Friday, August 29, 2008

More on weight loss

A couple of posts ago, I shared with you a calculation to use to estimate how many calories you should eat in order to lose weight.  It's based on your current size and current activity level.If you haven't done your calculation, please do it now.  

Another important factor in weight loss is eating at regular intervals--about every 3-4 hours or so.  This is SO important!  It should look something like this:  Small meal, snack, small meal, snack, small meal, snack.  You can divide the calories that you came up with in your calculation between all these mini-meals.  

My snacks are usually 100-180 calories, and then I make up the bulk of my calories with the three small meals.  I don't count calories most of the time (although I do log into my FitDay account every now and then to see how my calories are adding up), as I've gotten pretty used to "eyeballing" portion sizes or weighing them on a food scale.  You'll figure out what works best for you.

So, if you're really serious about losing some body fat, this is an important thing to do:  spread your calories out over your waking hours.  This keeps your metabolism running a little higher (it takes calories to digest food), it keeps hunger from creeping up on you, it keeps your blood sugar levels steady (as long as you make appropriate food choices!), and it lets your body know that it will be fed at regular intervals (so it doesn't need to hold on for dear life to body fat as reserve fuel).

Give this a try and I'll be back in a few days with more exercise  homework and a few more weight loss tips.

Have a wonderful Labor Day weekend!

Committed to your success,

Becky

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Lose some more body fat!

Get excited--I'm ahead of schedule with my boot camp homework this week :-).

 I have another another high intensity interval workout for you.  You'll definitely burn some serious calories with this one.  You can  scale it to your current fitness level. Newbies, take it easy and go for one round or two.  Folks who have been exercising for awhile--crank out 3 or 4 rounds. As always, please do a 3-5 minute warm up before you start any of my high intensity workouts.

This is homework for Almaden bootcamp participants, participants in both Campbell boot camps AND my in-home personal training clients.  I should have customers in Campbell, San Jose, Cupertino, Los Altos and Saratoga doing my workouts this week without me there (gee, I feel so powerful).  

 It's a little scary how I sometimes get rather excited about workouts, isn't it?  The reason:  combined with supportive nutrition, they make you look better and feel better.  When you look and feel better, life is just a little more fun (and you're a nicer person to be around).

I had SO much fun in the last few weeks measuring body fat on leaner people--I want the next round of tests to show more results.  So without further ado, here is your workout:

After a 3-5 minute warm-up, do each of the following exercises for 45 seconds straight (or repetitions to fatigue), and then take 15 seconds to rest and transition to the next exercise.  Complete as many rounds as you wish.  As always, stretch afterwards.

Here you go:
Lunges in place
"The plank"
Jump squat (or a regular body weight squat for non-jumpers)
Push ups 
Jumping jacks
Horizontal row w/exercise tubing (see Perform Better catalog if you need a band)

Feel free to post a comment after you've done the workout (just trying to instill a little accountability!).  

Hey, we could have a contest to see which boot camp scores the most "homework completed" posts!

In-home personal training clients, I'll be waiting to hear your homework report at our next workout!

Have a great week!

Committed to your success,

Friday, August 22, 2008

Honey, I've shrunk the boot campers!

Yes! lifeSport bootcampers are shrinking! I've done body fat tests on a handful of boot campers and body fat numbers are decreasing! I've been measuring some 3% and 4% body fat losses. Yeah! Scale weight hasn't necessarily changed in everyone. Just goes to show ya that muscle weighs more than fat :-).

Now, I can't take all the credit, because I do believe that solid nutrition must back up a good workout plan, and since we only meet twice a week, I needle everybody to work out another 2-3 times per week. Apparently some of you are listening. Well done!

Now, for those of you who are still struggling to strip off some body fat, I've got homework for you. Not the homework you're used to, though. This homework involves math. Sorry. If you want to lose body fat, you need to get to boot camp, do your workout homework AND eat fewer calories than you expend. It's also important to spread your calories out throughout your waking hours (roughly three small meals and 2-3 snacks per day).

So, your homework is to figure out approximately how many calories you should be eating to lose weight, and then log your calories for a few days. There are a lot of fancy calculations to figure out your metabolic rate. I'm going to give you a very simplified one. It's not exact, but it will be a decent ballpark. Your metabolic rate can be influenced by genetics, gender, hormones, and muscle mass. We're all a little different.

If you're trying to lose weight, multiply your current weight by the following numbers based on your activity level:

Sedentary: Body weight x 10-12
Moderaly active: Body weight x 12-14
Extremely active: Body weight x 14-16

For example, a 140 lb. sedentary woman would multiply her weight by 10 and again by 12 and get this calorie range: 1,400-1,680. This is a ballpark calorie range for this person to lose weight.

The next step is to write down everything you eat. I suggest you log on to FitDay.com (see sidebar for link), create a free account, and let the FitDay software do all the calculations for you. You'll learn how many grams of carbs, protein, and fat you're eating. Cool stuff. By doing this, you'll see if you're close to the range in which you should be for weight loss.

Now, you probably thought I'd stop at the math homework. Nope.

Here's something to work on over the weekend:

Take a break from interval training this weekend and do a steady state cardio workout (yes, I said it, "steady state"--hey, you have to mix it up once in awhile!). Whether you choose a run, a power walk, or a cardio routine on a machine at the gym, get out there and get to a "7" on our scale of 1-10 and stay there for a solid 45 minutes.

Have a great weekend,

Becky

Friday, August 8, 2008

Train like an athlete to look like an athlete

The Olympics start today. Time to celebrate and train like an athlete! Those of you in my Campbell evening boot camp did the "Olympic Buns" workout already. Campbell morning folks--it's coming on Tuesday! Almaden morning folks---you'll get it on Monday!

For your weekend homework, I'm sticking with short burst cardio work--no strength stuff. Just really hard cardio followed by recovery periods. Think of yourself as one of those lean, muscular short distance sprinters (runners or swimmers) as you power through your intervals. Drive it as hard as you can during your short burst intervals.

Afterwards, treat yourself to a great post-workout meal of whole grain carbs and good quality protein (aim for about a 2:1 ratio of carbs to protein).

You can do your workout on any cardio machine at the gym or at home, running/walking on a track or around the neighborhood, or swimming.

Here is your workout:

Warm up with low level activity for 3-5 minutes (just a slower pace of what you're doing for your cardio)

Do an all-out sprint for 30 seconds

Recover for 90 seconds

Repeat this short burst interval/recovery cycle for 5-10 times depending on your fitness level and time frame

Cool down with low level activity for 3-5 minutes

Stretch!

Enjoy your weekend.

Post a comment here and let me know what you did for your "Olympic Sprint" workout!

Committed to your success,

Becky

Thursday, August 7, 2008

What should you eat before a workout?

I know some of you morning exercisers don't like to eat before working out. I hear this a lot from people in my early morning fitness boot camps in Almaden (at the very cool Shamrock Martial Arts facility) and in Campbell (at John D. Morgan Park).

If you can handle it, it's a good idea to have just a small, easily digestible snack before heading out the door (something on the order of 100-150 calories). If you've got some readily available fuel in your body, you'll do much better in your workout. Obviously, if a small amount of food 30-60 minutes before a workout would make you ill--don't eat!

If you can stomach a little food before an early morning workout, here are some fueling ideas. They're easily digested sources of carbohydrates. Eat these 30-60 minutes before working out:
-1/2 of an energy bar ( one with more carbs than protein--save the huge protein bar for another day)
-1 piece of whole wheat toast
-1/2 or 1 whole banana
-1/2 cup cooked oatmeal (not the instant kind that's full of sugar!)
-6 oz. yogurt (this is a combination food--it contains carbs and protein)

If you're going to work out later in the afternoon, any of the above examples eaten about 30-60 minutes before a workout will do well for you as well.

I'll address post-exercise nutrition in a future blog.

Fuel yourself well for optimal workouts!

Becky