Monday, April 27, 2015

Do Your Squats!

  1. Squats obviously help to build your leg muscles (including your quadriceps, hamstrings, and calves), but they also create an anabolic environment, which promotes body-wide muscle building. 

    In fact, when done properly, squats are so intense that they trigger the release of testosterone and human growth hormone in your body, which are vital for muscle growth and will also help to improve muscle mass when you train other areas of your body aside from your legs. 

    So squats can actually help you improve both your upper and lower body strength. 

  2. Functional Exercise Makes Real-Life Activities Easier

    Functional exercises are those that help your body to perform real-life activities, as opposed to simply being able to operate pieces of gym equipment. Squats are one of the best functional exercises out there, as humans have been squatting since the hunter-gatherer days. When you perform squats, you build muscle and help your muscles work more efficiently, as well as promote mobility and balance. All of these benefits translate into your body moving more efficiently in the real world too.

  3. Burn More Fat

    One of the most time-efficient ways to burn more calories is actually to gain more muscle! For every pound of additional muscle you gain, your body will burn an additional 50-70 calories per day. So, if you gain 10 pounds of muscle, you will automatically burn 500-700 more calories per day than you did before.

  4. Maintain Mobility and Balance

    Strong legs are crucial for staying mobile as you get older, and squats are phenomenal for increasing leg strength. They also work out your core, stabilizing muscles, which will help you to maintain balance, while also improving the communication between your brain and your muscle groups, which helps prevent falls – which is incidentally the #1 way to prevent bone fractures versus consuming mega-dose calcium supplements and bone drugs.

  5. Prevent Injuries

    Most athletic injuries involve weak stabilizer muscles, ligaments and connective tissues, which squats help strengthen. They also help prevent injury by improving your flexibility (squats improve the range of motion in your ankles and hips) and balance, as noted above.

  6. Boost Your Sports Performance -- Jump Higher and Run Faster

    Whether you're a weekend warrior or a mom who chases after a toddler, you'll be interested to know that studies have linked squatting strength with athletic ability.1 Specifically, squatting helped athletes run faster and jump higher, which is why this exercise is part of virtually every professional athlete's training program.

  7. Tone Your Backside, Abs and Entire Body

    Few exercises work as many muscles as the squat, so it's an excellent multi-purpose activity useful for toning and tightening your behind, abs, and, of course, your legs. Furthermore, squats build your muscles, and these muscles participate in the regulation of glucose and lipid metabolism and insulin sensitivity, helping to protect you against obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease.


Workout of the Day-4/27/2015

Interval, Legs & Core Warm-up Walk 1-lap on track Light Stretch Agility [High Knee, Toy Soldiers, Carioca, Back Peddle, Knee Skips] 10yds Interval Sprint 400m/20Push ups/20 Flutter kicks/20yd lunges Rest 2min and Repeat 5x Jog 1 mile Situps 60 Cool Down & Stretch

Friday, April 24, 2015

Control What You Eat

The most accurate way to control
caloric intake is to control the size of
food portions and thus the total amount
of food ingested. One can use standard
household measuring utensils and a
small kitchen scale to measure portions
Portion Control
of foods and beverages. Keeping a
daily record of all foods eaten and

physical activity done is also helpful.

To estimate the number of calories
you use in normal daily activity, multiply
your body weight by 13 if you are
sedentary, 14 if somewhat active, and
15 if moderately active. The result is
a rough estimate of the number of
calories you need to maintain your
present body weight. You will need
still more calories if you are more than
moderately active. By comparing
caloric intake with caloric expenditure,
the state of energy balance (positive,
balanced, or negative) can be
determined.

Thursday, April 23, 2015

What Fitness Is All About!

Physical fitness is the ability to function
effectively in physical work, training,
and other activities and still have
enough energy left over to handle any

emergencies which may arise.

The components of physical fitness
are as follows:

• Cardiorespiratory (CR) endurancethe
efficiency with which the
body delivers oxygen and nutrients
needed for muscular activity and
transports waste products from the
cells.


• Muscular strength - the greatest
amount of force a muscle or muscle
group can exert in a single effort.

• Muscular endurance - the ability of
a muscle or muscle group to perform
repeated movements with a
sub-maximal force for extended
periods of times.

• Flexibility-the ability to move the
joints (for example, elbow, knee) or
any group of joints through an
entire, normal range of motion.

• Body composition-the amount of 
body fat a person has in comparison 
to his total body mass.

Improving the first three components
of fitness listed above will have
a positive impact on body composition
and will result in less fat. Excessive
body fat detracts from the other fitness
components, reduces performance,
detracts from appearance, and
negatively affects one’s health.
Factors such as speed, agility, muscle
power, eye-hand coordination, and
eye-foot coordination are classified as
components of “motor” fitness.