyway)in my head. I have logical, pragmatic, intelligent, positive, clear headed Annie. And then my alter ego: negative, passive aggressive, condescending, cruel and controlling. I also have others, but you have to marry me to meet those ones (ie/PMS Annie). Consider yourself spared, and consider Sean a saint!
Now I'm not schizophrenic, or bipolar. I'm a product of growing up believing certain things are true (I'm a failure/I'm unlikeable/I'm not good enough) and as an adult have learned that these things are not, logically, true.But emotionally, these things are harder to discount, especially after having believed them for 30years. Imagine finding out at 30 that the earth was not round, and had undisputable proof that this was a fact, after knowing that the earth was round for so long?
Exactly.
So, I have to battle back the things I once believed wholeheartedly. And replace them with hard, rational evidence. And remind myself of this. Often. This is how I battle back and stay positive, happy and live a normal life.

So in the end I'm so glad that my voice has become part of other peoples thought processes. Because sometimes when I teeter on the edge of make a bad decision or succumbing to a challenging day, and my positive voice isn't enough - I call upon my own army of peoples positive voices to fight the battle along side me.

I can only hope I have lent my voice to some positive life choices. And I encourage everyone to be a positive voice in their family and community. You never know when someone may be storing your words up for a battle later on.

Find Your CORE!