Thursday, September 30, 2010

Definition of a Workout

A Workout is 25% perspiration and 75% determination,

Stated another way, it is one part physical exertion and three parts self-discipline,

Doing it easy once you get started.

A Workout makes you feel better today than you were yesterday,

It strengthens the body, relaxes the mind, and toughens the spirit,

When you workout regularly, your problems diminish and your confidence grows.

A Workout is a personal triumph over laziness and procrastination.

It is the badge of a winner, the mark of an organized, goal-oriented person who has taken charge of his or her destiny.

A Workout is a wise use of time and an investment in excellence.

It is a way of preparing for life’s challenges and proving to yourself that you have what it takes to do what is necessary.

A Workout is a key to help unlock the door to opportunity and success,

Hidden within each of us, is an extraordinary force, physical and mental fitness is the triggers that can release it.

A Workout is a form of rebirth,

When you finish a good workout, you don’t simply feel better,

You feel well about yourself.

George Allen

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Visualize the Body Using Your Inner Power

Many professional athletes practice visualization, which means picturing themselves going through the motions to achieve a certain goal — complete with sounds, colors, tastes and smells — and have seen it pay off big time. It really works. What you can conceive in your soul and create in your mind, you WILL EXPERIENCE with your body! During my years as a professional athlete, I spent 10 minutes a day visualizing and looking at my body the way I wanted it to look and feel, the result that I mentally conceived in the visualization were experienced in my training sessions, making them tremendously intensive and effective. Now, whenever I work out, I close my eyes and visualize whatever I wish to accomplish in my workouts.

How to Visualize

Close your eyes and visualize your body being fit, beautiful, full of energy and strength, see yourself looking and feeling as you want your body to feel and look. Make the picture as detailed and vivid as you possibly can. What do you look like? How does it feel? The more vivid you’re able to make your visualization, the more powerful it will be.

It may take a while for you to feel completely comfortable doing this. At first the images may not be entirely clear. That’s okay, because the more you practice the clearer they will become. Try to picture the same images every day, adding more detail as you become more familiar with the process. Think of yourself as the lead actor in a movie you are projecting on the screen of your mind. Make sure that when you are doing this, you give an Oscar-winning performance!

This article or post is not intended to provide individual advice which should be obtained directly from your health care professional.

Visualize the Body Using Your Inner Power

Many professional athletes practice visualization, which means picturing themselves going through the motions to achieve a certain goal — complete with sounds, colors, tastes and smells — and have seen it pay off big time. It really works. What you can conceive in your soul and create in your mind, you WILL EXPERIENCE with your body! During my years as a professional athlete, I spent 10 minutes a day visualizing and looking at my body the way I wanted it to look and feel, the result that I mentally conceived in the visualization were experienced in my training sessions, making them tremendously intensive and effective. Now, whenever I work out, I close my eyes and visualize whatever I wish to accomplish in my workouts.

How to Visualize

Close your eyes and visualize your body being fit, beautiful, full of energy and strength, see yourself looking and feeling as you want your body to feel and look. Make the picture as detailed and vivid as you possibly can. What do you look like? How does it feel? The more vivid you’re able to make your visualization, the more powerful it will be.

It may take a while for you to feel completely comfortable doing this. At first the images may not be entirely clear. That’s okay, because the more you practice the clearer they will become. Try to picture the same images every day, adding more detail as you become more familiar with the process. Think of yourself as the lead actor in a movie you are projecting on the screen of your mind. Make sure that when you are doing this, you give an Oscar-winning performance!

This article or post is not intended to provide individual advice which should be obtained directly from your health care professional.

Expressing Anger

Anger is neither good nor bad; anger is just another one of our human emotions, alongside sadness, love, fear, hurt, etc. We have often convinced ourselves however, that anger is a big no-no, that if we feel anger then we are doing something “wrong.” But it is not wrong to feel anger – it let us know when we (or those we love) are being mistreated or when needs are not being met. It can, however, be hurtful to ourselves to not let go of the anger – unexpressed anger can lead to resentments or depression and might block our lives with feelings from the past that don’t apply to the present. When I am living in the present, though, anger is the radar that helps me recognize more fully when my needs are not being met. Although anger may still be uncomfortable, I am now open to the message it brings.

This article or post is not intended to provide individual advice which should be obtained directly from your health care professional.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Flexibility

Never assume that a healthy heart, strong and toned muscles are all you needed to keep your body looking good and be fit. But without flexible muscles, range of motion is weakened, which can ultimately lead to inefficient muscle functionality and injury.

Flexibility is essential for limber muscles and healthy joints; unfortunately it is the most neglected pillar of fitness. Each muscle-building exercise is followed by a corresponding stretch designed to promote flexible muscles and connective tissue.

Stretching is where you get the most benefit from your workout because it maintains muscles healthy, long, and lean. The exercise should always take place after a workout, when you’ve raised the heart rate and warmed the body; otherwise, it can lead to muscle strain and injury. Work into the stretch slowly but never bounce, holding it for 15 seconds to allow your muscles to let loosen-up.

Stretching is a good synergy to strength training because it increases blood flow to the muscles and breaks down lactic acid, which can cause stiff, sore muscles. Incorporating slow and deep breathing optimizes the outcome of the stretch by nourishing your muscles with abundance of oxygen. Breath through the nose, exhale at the end of a stretch to allow your breath to take you deeper into complete freedom of motion. The following are the benefits of stretching:

· Improves muscles flexibly.

· Healthier joints

· Improves range of motion

· Prevents injury

· Increases Oxygen into the muscles.

· Reduces muscle soreness by breaking down lactic acid.

This article or post is not intended to provide individual advice which should be obtained directly from your health care professional

Monday, September 20, 2010

Email’s Dark Side

Email is a fantastic tool, but these ten psychology studies remind us of its dark side. Like the telephone or the TV, email is a technology so embedded in our lives, we think nothing of it. Both help and hindrance, on one hand it's the Internets original 'killer application' and on the other it's a spam-spewing slave-driver.

We're used to hearing about the negative side of the balance-sheet, about email's addictive nature and the unnecessary stress it injects into the modern worker's life, but we downplay these problems because it's so incredibly useful.

Now that email is well into middle age (the first emails were sent in 1965), let's take stock of what we know about the darker side of email.

1. 59 per cent check email from the bathroom

You don't need to be an expert on Pavlov's drooling dogs to work out why email is so habit-forming. Most of it is humdrum, but occasionally we get something exciting and that's what we're hoping for when we check our email. In psychological terms email is a 'variable-interval reinforcement': we don't know exactly when the good stuff is coming so we have to keep checking.

It's no wonder, according to AOL's 2010 survey, 47% claim to be hooked on it, 25% of people can't go without email for more than 3 days, 60% check email on vacation and 59% check email from the bathroom.

2. You check more often than you think

Participants in a study claimed to check their email, on average, once an hour. However when the researchers spied on them, it turned out they checked their email every five minutes.

Despite the small sample size of the study, further research has suggested people do set their email program to check their email every 5 minutes as well as significantly underestimating how often they check their email. As a consequence we also underestimate how disruptive it can be.

3. Email eats a quarter of the working day

When a diary study of people in various different occupations was carried out, they found that on average people spent 23% of their working day dealing with email.

This is because people are not just using email to communicate; they are also using it as a way of tracking tasks-one study has found that workers are managing an average of 65 tasks in 10 different spheres at any one time.

4. It takes 64 seconds to recover from an email

We often react quickly to incoming email, almost like the phone ringing. One workplace study found that 70% of emails were reacted to within 6 seconds of their arrival, and 85% within 2 minutes.

The problem is that it took participants in the same study 64 seconds to recover their train of thought after an email interruption.

Add this to the fact that people spend an average of only 3 minutes on each task before they switch to another, and it's difficult to see how anyone can achieve the psychological state of 'flow' necessary for complex tasks.

5. Stressed emailers

Given the effort we put into email and the entire task switching that's going on, it's unsurprising that it generates stress. Of course we each deal with email in different ways, Three types of emailers were identified:

1. Relaxed responders treat email almost like snail mail. They refuse to let it control them and get back to people when they feel like it.

2. Driven responders try to reply instantly to email and expect others to do the same.

3. Stressed responders don't find email useful; to them it is mostly an irritation. My survey revealed 57% of people consider themselves relaxed, 32% driven and 11% stressed emailers, but this may well underestimate the actual number of stressed emailers.

6. Email kills sarcasm (and emotional communication)

People consistently overestimate their ability to communicate effectively with email. A series of studies found that both senders and receivers don't realize how poor email is for communicating things like sarcasm.

In one study participants thought that their sarcasm would be communicated 80% of the time. Face-to-face this was accurate, but over email the actual figure was 56%.

This overconfidence was also seen when people tried to communicate anger, sadness, seriousness and humor in an email. Without body language cues, it's hard to communicate more than literal meanings. Sorry, emoticons don't cut it :-(

7. People feel less co-operative

Email negotiations often feel difficult, especially with people we don't know well. When emailing was compared with face-to-face negotiations, it was found that people were less co-operative over email and even felt more justified in being less co-operative.

Part of the reason negotiations are difficult is that people tend to be more negative on email. For example, it was found that when people evaluated each other in performance appraisals using both pen-and-paper and email, they were consistently more negative about their colleagues when using email.

8. Low rapport on email

Another reason negotiations can be difficult over email is that when negotiating with a stranger, because email is so short and to-the-point, there is little or no rapport to fall back on. So if negotiations hit a problem, they can quickly fall apart.

I have found that even a single telephone call can create enough good feeling between the parties to bridge the rapport gap.

9. Lying feels more justified

People will lie in any medium, but compared with pen-and-paper, they lie more over email and feel that lying is more justified. In a recent study participants lied 50% more when they negotiated over email compared with pen-and-paper. They propose three reasons:

1. Emails are less permanent: it feels closer to chatting than writing a letter.

2. Less restrained: people feel freer online because of the online dis-inhibition effect.

3. Lower personal connection: over email we feel psychologically distant, resulting in low trust and rapport.

10. Irritating emailers

A fluffy AOL survey has classified the most irritating types of emailers by the type of emails they send.

In order of how irritating, from most to least:

1. The cryptic: rated the most irritating type of emailer, this person fills their emails with unexplained acronyms, mostly to try and impress the boss.

2. The author: thinks they are writing a novel not an email.

3. The forwarder: sends on every idiotic chain letter and joke they receive, apparently without exercising their judgment.

4. The player: claims not to have received your email. Quite irritating; but in these days of spam filters, hard to prove.

5. The smiley: emoticon users were amongst the least irritating types of emailer.

6. The succinct: the least irritating type of emailer keeps it short and to the point.

Email cold turkey

The practical up shots of this research are nothing you won't have heard before: check your email less, remember the costs of task switching, and keep email succinct.

Finally, remember it can be difficult to maintain relationships online because people feel psychologically distant from one another, so make a call every now and then. Because email isn't the all-powerful application it once was, with the advent of texting, Facebook, Twitter and the rest, we tend to forget both how useful email is and how dangerous it can be. I've avoided overblown talk of addiction, but given this research there's certainly a case for going email cold turkey every now and then.

Article by: http://www.spring.org.uk

Friday, September 17, 2010

Meditation as a Strong Wellness Tool

“The experience which you gain during meditation should offer some help while you’re working or being involved in your job. There is no point in separating these things.”

- His Excellency the Dalai Lama

I was introduced to meditation about 10 years ago by who I call my spiritual mentor; Dr. Dharma Singh Khalsa, author of seven successful books. It is a fact that my own parents knew meditation in a more traditional way such as prayer, so I was somehow meditating since I was a little boy. My connection with God has always been a constant meditative way to manifest everything I’ve experienced. Dr. Dharma has never tried to force me into meditation, what he did instead is educate and teach me the benefits of mediation and in turn I taught him how to workout, a fair bargain don’t you think. Here I am now after truly practicing and teaching meditation as it pertains to fitness, which is why I included it in my book Mind Over Body: The Key To Lasting Weight Loss Is All In your Head! It is my responsibility and duty to tell you what my perception of meditation has been and still are today. Meditation has allowed me to move away from the material world and the body image obsession. It allowed me to identify the channel in which I was connected to the Universe. It allowed my state of awareness to develop and to accept and live one heart beat at a time. When people ask me to describe meditation, I just give them the following explanation: “Meditation is like the Champs Elise Avenue in Paris, France. Twenty years ago the avenue was so narrow that it was a nightmare for traffic, (if you’ve seen the movie National Lampoon: European Vacation with Chevy Chase you probably know what I mean) then the government decide to rebuild the avenue by making it wider so traffic would be more flowing; that is exactly what meditation does; it widen your state of awareness so your own “thought” process is less jammed and allow you to think more clearly and therefore deal more efficiently with every day life’s challenges. Meditation as a pillar of wellness has made it easier, for thousands of my clients, to access their inner self, accept who they are, how they wanted to feel and achieve extraordinary results.

Benefits of meditation:

  • Allows the connection between body and mind
  • Widen your state of awareness
  • Reduces cortisol level by reducing stress
  • Reduces blood pressure
  • Reduces anxiety
  • Helps with depression
  • Helps with focus

This article or post is not intended to provide individual advice which should be obtained directly from your health care professional.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

DEFINITIONS OF COMMON NUTRITRIONAL TERMS

FAT FREE - Product has less than 1/2 (0.5) grams of fat per serving. This value will be rounded to zero.

99 FAT FREE - Every 100 grams of food will have 1 gram or less of fat.

LOW FAT - Product has 3 grams of fat or less per serving.

REDUCED FAT - Fat has been reduced by at least 25 percent (compared to a similar food).

LIGHT (LITE) - Product has 33 fewer calories or 50 less fat per serving than a comparable product.

LEAN - For meat and poultry only. Product has less than 10 grams fat, less than 4 grams saturated fat, and less than 95 milligrams cholesterol per serving.

LOW CALORIE - Product has 40 calories or less per serving.

SATURATED FAT FREE - Product has less than 0.5 grams saturated fat per serving. This value will be rounded to zero.

LOW IN SATURATED FAT - Product has one gram or less saturated fat per serving.

CHOLESTEROL FREE - Product has less than 2 milligrams of cholesterol per serving. This value will be rounded to zero.

LOW CHOLESTEROL - Product has 20 milligrams or less cholesterol and two grams or less of saturated fat per serving.

SODIUM FREE - Product has less than 5 milligrams of sodium per serving. This value will be rounded to zero.

VERY LOW SODIUM - Product has 35 milligrams or less of sodium per serving.

LOW SODIUM - Product has 140 milligrams or less of sodium per serving.

GOOD SOURCE - Used for fiber, protein, vitamins, or minerals. Product has at least 10 of the Daily Value for the particular nutrient.

HIGH IN (EXCELLENT SOURCE) - Used for fiber, protein, vitamins, or minerals. Product has at least 20 of the Daily Value for the particular nutrient.

This article or post is not intended to provide individual advice which should be obtained directly from your health care professional.