Archive for the ‘Core Strength’ Category

Sample Exercise Programme for The Busy Working Mums

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

6.30am Before getting out of tone up your pelvic floor muscles with 5 minutes of Kegels

7.00am Roll out of bed and rev up your engine for the 3 sets of 15 free squats

7.15am Give your   vitamin D levels a good boost with a15 minute walk in the sun

7.30am Have a light nutritious breakfast of high quality easily digestible protein and complex carbs

8.30am Take the stairs at work

10.30am Have a nutritious mid morning snack such as a piece non starchy fruit and a small handful of raw nuts ( e.g Almonds), or seeds ( e.g sunflower, and/ or pumpkin) or protein bar and green tea

2.00pm climb the stairs again

3.00am snack of fruit and nuts

Between 4.00pm and 6.00pm Take another 30-45 minutes of exercise either cardio, weights, core, flexibility or a combination

Yours in health,

Nancy

Supa Busy But Just Wanted To Share This Tip

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

Whenever you are training especially when you are targeting your core musculature, ie your abdominal muscles remember to draw your naval into your spine, and zip up your middle so to speak. This protects your lower back as well as your abdominals from separating in the middle, which is very common especially for women who’ve just had a baby, and body builders. This diastis or abdominal separation causes a weakening of the abdominal wall “zipping up your middle” regularly can help to prevent that and often to correct the problem over time.

Cheers, bye, talk soon

Nancy

Keep Your Goals Simple and Achievable

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

Yesterday I talked about being flexible in your training, allowing yourself to change your exercise program to suit your changing circumstances.
In my twenties and thirties I was focused on increasing my strength through lifting heavier weights on a progressive basis. Right now, my focus is far more on cardio fitness, flexibility and core strength, incorporating exercises to specifically improve my surfing performance.
This doesn’t mean that a person can’t keep the same focus with their training, as each of us needs to train in a manner that they enjoy, whether that means sticking to the same program year after year, or regularly changing their routine.
Whatever exercise system works for you, the main ingredient is to keep doing it!
Having said that, don’t fall into the trap of giving yourself too much to achieve. You need to create routines that are simple and easy to achieve. As you get fitter, stronger, more agile and flexible, then you can look at adding more to your program.
You are far better off to start a jogging program that has you running for 30 seconds for 5 days a week, then adding another 30 seconds so you jog for 1 minute for the next 5 days, then 1 minute and 30 seconds for the next 5 days, and so on; allowing you to comfortably build up to running for 20 minutes within about 9 months.
This beats going hard out for 10 minutes in your first run, feeling really exhausted, having very sore muscles for three or four days, and then giving up.
Set goals that build a strong foundation, that allow you to sustain exercise for year after year, because you are seeing great results and you are thoroughly enjoying yourself.
All the best
Jonathan
www.flexibilityplus.com

What Are Your Health and Fitness Goals?

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

This is a big subject, but I am only going to touch on one aspect of it for now.
What I want to focus on is how your goals will change as you get older.
BUT you do need to have goals of some sort to stay motivated and to train regularly.
Over the previous two years I lost my motivation for surfing after getting hit by my surfboard across the side of my head which perforated my eardrum and took about six weeks to heal. Then I got a painful ear infection which kept me out of the surf for another few weeks, so all in all I was pretty fed up.
This led me to focus more on my martial arts and so I got more into stretching to increase my flexibility for higher kicks.
In an earlier post I talked about getting back into surfing this year, so I won’t go into that again, except to say that right now I am very focused on my surfing as I am really enjoying it.
So, I have developed a new exercise program that focuses a lot on cardio fitness, upper body strength, and core strength, with stretches to maintain my flexibility.
So you can see how my changed circumstances have resulted in my goals being changed.
My overall goal to be fit and healthy hasn’t changed, but how I train has altered to meet my micro goals. This flexible approach to exercising is really important, and is an aspect of training that is often taken for granted.
It is, however, the secret to longevity for your health and fitness, because as you grow older you will find that your circumstances do change, and these changes will affect what you can do.
So, go with the flow, train in a manner that achieves your goals and don’t be stuck in a groove.
Check out www.flexibilityplus.com which provides training methods that allow you to create your own unique personalised exercise program.
Enjoy your training
Jonathan

Physical Exercise Protects the Brain as it Ages

Tuesday, November 25th, 2008

Cynics might argue that the gym is where one goes to walk nowhere on a tread mill and build muscles one needs little, merely to look at. But, even those of us who think we can live with some extra body fat or less flexibility or even a disease risk will be motivated to exercise when we realize that doing so helps preserve our brains. Modern science has proven that the Greeks knew something 2,500 years ago when they coined the term ‘a sound mind in a sound body’. Recent scientific research has shown us that those workouts at the gym don’t just help you shed excess weight, add pleasing contours to your physique, and put a smile on your face, especially once you’ve hit the shower, but they even help you to think better and keep more of your marbles in play as you age .
Studies show that:

Aerobic exercise physically increases blood supply to the brain and increases brain connections and these correlate with brain function. This is mainly because aerobic exercise, the kind that quickens your heart beat, and improves the health of your heart and lungs, also increases the flow of oxygen rich blood to the brain. Over time this makes a significant difference to the function of the brain.
Walking women keep brains sharper as they age than their sedentary counter parts.

People who were physically fit were  mentally fitter 6 years later than those who were not fit
Exercise improves levels of focus and attention in middle age in those who were physically fit at age 36. This was true also of a group of older exercisers tested whose brain function compared as well with younger adults proving that it is never too late to start!

The brain functions positively affected by exercise include the higher processes of memory, planning, organisation and the ability to juggle different intellectual tasks at the same time.

Conversely adults who lost substantial bone and muscle mass have been shown to be at greater risk for developing dementia (including Alzheimer’s disease) as they age.

Resistance training helps offsets this loss significantly. This is because in a well nourished body, building lean muscle mass causes certain growth factors to be released in response to exercise. This increases the amount of specific brain factors that stimulate growth and repair, especially in the memory centres. This encourages the growth of new brain cells and protects existing brain cells from damage, related to chronic stress and lack of sleep. The increase in these brain factors also results in the formation of a richer network of interconnections among brain cells, which is vital for learning and memory.

In addition to resistance exercise such as weight training and Pilates, cardio exercises like walking, swimming, rowing, and biking have proven valuable in raising the brain factor levels that help us preserve our higher brain functions , suggesting that any sort of physical activity is good for brain building.

While the same pattern of activity (e.g daily walking) is fine for keeping the body conditioned, for the brain to remain in peak condition cross training with an often changing and diverse exercise programme is better. So picking several activities you like doing- walking, weight training, aerobic, dance, yoga, cycling- and rotating them is a good idea.

In addition to the exercise you are already doing, trying something totally new or that you haven’t done in awhile – golf, tennis, samba, orienteering, etc – will reward you not only with the satisfaction of mastering something new or becoming reacquainted with something you used to love doing, but your brain will also become shaper! Every new thing we learn hooks up new circuits in the brain that grow stronger with repetition and weaker or even disconnect with lack of use.  Nowhere is the phrase ‘use it or lose it’ more apt than in keeping the edge on your mental abilities and exercise, is one of the master keys.

For specific ideas on creating a varied and challenging training programme see our website www.flexibilityplus.com.

Yours in Health
Nancy

Our First Blog Post!

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

Hi,
I’m Jonathan and along with my wife Nancy, we are proud to announce our new web site www.flexibilityplus.com. Our focus is on helping heaps of people to increase their flexibility plus hugely improve their overall health and fitness. You will find all sorts of stretching exercises plus great strength training routines to increase your core and overall body strength – to suit you.

To feel really terrific our bodies need regular exercise plus nutritious food.  That’s why on our site you’ll find easy to follow information on nutrition, including great recipes.

This is our first blog (and we are really excited to share it with you) and in our future blogs we will cover a wide range of health and fitness related topics. We hope you’ll give us truckloads of feedback and comments so we can improve what we offer to better meet your needs and add more benefits for you.

By the way, if you want to know some more about us, please read our About Us page on our Blog site.

Nancy and I are passionate about the wonderful benefits that come from regularly performing dynamic flexibility exercises and sensible strength training routines along with healthy nutrition.

In the health and fitness industry there is no shortage of different opinions. If you are looking for info on how to increase your flexibility for golf, develop pelvic flexibility, increase your lower back flexibility, become stronger through performing strength training exercises, you will have no problem in finding a ton of information on these subjects. But the problem with all that info, is – all that info! Figuring out, if you have the time, what is worthwhile and practical, and not too off-the-wall can take a long time.

Our aim is to give you straight up info on great exercise programs and nutrition. We will give it to you in a way that means you can adapt the exercise routines to suit you. We believe everyone should be exercising regularly and eating nutritious food (most of the time). We will show you how this can be fun and effective. We will make it easy for you to find time for exercising and for eating well (and we don’t mean greasy fast foods!) We believe that you can follow a great exercise routine and eat really well so you gain a huge sense of well-being and joyful energy.

The aim of our future blogs will be to add a little more knowledge that will add value to your life. I will leave you with a quote I read the other day on a wall calendar, written by Carl Bard, that says:

“Though no one can go back and make a brand new start, anyone can start now and make a brand new ending.”

We really hope you will join us as we explore the fantastic world of exercise and nutrition.

All the best

Jonathan Rishworth