Be Challenged Be Changed

Are you ready to take your Fitness to the next level? Tired of the same old routine? Not getting the results your looking for? We all train with different goals but we all have one thing in common, we are looking for CHANGE! Are you looking to get faster, stronger, more flexible, increased endurance or weight loss well it is all CHANGE!

Now its time to step out of your comfort zone and start creating CHANGE with improvements to your strength, endurance and flexibility.

Personal Training and/or Outdoor classes are the answers your looking for. The workouts are always changing. Some times we use Body Weight exercises, other times using Kettle Bells, Battle Ropes, Steel Mace, Medicine Balls, Bands, Suspension Training and many other variables.

Whether your training for a particular sport or weight loss or that upcoming 5K or maybe an Obstacle Course Race. I will help you be at your very best!

Personal Training can be one on one or team up with a friend for added accountability. Get a group of your friends together and train for that special upcoming event!

Call me now or send me a text to set up your free initial consultation at 623-302-4944. Or fill out the contact me information on the right side of this page.

BE CHALLENGED! BE CHANGED!!!

Monday, January 30, 2012

3 Surprising Reasons to Give Up Soda (from Mens Health)

America has a drinking problem. No, not booze. I'm talking about soft drinks. According to the Beverage Marketing Corporation, the average American guzzles 44.7 gallons of the sweet stuff every year. Not sure what 44.7 gallons looks like? It's about what you'd need to fill a small kiddie pool.
But the truth is, you don't need me to tell you that soda isn't healthy. We all know that America’s drink of choice contributes to our country's ever-expanding obesity problem. But, as Rodale.com writer Leah Zerbe discovered, love handles are just the beginning. Read on for her report on three shocking soda facts that will have you saying “Just water, please” from now on.

Shocking Soda Fact #1: Soda fattens up your organs

A recent Danish study revealed that drinking non-diet soda leads to dramatic increases in dangerous hard-to-detect fats. Researchers asked participants to drink either regular soda, milk containing the same amount of calories as regular soda, diet cola, or water every day for six months. The results? Total fat mass remained the same across all beverage-consuming groups, but regular-soda drinkers experienced dramatic increases in harmful hidden fats, including liver fat and skeletal fat. The regular-soda group also experienced an 11 percent increase in cholesterol compared to the other groups! And don’t think switching to diet varieties will save you from harm: Artificial sweeteners and food dyes have been linked to brain cell damage and hyperactivity, and research has shown that people who drink diet soda have a higher risk of developing diabetes.


FIX IT WITH FOOD: The average American drinks 450 calories a day. By switching to water as your go-to beverage, you'll make room in your diet for these 40 Foods with Superpowers—foods that, even in moderation, can strengthen your heart, fortify your bones, and boost your metabolism so you can lose weight more quickly.

Shocking Soda Fact #2: Soda contains flame retardants

Some popular soda brands, including Mountain Dew, use brominated vegetable oil—a toxic flame retardant—to keep the artificial flavoring from separating from the rest of the liquid. This hazardous ingredient—sometimes listed as BVO on soda and sports drinks—can cause bromide poisoning symptoms like skin lesions and memory loss, as well as nerve disorders. If that’s not a good enough reason not to “Do the Dew,” I don’t know what is.


DRINK DISASTERS: Soda isn’t the only dubious drink you have to watch out for. Many bottled beverages pack enough sugar and calories to foil your get-fit plans in one fell sip.

Shocking Soda Fact #3: Drinking soda makes you a lab rat

Many American soda brands are sweetened with high-fructose corn syrup, a heart-harming man-made compound derived mainly from genetically engineered corn. The problem? Genetically engineered ingredients have only been in our food chain since the 1990s, and we don't know their long-term health impacts because the corporations that developed the crops never had to test them for long-term safety. Case in point: Some recent findings suggest that genetically engineered crops are linked to digestive tract damage, accelerated aging, and even infertility!



Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Busting Strength Training Myths for Women

The mountain of evidence showing the positive impact of strength training for women is growing every day.  Among the myriad of benefits, it can increase metabolism, have a positive impact on bone density, have positive mental health and mood benefits, prevent injury, and may even boost your libido. Yet, the National Center for Health Statistics shows that only two out of 10 women strength train two or more times a week. And, even of those that do participate, many unknowingly proceed in such a way that they aren’t reaping the full benefits.
Strength training for women is a subject overrun with myths and misunderstandings, so let’s put some of those myths to rest once and for all.
Myth #1: Strength Training will make me look like a bodybuilder! First, it’s important to realize that the amount of muscle a woman can put on is metabolically limited by a number of factors. First, women don’t have the testosterone needed to build a lot of muscle. Second, many women coming to strength training are eating at a deficit for fat loss, and thus won’t be building much, if any, new muscle—the goal of strength training while eating at a deficit is to retain the muscle mass you already have and skew the percentage of weight loss towards fat and away from lean body mass. 
The fact is: “Looking like a bodybuilder” doesn’t happen accidentally. A personal favorite tough-love article on the subject of women and strength training equates saying you don’t want to end up accidentally looking like a bodybuilder to saying, "Eh, I don't want to do any sprints today because I don't want to win the 100m gold medal next week."  Looking like a bodybuilder, especially for women, requires a phenomenal lifestyle commitment.
Myth #2: I get bulky when I lift weights! Fat overtop and inside the muscle can look a lot like muscle bulk when it’s not. Case in point- if you’ve ever seen an early episode of The Biggest Loser, you can often see what looks like muscle definition showing through on contestants that are still in the 40% bodyfat range with more than a hundred pounds of fat to lose, yet none of those contestants look anything near “bulky” at the final reveal.  I encourage women concerned about bulk to worry about getting the fat off first and foremost—I have yet to meet a woman who has gotten down to her ideal bodyfat and still said “I shouldn’t have lifted those weights!” Even if you do end up not liking the definition of a particular muscle group once the fat’s off, you can always fine-tune that later. But the fact is, a necessary part of creating a metabolism that will maximize fat burn is through including strength training to retain lean muscle.
Myth #3: I lift low-weight, high-reps to get lean! Many women who do use weights fall prey to “pink dumbbell syndrome”--  lifting 3-pound dumbbells for countless reps, year-after-year, and never hitting a point of muscle fatigue. This isn’t “strength training,” it’s aerobic exercise.  To reap the benefits of strength training, you should lift in the 10-12 reps-to-failure range, and should need to add weight every month or so to continually hit the appropriate level of muscle fatigue.
Myth #4: The scale’s not moving, but it’s OK because muscle weighs more than fat! Going back to the metabolic limitations of muscle gain for women, the best research I’ve bubbled up shows that a female bodybuilder who is living the lifestyle required to put on the maximum amount of muscle possible—this means not eating at a deficit, supplementing, lifting extremely heavy—would be considered very successful if she were able to put on about .8 of a pound of lean muscle mass per month.  And, as we’ve discussed, if you are eating at a deficit for fat loss, you are putting on vastly less than that. 
So, the tough truth is… if you are successfully achieving a calorie deficit to realize even a pound of fat loss per week, your “muscle gain” would never obscure scale movement.  The two most likely reasons the scale’s not moving? 1) The new stimulus has moved some water into the muscles as part of the repair cycle.  You’ll know this is the case if some weight comes on quite suddenly after starting a weight training program and then your weight loss progresses as expected from there. Or, 2) You are overestimating the calories you are burning and/or underestimating the calories you are consuming and aren’t actually at a calorie deficit for weight loss. You’ll know this is the case if your weight is staying the same or creeping up over time.
In case you can’t tell, I am a huge proponent of strength training for women.  I hope by putting some of these myths to rest, you’ll feel more comfortable adding an effective strength training element to your fitness regimen.