Fitness Facts: Sweat

Fitness Facts: SWEAT:
🔹When the body is hot, it stimulates the sweat glands to release sweat so that it can be evaporated. This evaporation process cools the body down and helps bring it back to normal temperature.
🔹Sweat contains about 99% water. It also contains minerals (primarily sodium), lactic acid, & urea.
🔹There are two types of sweat glands in the skin: apocrine, found mainly in the armpit area, and eccrine, which are found all over the skin’s surface.
🔹The apocrine glands produce sweat when we feel strong emotions, stress, pain or exercise. This is the sweat that can produce a strong scent or odor, and is also linked to the production of pheromones.
🔹The eccrine glands produce the vast majority of the rest of the body’s sweat, & are primarily activated through exercise or increase in temperature.
🔹Sweating can provide many benefits to the human body, including an increased immune system, decrease in stress & fatigue, healthier skin, & decreased risk of diseases or disorders, including kidney stones!
🔹The act of sweating itself burns very few calories, but the process of sweating out fluids and rehydrating that storage can speed up the metabolism and lead to fat loss.
🔹Sweating is great for the skin! The increase in circulation brings many nutrients to the skin cells, and it also causes pores to open- allowing dirt, toxins, & impurities to exit.
🔹Sweating regularly (3-6x/week), if followed by proper cleansing, can help achieve healthier & smoother skin- so don’t forget to wash your skin as soon as possible after you sweat!
🔹The average person can sweat between 25-55 fl oz in an hour of moderate intensity exercise (men generally tend to sweat more than women). Make sure to stay hydrated before, during, & after exercise to replenish those lost fluids in order to prevent dehydration or malnourishment.
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Fitness Facts: Peanut Butter

Fitness Facts: PEANUT BUTTER
🔹Peanut butter can be a great addition to a healthy diet when eaten in moderation.
🔹Peanuts are high in many nutrients, especially protein- but they are also high in calories and fat.
🔹The good news is the mono- and polyunsaturated oils contained in peanut butter are the “healthy” type of fat. Not only are they less likely to be stored as body fat, but moderate amounts can actually lower bad cholesterol & help prevent heart disease!
🔹Peanut butter also contains many vitamins and minerals, including folate, magnesium, vitamin E & zinc. These nutrients help maintain the immune system, as well as reduce the risk of both heart disease & type-2 diabetes.
🔹The protein and fiber contained in peanut butter produce a more satiating, or filling, effect on the stomach. This is a quality that makes peanut butter an excellent snack.
🔹The healthiest type of peanut butter to consume is organic. Ideally there should just be 2 ingredients: peanuts & salt. Stay away from any with partially hydrogenated oils, and remember most brands of low-fat peanut butter are loaded with extra sugar, sweeteners or carbs.
🔹Crunchy peanut butter generally offers more nutrients than the smooth kind- including an average 30% more fiber!
🔹Although peanut butter has many health benefits don’t forget it can still be high in calories! Moderate consumption is considered 2 tablespoons a day- & just 1 tablespoon avg is 120 calories.
🔹Try adding some regular or powdered peanut butter to your meal replacement or protein shake for extra flavor & nutrients!
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A Personal Insight…

So as some of you know by now I suffered a stroke and artery dissection (tear for those of us medically challenged folk) about three months ago. Now, my posts haven’t been much on a personal level even though I’ve tried to post regularly. I want this blog to be a place for people to come to for workout advice, Primal or Paleo recipes, information on strokes and/or PTSD sufferers. I’m about to embark on cognitive behavioral therapy and would like to use this as a source for other to come to for information, inspiration, or motivation. So if any readers out there know so done who knows someone that could use assistance in ANY of these areas, send them on over. I’m not a professional personal trainer or licensed psychologist, but I do provide plenty of life experience, that has to count somewhere right?

As far as workouts go mine are nonexistent at the moment. I am. To allowed much more than the sit down bike so what I would love to do is help people with their workouts or diets. If you read back through my past posts, it’s clear I was a fat kid. And if I’m not careful about my diet that’s where I’ll end up again (Krispy Kreme donuts are chanting my name so e where, I can hear them!)

I’ll leave you all with a little motivation to get your week going in the gym

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5 Ways to Motivate Your Workout

Do gym sessions have you stuck in a rut? If you find yourself more drawn to washing out the bathtub, mowing the lawn, or continuously waiting until next Monday to start getting your fitness on track, it’s time for a change.

1 / Refresh Your Playlist

There’s absolutely no denying it, music plays a pivotal role in workout motivation. Not only has self-selected music been shown to increase performance during explosive exercise, but one study from Ohio State suggests that listening to music while exercising might improve verbal fluency and overall mental performance1. Tune in to benefit both your body and brain.

Most people come to a halt as soon as the music stops, so a fully charged Mp3 player is essential. Branch out from the basics and make sure your motivation holds strong by continually refreshing your playlist. Seek new music that keeps your energy up. Aim for songs that meet the recommended 120-140 beats per minute (BPM)—the pace that roughly corresponds to the average person’s heart rate during a workout routine.

If you’ve been listening to the same songs for a while, change them before they lose their “pump-you-up” appeal. Find some fresh new music to get you excited to hit the gym again.

2 / Watch Any Motivational Personal Trainer

Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. While you might not be able to afford a personal trainer, turning to the Internet for some pre-workout fitspiration is a great way to pump up your motivation level.

The advent of YouTube lets you easily locate just about any sort of video that inspires you—whether that is an instructional how-to, a compilation of ‘mirin-worthy photos, or a demo by a strong, powerful trainer you admire. Watch one or two videos before you hit the gym and, chances are, you’ll give a much better effort.

3 / Try A Pre-Workout Supplement

The next must-do if you want to keep from falling off the workout bandwagon is to try out a pre-workout supplement. If you have never used a pre-workout product before, you don’t know what you’re missing. If you’ve been using the same one for years, it’s time for a refresher. The supplement industry constantly changes, and companies come out with new and improved versions and formulas of existing products.

Whether you’re after more power, more energy to combat fatigue, or improved mental focus and concentration, you can find a pre-workout tailored to your specific needs.

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4 / Set Specific Workout Goals
While it’s great to work toward that six-pack, or post photos of giant biceps on your vision board, short-term goals are paramount to your success. When you only focus on that long-term objective far off in the distance, it becomes much easier to skip a session or have one too many cheat meals. Take some time before you start each workout session and choose one or two specific things you want to accomplish during that workout. This way, your workout has greater meaning, and you have a real reason to hit the gym.

What’s also great about this technique is that after each workout is completed, and you successfully accomplish the goal you set out to do, you’ll experience a huge boost to your self-efficacy. You increase your belief that you can dominate any workout you set out to achieve.

5 / Try One New Exercise Variation Per Workout

Finally, change things up if you want to see significant improvements to your drive and desire. Try adding in one new exercise variation per workout. New exercises keep you interested. We all seek variety in our routine and, if it’s not being met, we’re likely to skip a session. One slight change is often all you need to create the variety your mind craves. There is no need for extensive planning. A change could be as easy as using a different grip placement on the bench press or using a wider stance for your full-depth squat sets.

An additional benefit to using this technique: it prevents you from hitting that dreaded plateau. Having ongoing change added to your workout program is going to be vital to ensuring your workout success.

Fitness Facts: Fat

Fitness Facts: FAT:
🔹Believe it or not, fat is a nutrient! It is crucial for normal body function and without it we could not live.
🔹Fat plays a vital role in insulating body organs, maintaining body temperature, promoting healthy cell function, maintaining healthy skin and hair, and even preventing disease.
🔹Another of the main purposes of fat is as a source of energy- the body can pull on its fat reserves and convert it into glucose.
🔹But too much reserve fat can definitely be unhealthy! Excess fat can negatively affect many of the body’s processes, including digestion, respiration, circulation, and even brain function.
🔹Large amounts of excess fat can lead to many types of lifestyle disorders & diseases, including low energy, low self esteem, joint, muscle, & nerve pain, asthma, type 2 diabetes, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, coronary heart disease, heart attack and even death.
🔹The human body creates fat storage from excess calories. Excess calories are calories that have been consumed and not burned through daily living and exercise.
🔹To burn excess fat, you must burn more calories than you consume. The best way to do this would be to eat a low calorie nutritionally balanced diet and exercise at a challenging intensity for at least 30 minutes 4-6 days a week.
🔹1 lb of fat = 3,500 calories. An average individual can healthily burn fat at a minimum rate of 1-2 lbs/week by creating a deficit in daily calorie intake + burn. To burn 2 lbs/week (7,000 cals), create a 1,000 cal/day calorie deficit.
🔹There are many online and mobile resources to track calorie intake & burn! From websites, phone apps, food logs, pedometers, or even wrist or arm bands, there is an abundance of ways to monitor calories and track fat loss.
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10 Mistakes in Your Ab Workout

But here’s the thing about ab training: What you do is only one half of the equation. What you don’t do is the other—and I’m not just talking about the usual pre-photo shoot fitness model tricks like avoiding sodium, carbs, happiness, or air. I’m referring to the piles of abominable abdominal misinformation lurking out there, both on television and in casual conversation. Perhaps more than any other body part, ab training keeps you constantly on guard against making basic mistakes.

Below are 10 of the biggest ab training mistakes I see people make. I could say I “always” see people make them, because that’s how people talk about abs, but that’s not technically accurate. I mean, everybody has to blink sometimes, and every once in a while I have to go get a drink of water. But aside from that, yeah, it’s pretty much constant.

But if you can minimize—or completely eliminate—these mistakes, you might just see your abs pop out sooner than planned.

AB FLUB 1: FORGETTING ABOUT COMPOUND EXERCISES
If you strictly perform isolation ab exercises, you’re making a huge mistake. Compound movements like deadlifts, squats, and overhead presses engage every inch of your core. Don’t forget to include them in your training program.

AB FLUB 2: DOING AB EXERCISES FIRST
Your abs are part of your core area, which helps stabilize your body. If you fatigue them early in your workout, you will have a hard time doing other ab-intensive exercises like squats.

And just so we’re clear, the role that your core plays in squats is to protect your spine, so you want them to have a full tank at that point. Save your ab training for the end.

AB FLUB 3: THINKING YOU CAN OUT-CRUNCH YOUR DIET
The secret to visible abs is no secret at all: Lower your body fat percentage. This doesn’t happen by doing hundreds of reps of ab exercises—nor thousands, nor millions. You can train your abs all you want, but if your diet isn’t in check, you’ll never see that six-pack.

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“YOU CAN TRAIN YOUR ABS ALL YOU WANT, BUT IF YOUR DIET ISN’T IN CHECK, YOU’LL NEVER SEE THAT SIX-PACK.”

AB FLUB 4: HAVING A FULL WORKOUT JUST FOR ABS
All you need is 15 minutes. If you’re already doing compound exercises like squats and deadlifts, one or two ab exercises for 2-3 sets each at the end of your workout is sufficient.

AB FLUB 5: TRAINING THEM EVERY DAY
“But Arnold worked the abs every day!” Save it. Abs are just like any other muscle in your body. That means they need time to recover. When they get worked hard, a couple of days’ reprieve is necessary, in my opinion.

If you can crunch yourself into submission one day and then wake up the next morning ready for more, take it as proof that crunches aren’t actually working your abs as hard as they should be.

Try a harder movement and tell me if you’re up for repeating it tomorrow.

AB FLUB 6: ONLY DOING CRUNCHES
I heard the question you just screamed “So what’s better than a crunch, maaan?” There are dozens of exercises that are much more effective than the traditional crunch.

In fact, the traditional crunch is one of the least effective ab exercises you can do. And just because you can’t perform these other movements for hundreds of reps doesn’t mean they’re not effective. Trust me, this one is: click here for video

AB FLUB 7: NOT FOCUSING ON FORM
Again, abs are just like any other muscle in your body. So why are you writhing around like you’re on fire to work them, when you’re a stickler for form on your squats and presses? Focus on form and make sure your abs engage in every rep.

When you start doing more advanced and effective ab movements like the pike roll-out, you’ll discover that they’re pretty much impossible to perform sloppily.

AB FLUB 8: FORGETTING ABOUT YOUR LOWER BACK
The core has a front and a side, but it has a back, too. A lot of people neglect the lower back muscles (erector spinae), so make sure to train them just as you would with every other muscle.

If you want to have a strong core, treat your lower back like your abs. Train it hard and smart, and you’ll feel as strong as you look.

AB FLUB 9: ONLY WORKING IN ONE ANGLE
Your obliques, transversus abdominis, rectus abdominis, and erector spinae are all part of your core, but they’re different muscles with fibers running in all manner of directions. You must train them in more than just one angle.

Complex, difficult movements like windshield wipers can work the whole team at the same time, but if you’re not there yet, don’t take it as an excuse to revert back to middle-school-crunch tests.

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Seated twists (spinal rotation), hyperextensions (spinal extension), side bends (lateral spinal flexion), and planks (isometric/stabilization) are all movements that target your core in more comprehensive ways than the typical crunch (spinal flexion).

AB FLUB 10: USING INFOMERCIAL AB GIZMOS
Click here for YouTube video

Seriously? That thing brings you about as close as possible to kicking your own ass. And if you really think that wiggling from side to side is enough to make you lose 10 pounds in two weeks, you’ve got the kick coming!

For more information go to BodyBuilding.com

Fitness Facts: Sleep

Fitness Facts: SLEEP:
🔹Sleep is a crucial factor for any fitness goal, whether it’s weight loss, general health, or muscle gain.
🔹7-9 hours of sleep per night is recommended, while any more or less can be unhealthy.
🔹On average, people that get enough sleep are less over weight, have less lifestyle disorders & diseases, and live longer than people that are sleep deprived.
🔹The human body releases a large blend of chemicals & hormones during sleep, almost all with the purpose of rebuilding and recovering the body.
🔹During sleep, the pituitary gland secretes more growth hormones than during waking hours. Growth hormones aid in fat loss, muscle building, & cell regeneration.
🔹Sleep suppresses appetite and raises metabolism, while allowing the body to rest and recover.
🔹Lack of sleep can raise levels of cortisol in the blood, which can lower metabolism, slow down healing, increase stress, and decrease the body’s ability to build muscle mass.
🔹Poor sleep is more dangerous to women than to men. Women have higher risks of cardiovascular problems when they don’t get enough rest.
🔹A minimum of 30 minutes of physical activity a day increases the body’s ability to fall asleep quicker & deeper! Try to exercise at least 3 hours before bedtime for the best results.

Fitness Facts: Running

Fitness Facts: RUNNING:
🔹Running is a great form of cardio & can provide many benefits when combined with a regular strength training routine.
🔹Frequent running can boost the immune system, decrease stress, lower anxiety & depression, lower blood pressure, increase metabolism, & bring more circulation to the brain.
🔹Running a mile can burn between 100-400 calories, depending on the length of time, the weight, & activity level of the runner.
🔹Outdoor running generally burns more calories than on the treadmill, due to the forward propulsion that is needed on ground. Air & wind resistance also plays a part outdoors.
🔹There are 2 primary benefits of treadmill running: once the pace is set, the runner has to keep up with the machine, while outdoors the pace can pick up or slow down periodically. The other largest benefit is the decreased pressure on the joints.
🔹Moderate impact on joints can be a good thing! Running in moderation decreases the risk of bone related diseases like osteoporosis and arthritis.
🔹Because the body hits the ground with 2-3x it’s body weight during running, the most predominate site of injury for runners is the knees. To prevent injury make sure to wear appropriate shoes, stretch before & after the run, stay hydrated & nourished, and focus on proper form.
🔹Basic form tips: Torso should be straight up, not leaning forward. Relax the shoulders away from the ears. Lead with the hips (Don’t let the hips lean back- especially on an incline). Keep the knees low (Don’t let them come up too high toward the torso- this will minimize the impact on the knees when the feet land). Arms should move forward & back- don’t let them cross the midline of the body.

Fitness Facts: Glutes!!

Fitness Facts: GLUTES
🔹Glutes is short for Gluteals, which are a group of 3 muscles that make up the buttocks and consist of the gluteus minimus, gluteus medius, & gluteus maximus.
🔹The glutes are the largest & strongest muscle group in the human body.
🔹Around 68% of the glutes are comprised of slow-twitch muscle fibers, which react best to low weight, high rep exercises. One of the best ways to develop the glutes is to start with the low rep heavier compound leg exercises (ex: squats, deadlifts, or lunges), then transition to isolation with low weight and high rep (ex: walking lunges, lateral band walks, rear kicks… etc).
🔹Excessive sitting or standing can often lead to tight hip flexors, imbalanced quadricep strength, and tight hamstrings. This can lead to injury, poor posture, or chronic lower back pain. Strengthening the glutes can help prevent a lot of these negative effects.
🔹Well balanced glutes not only look better, but can also help exercise performance! Running speed, jump height, and balance can all be improved with stronger glutes.
🔹The heels are the base of the feet that support the majority of the glutes in most standing exercises (squats, deadlifts, lunges… etc), so generally if more energy is driven down into the heels, the more the glutes will be activated.
🔹Here are some of the best exercises to work the 3 glute muscles: squats or deadlifts for the gluteus maximus, 1-legged deadlifts or lunges for the gluteus medius, and lateral band walks or side-lying leg lifts for the gluteus minimus.
🔹Stair climbing, walking lunges, & sprinting are great cardio exercises that also target the glutes.

Healthy Taco Dip For Football Season!

So it’s safe to say many of you are football fans. You have been patiently waiting for college and pro football to begin. Football season marks the start of tailgating, wings, beer, and rivalries. Today I’m going to provide you with a wonderful taco dip recipe that is healthy so you don’t have to feel too guilty or stray too far from all the progress you have made on your diet.

First I start with my glass pie plate. You can use one of the foil ones for easy clean up but I don’t really recommend it as you might not fit everything into it. Preheat your oven to 375F.
The first ingredient I start with is 1 package of cream cheese. I used light cream cheese this time but usually I try to stay away from light or low fat items. These items tend to be jam packed with chemical substitutes. Spread the softened package of cream cheese on the pie plate. Next, pour about 8 oz of taco sauce on top of the cream cheese. Here is the sauce I used

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Next I put diced tomatoes on top of the sauce. I bought two packages of diced tomatoes but you can dice two or three of your own. Just be sure to really dry the chopped tomato pieces with paper towels so you don’t have a runny pie. Next I chopped half an onion and half a pepper nice and small. Place that on the tomatoes. Next I added a small can of jalapeños.

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Again don’t go with light or low fat, for those of you on Primal or Paleo, it’s recommended you stick with full fat as the common misconception is this kind of fat is bad for you, which in moderation this is untrue.
If you don’t like spicy things you can use a can of chiles of the same size. Next comes the cheese. I bought a 16oz package and used about 3/4 of it.

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Spread a large amount of cheese over the top. Don’t be shy with it! Place the entire dish in the oven until the cheese melts (time will vary by oven). Take dish out of the oven and this is what you should get

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Please disregard the giant hole in the bottom right, we dug into it as soon as it came out of the oven!! Now most tortilla chips work, especially the Scoops, however, I stumbled upon these little gems at my grocery store

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They were at the end of the deli department before produce and if you can find them, I recommend buying them, multiple times. Not so much Primal or Paleo, but they only use corn flour and they are gluten free!! If you make this, let me know how it turns out!! Bon Appetit/Buen Provecho!
Recipe
1 package cream cheese
1 jar taco sauce
1 onion diced
1 bell pepper diced
2-3 diced tomatoes (dry with paper towels)
1 can jalapeños or chiles
1 16oz package cheese blend

Preheat oven to 375F. Spread softened cream cheese in glass pie plate. Add 8oz of taco sauce to pie plate. Add diced tomatoes, pepper, onion and jalapeños in layers. Add cheese on top (amount will vary depending on how much cheese you enjoy). Place dish in oven until cheese is melted. Let cool slightly and enjoy!!