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Tim Russert - It was preventable.

 

What is killing me about this article is the high importance given to the drugs he was using to lower this and manage that, and they manage to mention he rode an exercise bike…

But, how long? When did he start exercising? 6 months ago? One year, two?

This was ENTIRELY preventable. It’s so not about managing everything once it ALREADY EXISTS, it’s about not getting to this place to start with. They didnt give him more invasive tests because he didnt have chest pains …

This angers me so much. By the time there are CHEST PAINS you are in deep sh@t. And Tim Russert also seems like the kind of guy that would shrug off a chest pain and keep it movin’….

Hope this wakes men up enough to get their a@@es to the doctor, don’t shrug off cardio like it doesnt matter, and guys…START TAKING CARE OF YOURSELVES NOW.
From Todays NYT

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/17/heal th/17russert.html?ref=health

A Search for Answers in Russert’s Death

Published: June 17, 2008

Given the great strides that have been made in preventing and treating heart disease, what explains Tim Russert’s sudden death last week at 58 from a heart attack?

 

The answer, at least in part, is that although doctors knew that Mr. Russert, the longtime moderator of “Meet the Press” on NBC, had coronary artery disease and were treating him for it, they did not realize how severe the disease was because he did not have chest pain or other telltale symptoms that would have justified the kind of invasive tests needed to make a definitive diagnosis. In that sense, his case was sadly typical: more than 50 percent of all men who die of coronary heart disease have no previous symptoms, the American Heart Association says.It is not clear whether Mr. Russert’s death could have been prevented. He was doing nearly all he could to lower his risk. He took blood pressure pills and a statin drug to control his cholesterol, he worked out every day on an exercise bike, and he was trying to lose weight, his doctors said on Monday. And still it was not enough.

If there is any lesson in his death, his doctors said, it is a reminder that heart disease can be silent, and that people, especially those with known risk factors, should pay attention to diet, blood pressure, weight and exercise — even if they are feeling fine.

“If there’s one number that’s a predictor of mortality, it’s waist circumference,” said Dr. Michael A. Newman, Mr. Russert’s internist.

But, Dr. Newman added, most people would rather focus on their LDL cholesterol, instead of taking measures to reduce their waist size. Studies have found a waist of over 40 inches in men and 35 inches in women is a risk factor for heart disease.

Mr. Russert’s cholesterol was not high, and medicine controlled his high blood pressure pretty well, Dr. Newman said. But, he added, Mr. Russert was “significantly overweight.” He also had a dangerous combination of other risk factors: high triglycerides, a type of fat in the blood, and a low level of HDL, the “good cholesterol” that can help the body get rid of the bad cholesterol that can damage arteries.

Even so, Dr. Newman said, “the autopsy findings were a surprise.”

In an interview, Dr. Newman and Mr. Russert’s cardiologist, Dr. George Bren, said the autopsy found significant blockages in several coronary arteries, which feed blood to the heart muscle.

Blockages start out as cholesterol deposits in the artery walls that turn into lesions or plaques, narrowing the vessels. Heart attacks occur when a plaque ruptures, causing a blood clot that quickly closes the artery and pinches off the blood supply to part of the heart.

In Mr. Russert’s case, the heart attack was caused by a plaque rupture in a branch of the left anterior descending coronary artery. The heart attack led to an abnormal heart rhythm that stopped his heart from pumping blood effectively and caused his death.

“What is surprising,” Dr. Newman said, “is that the severity of the anatomical findings would not be predicted from his clinical situation, the absence of symptoms and his performing at a very high level of exercise.”

In 1998, Mr. Russert had a calcium score of 210 on a CT scan of the coronary arteries, a test that indicates blockages. The result called for “an intensive cardioprotective regimen,” Dr. Newman said. That level can indicate a moderate to high risk of a heart attack.

Dr. Newman and Dr. Bren said that in the past year, Mr. Russert’s blood pressure had risen a bit, and that they had changed his drug regimen to lower it. His heart muscle had also thickened. Some cardiologists say a thickened or enlarged heart can indicate severe heart disease and should prompt more tests, like an angiogram, to look for artery blockages. But those tests are invasive, and Mr. Russert’s doctors did not think he needed them.

Had the tests been done and the true extent of blockages revealed, Dr. Newman said, Mr. Russert would probably have been advised to have bypass surgery. Dr. Bren differed, saying it was not clear that there was enough disease to prompt a recommendation for surgery.


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Costa Rica 2008

Costa Rica 2008

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I LOVE MY JOB.

I seriously want to thank my clients. They all make me realize how lucky I am to do what I do.

Today…measurement time for one client.

44 lbs lost in 3 months.

33 inches all over.

8 of those inches off her waist.

I’m SO PROUD of her.

She doesn’t ‘diet’. She eats WELL.

She works out 4x/wk.

Twice with me, twice on her own.

It’s not brain surgery. Movement cures everything.

An online client just emailed me…6lbs in one week.

WOW. What a great day today is. Thank you you guys!!!!

I can’t even describe how proud and happy I am to work for you.


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Fitness Equipment: Kettlebells!

Get a whole body workout with kettlebells - get swinging!

Kettlebells are big news in the fitness industry - this is partly due to the fact that this kind of exercise has been taken up by a lot of celebrities including Kim Basinger, Penelope Cruz and Matthew McConaughey. The publicity here has brought this kind of equipment back into the public eye and more and more people are trying out kettlebells as part of their fitness routine.

Often described as a ‘bowling ball with a handle attached’ a kettlebell really can push every fitness button. These bells have been around for centuries - traditionally used by strongmen in Russia, they get a mention in a Russian dictionary from the 1700s! So, if you want to improve your endurance or build or simply want to lose some weight then a kettlebell workout could give you an ideal solution.

Kettlebells impact on a lot more muscle groups than any kind of workout - they also help decrease body fat and increase muscle and tone. Few pieces of workout equipment can give such a versatile repertoire of potential benefits. Some people, for example, use them to build muscle, some use them to improve posture and balance and some use them to turn fat to lean muscle.

Used correctly they can also burn up a lot more calories than many other forms of exercise and can help improve posture and balance into the bargain. It’s estimated they double the number of calories the average person can burn off compared to other workouts such as treadmill running, for example. So, if you workout with kettlebells and keep to a healthy diet you could see some very real weight loss benefits.

One of the big attractions with kettlebells is that they are as versatile as dumbbells so they can be used both in the gym and for workouts at home. So, what can you do with a kettlebell?

There are few limits to the types of exercises that you can do with a kettlebell as they can give a real benefit for both strength training and weight loss exercise programs. You can use them for dead lifting, squats, curls, rows, presses and swings, cleans, jerks and snatches.

Kettlebells come in various weights from 8lbs and up. They are then graded by weight to suit any kind of fitness ability.

Remember, if you’ve not used kettlebells before or aren’t sure what kind of workout will suit your exercise needs then try talking to an online personal trainer, or a nyc personal trainer to make sure that you get the maximum benefits before swinging the lead!


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Short Layoff, Long Comeback


Reprinted from the New York Times. I really liked this article. Good info that bears repeating.
WHEN Helen Betancourt, an assistant coach at Princeton, was preparing for the World Championships in rowing in 1998, she suffered an overuse injury: stress fractures of her ribs. She competed anyway, but then had to take five months off.

Like most athletes, she did her best to maintain her fitness, spending hours cycling. Finally, she returned to her sport.

“I lost half my strength,” she said. And rowing just felt weird. “It was like I had stepped off another planet.”

Yet a couple of months later, much faster than it takes to get that strong to begin with, Ms. Betancourt felt like her old self on the water. Four months of rowing and she was in top form.

It shows, exercise physiologists say, that training is exquisitely specific: you can acquire and maintain cardiovascular fitness with many activities, but if you want to keep your ability to row, or run, or swim, you have to do that exact activity.

It also shows, they say, that people who work out sporadically, running on weekends, for instance, will never reach their potential.

This is a time of year when many people who exercised religiously for months cannot maintain their exercise schedules because they are traveling, or they have a severe cold, or simply because they are celebrating holidays with family.

That may not matter if you do not want to compete, and there is no reason why everyone who works out would want to race. But if competition or a new personal record is your goal, exercise physiologists have some lessons to impart.

Training has a pronounced effect on the heart, says Matthew Hickey, the director of a human performance laboratory at Colorado State University. Athletes develop a lower resting heart rate, their hearts beat slower during exercise, and their hearts are larger than they were before training began.

They also have a greater blood plasma volume, which allows the heart to pump more blood with each beat. One of the first and most noticeable effects of detraining is that that plasma volume is lost.

“It’s water in your plasma,” said Joseph Houmard, the director of the Human Performance Laboratory at East Carolina State University. “You just lose it. There’s no reason to keep it.”

Plasma water is lost amazingly fast, said Dr. Paul Thompson, a marathon runner and cardiologist at Hartford Hospital in Connecticut.

“We once paid distance runners $10 a day not to run,” Dr. Thompson recalled. “They spent a lot of time in the men’s room urinating.” Two days into their running fast, he said, the men lost a little more than two pounds from water weight as their plasma volume fell 8 percent.

But if runners keep running, even if they cover many fewer miles than at their peak, they can maintain their plasma volume, Dr. Thompson said.

When athletes stop training, the heart also pumps less blood to their muscles with each beat. Both changes are so pronounced, says Edward Coyle, an exercise physiologist at the University of Texas, Austin, that within three months of detraining, athletes are no different in these measures than people who had been sedentary all their lives.

But athletes, like Ms. Betancourt who do alternative activities still find that they lose a lot of conditioning.

It makes sense, Dr. Coyle said, because each activity trains specific muscles and the muscles change biochemically as a result.

He compares bicycling and running: Fast runners propel themselves forward, using their calves and ankles. With bicycling, the ankles barely move and the calves play little role. Instead, the quadriceps muscles at the front of the thigh power the bike.

Even exercises that seem similar are rarely similar enough, Dr. Coyle added. Some injured runners run in a pool, wearing a vest. That, Dr. Coyle said, is not the same as running on land. In fact, it is more like bicycling because it uses the quadriceps muscles to push against the water.

Training is especially challenging for people who want to compete in more than one sport, like triathletes, and have to divide their training time among different activities, exercise physiologists say. It’s also hard for people who reduce their exercise time because they are traveling or busy at work.

When training time is limited, Dr. Coyle said, “you have to decide where you will get the biggest performance bang for the hour you spend.”

The key, he found in his research, is to substitute intensity of effort for time. “A runner who’s been running doesn’t need much time to maintain his performance,” Dr. Coyle said. “But the training needs to be almost like racing.”

Dr. Rafael Escandon, a medical researcher in San Francisco, did it all wrong this summer when he trained for a September triathlon in Cancún, Mexico.

Dr. Escandon said he was a natural runner who completed 43 marathons. But he spent most of the summer cycling. When he ran, he did not push himself and he averaged at most 15 miles a week. He normally runs a half marathon in about 90 minutes.

When race day came, Dr. Escandon did great in the swimming and bicycling segments, even averaging almost 25 miles an hour when he was riding.

But running was another story. He ran the half marathon segment in 2 hours 17 minutes, “my worst ever, by far, far, far under any conditions,” he said. “I completely fell apart.”

But the good news is that it takes much less time to regain fitness for a specific sport than it did to become fit in the first place.

Even exercise physiologists are surprised at how quickly the body can readapt when training resumes. Almost immediately, blood volume goes up, heartbeats become more powerful, and muscle mitochondria come back.

Of course, researchers say, individuals respond differently and young people may bounce back faster than older athletes. But, they say, speed and strength and endurance do return, even in deconditioned athletes, some of whose lab test results look like those of a sedentary person.

Part of the reason, researchers say, is that training may elicit lasting effects that are very hard to measure, like changes in nerve-firing patterns and blood vessels. Dr. Coyle, who has measured muscle mitochondria, said that even though muscles lose mitochondria when athletes stop training, they retain more of them than are found in muscles of a person who has always been sedentary.

But another reason may be that athletes, unlike most inactive people, know how to train and how to push themselves.

Dr. Michael Joyner, an exercise researcher at the Mayo Clinic, saw the effects of detraining and retraining firsthand. He was a young man at the time (he’s now 49), a college athlete, and had been training continuously for several years, running an average of 80 miles a week.

“It was all very macho and I had a bunch of buddies to run with,” Dr. Joyner said. “Someone was always prepared to pick up the pace.”

Then he agreed to be a subject in one of Dr. Coyle’s deconditioning studies, which required him to stop running entirely for 12 weeks.

When he started running again, Dr. Joyner could hardly believe it. Running was so hard, he was so slow, he became tired so fast. But he persevered, running 30 miles a week for the first couple of weeks and then increasing his mileage.

“I just sort of got back with the group and started pushing it,” he said. Which, of course, is the key.

“A lot of coming back is knowing how to read your body and how to manage your suffering,” Dr. Joyner said.

But there are real rewards.

“I was back to normal again in about a month,” Dr. Joyner said.


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The Top 10 Best Butt Exercises


Let’s face it - if your butt looks good then you feel good! Of all the parts of your body you think about this is one the part that you probably aren’t happy with. We could ALL have a better butt…..with the help of the following exercises, you can have a better butt too!

1. Squats with Medicine Ball
Squats don’t just help your butt - they are a good overall cardio exercise that tones up your thighs and hips as well. With your feet planted wider than your shoulders stand upright in front of your ball. Place a 2-5 lb medicine ball between your knees. Lower down your butt parallel to the floor as you sqat.

2. Barbell/Dumbbell Squats w/Balance
Stand upright holding your barbells/dumbbells by your sides (or over your shoulders if you want a harder workout). Squat down, lowering your butt parallel to the floor. As you stand up lift one foot from the floor, place that ankle next to the opposite knee and hold until balanced.

3. Step Ups
Stand in front of a workout bench or step and then put one foot on it. Push down with the top foot to stand on the step and then return to the beginning position.

4. Traditional Deadlifts
Stand with your barbells/dumbbells held in front of your thighs. Bend from the hips (pressing your butt backwards) and lower your bells down to the floor as far as you can comfortably go.

5. Cycling
Cycling is great because you can do it in the gym or outdoors. In the gym you can join a spinning class. Outside the gym think about riding to work. Remember to get some resistance to really work your butt - find some hills!

6. Running
Running can be a great butt toner - especially if you make sure to find challenging slopes or hills. Work some sprints into your workout to up resistance as well.

7. Butt Kickers
Get down on the floor on your hands and knees. Extend one leg behind you, and bend the knee at a 45 degree angle. Lower the knee to the floor and then raise the knee back up, stopping at hip level.

8. Lunges
Stand upright with your feet shoulder width and your toes facing forward. Take a step back with one leg (the foot should almost be on tiptoes). Bend the knee of the leg that is to the front - as you do this the other leg will lower down. Stop when the back leg is around six inches off the floor and then push the front foot down to return to standing.

9. Exercise Ball Bridges
Lie flat on the floor on your back with your feet on an exercise ball. Extend your arms out to either side of your body. Your knees should be straight. Press your legs into the ball until the hips lift from the floor, roll the ball toward your butt and then return to the straight leg position.

10. Leg Presses
Set yourself up on a leg press machine. Your arms should be your sides and your back should be flat on the backrest. If you position your feet so that your heels are doing most of the pushing when you push up then you’ll add emphasis to the butt with the press.

New exercises should always be treated with care - ease yourself in rather than rushing to take on too much. You won’t get the perfect butt if you injure your back! If in doubt then a personal trainer will be able to give you the best advice.


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The Top 10 Abs Exercises


The Top 10 Best Abs Exercises

Abs are probably the sexiest muscles for a lot of people looking to improve their fitness and strength. Home to the ‘six-pack’, the abdominals are the area that everyone wants to work on! Before taking a look at our Top 10 best abs exercises bear in mind that you won’t get the perfect six-pack by just following these guidelines - you still need to work to reduce your body fat with a healthy diet and to make sure that your whole body is lean and streamlined.

1. Full V-Ups
Lie flat on the floor keeping your legs about shoulder width apart. Put your hands over your head and raise your upper body and lower body until you are sitting up in a ‘v’ shape. Grab on behind the knees for a quick second to steady yourself and return to the floor, all the while keeping the ribcage closed and the navel pulled toward the spine. Your legs can be bent if need be, or you can straighten them.

2. Exercise Ball Crunches
Lie on the ball with your feet on the floor and your head raised - the ball should be sitting in the middle of your back. Put your hands behind your head and lift your body off the ball making sure to contract your abs as you raise yourself up.

3. Reverse Ball Crunches
Lie on your back with your exercise ball under the knees. When comfortable contract your abs and raise your hips up from the floor.

4. Straight Leg Lifts
Lie flat on your back with your hands under your buttocks - your knees should be slightly bent. Lift your head and shoulders, bring your legs up until your heels are about to leave the floor - your back should stay on the floor.

5. Hanging Leg Lifts
You’ll need a High Chair for this exercise so it may be best done at the gym. Take hold of the handles and rest your back against the rest. Your legs should be hanging comfortably and you should feel balanced. Lift your knees until they are at around a 90 degree angle to your body and then lower them.

6. Barbell Roll
Place a barbell on the floor and kneel down on your hands and knees. Place the barbell in front of you with hands about shoulder width apart. Roll forwards making sure not to arch the back….pull the navel upward and roll back to the starting position.

7. Alternating Straight Leg Bicycles
Lie flat on your back with your hands to your forehead and your elbows pointing forward. Keeping the legs straight raise a knee towards your chest and touch it with the opposite elbow while keeping your ribcage down and the navel pulled toward the floor. Repeat with the other leg/elbow.

8. Rubber Band Crunches
Lie flat on the floor with your arms stretched out above your head. Grab the end of a rubber band, bend the elbows and lift your head and shoulders off the floor.

9. Decline Bench Crunches
Lie on a bench with your head lower than your hips. Raise your upper body as high as possible. When returning, do not lie all the way down, keep the ribs closed and the navel pulled toward the spine.

10. Decline Twist Curl
Lie on your back on a decline bench with your feet/knees securely positioned. Cross your arms over your chest and rotate your torso as you lift the upper body. Repeat on the other side.

Remember to be careful trying out new exercises - if you are unsure about the right abs exercises for you then an a personal trainer in nyc will be able to give you the best advice. :)


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The Top 10 Leg Exercises


Working on your legs can improve your stamina, shape and overall fitness. If you don’t work on your lower body as well - you won’t see the kind of ‘whole body’ benefits that you CAN achieve and the body shape won’t be in proportion. Great leg and butt exercises are a must. Here are my current top 10 leg exercises:

1. Step Calf Raises
This exercise is great for toning the calf muscles - you’ll need a step and some dumbbells. Stand on the step and position your feet so that the heels are slightly off the edge. Hold the dumbbells to the side and push up on to your toes.

2. Lunges
Stand holding dumbbells at your sides with your feet about a hip width apart. Step forward with one foot - when the foot hits the floor bend it and lean forward so that your other leg bends towards the floor.

3. One Legged Squats
Stand sideways next to a wall and place the palm of your hand on the wall just under the level of your shoulder. Extend your arm and position your body so you feel comfortable - you’ll use the wall for balance and support. Make sure that the foot that isn’t next to the wall is at a 45 degree angle and bend the leg nearest the wall back. Keep upright and lower your body until the knee that isn’t bearing your weight is close to the floor then push back up again.

4. Hamstring Bridges
Lie down flat on your back. Keep one foot on the ground and lift the other one up and hold it there. By using your hamstrings in your leg you can lift your body and then lower it back down again.

5. Squats
Using either dumbbells or a barbell, stand with your feet a shoulder width apart and lower yourself down until your knees are fully bent at a 45 degree angle and you are squatting. Push up until you are upright again.

6. Dumbbell Step Ups
Take your dumbbells and use one leg to step up on the step. Then step up with the other leg and step down again.

7. Dumbbell Plie
Squat down with your legs around a shoulder width apart. Hold your dumbbells in front of you with the palms of your hands facing inwards. Move into a standing position whilst opening your arms in a T position.

8. Leg Presses
Sit on a leg press machine - your feet should be around a shoulder width apart. Without altering the position of your hips bend the knees to a 45 degree angle while lowering the weight, then push it back up, extending and straightening the legs.

9. One Legged Press with Exercise Ball
Sit on your exercise ball and walk/roll forward until your knees are bent. Straighten out one leg, keeping the other one bent. Use the heel of the bent leg to push up on the exercise ball and push down on the heel of the extended leg as it drags in the movement.

10. Leg Circles with Exercise Band
Lie flat on the ground with one knee bent and the foot placed flat on the floor. Then extend the other leg straight up toward the ceiling. The band should be wrapped round the foot that is pointing upwards. You need to hold both ends of the band in the hand on the side of the leg that points up - keeping your leg straight, start to make circles with your leg at the hip in a counter-clockwise direction. Reverse and switch legs.

If you are unsure about the best leg exercises for your exact fitness level then an online personal trainer or a personal trainer at your local gym will be able to give you the best advice.


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10 Exercises To Do On a Balance Board


What is a Balance Board?

Balance boards have been around for decades - they used to be most used in physical therapy after an injury. At the moment they are one of the hottest types of fitness equipment around. These boards are used to help you develop coordination, balance and how you distribute your weight. The board rests on an unstable pivot, like a roller or a sphere, and you have to use your smaller stabilizing muscles to balance and stay on it while running through various exercises.

When should a balance board be used?

Balance boards may look like fun to use (and let’s face it they are!) but they won’t suit everyone’s fitness program. They can be great if you need to improve your balance due to specific problems or need to build up strength and fitness after injury. In general terms they can be used to increase ankle strength, to improve core stability, fitness and strength. You should always check with a personal trainer before you actually start using one to make sure you’ll see the right kinds of benefits.

Who should NOT use a balance board?

The fact that you can actually slip off a balance board makes them dangerous if you don’t know what you’re doing. These boards can be great for kids to help them learn balancing skills - but they should never use one unsupervised. It’s also not a great idea to use them without help if you have or are prone to back, leg or neck problems or have issues with bone density in case of falls. Needles to say, if you’re pregnant, a balance board is NOT a good idea.

There are all kinds of exercises you can do on a balance board - let’s take a look at some examples:

1. Two legged balance - stand centrally with both feet on the board, rock from side to side and see how long you can balance.
2. Two legged balance with eyes closed - as above but do it with your eyes closed! Try this one when you’re confident with the first exercise.

3. One legged balance - stand centrally with one leg on the balance board, rock from side to side and see how long you can balance.
4. Oblique one legged balance - stand with one leg placed diagonally on the board, rock from side to side and see how long you can balance.
5. Two legged balance with head movement - stand centrally with both feet on the board and rock from side to side. At the same time turn your head from left to right and see how long you can balance.
6. Two legged squat balance - stand centrally with both feet on the board and then bend down slightly in a squat, rock from side to side and see how long you can balance.
7. Two legged lean - stand centrally with both feet on the board and then lean to the left without letting the board move with you. Repeat for the right.
8. Step down - stand centrally with both feet on the board and then take one foot off the board and step down, keeping the board parallel to the floor. Bring the leg back on the board and repeat with the other leg.
9. Number work - stand centrally with both feet on the board and then take one foot off, keeping the board balanced. Use the free foot to draw imaginary numbers in the air whilst keeping your balance as long as you can.
10. Balancing push-ups - try push-ups but use the board to balance. Hold the board with both hands and do push-ups while keeping it level.

Using a balance board can add a whole new dimension to your fitness program. If you’ve never used one before then it will be worth your while to work with a trainer for a while until you become more confident. Remember you can always start off with simple exercises and hang on to a wall for a while until you feel ready to go solo!


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10 Ways to Stay on Track with Your Fitness Program


Deciding to get fit is easy - doing it can be tougher! Making the decision to start a fitness program can make perfect sense - we plan a schedule, book time at the gym and make a start. But, then lose the motivation to carry it through and end up firmly back at step one.

Then to make things worse, we feel demoralized because we failed. But, believe it or not, you CAN start and CONTINUE an effective fitness program. All you have to do is to follow our 10 step plan:

Step 1 - Use A Personal Trainer

Keeping up a fitness program on your own can be hard - how do you motivate yourself? This needn’t be a problem if you work with a personal trainer as it’s their job to keep you motivated!

Step 2 - Use Your Friends

Make sure that you enlist both friends and family to support your efforts in your fitness program. It’s a lot harder to give up if you are getting encouragement at home (and the embarrassment if you do give up is enough to motivate most people!)

Step 3 - Know Your Limits

One of the main reasons that people give up on fitness programs is that they try to do too much too soon. It’s much easier to keep going if you start off slow and build up as you go along.

Step 4 - Keep Changing

In the gym boredom is your ENEMY. If you get bored with a routine then you’ll lose motivation and you’ll stop seeing such good results. So, change routines regularly and keep yourself challenged!

Step 5 - Set A Target

Decide why you want to get fitter, write the reason down on a piece of paper and stick it on the refrigerator. This way you won’t open the door for unnecessary snacks and you’ll have a constant reminder of what you’re aiming for.

Step 6 - Break Your Goal Down

Achieving a big fitness goal can be hard as some days it’ll just look like all work and no results. Breaking your goal down into smaller targets will make you feel better and you’ll be more motivated. So, if you’re aiming to lose 10 lb then set smaller goals along the way.

Step 7 - Treat Yourself

When you reach a target or feel a bit demoralized than give yourself a ‘fitness treat’ to make you feel better. Have a manicure or pedicure, invite the girls round for a DVD treat or take yourself off for the weekend.

Step 8 - Work on Your Whole Life

An effective fitness program isn’t just about getting to the gym - it’s about what you drink and eat. So, make sure that your diet is healthy. This will increase the results you see from the gym and it will make you feel better about your life as a whole which will make you feel better about continuing with your fitness program..

Step 9 - Get Fit Out Of The Gym

Taking regular exercise makes you feel better so don’t just use the gym as part of your fitness program. You can work exercise into any part of your day. Walk round the office to give a colleague a message rather than emailing. Take the stairs at the mall rather than the elevator. Go for a long walk at the weekend. It’ll all make a difference.

Step 10 - Scare Yourself

Being unfit and/or overweight can seriously harm your health - it can even shorten your life expectancy. Take a look at any online medical service and you’ll soon see the damage you could be doing. That should be enough to scare you straight into the gym!


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