Thursday, September 22, 2016
Water for Health and Performance
12:24:00 PM
Being Fit and young
Nearly all the bio-chemical
reactions that occur in body cells depend on water and electrolyte (sodium,
potassium, calcium, chloride, phosphorous, magnesium, etc.) balance. These
balances are not only vital to maintaining life but also affect physical and
mental performance. Water is the most abundant component of the body (60 per
cent + by weight). It is believed that it was Mike Colgan of the Colgan
Institute who referred to the body as a "Hairy protein bag full of
water". This bag of water has many holes which allow for leakage. These
holes include skin pores which allow for perspiration (skin leakage) the
kidney/bladder system which expels wastes carried by water and the respiratory
system which must he moist or breathing would be very dry and painful. Adequate
hydration is very important in the maintenance of body temperature. When muscles
contract they generate heat which must be dissipated from the core to the body
surface and adequate water to maintain adequate blood volume is vital. Blood,
kidney, heart and lungs are made of 80 per cent or more water. Muscle, spleen,
brain, intestines, and skin are 72-75 per cent water. Even bones are 22 per
cent and fat tissue is 10 per cent water. On a normal, moderate temperature,
inactive day you would lose 1.5 liters (6 glasses) of water through kidney
filtration (urine production) and another 0.750-1 liter (3-4 glasses) through
the skin and respiration. So an average person needs 8-9 glasses per day just
to replace average losses. It is true you get some of that from fruits,
vegetable, other beverages and food. My "rule of thumb" for water
requirements has long been—weight in kgs./2 = gm of water/day. Caffeinated,
alcoholic and many carbonated beverages have a diuretic effect and actually
increase the daily fluid requirements. One should choose pure water or high quality
sport beverage in some circumstances. Naturally, daily fluid requirements will
vary with environmental conditions, clothing and exercise intensity and
duration.
Even mild dehydration-1 per cent
of body-which would represent approximately.75 to 1 liter of water (1 per cent
of 75 Kg = 750 ml.) can create a reduction in muscle performance and start to
show dehydration symptoms. Early symptoms are headaches, dry eyes (ask any
contact lens wearer what happens after a couple of glasses of wine), drowsiness,
loss of concentration, irritability. If the dehydration is 2-3 per cent,
serious performance inhibition occurs. Dr. David Costill demonstrated that at
these low levels of dehydration 1-3 per cent even the time for 1500 metres was
inhibited. The time for a competitive 10 K was reduced by 2.5 minutes which is
serious in a 30 min 10 K. Muscle cramps are also a sign of inadequate fluid
replacement and electrolyte loss, particularly calcium and magnesium. Even
"Lactate threshold"—an indicator of maximal work performance ability
is lowered which is not a good thing in high intensity, endurance competition.
Thicker blood, fast heart rate, negative changes in blood pressure is other
symptoms. Don't wait until you are thirsty to decide to drink. Fluid
replacement is part of a daily plan. Thirst is a sign—too late—of dehydration,
performance is already impaired. You actually lose significant fluid just
sitting in an air conditioned car or office. Frequent drinks of water during a
long automobile trip will reduce apparent road fatigue. The same applies to
sitting at your desk. A friend has a water bottle holder mounted on the dash of
car to encourage convenient hydration while driving. Here are typical water
losses during exercise: 1 hour of weight training = 227 gm; 45 minutes of
swimming = 283.75 gm, a softball game = 454 gm; 5 mile run = 681 gm, 45 minutes
of full court basketball = 681 gm; bicycling for 1 hour = 936.37 gm. and a
marathon = 3291.5 gm. As the environmental temperature, exercise intensity and
or duration increases, you need to drink more and may want to switch to a
quality sport drink (one made with a glucose polymer like maltodextrin rather
than table sugar and 6-8 electrolytes rather than just sodium and potassium) to
avoid a condition known as Hyponatremia or water intoxication caused by
electrolyte loss and excess water intake. During the famous Daedalus man
powered flight over the Aegean Sea (energy equivalent of 3 non-stop marathons)
in 1988, the athlete lost only 1.5 Kg and had normal blood chemistry at the
end. He drank a cup of high quality sport drink every 15 minutes for just over
4 hours. Cool beverages are absorbed better than room temperature or warm
beverages.
Drink or not to drink?
12:21:00 PM
Diet
In the ideal world, we would eat
everything organic, like it was less than 100 years ago. However, in this less
than ideal world, at least from a nutritional view point, we find food
processors, manufacturers and purveyors determined to impress their investors
with great "bottom line" profits through whatever means our free
enterprise system allows. Unfortunately, nutritional consideration is not first
in the priority lists of most Fortune 500 companies involved in the manufacture,
distribution and sale of food products. There are over 6,000 web pages,
according to Aspartame Truth Information web site, devoted to discussing,
revealing, berating and defending this non-nutritive item which has infiltrated
a huge segment of the food market. The desire to reduce the calorie content of
our meals, in order to manage weight and the wish by those on sugar restricted
diets (primarily Diabetics) to enjoy the taste of sweet, is the two driving
forces in this market. Here a phrase "non-nutritive" is used because
artificial sweeteners provide no nutrition to our diets nor is the taste of
sweet a fundamental necessity for optimal health. All tastes are acquired and
for those with a "sweet tooth" will find that if they increase the
protein consumption in their diets, the "sweet tooth" will become
much less powerful.
Aspartame is the artificial
combining of two naturally occurring amino acids—phenylalanine and Aspartic
acid. Questioning the efficacy and safety of this product is the subject of the
majority of the 6,000 web sites. One of the reasons for using aspartame is the
quest to reduce calories and therefore lose or maintain body weight. However,
there is some evidence, disputed by the manufacturers of course, that the sweet
sensation provided by artificial sweeteners, including aspartame, can through a
"neural/humeral" connection cause the pancreas to secrete insulin
regardless of the blood sugar levels. Insulin is the storage hormone and
inhibits fat mobilization, thus defeating the original goal to lose fat. With
elevated insulin, which does not combine with blood sugars, you get an increase
in appetite and a craving for carbohydrates. This has been reported by several
researchers and of course denied by the research of the manufacturing
companies. The other major criticism is that the Phenylalanine component
degrades into methanol, which quickly converts into formaldehyde and
accumulates in cells. Accumulated formaldehyde can become toxic to nerve cells
over time. The industry claims that the methanol levels in question are well
within safe limits and recognized by the FDA in the US and the Health
Protection Branch in Canada.
The literature reports a myriad
of health problems ranging from behavioral and neurological disorders to immune
system breakdowns leading to cancer, arthritis, MS, Parkinson’s disease, ALS
and Alzheimer’s disease. Others report headaches, epileptic seizures, allergies
and mood swings. All such allegalcions are denied by the industry as they
report their research.
Independent research finds
problems with aspartame research. An analysis of 164 peer reviewed medical
studies by Dr. Ralph Walton of Northeastern Ohio University found that of the
90 non-industries sponsored (independent) studies, 83 (92 per cent) identified
one or more problems with aspartame. Of the 74-aspartame industry sponsored
studies all (100 per cent) claimed that no problems were found with aspartame.
Little comfort for the consumer.
Sunday, June 19, 2016
Health and Fitness
11:57:00 AM
Health
Health and Fitness is a very
important factor in all physical activities and Martial Arts is no exception.
Therefore, in this chapter we will be covering all aspects of physical and
mental training. "Before partaking in any physical activity get a full
medical check-up from your physician."
In 1993, the Centre for Science
in the Public Interest (CSPI) attracted extensive media attention when it
reported that Chinese restaurant food is unhealthy. A meal of kung pao chicken,
the centre claimed, is comparable to "four McDonald's quarter
pounders." In the months that followed this news, the CSPI focussed on
several other types of food—including Italian food, Mexican food, and movie-theater
popcorn—that, according to the centre's findings, contained unhealthy levels of
salt and fat.
The centre declared that fettuccine Alfredo is "a heart attack on a plate," that eating "chile rellenos is like eating a whole stick of butter," and that a medium-sized container of movie-theatre popcorn with butter-flavoured topping contains "more fat than a bacon-and-eggs breakfast, a Big-Mac-with fries lunch, and a steak dinner with all the trimmings combined."
In response to this ever-growing
list of dangerous foods, Mike Rooky, a columnist for the Chicago Tribune,
undoubtedly expressed the frustrations of many Americans when he wrote, "I
can save the Center for Science in the Public Interest a lot of bother and
expense. All it takes is a simple announcement: If something tastes good, it is
probably bad.
If something tastes really dull,
it is probably good." In a humorous tone, Rooky asked, "Who knows
where the food nags will strike next? A deli?" Ironically, delis were one
of the CSPI's subsequent targets: It proclaimed that an egg-salad sandwich
"makes a Dairy Queen banana split look like a diet food."
The CSPI's campaign against
unhealthy food and the reaction to it illustrates the uneasy relationship that
often exists between health experts and the American public. Health
officials—with the help of the news media and advertisers—produce a constant
stream of information about the health effects of various foods, beverages,
chemicals, drugs, lifestyles, and activities.
These reports ceaselessly implore
the public to adhere to dietary and fitness guidelines that are continually
being updated, revised, and amended. Because these recommendations are in
constant flux—and often contradict one another—frustration such as that
expressed by Rooky is commonplace. Some people adopt the attitude that because
risks are ubiquitous and health problems are unavoidable, it is futile to
attempt to alter one's behavior to avoid the inevitable.
Daniel Minturn, a shipping clerk
interviewed by Richard Wood bury in Time magazine, succinctly summed up this
philosophy as he prepared to eat a cheeseburger: "Everywhere you turn,
it's a warning for this and a warning for that. So what's wrong with just now
and then going out and enjoying what you want?" In fact, health experts
who challenge the CSPI's claims suggest that Minturn's attitude is the correct one.
Elizabeth M. Whelan, the president of the American Council on Science and
Health, argues, CSPI's diet advice is "lite" on science and
"reduced" in common sense. It overlooks the fact that what is
important is one's overall diet, not the occasional consumption of any specific
food. The key to healthy eating is a balanced, varied, moderate diet—and there
is room in that overall scheme for fettucini and popcorn. Whelan and others
accuse the CSPI of oversimplifying nutritional science. These critics contend
that the restaurant foods cited by the CSPI are safe in moderate amounts, and
that the CSPI ignores the fact that the degree of risk posed by fat and salt
intake varies among individuals. For example, Jacob Sullum writes in National
Review, "While too much (salt) aggravates certain kinds of hypertension,
there is no Medical reason for people in general to avoid it." Similarly,
he argues that although "a high-fat diet may increase the risk of heart
disease in some people, that does not mean that fettuccine Alfredo, kung pao
chicken, and chile rellenos are poison." Not only do experts debate the
dangers posed by fat levels in particular foods, they also disagree about the
risks and benefits of different types of fat. The food guide pyramid developed
and issued by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) in 1992 recommends
using all fats and oils "sparingly." However, according to Michael
Mason, a staff writer for Health magazine, this advice is misguided because it
fails to differentiate between kinds of fat.
While saturated fat has been
linked to heart disease, Mason notes, monounsaturated fat may actually benefit
the cardiovascular system. Mason argues that by lumping all fats and oils
together, the USDA calls for cutting olive oil, which is a source of monounsaturated
fat. Simultaneously, according to Mason, while the pyramid advises cutting fats
and oils, it allows for two to three servings per day of red meat, which is
high in saturated fat. To rectify these inconsistencies, Mason endorses an
alternative pyramid that was developed in 1994 by the Harvard School of Public
Health, Old ways Prevention and Exchange Trust, and the World Health
Organization. Based on the traditional Mediterranean diet, the new pyramid
recommends eating red meat only a few times a month and calls for daily use of
olive oil.
Along with contradictory
information on nutrition, the public also receives mixed signals on exercise.
For example, during the 1970s and 1980s, experts recommended that Americans
engage in vigorous exercise for a minimum of thirty minutes a day, five days a
week.
In 1993, however, new guidelines
were released jointly by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) and the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM). The CDC and the ACSM
called for moderate exercise and said that the recommended daily amount of
activity could be "accumulated in short bouts" rather than during one
workout, as was previously recommended. Then, in 1995, a study authored by Win
Lee, an assistant professor of medicine at the Harvard School of Public Health,
concluded that vigorous exercise—but not moderate exercise—was associated with
greater longevity, suggesting that only vigorous exercise could help people
live longer. Reflecting the public's confusion, an Associated Press article
reporting on Lee's study began, "Run! No, walk. No, run!"
The uncertainty caused by such
contradictory information can lead some people to become discouraged and to
adopt a careless attitude about their personal health and fitness. However,
amid the cacophony of competing recommendations, a few generalizations can
safely be made. Most experts agree that some exercise is better than no
exercise, and most agree that the best diet is a varied one low in saturated
fat. In Health and Fitness: Opposing Viewpoints authors examine diet, exercise,
and other things for instances. What Behaviors Pose the Greatest Health Risks
and Benefits? Are Exercise and Weight-Loss Treatments Beneficial? Are
Alternative Therapies Viable? Is the Health Care Industry Effective? Throughout
these chapters, issues that affect the health and fitness are discussed and
debated.
Maybe you've never done much in
physical fitness, but you would like to learn about it and see what's involved.
Or maybe you have been exposed to some aspects of exercise, but don't feel that
what you learned was balanced and comprehensive enough. Maybe you've noticed
signs of aging and disuse in your body, and want to do something about it.
Most books, videos and television
programmers dealing with health and fitness are narrow in who they're aimed at,
the methods they promote and the information they provide.
Aging and longevity research has
shown that physical exercise is the most important single factor for a healthy
long life. In the many thousands of years of human evolution, it's only during
the most recent fragment of time that large numbers of us have had the dubious
luxury of inactivity.
We live under sedentary
conditions that are alien to the way our internal organs, skeleton and
musculature evolved. Exercise returns us to a more natural condition. Reaction
times and hormones tend to remain at more youthful levels for physically active
people. You don't need long gut-wrenching workouts to benefit. You need a
persistent long-term programmed of moderate intensity. Fitness requires some
effort on your part. Don't let anybody tell that you can get health and fitness
gains without some effort. However, a well-directed programmed will minimize
the effort and maximize the gain.
Few Questions Related to Health and Fitness:
· What are the three basic categories of exercise and their priorities for health and fitness?
· Considering the diet that most
people eat, what are the main problems?
· When it comes to making
adjustments to improve our fitness and health, how long should we continue
these before we can resume our old bad habits? A few months? A couple years?
Until we find somebody to date? The rest of our lives?
Read on if you would like the answers to those questions. Exercise Answers
Physical exercise falls into three categories:
1. The leading priority is cardiovascular fitness, which is exercise aimed at the heart muscle. The main concern in fitness is to stay alive and a strong heart helps in that regard. Cardio-vascular fitness exercises work large muscle groups in a light persistent manner so that those muscles demand increased blood and pumping action from the heart. Typical examples are running, biking, and aerobics. Research indicates that cardio-vascular (CV) sessions lasting about 30 minutes every day are sufficient for most fitness purposes.
Most people are unaware that for each individual there's window of exertion that CV workouts should fall within to get the desired effects. You'll be shown how to determine the intensity level of exercise necessary for you to get an optimum conditioning effect from your CV exercise sessions.
2. The next priority in physical fitness is stretching the major muscle groups and strengthening the lower back. The value of a long life is diminished if a person is stiff, partially immobile or in nagging back pain. It's remarkable how little exposure and emphasis this point gets. The only equipment you need is your living room floor. Stretching exercises should be done a few minutes daily.
Keeping the lower back muscles flexible and strong should be a high priority in any fitness plan. There's a tendency for men to discount stretching exercises and concentrate on strength training. That's not smart. Physical prowess is greatly enhanced by limberness. In most sports, the best athletes have a flow of motion that is simply not possible with stiff weak back muscles.
3. The last fitness priority is strength training. This is the type of exercise that gets the most attention. Weightlifting can make you look good but it shouldn't be the first priority in fitness training. A barbell set, a weight bench and a good workout plan are all that's needed. Used with common sense, working out with barbells is as safe as any other method. The strength training routine takes about 30 minutes, every day. Over a period of months, the average person can improve their strength greatly and make their appearance more youthful and attractive. This applies to women as well as men. Women normally don't gain muscle mass like men sometimes do with intensive weight training but they do gain a more healthy, youthful athletic appearance.
(The overall plan is to work out 5 or 6 days a week for about 30 minutes each time. You alternate the days between cardiovascular and weight-lifting exercises, with a little overlap that will be described later. In addition, every day you spend several minutes doing stretching routines. In addition to exercise, many people should adjust their diets away from excessive quantities of food, and away from food that is loaded with fat and sugar.)
Healthy changes in exercise and diet should be lifelong, not for some limited pe io cif t nee. Changes that are realistic for a lifetime have to be sensible—not extremist fad-oriented or requiring so much time or effort that they become burdensome and get abandoned. Sensible methods that can become lifelong habits are what you will see here.
Working Out
Exercise in the most comfortable convenient room in your house or apartment. Have a TV and a radio/tape player there, so that you can merge the time with entertainment. It should be a brightly-lit area and if you have children, it will be a good influence on them to see you exercising. Don't confine your work-out area to the basement or garage. The idea is to make it as enjoyable and convenient as possible, and to make it as habitual as possible.
Habit of Fitness
11:56:00 AM
Health
The idea of making fitness a habit is important. People often associate "enthusiasm" with working out and getting fit. There's nothing wrong with bringing enthusiasm to a worthwhile Endeavour. However, it's not enough, it usually wanes, and it's really not the key ingredient.
Here's the important thing about a fitness programmed make it a habit. Make it a habit to Rio our cardio-vascular exercise regularly. Make it a habit to do our strong exercises daily. Ma e it a habit to do your weight-training exercises regularly. Make it a habit not to overeat. Habitually steer away from Liat and lusugar foods.
Developing a "fitness habit" is important. The idea is to abandon bad habits, like physical passivity, and get new good ones. Any exercise plan that isn't conducive to becoming habitual is a waste of time. If it's too difficult, or too time-consuming it's not a winner. The plan presented here is something you can make into a permanent part of your daily activities.
Formation of Habit
11:56:00 AM
Health
Habits are developed by means of two basic factors: reward and repetition. When adults make changes in their lives through new behavior, they have go through the process of forming new habits. Enthusiasm by itself is not enough. It can get you started, but it's not the thing that maintains a change in long-term behavior.
As an adult, you have to decide what you want (a reward like looking better and being healthier).
Determine what you need to do to get it. Then start doing it repetitively
Losing weight and/or building up your muscles are not rewards that will occur immediately—they take at least some months. So the reward is delayed and to a large extent the formation of a new habit in physical exercise and diet depends mostly on repetition. But that's nothing unusual. Many of our habits grow from repetition and delayed reward.
Brushing your teeth several times a day doesn't yield any immediate reward. The payoff is a "non-event" the dentist not using his drill on you months into the future. But that ephemeral association doesn't deter most people from engaging in dental hygiene.
The delayed reward of looking better and avoiding health problems in the future shouldn't preclude you from forming new habits in the area of physical exercise and diet.
Building habits through repetition is easy. How many times have you driven an often-traveled route without thinking? Sometimes, it can get so habitual that even if you intended to divert off the course to go someplace else, you miss the turn off and follow the habitual course. That's the behavior that you want to get working for you in the areas that you choose.
You want to find it easier to follow your fitness programmed, than not to.
Here are some factors and techniques that might help you in developing positive habits.
Favorably Alter Your Environment
11:55:00 AM
Health
If you want to encourage
yourself to exercise regularly, then put your equipment in a convenient place.
Don't put it down in the basement or in some room you never go into. If (you
want to stop eating certain types of foods, then throw the route Lithe keeled in
and avoid restaurants where they are served)
Stock up on the kinds of
food you intend to eat. If you want to cut down on eating, minimize your time
in the kitchen by preparing easy to make things) If you want to encourage
yourself to do your cardio-vascular exercises regularly, keep your running shoes,
skip rope or whatever equipment you use in plain sight. What you see—you think
about. What you think about—you do.
Monitor
Your Behavior
Creative Thinking
Maybe you find yourself
in some irrelevant meeting listening to someone rattling on. Give yourself the
luxury of escaping for a moment.
In your "minds
eye"...
- · See yourself coming home this evening.
- · See yourself changing into your work-out clothes.
- · See yourself doing your exercises.
- · Feel the satisfaction you will have when you've done
your workout.
This kind of visualization works in a couple ways. It's a good method to implant a thought that will recall itself at the right time. But when you add good feelings to the visualization you not only tend to remember to do it, but actually want to do it.
General, when you want
to promote a certain activity by thought it's best to think positively about
the benefits that come from carrying out the behavior, rather than thinking
about the negative consequences of failing to do it. In other words—think_
positively.)
Set-up an Intermediate
Reward System
Be Realistic
Crash diets put too much
strain on the system. The methods involved in doing them are almost never
supportable over the long-term, so people who crash down in weight, almost
always vault right back up again.
Similarly, be patient in
your muscle strengthening programmed. You will probably gain muscle strength
quickly the first few months without it showing up very much in the mirror.
Don't expect 30 minute weight-lifting sessions every day to result in you
looking like a body-builder. However, this type of programmed will start
visibly showing through in six months to a year. And over the course of several
years, the average person will take on an appearance of an obviously fit
person.
Support from a Partner?
You definitely do not
want to miss or even alter the timing of your workouts because of difficulties
in synchronizing two schedules. Schedule disruptions will damage your ability
to form the fitness habit. And habit is the key. Most people will be best off
developing the fitness habit on their own.
Just Starting Out?
1. To slowly accustom
your muscles and heart to exertion. Doing too much in the starting phase can
lead to serious muscle soreness. Obviously, doing cardiovascular exercise when
you are out of shape has the risk of overtaxing the heart, and should be done
cautiously and perhaps only after a physical examination by a doctor. Listen to
your body, and use good judgment.
2. To learn the proper
form of the routines. Do the exercises right, so you get the maximum benefit.
3. To ease into the
habit of taking time each day for exercise. Be consistent and use repetition to
ingrain a good workout habit in you.
How you start out on an
exercise programmed is important. Overdoing things in the beginning can mess
the whole thing up. Here's an anecdote about a guy who was in that position.
Get a calendar devoted
solely to your physical fitness and/or diet programmers. Maintain it daily.
Everyday mark down whether you followed the programmed, or did not. The days
for which you failed should cause you a certain amount of dissatisfaction and impatience
with yourself. Remember, repetition over time will make the desired behavior
become easier to fulfill. Lapses just delay and make your goal's achievement
more difficult.
Get in the habit of
imagining and mentally rehearsing what you want to do. Several times a day,
whether you are alone or not, take 20 or 30 seconds to imagine seeing yourself
and feeling yourself doing your next scheduled workout.
The main reward in a
physical fitness programmed takes some time in coming. However, perhaps there
are some things that you particularly enjoy that you can hold as rewards to
yourself for following your programmed. Perhaps two weeks with no lapses should
be rewarded by spending a little more than you normally would to see a good
play, or for shopping.
You often hear about
people setting very high goals and then driving themselves to fulfill them. You
don't often hear how this can promote discouragement and failure. If you (want
to lose 15 kg give yourself 15 to 30 weeks to do it in a steady progressive
manner? Even if you could lose it faster than that, it's usually unwise to do
so.
Can you benefit by
teaming up with a partner? The idea is that you encourage your partner if they
start slacking off, and vice versa. The problem is that a weak partner will
undermine your efforts. In addition, you may wind up disrupting the formation
of your work-out habits due to scheduling problems.
If you're just starting
an exercise programmed after a long period of inactivity you should take it
easy during the first month. The objectives during this beginning period are
not to see how strong you are or even to get much of a workout. The priorities
are:
Weight Machines
11:55:00 AM
Health
Roomy had never been particularly athletic even in his high school and college days. He didn't have much of a base of knowledge to go from when his doctor advised him to lose weight and start getting some exercise. He was in his mid '30s, had a pot belly and mild high blood pressure. As part of a new year's resolution he joined an athletic club not far from work and resolved to start spending his lunch-times exercising, instead of in restaurants.
He didn't know quite what to expect from this unfamiliar environment the first day he walked into the work-out room. The place was filled with 20 or 30 machines specialized for exercising everything from the calf muscles all the way up to the neck. Ten or 15 people were in the room busily using the machines and he decided the best thing to do was simply to watch what others were doing and follow on.
After a few tries at the machines, he realized that he had no idea how much weight he should be using for a given exercise. A couple machines he had tried gave too little resistance, while others had so many plates selected that he could barely get one repetition completed (to his embarrassment). All the other guys and girls in the work-out room seemed like old hands at all this, leaving him feeling all the more obvious in his inadequacy. This got his hackles up and he elected to leave early and come back during the mid afternoon when he knew he would have the place more to himself. Then he could experiment with the machines and note what weights to use on each, away from the gaze of amused eyes.
As he had expected, the place was nearly empty when he returned. The aggravation of his earlier experience spurred him on in his determination to conquer the machines. He went from contraption to contraption experimenting with the number of weight plates for which he mild manage to make the cams and levers move along their prescribed paths.
His enthusiasm for the idea of getting healthy and fit grew as he drove himself to conquer every machine in the weight room. The full spirit of it all impelled him to forcing himself not to give up until he couldn't get out another repetition on each and every apparatus. Finally, he went to the showers feeling that he had really accomplished something. He had used his enthusiasm to confirm his commitment to himself to improve his health!
Unfortunately, while Rory’s enthusiasm gave him over to a spate of beginners' euphoria, his long-neglected muscles were soon to burst the bubble. They didn't appreciate such rough treatment after years of non-use. Roomy felt pain in every bit of his body the next morning. It was to be over a month before he went anywhere near that weight room again and then only after he had read everything and queried everybody he could on the right way to goes about weight training. He recalled that when he had learned to drive a car,
like everyone else he had taken it one careful step at a time. He hadn't just jumped behind the wheel and gone out on the freeway during rush hour.
Fat: Fat, perhaps no other word in our language is despised as much, nor focused on so intensely. Peoples are obsessed about fat—body fat—and how to get rid of it. We have been conditioned to view health and fitness in strictly black (fat) and white (fit) terms: A "fat" body cannot possibly be fit and healthy. This fat-versus-fit dichotomy, made popular in the 1970s with the publication of fitness guru Covert Bailey's "Fit or Fat?", has become the mantra of many a fitness and health professional. You don't have to read any more than the title to grasp the fundamental message of this perennial bestselling fitness bible: A person is either fit, or fat—but not both.
The implications of this myopic fitness philosophy are obvious: The road to a fitter and healthier body is a very narrow one indeed. In order for a fat person to become fit and healthy, that person must lose weight and become lean. This of course implies that "lean" is inherently good and "fat" is inherently bad. Not only is this lipophobic paradigm overly simplistic, it does not stand up against a substantial amount of medical and scientific evidence.
















