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Posts Tagged ‘fitness’

How to Start Running – Without Feeling Like a Failure

runner on beach

Do you sometimes wish you were fitter? And maybe slimmer? I do. In fact, I’m determined to lose 7 kg in four weeks and get really fit. But how to get fit in a hurry – without spending hours at the gym?

One of the fastest ways to get fit is to start running.

It can be daunting if you’ve never run before. Especially if you have friends, colleagues or family members who talk casually about how they run 7 miles each morning before breakfast. (Don’t you sometimes want to throttle them?)

I just spent three weeks with my family and two of them, my brother and my niece, thought nothing of running for an hour-and-a-half after spending an exhausting day stumbling through thick rain forest. It made me feel like a fitness failure…

In the end, I started to run too. Because running is great for getting fit fast. There are some important advantages of running as a fitness strategy:

  1. It boosts cardiovascular fitness.
  2. It tones your whole body because so many muscle groups are involved when you run.
  3. Weight-bearing exercise, such as running, is especially good in promoting bone density and protecting against osteoporosis, which affects men as well as women.
  4. Running is a natural movement. The body is designed to be able to run.
  5. As one of the most vigorous exercises out there, running is an efficient way to burn calories and drop pounds.

Here are some tips that will help you develop running:

1. Buy good shoes

It’s worth going to a specialty shop to buy a pair of running shoes. Make sure that the salesperson looks at the shape and arch of your foot to figure out the best shoes for you. The reason good shoes are important is because it will soften the impact and protect your joints.

2. Take it slow

When you start running, it doesn’t matter how slow you go. Remember that your body needs to get used to new movement.

3. Ease into running with interval training.

The best way to get fit fast is through interval training. This means short burst of high intensity exercise alternating with recovery periods. According to the American College of Sports Medicine, more calories are burned in short, high intensity exercise.

Try alternating 5 minutes of walking and one minute of running for twenty minutes. As you get fitter, you can lengthen the periods of running. Once you get used to running, you can alternate slow jogging with fast sprints.

4. Warm up first

It’s important to warm up your body before running. Otherwise running will feel very hard and your body will moan and groan. Walking is a great way to warm up the body. Stride out and pump your arms. Start with a medium paced walk and then speed up until you start to sweat. Once your body is warm, you are ready to run.

5. Use correct running technique

Beginners like me find it difficult to relax while running. Keep your head up and your lower arms in hip height, and run without bouncing. It all helps to work your body more efficiently. Check out this video about correct running technique.

6. Run with others

A great way to keep up your motivation is to run with others. See if a colleague or a friend is willing to come running with you. Set an interval schedule for your run and stick to it.

7. Keep an exercise diary

Keep a record of your new exercise routine. Write down each day what kind of exercise you have done. A great way to track your growing fitness is by measuring your resting pulse before you get up in the morning. As you get fitter, your resting pulse will get lower.

8. Add strength exercises to the mix

Building strength in your legs will help you to run. A simple way to build your leg muscles is by doing squats. Stand with feet a little more than shoulder width apart. As you squat, keep your feet on the ground and swing your arms to the front in order to keep your balance. Start with 3 sets of 10 squats but don’t get carried away. If you do too many at one time, you might have difficulty walking the next day! As you get fitter, you can add more sets to your squat routine.

9. Add a cool-down period after exercise

It’s important for the body to cool down after running. The best way is to walk at a medium pace until your heart-rate returns to normal.

10. Stretch after running

It’s a good practice to stretch after running because it keeps your body flexible. Watch this short video on which stretches to do after running.

If you follow the ten points above, you will become a runner – without feeling like a failure. Remember that you can start running at any age. Bob Hayes took up running when he was 60. After a little while, he decided to enter a 5km fun-run and his son gave him his first pair of trainers. He said afterwards, “I wasn’t feeling as fit as I would have liked to. Perhaps age is catching up on me?” Yeah, right!

Fast forward 20 years…
At age 80, Bob completed his tenth 50-mile ultra-marathon in Montana and has made running history. He said afterwards:

“I’m in the best shape of my life.”

If you follow these 10 tips, you will get into the swing of running. Soon you will feel your body tone up and slim down in response to the exercise. Best of all, you’ll begin to feel confident, healthy, and attractive.


Mary Jaksch is an author, Zen Master, and psychotherapist who likes dancing tango in skimpy dresses. Her blogGoodlife Zen focuses on personal growth for intelligent people. Get her FREE eBook Overcome Anything: Finding Light after Darknessclick here.Mary is also Chief Editor of Leo Babauta’s blog Write to Done


There’s a speed limit to the pace of evolution, say biologists

Biologists at the University of Pennsylvania have developed a theoretical model that determines how quickly an organism will evolve using a catalogue of “evolutionary speed limits.”
The model provides quantitative predictions for the speed of evolution on various “fitness landscapes,” the dynamic and varied conditions under which bacteria, viruses and even humans adapt.
A major conclusion [...]

Physical Fitness in Stress Management

Physical fitness plays an important role in managing stress. If the person fitness is good he can easily manage their stress. Stress can be developed any time after changing activities or doing some important work in a given timeframe. Whenever a person changes his or her level of activity, risks are involved. This is especially [...]

New Jane Fonda Workout DVDs

Jane Fonda has signed a deal to star in a new series of workout DVDs.

Jane was known as the Queen of the Workout World when she fronted a series of fitness videos between 1982 and 1995. The 71-year-old actress signed a deal last week to re-release a modernized collection of her famous aerobics DVDs, celebrity [...]

The truth about sports drinks

Sam Murphy reveals how much fluid you need to drink before, during and after a workout, and whether water does the job just as well as sports drinks

Do I really need a sports drink? Won’t water do?

It depends on the intensity and duration of your workout. “Water is generally sufficient for shorter sessions, but for exercise lasting more than 60 minutes, an isotonic sports drink is recommended,” says Wendy Martinson, registered dietician and sports nutritionist.

But Nick Morgan, head of sport science at Lucozade, believes sports drinks can be useful for shorter workouts, too: “If you’ve had a good high-carbohydrate meal in the three-four hours before your workout, you probably don’t need a sports drink”, he says. “But if you haven’t eaten for ages – if, for example, you’ve just got up or have hit the gym straight after work, a sports drink will provide a little extra energy, helping you get more out of yourself and reducing your ‘perception of effort.’”

Just for the record, a study in the Journal of Applied Physiology found that consuming an isotonic sports drink increased treadmill running time to exhaustion by 27% in recreational runners.

What should I look for in a sports drink?

According to Martin Gibala, an associate professor of kinesiology at McMaster University in Canada, there are two key ingredients in a good sports drink: “Carbohydrate, which provides fuel for working muscles, and sodium, which helps to maintain fluid balance.”

But formulation is key. An isotonic drink (such as Lucozade Sport or Gatorade) contains a 6-8% carbohydrate solution, which is absorbed into the body more rapidly than water, as well as providing energy. A sports drink should also contain approximately 50mg of sodium per 100ml, along with smaller amounts of the other electrolytes, such as potassium and chloride, which are lost in sweat.

Morgan highlights another important consideration: palatability. “Studies show clearly that if you don’t like the taste of a sports drink, you won’t consume enough of it.”

Are all sports drinks isotonic?

Confusingly, no. Lucozade Sport Hydro Active, for example, is ‘hypotonic’, meaning it contains a less concentrated carbohydrate solution (1-3%). “This will promote water absorption, but provides less carbohydrate energy and fewer calories,” explains Martinson.

At the other end of the scale are ‘hypertonic’ drinks, with a carbohydrate concentration greater than 10%. “These will have a slow gastric emptying rate, thus decreasing fluid absorption,” says Martinson. Energy drinks – including Red Bull – and soft drinks – such as Coke and Pepsi – come into this category, which makes them unsuitable for use during exercise.

How much do I need to drink?

In 2007, the American College of Sports Medicine, an international authority on sport science, revised its guidelines on fluid intake during physical activity, no longer suggesting specific volumes per hour. “We now know that individual needs vary so much it is impossible to suggest a ‘one size fits all’ amount that will suit everyone”, says Morgan. “Issues surrounding the risks of dehydration on one hand and hyponatraemia (water intoxication) on the other make this dangerous ground.”

So what’s the best way forward? Martinson advises calculating your own personal ‘sweat rate’ (see below) so that you can determine how much you need to drink. “Exercise performance is impaired when there is only a 2% decrease in body weight [due to fluid loss]“, she says. “Determining your own sweat rate will enable you to drink sufficient amounts of fluid to minimise weight loss to less than 2% body weight.”

According to Joseph Verbalis, Professor of the Department of Medicine at Georgetown University Medical Center, you should also listen to your body. “Thirst is a good indicator of your body’s need for fluid,” he says.

Working out your sweat rate

• Record your nude pre-training weight (in kg)
• Record your nude post-training weight, towelling off sweat first.
• Opt for a 30- or 60-minute session, during which you don’t consume fluid. (This makes the maths easier!)
• Subtract your post-training weight from pre-training weight to work out the weight lost, and multiply by 1,000 to convert to grams. The amount you lost in grams is equal to the amount of fluid you lost during that session. If you did a 30-minute session, multiply by two to get your ml per hour figure. This is the amount you should aim to consume in subsequent sessions. For example, if you lost 500g in 30 minutes, you’d be looking to consume 1000ml per hour.
• Bear in mind that the temperature, weather conditions and the intensity of the session will influence your fluid loss – factor this in when determining how much to drink in future sessions.

Should I drink before my workout, or just during?

It’s important to start exercise well hydrated. Research suggests that the body cannot absorb ingested carbohydrate efficiently if the body is dehydrated, so even if you are guzzling sports drinks, they may be of limited benefit. The ACSM recommends drinking 5-7ml of fluid per kg of your body weight in the three-four hours before exercise. (So, if you weigh 60kg that means drinking 300-420ml.) If your urine is still dark after this, they suggest drinking a further 3-5ml/kg. Water will do just fine – but, says Martinson, consuming a sports drink helps to top up carbohydrate stores.

Does it matter if I drink sports drink and water in the same session?

Martinson believes not. “You will still benefit from the carbohydrate and electrolytes in the sports drink even if you drink some water as well,” she says.

Scientists at the Gatorade Sports Science Institute, however, disagree, stating: “Watering down a sports drink dilutes the taste, carbohydrate content and electrolyte level – any of which will diminish its performance benefits.”

What about if I mix sports drinks with gels? Am I destined for the Portaloo?

Despite a belief among many runners and triathletes that you shouldn’t mix drinks and gels, according to Morgan it shouldn’t make any difference. “The important thing is to get enough fluid and enough carbohydrate on board – whatever the source,” he says. But like any nutrition or hydration strategy, you need to test it out in training.

Once I’ve finished exercising, is there any benefit in drinking a sports drink?

“You need to think about what kind of workout you’ve done and when you’ll next be exercising to determine whether a sports drink will help you recover,” says Morgan. If you’ve swanned around the gym for 20 minutes, forget it. If, however, you’ve done a tough session and will probably be doing another one within the next 48 hours, you’ll definitely benefit from taking extra carbohydrate on board within the first hour.

“Research also supports the practice of consuming protein after exercise to promote muscle recovery,” adds Gibala. Proprietary ‘recovery’ sports drinks typically tick both the carb and protein boxes, but research from Northumbria University found chocolate milk to be highly effective in facilitating recovery.

Other recent research, published in the Journal of Applied Physiology, found that athletes who added caffeine to their recovery cocktail had 66% more glycogen in their muscles four hours after finishing an intense workout.

I have ‘tidemarks’ on my clothes after exercise – should I take extra salt on board?

Tidemarks on clothes are an indication of a ‘salty sweater’. But, says Morgan, this alone is not reason to take extra salt on board. “It needs to be considered alongside the volume you sweat: so you could be a salty sweater who doesn’t lose much sweat (so not too much sodium lost) or a non-salty sweater who sweats buckets (increased loss of sodium.) If you sweat profusely and are a salty sweater there may be need for extra salt, but you would probably be suffering from cramping or extreme fatigue if this were the case.”

How to make your own sports drink

This sports drink recipe, provided by Wendy Martinson, will produce an isotonic drink containing 6-7% carbohydrate solution, depending on the type of squash used.

Mix 250ml ordinary squash or 200ml high juice squash (not sugar-free or low calorie) with 750-800ml cold water, or mix 100-110ml standard Ribena with 900-890ml cold water. Add 1.25g salt (1/2 level tsp).

More information

lucozade.com/sport
gssiweb.com
American College of Sports Medicine on exercise and fluid replacement

Do you swear by sports drinks during exercise, or does water keep you going? Will you change what you drink after reading this article? Let us know in the comments section below.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Pals ask Sarkozy to give up rigorous fitness regime introduced by wife

French President Nicolas Sarkozy has been asked by his friends to give up severe diet and exercise regime introduced to him by wife Carla Bruni.
The 54-year-old politician was rushed to hospital last weekend after he collapsed while jogging.
He was released from Val-de-Grace military hospital in Paris after being kept in overnight under cardiological observation.
While [...]

The tough get going

Thousands of tough guys and gals battle through fire, nettles and barbed wire in the annual event


ECB denies that Pietersen got injured during IPL

The England and Wales Cricket Board has denied reports that their star batsman Kevin Pietersen had aggravated his achilles injury while playing for Bangalore Royal Challengers in the Indian Premier League in South Africa earlier this year.
The ECB also denied that they had prescribed any training programme for Pietersen, as alleged by Bangalore Royal Challengers [...]

Guide to British mountain biking

Susan Greenwood recommends her top UK routes for getting to grips with the sport


Rhythm to beat the blues

Ecstatic dance has an image problem. It’s a shame, because it will keep you fit, give you a natural high, and could even change your worldview, says Christine Ottery

Ye-ow. As I sit down to write this, my thigh muscles are screaming. Last night, for a sweaty hour and a half I was twirling, swaying, reaching, wiggling, shaking, flapping, and moving my body into every kind of arc, angle, figure-of-eight and heap-on-the-floor configuration.

I was ecstatic dancing. This can be a strenuous cardio workout, and has all the associated upsides: the feel-good fix of endorphins, getting fitter, toning up and losing weight. One ecstatic dance teacher, Christian de Sousa, discovered just how fit he was from all the dancing when on a two-hour mountain run with a marathon-addicted friend. “I was actually leaving him behind,” de Souza says.

There’s no significant study of the physical pluses of ecstatic dancing, so I hooked myself up to a heart rate monitor for the duration of my workout. My gadget told me that I spent 54 minutes out of 1 hour and 35 minutes at a heart rate that will improve my endurance and aerobic fitness. I burned up 334 calories – equivalent to 100g of Jelly Babies.

Sadly, ecstatic dancing suffers an image problem. Mention it to the uninitiated and they’ll picture eye-rolling, flushed, pseudo-orgasmic people with quivering bodies and arms aloft, Woodstock-style. But ecstasy in this context relates to a trance-like mental state. Some ecstatic dancers are disillusioned clubbers. “They want to carry on getting the rave high but leave the drugs behind,” says Richard Clare, a 26-year-old ecstatic dancer.

“Trance is not just some mystical experience, which belongs to special people, it belongs to human beings who are prepared and willing to dance themselves into that state”, says Ya’ Acov Darling Khan, co-founder of the School of Movement Medicine in Devon.

Khan describes trance as discovering that you’ve got second, third, fourth, and fifth gears of perception when you’ve been ambling along in first. This is analogous to the science behind trance: that our conscious modus operandi is mostly beta, (cognitive, problem-solving) brain waves, but we can tune into our alpha (focused, aware) waves and delta and theta (creative, transcendent) waves.

Communities have danced ritual celebrations since time immemorial, but in the west we have made dance into a form of entertainment. However, in recent times “psychotherapeutic” dance therapy has been made available on the NHS, depending on your primary care trust, as part of art therapy for people with mental health problems, particularly schizophrenia. A study cited on the American Cancer Society website infers that dance and movement therapy can help with all kinds of emotional problems, especially boosting body image and self-esteem while reducing anxiety, isolation and depression.

Ecstatic dance has similar therapeutic effects, although often couched in more spiritual terms. It encompasses everything from large global movements such as 5 Rhythms and Biodanza to local drum’n'dance meet-ups, so there is no governing association. You may find 5 Rhythms is a good place to start. Its creator, Gabrielle Roth, began as a dance teacher and has studied and disseminated ecstatic dance for over 50 years. There are now more than 250 certified 5 Rhythms teachers worldwide, and countless offshoots.

“Dance is an art form and movement is a life form,” Roth says. She observed patterns in the way people moved and 5 Rhythms was conceived. The rhythms form a natural wave, building up through gentle “flow”; jagged “staccato” rhythm; peaking in the head-rolling frenzy of “chaos”; and then drawing you deeper into self-expression with “lyrical” beats; and finally meditative “stillness”. The different rhythms allow us to “put the entire psyche into motion. That is to say we need to be physically fluid, emotionally fluid, mentally fluid, and not locked into positions and beliefs and theories,” says Gabrielle.

I decide I’d be hard pressed to be as awkward and ungainly as Mark in the Rainbow Rhythms episode of Peep Show, so I try a couple of 5 Rhythms classes. There are about 60 people in each class. Nervously, I stretch and warm my muscles. As the rhythms take off, I shake off my shyness. We dance by ourselves, with partners, and at the centre of a circle, where I whirl like a dervish, swoop and leap. My body is expressing itself – it’s utter abandonment and a complete high. As Roth says, “there’s no dogma in the dance”.

I also go to a new ecstatic dance group with a percussion band called Urubu. The improvised drumming creates a deep release in me: in one session I weep silently while comforted by a fellow dancer. As we embrace each other in a perspiration-soaked hug, it doesn’t matter who wears what, who smells like what, or how we dance. Ecstasy is the best leveller. “You recognise the life that’s moving through you and feels good”, says Khan. “It’s the same life as whoever’s standing next to you, whether they’re a complete stranger or your best friend.”

It is no surprise that people make lasting connections that go beyond the dance scene, given the intensity of the experience and the way people engage with each other without the distractions of alcohol, drugs, or even speech. Friendships form, sometimes even romances. Dancers come from all kinds of backgrounds, they are all ages, and there is an equal mix of men and women.

Dancing yourself into a trance can also give you a new perspective on your role in a global society. Roth has recently set up a charity, 5 Rhythms Reach Out, for marginalised people in Cambodia and Thailand. She believes that change must come from within, and ecstatic dance can be a catalyst: “You’re just in a position of being inside of and completely connected to the bigger picture. It’s a very real state of being.”

Other ecstatic workouts

Yogi Bhajan brought Kundalini yoga to the UK in the 70s. It uses repeated postures called “kriyas” to unfurl latent energy from the base of your spine to the top of your head, creating altered consciousness.

The practice of Tantra contains some solo sutras, which are exercises with breath that are intended to heal by releasing negative emotions and root us in an awareness of our body. Can be very ecstatic!

Find an ecstatic dance group near you

gabrielleroth.com has a list of 5 Rhythms teachers, including some in most major UK cities.

schoolofmovementmedicine.com is a Devon-based school for healing dance practices.

admt.org.uk has a list of Masters-qualified Dance Movement Therapy practitioners in the UK.

acalltodance.com is the website of London’s most popular 5 Rhythms teacher, Sue Rickards. It also lists some other London ecstatic dance classes.

meetup.com is a useful resource for finding ecstatic dance sessions in your area. Otherwise, try Googling.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Beckham reveals his tenacious workout to ensure fitness

English footballer David Beckham has revealed the extent to which he pushes his body in order to ensure that he keeps himself fit enough to play football until he is 40.
“I”ve always kept myself in shape. I look after my body. For the 10 days before coming back to play for LA Galaxy earlier in [...]

PCB’s ‘amazing’ fitness test for Shoaib where he didn’t bowl a single ball!

Ever heard of a fitness test for a fast bowler where he passes it without even bowling a single delivery; well this is just what the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has managed to do.
Interim chief selector Wasim Bari conducted a fitness test for controversial pacer Shoaib Akhtar where he did not bowl even a single [...]