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Sometimes when we approach our weight loss or muscle building goals, we develop a routine. That routine may work for us for a little while, but there will come a time when we hit a (Exercise) plateau.

(Exercise) Plateau/homeostasis : A level at which the body stops responding to a certain activity.

See, the body is highly adaptable. It always wants to find the most efficient way to perform tasks. It will allocate more blood flow and oxygen to certain muscles that perform repetitive tasks, or use fat stores for energy to accomplish…..depending on the goal  trying to be obtained. Once the body can perform that task without strain on the system, it no longer has to adapt. When it no longer has to adapt, you no longer reap the benefits.

What must be done? One of three things, evaluate your nutrition habits, change your exercise routine,or decondition the body by taking a two week break from the performed activity. My recommendation is to change the routine. Present the body with a new challenge to adapt to……..Plain English coming in 3,2,1….If you’re running on the treadmill for 45 min without taking a break, and your body isn’t changing anymore, you need to cut calories, or do a different activity that you aren’t used to. If you’re benching 225lbs., 15 times with now problem, and you can’t get any bigger, then its time to add more weight (only 10lb increments). This is called “muscle confusion

One thing I ask my clients is “if your body is used to it, why should it change?” So if you can jog for 30min at a good pace, but your goal is to lose weight (not a long distance jogger),then maybe its time to start running. Maybe its time to start lifting. Maybe its time to start swimming. There are so many activities to choose from to achieve your goals, the question is “will you step outside your comfort zone and try something new?” I’ve posted some different activities in the past, but ultimately its up to you to change your routine from what you’re used to, to something that presents a different challenge.

~its about what YOU see in the mirror~

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Let’s learn about sugar and how to battle the effect it has on your body.

When you consume starch and refined sugar, these foods enter the bloodstream quickly, causing a sugar spike. Your body then produces the hormone insulin to drive that sugar from your bloodstream into cells. But over time, excessive levels of insulin can make your muscle cells lose sensitivity to the hormone, leading to type-2 diabetes and heart disease. Your fat cells are another story: They always remain sensitive. Insulin spikes lock fat into them, so you can’t use it for energy.

How do you break this cycle? The first step is just to reduce the blood sugar spikes that produce sharp increases of insulin. The substance in our diet that’s most responsible for these surges is starch, namely, anything made from potatoes, rice, flour, corn, or other grains. (Think pasta, lasagna, white bread, doughnuts, cookies, cakes, and fruit…….. although healthy its still sugar) Limit your intake of these foods, and try these 7 healthy tricks to ease their effects.

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Sugar Blocker 1: Have a fatty snack 10 to 30 minutes before your meals

Reason: You remain fuller longer.

At the outlet of your stomach is a muscular ring, the pyloric valve. It regulates the speed at which food leaves your stomach and enters your small intestine. This valve is all that stands between the ziti in your stomach and a surge of glucose in your bloodstream. But you can send your pyloric valve a message to slow down.

Fat triggers a reflex that constricts the valve and slows digestion. As little as a teaspoon of fat, easily provided by a handful of nuts or a piece of cheese, will do the trick, provided you eat it before your meal.

Your New Secret Weapon To Fight Diabetes

Sugar Blocker 2: Start your meal with a salad.

Reason: It soaks up starch and sugar.

Soluble fiber from the pulp of plants, such as beans, carrots, apples, and oranges, swells like a sponge in your intestines and traps starch and sugar in the niches between its molecules. Soluble means “dissolvable,” and indeed, soluble fiber eventually dissolves, releasing glucose. However, that takes time. The glucose it absorbs seeps into your bloodstream slowly, so your body needs less insulin to handle it. A good way to ensure that you get enough soluble fiber is to have a salad, preferably before, rather than after, you eat a starch.

Sugar Blocker 3: Have some vinegar.

Reason: It slows the breakdown of starch into sugar.

The high acetic acid content in vinegar deactivates amylase, the enzyme that turns starch into sugar. (It doesn’t matter what kind of vinegar you use.) Because it acts on starch only, it has no effect on the absorption of refined sugar. In other words, it will help if you eat bread, but not candy. But there’s one more benefit: Vinegar also increases the body’s sensitivity to insulin.

You should consume vinegar at the start of your meal. Put it in salad dressing or sprinkle a couple of tablespoons on meat or vegetables. Vinegar brings out the flavor of food, as salt does.

Vinegar is also a metabolism booster

Sugar Blocker 4: Include protein with your meal.

Reason: You won’t secrete as much insulin.

Here’s a paradox: You want to blunt insulin spikes, but to do that, you need to start secreting insulin sooner rather than later. It’s like a fire department responding to a fire. The quicker the alarm goes off, the fewer firefighters will be needed to put out the blaze.

Even though protein contains no glucose, it triggers a “first-phase insulin response” that occurs so fast, it keeps your blood sugar from rising as high later and, reduces the total amount of insulin you need to handle a meal. So have meatballs with your spaghetti.

Sugar Blocker 5: Eat lightly cooked vegetables.

Reason: You digest them more slowly.

Both fruits and vegetables contain soluble fiber. As a rule, though, vegetables make better sugar blockers, because they have more fiber and less sugar.

But don’t cook your vegetables to mush. Boiling vegetables until they’re limp and soggy saturates the soluble fiber, filling it with water so it can’t absorb the sugar and starch you want it to. Also, crisp vegetables are chunkier when they reach your stomach, and larger food particles take longer to digest, so you’ll feel full longer. Another tip: Roasted vegetables like cauliflower can often serve as a delicious starch substitute.

Sugar Blocker 6: Have a glass of wine with dinner

Reason: Your liver won’t produce as much glucose.

Alcohol has unique sugar-blocking properties. Your liver normally converts some of the fat and protein in your blood to glucose, which adds to the glucose from the carbs you eat. But alcohol consumed with a meal temporarily halts your liver’s glucose production. A serving of any alcohol; beer, red or white wine, or a shot of hard liquor, will reduce the blood sugar load of a typical serving of starch by approximately 25 percent.

That doesn’t mean you should have several drinks (especially if you have diabetes, as multiple drinks can cause hypoglycemia). Not only does alcohol contain calories, but it also delays the sensation of fullness, so you tend to overeat and pile on calories. Be especially mindful about avoiding cocktails that are made with sweetened mixers, yet another source of sugar.

Sugar Blocker 7: Eat sweets for dessert only. And I would limit this to once a week. Dont use this post as a crutch to go crazy….LOL

Reason: All of the above.

If you eat sweets on an empty stomach, there’s nothing to impede the sugar from racing directly into your bloodstream, no fat, no soluble fiber, no protein, no vinegar. But if you confine sweets to the end of the meal, you have all of the built-in protection the preceding rules provide. If you want to keep blood sugar on an even keel, avoid between-meal sweets at all costs, and when you do indulge, don’t eat more than you can hold in the cup of your hand. But a few bites of candy after a meal will have little effect on your blood sugar and insulin, and can be quite satisfying.

 ~its about what YOU see in the mirror~

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http://www.today.com/

That’s an appealing title isn’t it? It seems that in this day of fitness a great majority of people want results with little to no effort. People wonder why it takes them so long to reach their goals but won’t approach them in a logical manner. If little to no effort is how you got the way you are now, then how can you expect to have the opposite effect on your body from that same approach? If you are saying in your head “something is better that nothing” right now, then I’m speaking to you.

What is your INTENSITY level when you exercise? Do you expend all the energy you have in the shortest amount of time, or do you try to conserve energy until the predetermined time has elapsed?……….Plain coming english in 3,2,1……Do you 1. Go hard, catch your breath, then go hard again? OR 2. Go through the motions until your 30min. or however long you decided to workout has past…….on your cellphone, talking to your friends, reading a book, looking at everyone else like they’re crazy cause they’re sweating all over the place. Walking out the gym looking the same way they did coming in. Then get online talking about how you got it in at the gym today. (are you uncomfortable reading this right now?) Understand this, no matter what it is in life, your approach dictates your outcome. If you want mediocre results then give a mediocre effort. If you want life changing results then give a life changing effort. If you want the effects to last short term then give a short term effort. If you want the effects to last long term, then give a long term effort. Simple logic. These post are a direct result of what I see everyday. I have people coming to me on a regular basis asking how can they reach their goals, but wait til the VERY last second to start achieving them, with a laundry list or things they don’t want to do. It seems everyone wants that spectacular “after” photo, but will put more effort into searching for the easiest way to get there, with as little effort as possible, than actually working towards that goal.

Take a look at these pics and decide who’s going to reach their goals quicker……

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The reason I chose this topic is because this is how the fitness industry makes BILLIONS. They tell you what you want to hear…..QUICK, EASY, CONVENIENT. Well I’m going to tell you the exact opposite. Get up! Get out the house! Skip putting on make-up (ladies)! Put the phone down! Close the book! AND GO HARD! Go until you need to catch your breath. Go hard until it burns. Go hard until you need to lay down in the middle of the floor no matter where you are. Get up and do it again…….and after that, get up and do it again. This is how you change your life.

~it’s about what YOU see in the mirror~

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Did you start your workout yet?  Have you changed your diet? Do you feel that its hard to  live an active lifestyle after being sedentary for so long? Do you feel that you will never get eating healthy down packed? Do you feel like your goal was too far fetched? The one thing I know about training and counsling is ATTITUDE is one of the most important weapons you can have in your aresenal. I often used to ask myself, why is giving up so easy? Why is it so easy to give in? Why is it easier to do negative than positive? When I am confronted with unmotivated people, I keep the answer to these questions in mind. One of the first things I tell new Fitness Freaks is that once you decide to make a positive change in your life, EVERY reason possible will rear its ugly head to deter you from your goal. How do you overcome this?

at·ti·tude: noun
ˈatiˌt(y)o͞od/

a settled way of thinking or feeling about someone or something, typically one that is reflected in a person’s behavior.

Every negative situation, every negative person, every negative thought should be met with the ATTITUDE that reflects your deepest desire. You started on this journey because you wanted to change. Your life, up until this point has accommidated what you no longer desire. So what do you think is going to happen once you decide to change? Opposition.  And what do we fight opposition with?……. ATTITUDE! I won’t give up! I won’t give in!  I won’t quite! I do still want this! This is tough but I am tougher! I won’t look for the excuse, but the solution! I won’t look for the way around, but the way through! We ALL started with a day1, and don’t think every day after that has been consecutive. There has been bumps in the road and side tracks, and but progress has always been the goal. God didn’t make any of us perfect, therefore our journey won’t be perfect.  Keep this in mind when you feel like this healthy life wasn’t meant for you. Remind yourself over and over that…………..

~its about what YOU see in the mirror~

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Diabetic patient doing glucose level blood test

Diabetes mellitus refers to a group of diseases that affect how your body uses blood glucose, commonly called blood sugar. Glucose is vital to your health because it’s an important source of energy for the cells that make up your muscles and tissues. It’s also your brain’s main source of fuel.

If you have diabetes, no matter what type, it means you have too much glucose (sugar) in your blood, although the reasons may differ. Too much glucose can lead to serious health problems.

Chronic diabetes conditions include type 1 diabetes (born with) and type 2 diabetes (poorn diet and activity level). Potentially reversible diabetes conditions include prediabetes — when your blood sugar levels are higher than normal, but not high enough to be classified as diabetes — and gestational diabetes, which occurs during pregnancy but may resolve after the baby is delivered.

Type 1 diabetes is a serious condition that occurs when the pancreas makes little or no insulin. Without insulin, the body is unable to take the glucose (blood sugar) it gets from food into cells to fuel the body

Type 2 diabetes usually occurs slowly over time. When the body is exposed to large ammounts of glocose (sugar), your body’s cells start to become resistant to insulin (know as receptor downregulation). The cells can’t absorb the glucose for energy, so it stays in the blood (high blood sugar)  Most people with the disease are overweight when they are diagnosed. Increased fat makes it harder for your body to use insulin the correct way.

Type 2 diabetes can also develop in people who are thin. This is more common in the elderly.

Family history and genes play a role in type 2 diabetes. Low activity level, poor diet, and excess body weight around the waist increase your chance of getting the disease.

Let’s talk more about type 2 diabetes. Why? Because it’s the most controllable. What we eat is just as important as how much we eat. Take wheat, corn, and white starches like potatoes and rice for instance. These foods are converted into sugar. So much in fact that if you have diabetes, the first thin that’s recommended to cut out is wheat. It can spike your blood sugar higher than a candybar. For this reason I recommend cutting back drastically on these food items. They should not be part of your normal diet. Too often these food “have” to be eaten with a certain meal. Shrimp, veggies, rice. Steak, bread, potatoes….Why? Who said? Certainly your body isn’t agreeing with this idea. Let’s break these habits. Let’s take responsibility for our health. Just because the dinner you order comes with these items, does not mean you have to consume them. Remember what is important…….

~its about what YOU see in the mirror~

http://www.mayoclinic.org/

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Hello my athletes! Today we’re gonna talk about HYPERTENSION. Is nick named the silent killer because it usually causes no symptoms. Many people have the problem for years without knowing it. Just because no symptoms are presented does not mean damage is not occuring. The only way to know if you have high blood pressure is to have it checked. When was the last time you had yours checked? Hypertension is when your blood pressure is elevated and it causes your heart to work harder. There are all kinds of reasons for this to occur but we want to talk about the number one reason that we can control……Sodium (salt). Think of high blood pressure like a garden hose where both ends are connected together and there is a pump circulating the water. The more water you put in this system the greater the pressure. When you consume too much sodium the body can’t filter it out and it enters the blood stream. Salt attracts water. This water raises the total volume of your blood causing your pressure to rise. The higher the pressure the harder your pump (heart) has to work to keep the fluid circulating. If the heart isn’t strong enough it fails (heart failure). We get thirsty because the body wants WATER to trying to expell the extra sodium through urine. The body on average only needs about 500mg of sodium a day. Sodium is found mostly in processed foods as a preservative (to extend their shelf life). Even frozen and some prepackaged veggies have sodium added.

Did you know?

One bratwurst contains 900mg of sodium

A can of Chunky Soup contains 880mg of sodium.

Hot Sauce contains 124mg per tsp. 

Lean Cuisine dinners contain sodium starting around 400mg

Whopper w/ cheese =1430mg sodium

KFC grilled chicken breast=730mg sodium

Subway Italian B.M.T=1260 mg sodium

!!!!!!!!!!PAY ATTENTION!!!!!!!!!!PAY ATTENTION!!!!!!!!!!PAY ATTENTION!!!!!!!!!!PAY ATTENTION!!!!!!!!!!

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This is a normal bottle of Gatorade. We usually drink the whole bottle. The label says it contains 110mg of sodium per 8 ounce serving. This bottle is 32oz……..32/8=4 and 4x110mg=440mg. You are drinking 440mg of sodium. This is how consumers consume large ammounts of sodium without knowing it.

Homework:

1: Find out how much sodium is in EVERYTHING you eat and drink today. EVERYTHING.

2: Have you blood pressue checked

~It’s about what YOU see in the mirror~

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