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I'm sure you've heard the saying, "a calorie is a calorie," and that when weight loss is the goal, you can probably loose weight on a 1,200 calorie/day diet whether it is 1,200 Twinkie calories or apple calories. At this point, you might be thinking, "Cool! I'll go on the Twinkie diet!"   Our bodies are smarter than that though, and I say, thank goodness. I know - I'm no fun at all :-). Last week at the grocery one of my kiddos held up a box of Twinkies and had the audacity to ask me to purchase them. I nearly burst a vessel in my forehead trying to restrain myself from smashing the box with......
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Being that it is summer, and there are vacations, kids home from school, camps, a lot of running around in circles...sometimes a workout is hard to knock out, even when intentions are high. When that happens, I have a 30-minute, total body workout that requires very little equipment, yet will leave you dripping in sweat. Wanna hear it? Here it is... You'll need:  a set of 10 or 12lb wts (lighter if you like), a resistance tube 5-10 minute warm up @ 40-50% max heart rate Set 1: 10-14 Burpees (also called pop squats) 3-way lunges w/ dumbbells: Start with weaker leg leading. Take one lunge forwa......
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Stumbled upon a few deals I'd like to pass along: 20% off planners! For all of you planners out there (you know who you are, planning each workout weeks in advance), get a head start on school year planning at MomAgenda. MomAgenda is offering 20% off small School Year books (use code: schoolyearsmom) Visit MomAgenda.com, offer expires 7.31.2011 *P.S. I LOVE MomAgenda planners. Seriously, love them - totally created by moms, for moms. Enough said. EatingWell magazine has a new book out: EatingWell 500-calorie Dinners for $22.45 (10% off the regular price). While you are planning workouts in you......
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Check out this video if you are unfamiliar with trigger point therapy... TPR Therapy, Ironman competitor Have you ever wished you could afford a personal masseuse? One who could come to your home, preferably daily, to help relieve you of the knots and muscle tightness that inevitably occur from daily workouts and, well, being a mom? In search of a solution to my IT band issues, I tried a chiropractor (not money well spent), stretching, massage therapy (therapist too gentle to release deep tissue), and my O.D. The O.D. provided the most valuable information: without proper biomechanics, the bod......
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The mysterious " fat burning zone " continues to confuse many gym-goers. The theory goes something like this: working out in a "zone" of intensity that is less intense for at least 20 minutes will burn more fat calories than calories from carbohydrate. Is this true? Yes and no, but mostly no. You actually burn more calories from fat right now, sitting still, reading this post, than you do on the treadmill. That is because in the resting state, the body burns a higher percentage of fat calories. As you crank up the exercise intensity, you burn a little less fat per calorie. However, it really c......
Nov

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It happens with predictable frequency, beginning in October. The mornings are colder, and much, much darker, and though my workout doesn’t know the difference, my mind and body certainly do. The alarm sounds, I fumble for the snooze button using the only arm that isn’t completely numb and tingly, decide ten more minutes won’t hurt anything, and fall back asleep. Ten minutes later, I reason that I could just go for a shorter run today. Ya, ten more minutes of sleep won’t hurt. Then, ten minutes later, I convince myself that there’s a reason I’m this tired – maybe I need the sleep more than my workout? This time, I don’t hit the snooze – I turn the alarm off! I lie in bed debating the benefits of sleep versus the workout. A full hour after the first alarm sounded, I am neither rested, or exercised. I am, however, mad at myself for letting another morning slip away. The warm bed wins again, and now I’m forced to squeeze in a workout some other time during my already jam-packed day. Ack! Wouldn’t it have been easier to just get out of bed in the first place?

Sound familiar?

See, even personal trainers have trouble dragging themselves out of bed in the morning to exercise. ;0) I have a few mental tricks that I employ when I need a kick in the pants, and quite possibly one of them will work for you as well.

1. As soon as the alarm sounds, turn it off. Don’t give yourself the snooze option. Then, visualize your day, beginning with the first item on the “to do” list, which is to exercise. Think about how good you’ll feel mid-morning knowing that the big rock has already been added to the glass. And if you’re thinking, what does a rock in a glass have to do with anything…pick up a copy of Steven Covey’s The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People

2. Make a mental list of all the “pros” of getting up to exercise versus staying in bed. This works for me 9 times out of 10. When the only reason for staying in bed is to sleep another thirty or forty minutes, it pales in comparison to the long list of “pros” to working out (having more energy all day, feeling healthy and strong, starting the day off on the right foot…).

3. Visualize your workout. That’s right, before you toss the sheets aside, spend a minute mentally going through your workout. Sometimes seeing yourself doing something positive is enough to start your engine.

4. Promise yourself that if you get up and exercise, you can reward yourself with a “sleep in” day later in the week. In other words, front load your week with workouts, then at the end of the week, if you feel like skipping one, you have wiggle room to do so.

5. Have a goal. I find that it is much easier to roll out of bed when I’m training for a running event. There is something about a deadline, and the desire to compete well, that motivates me much more than exercising just because I know I should.

6. This is obvious, but getting to bed early and sleeping well go a long way toward improving the odds you’ll get up with the first alarm. Sleep deprivation and morning workouts don’t mix. Set yourself up for success by nodding off early.

7. Set a goal of getting up X-number of mornings, just this week. Keep the focus on the next seven days, rather than FOREVER. Then, do the same thing next week. Soon enough you will have a workout streak spanning several weeks, then months, then a year. It will be a habit, and you won’t remember a time when you didn’t exercise in the morning.



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