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Gina Jackson Personal Fitness

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Regimens For Life

I have been training people – men, women, mom’s, under/over 30 and under/over 50 year olds for about eight years now.  I started referring to the programs I developed for clients as “lifestyle fitness training” because we are all doing this work for the long haul and therefore a short-term focus was, in my opinion, selling the body and mind involved with the effort short.  A bad move. 

In late October 2008, I found another article (New York Times) that underscores my premise and belief.  The Federal Department of Health and Human Services has also taken up the call to “get and stay active,” for lifestyle fitness – not just for weight loss.

Paying attention to the pounds gained here and there is much harder than consciously living (and working) an  active lifestyle that maintains the weight, flexibility, endurance, stamina and strength that will keep one happy – period.

Here are excerpts from the NYT article, as it pertains to adults:

SWIM, bike, run, rake leaves. Climb monkey bars if you’re a child, do water aerobics if you’re older. Do whatever you like. Just keep moving.

That, in essence, is the message of the physical activity guidelines announced this month by the Federal Department of Health and Human Services. The basic recommendations — including the core guideline that Americans should get about 150 minutes of moderately intense activity per week — have not really changed from the ones announced in 1996 by the surgeon general’s office.

What is different is the emphasis on the variety of activities — including daily chores — that can reap the profound health benefits of exercise.

There is no “one size fits all.” Instead, the guidelines are broken into specific recommendations for adults, children, people over 65 and others. And while sustained aerobic activities are the foundation, there are other types of activities — muscle-building and flexibility-enhancing — that are also important.

Here are some ideas on filling your own exercise prescription.

For the Time-Crunched

  • Can’t find five days a week to exercise? Train three days instead, but pick up the pace. Richard Cotton, an exercise physiologist with the American College of Sports Medicine, recommends a Wednesday-Saturday-Sunday routine. That way, he said, “you’re only getting into one of your workdays, but you don’t have any more than two days off at a time.”
  • Training for 30 minutes three times a week may fall short of the 150-minute goal, but the guidelines allow for as little as 75 minutes of exercise a week, provided the activities are higher in intensity. Mr. Cotton called that high-return-on-investment activity, and suggested using interval training to achieve it. Here’s how:

After a five-minute warm-up (on a treadmill or stationary bike, in a pool or even walking or jogging around a park), pick up the pace for five minutes, then go a little easier for three minutes. Repeat that pattern for the rest of the 30 minutes, making sure to end with an easy-effort, three- to four-minute cool-down. On an intensity scale of 1 to 10 (with 1 being the easiest effort, and 10 being all-out), your hardest intervals should be at 7 to 8, and recoveries at 5 to 6.
The same is true with strength training. Work the major muscles groups during at least two sessions a week. Mr. Cotton said you can begin to meet that part of the guidelines through a 10-minute workout using just three bodyweight exercises — abdominal crunches, back extensions and push-ups. For details on the program, visit www.myexerciseplan.com/assessment. Look for the Basic Bodyweight Strength Plan under “Keep It Simple.”

The Older Set

Older adults should try to get in 150 minutes of moderately intense activity and at least two sessions of strength training a week. You can accumulate those minutes by walking or joining an exercise class for older adults. For strength training, work with resistance bands, do bodyweight exercises or just climb stairs.

One key change in these guidelines is the stipulation that older adults should do exercises to maintain or improve their balance and to help avoid falls. Walking backward or on your toes can do that. In her forthcoming book, “Fitness After 40” (Amacom), Dr. Vonda Wright of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center recommends a body movement that she calls “the stork.”

Stand with your feet slightly apart. Raise one knee, while keeping your arms to the sides or your hands on your hips. Hold for 30 seconds, then switch legs. Repeat. If you have trouble at first, place your fingertips on a hard surface until you can balance.

Getting Started

The people who accrue the greatest health benefits from exercise go from doing nothing to doing something.

“A one-minute walk isn’t going to do much for your health, but it is a way to start,” said Dr. Steve Blair, an epidemiologist at the University of South Carolina whose research over the last 20 years formed much of the basis for the new federal guidelines.

“Next week, can we do two minutes? Then the third week, three minutes. Eventually you’ll be up to 30 minutes.”

Even then, it doesn’t have to be 30 minutes at a time. “Ten minutes in the morning, 10 minutes when you come home. Weekends, try to get up to 30 minutes,” said Bill Haskell, an emeritus professor at the Stanford University School of Medicine.

Although the guidelines urge adults to “strongly consider walking” as a way to get aerobic activity, biking and swimming are excellent choices, too. You can also get in those minutes through day-to-day activities —“heavy” gardening (defined as continuous digging or hoeing), brisk raking of leaves, aggressive scrubbing or cleaning of floors. As public health officials have been saying for a decade, exercise can be engineered into daily routines: Taking the stairs instead of the elevator or parking at the far end of the lot.

As for resistance training, you don’t have to wait. “Some find that by doing some strengthening first, walking becomes easier,” Dr. Blair said.

For Those Who Can’t Do Enough

If you’re reading this on the elliptical machine while waiting for your personal trainer to arrive, and hoping that you’ll still have time to make your yoga class, chances are you’re already meeting the guidelines. In the past, you might have been cautioned against going much further. Not now. If you are reaching 150 minutes, “we see general health-risk reductions of 25 percent,” Dr. Haskell said. “If you go above that, from say 150 to 300 minutes, we’re seeing reductions of 40 percent.”

If you want to raise the duration or intensity of your regimen, consider these combinations:

  • Riding a stationary bicycle for 45 minutes two days a week; playing basketball for 60 minutes on two days; doing calisthenics on three days.
  • Running for 45 minutes three or four days a week; doing circuit weight training in the gym (without stopping from exercise to exercise and getting both an aerobic and strengthening workout) two or three days a week
  • Playing soccer for 90 minutes one day; walking briskly for 15 minutes, three days a week; lifting weights on two days.
  • And as you increase your exercise time beyond 150 minutes, remember the 10 percent rule: To reduce the risk of injury, increase your training by no more than 10 percent a week.

By JOHN HANC – NYTimes Published: October 22, 2008 Share this with a friend via email: eMail


2 Comments for Regimens For Life


Scott "Coach" Mosley

The key to it all is we have to eat right and exercise. Our bodies consist of over 10 trillion cells. Eating right and exercising will help these cells to be in their very best optimal “shape”! This helps with proper cell communication resulting in overall well being and allowing you to be more properly equipped to handle those bumps in the road that you will without a doubt encounter. Plus exercising and proper diet also will aid in the fight against stress which is thought to be the main culprit in so many of the diseases that plague us today. I suggest at least 3 days a week for approximately 45-60 minutes at a time concentrating on maintaining a 70-75% maximum heart rate. You should combine cardio and strength training as they both have very beneficial qualities.

Studies suggest that by joining an online fitness/weight loss support group you are likely to have 3 times the success in achieving your goals than those that don’t.

To your health!
Scott Mosley
Fitness and Nutrition Coach
866.620.8671

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