Wednesday, 26 September 2018

Childhood Health

I am lucky enough to have two gorgeous little boys. One is seven, the other four. They are brimming with life, exuberance and 100% in your face! Naturally, I wouldn’t have it any other way! One of their favorite pastimes is wrestling (and beating up) daddy and they love walks and cycle rides around our little village. Like most children they adore the park and of course, soft play areas! Hopefully this rings true to most other parents.

In this blog my aim is not to come across arrogant, judgmental or like I believe I am the world’s best father. What I am is a dedicated dad who happens to be a personal trainer. Like most other parents I experience the day to day struggles associated with trying to do the best for my children. I have written this article to highlight some scary facts but also offer hope with some potential alternative choices when it comes to ensuring your child is fit, healthy and happy. 
 
Childhood obesity is an ongoing hot topic in the media and rightly so. I believe it is a worrying and fundamental problem that is clearly obvious to my eyes when I’m out and about. Across the board children are becoming more sedentary and eating cheaper, more convenient and ultimately poorer quality, processed foods. Foods which are less dense in nutritious content but filled with nasties such as salt, sugar, fat and additives.

I am not claiming for one second that my boys don’t have lazy days were they watch TV or play on their IPads and they certainly enjoy foods which I would rather they didn’t. (To be fair so do I!)  What I can say is that I will always ensure they get out of the house and do some physical activity to stimulate their brains and bodies for an hour or two. The majority of time at home they are cooked healthy, nutrient rich foods. I personally love cooking from scratch and I enjoy getting my boys involved in the cooking process where I can. Involving the children means we all own the process and they clearly appreciate eating something they helped create. What’s more, it’s a great way to spend quality time with them. Satisfaction all round. Disclaimer… be prepared for mess!


Some facts and stats on childhood obesity in the UK:

On average across the UK, almost one quarter of children are overweight or obese by the time they start school. – This to my mind is staggering.

Typically, it is the poorest children who are most likely to be overweight or obese and to have a poor diet. They’re the least likely to eat enough fruit and vegetables and the most likely to eat foods high in fat, sugar and salt every day.

Obese children are at greater risk of conditions like diabetes and high blood pressure, and of heart disease and stroke as they get older.

Obesity in childhood can contribute to behavioral and emotional difficulties like depression, and reduce educational attainment. Obese children are more likely to need medical care and days off school as a result of illness. - From my own experiences owning gyms and personal training businesses I have come to realise so many people suffer and have suffered since childhood with depression.

Excess consumption of sugar is damaging children’s teeth, with extractions the most common reason for 5-9 year-olds in England to be admitted to hospital. This blows my mind.


Currently my wife and I are looking into various after school clubs for our children as we both believe in offering them further physical and mental stimulation outside of their school and home environments. They both swim once a week and I’m sure it’s a given my eldest will try out my Little Dragons Martial Arts Classes.  They already swim once a week and we are looking at enrolling one into a modern dance class and the other, a local Beaver group (Beavers are similar to scouts but for younger children) 



Unfortunately it appears in the UK and across the Western world millions of children aren’t getting these opportunities. This can be for a number of reasons such as:

Too little emphasis or interest from parents or guardians to help get their children active. - I would like to think most children have a teacher or adult in their life that would encourage and take the time to help them take part in some physical activity.

Parents are too busy to cook from scratch or take their children to classes – This for me is a simple work life balance issue.

Clubs and hobbies can be very expensive and create a financial burden.

Advertising of junk food is rife on TV and try saying no all the time to your child!

Eating healthily can be extortionate. - Have you ever been at the super market and compared the prices in the junk food Isles to those of the fruit and veg and organic sections? - I personally would love to see the government doing more to promote healthy eating. For me it is essentially a sickness industry. One option is narrowing the price discrepancy between health and junk food!


Admittedly if your funds are tight it can be difficult to pay for clubs or to buy good healthy foods but I do have some simple suggestions.

          Buy less junk food snacks and use the money you save to upgrade and purchase better quality meal foods

          If you and your children eat too much, reduce portion size in meals and avoid creating food waste. This will result in smaller food shops leaving money in your pocket!

          Consider how much you spend on your children’s electronic devices such as computer games and small toys that get played with once and then thrown away. Place a spending cap on those items and use the surplus cash to go swimming or enroll your child in a club. 


If money is still tight, organise walks, cycles, and play dates with your children’s friends. Take them to the woods to make forts and bases, climb trees, kick a football round, or go out looking for wildlife. These are all fantastic activities which build experiences and make happy memories.

I am all for choice but many children, including my own at times, would rather pick their electronic devices over going out to play or taking part in their sports / activity club. What I guarantee though is 9/10 times your children will have a better time burning off energy, socialising outside and blowing of steam than they would cooped up in front of a screen eating sweets.

Happy, healthy children. That’s all we really want.

Tuesday, 21 August 2018

Functional Injury Rehabilitation

Over the years I have worked with many clients who have required injury rehabilitation.  I have always used the functional rehab approach, which is to say, I encourage natural day to day movements using little although ever increasing resistance. Getting rehabilitation right is not an easy task nor is it an exact science. All our bodies differ and there are various degrees ad severities of injuries depending on how they occurred and your immediate treatment. Luckily with my knowledge and guidance, all my clients have seen huge improvements in their condition through carefully monitored supervised exercise rehabilitation.

Common injuries I have rehabilitated that you may recognise from your own experience are:

Shoulder and rotator cuff tears
Football (soccer) related knee injuries such as post cruciate ligament reconstruction
Lifestyle and posture induced wear and tear on the upper and lower back and hips
Shattered ankle and calcaneus (heel) bones.
General to severe tightness in back and shoulders



If I do say myself, I have an exemplary record when it comes to helping people get back to where they need to be. Here I am going to provide a few simple (and quite obvious) guidelines to help you help yourself or your client through the process of injury rehab. All these guidelines are based on the assumption that previous medical surgery or diagnosis and initial treatment have taken place and you have a doctor’s recommendation that you / your client should begin physical rehabilitation.



Know what you’re dealing with: Understanding the injury and how the injured body part moves / works is vital. You do not want to be moving or manipulating the area in ways that it is not designed to move! If you haven’t seen a particular injury or established solid tried and tested methods to improve it then do your research. I often consult my books if I haven’t dealt with a certain injury in a while. Never guess how to rehabilitate an injury and always have a plan!

Every case is different: Appreciating not only the injury but also the individual (when helping a client) is so important. Your client must be confident and comfortable with you. After all they are trusting you with their body. What’s more, a body that is already in discomfort. So listen to what they are telling you and communicate the rehab process to them.

Establish what you / your client can already do: So often with less severe injuries, physios give their patients exercises which place less stress on the client than the stresses they automatically place on themselves during everyday life. Don’t go mad but begin with controlled and stable movements or exercises. Try and place a small demand on the body part. Initially, I usually use two sets but that’s dependant on how the first set feels.
Don’t be scared of the injury: As long as you listen to your body / client’s feedback and you don’t force anything, you are half way there. By simply encouraging natural movements you are increasing mobility and oxygenated blood flow to the injured area. This helps to heal the injured area and builds connective tissues, muscle fibre and nerve ending resulting in improved strength. Don’t forget the human body is an ever evolving organism and is pretty robust. By applying functional rehab exercises you are encouraging the comprehensive growth and repair.
Slowly but surely: Never rush rehab. Keep progressions minor but constant allowing the muscles to acclimatise to the volume and intensity of work

Always listen to your body: If something hurts then stop. I never use the “no pain no gain” philosophy. I use the “no pain no gain no brain” approach. Pain is your body’s way of letting you know something is not right so listen to it or risk making things worse. I always go by the uncomfortable is fine, pain is not rule of thumb.

No machines: I never use machines simply because they do not stimulate comprehensive proprioception (the connection between brain and body and resulting balance, coordination, sensitivity and reactivity). Utilising body and free weight exercises, your brain must send millions of messages to all the relevant muscle fibres and nerve endings to effectively control movement in a smooth and supported fashion. The more off balance you are, the more nerve endings and muscle fibres are created to support the demand resulting in improved strength and coordination. This is vital when you consider that when you injure yourself you damage these very muscle fibres and nerve endings! The more you have the stronger, more balanced and coordinated you are! Balance and non-supported exercise is harder than you would imagine. Try standing on a bosu with one leg lifted in the air and just feel the twitches and involuntary stabilising movements through your lower limb.

Balance and core stability: I have just spoken about balance and how it encourages the brain to recruit and establish a greater quantity of nerve endings and muscle fibers for stability but the core has a very important role to play too. Activating the core (squeezing the pelvic floor and pulling / tightening up internally to the navel) will help you maintain a good posture and control during all your clients’ rehabilitation exercises. Especially with lower back issues, the core muscles work like a weight belt and if activated correctly will protect you and help you heal without imposing further damage to the area. I personally believe that your body heals from the inside out so having a healthy core will enable a healthy body and quicker recovery. For further information, I have written an article on this blog about core stability.


Progression: As with regular gym periodisation it is important that you continually increase the challenge and demand on the body. Once a good basis of strength and stability within the injured part is established, reduce stability and force the body to work hard. For example introduce exercises on the ball or bosu or lift a planted limb off the floor / away from the central line to challenge balance and core stability..  
Nutrition: By eating a varied, natural wholefood diet you are fueling your cells with lovely nutrient rich goodness which will promote healthy cell growth.

Ice treatment: Quite simply, after a rehab workout it is common to experience swelling (especially if it’s the knee) around the injured sight. Applying ice to the area will cause vasoconstriction, the process where your blood vessels constrict, reducing blood flow and therefore swelling and any residual pain.





I hope this article provides . Please feel free to visit my other online work.





Friday, 13 July 2018

Carbohydrates - Should you cut them out?


Over the years I have all too often heard people say that they intend to cut carbohydrates from their diet to lose weight. This is generally a bad idea, whoever you are. From a nutritional perspective, what we should be more concerned with is the type of carbohydrate we consume and how much we have. After all, in your diet you should be consuming more carbohydrates than any other macro nutrient so it makes no sense at all to try and cut them out. 


So, what are carbohydrates and what do they do?
  
Carbohydrates are organic compounds occurring in foods and living tissues including sugars, starch, and cellulose. Once consumed, carbs are broken down and stored as glycogen in the muscles and liver. Glycogen stores MUST be replenished every day to survive so quite literally don’t go starving yourself to death! As you exercise, your body uses up more glycogen and as a result, you need to replace the depleted stores by taking on board more carbs.                                                                                           
About a fifth of the body’s glycogen is stored in the liver and helps maintain blood sugar, an extremely important job! The other four fifths is stored in muscle cells and is used as energy fuel for physical activity. For someone who leads a relatively sedentary lifestyle or who trains at a low intensity for less than one hour per day, I would recommend 3-6 grams of carbohydrate per kg of body weight each day. (Serious athletes will require 7-12 grams per kg of body weight).  In both scenarios, this will be enough to fuel the body but prevent an excess fat gain. As activity levels and therefore energy requirements increase so does the carbohydrate requirement. Still think it’s a good idea to cut out carbs?!

So you can gain some perspective on the energy value in food I have listed the following average calories per gram in macro nutrients.

Carbohydrate = 4 calories
Protein = 4 calories
Fat = 9 calories
Alcohol = 7 calories (empty calories right?!)

Now, when it comes to (and I hate the word) “dieting”, yes it can be beneficial to reduce your carbohydrate intake if it is clearly too high. Another more precise approach I recommend is changing the type or source of your carbs which I will explain in a minute... 
Firstly a fun fact:

Did you know that for every gram of glycogen there are 3 grams of water attached to it? So in other words, suddenly reducing your carb intake will result in a loss of 3 grams of water for every one gram of carbohydrate. This means when you weigh yourself you have lost predominantly water weight and not body fat.   


Good Carbs vs bad carbs

Many of you would have heard of good and bad carbohydrates and categorising them can make it easier to distinguish which ones are healthy or unhealthy.

Simple = sugars (generally less healthy)
Complex = starches and fibers (generally good)

I would urge you not to rely solely on simple vs complex carbs when planning your food consumption as these ideas are a little dated and can be misleading. For example some foods such as biscuits, cakes and bananas contain both complex and simple carbs and natural sugars are healthier for you than processed ones.
A modern and very effective method to decipher the effects different foods will have on your blood sugar levels and therefore weight control and health is the Glycaemic index.


Glycaemic index

The glycaemic index ranks foods between 0 and 100 depending on their immediate effect on blood sugar levels (how quickly the body digests them and converts them into glucose). It is considered better to stick to low GI foods as these have less of an impact on your blood sugar and insulin levels therefore controlling and maintaining balanced levels. They take longer to break down and digest. High GI foods however will quickly spike blood sugar levels potentially leading to hyperglycemia. This is followed by a rapid dip in the blood sugars, causing light headedness, sickness, headache and irritation! For diabetics these symptoms can be much more severe and very dangerous.

Low GI = GI 0 – 55: Most fruits, pasta, grains, peas, beans, brown rice

Medium GI = GI 56 – 69: Rye crackers, cereals, couscous

High GI = GI 70 – 100: White bread, rice, cakes, sweet pastries 




Low GI foods help manage food cravings therefore promoting weight loss. They prevent energy dips, feelings of irritation and general hangriness!! They are also ideal for athletes as they improve endurance and delay fatigue. By contrast High GI foods have been linked to heart disease, diabetes and a wide variety of different cancers.

If you would like more information on healthy eating choices or an in depth diet analysis and eating plan please email me on info@jwcorenutrifit.co.uk


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Tuesday, 26 June 2018

Exercise for mental health and brain function


Why do you hit the gym or go out running? Is it to improve cardiovascular fitness, build muscle, and of course let’s not forget, get an amazing beach body? Probably yes I’m guessing, but have you considered the above the neck inter-cranial benefits? There is a wealth of evidence backing up the theory that exercise increases brain function and helps fight the ever more publicised battle with mental health issues.


Firstly, keeping active can reduce stress (and I can vouch for that!)

Feeling stressed out or not coping well with work or life in general? Something as simple as leaving the office for a 40 minute walk in the fresh air at lunch can make all the difference. Working up a sweat increases concentrations of norepinephrine, a chemical that can moderate the brain’s response to stress therefore can help manage physical and mental stress and can reduce anxiety sensitivity. Over the years I have trained many clients who pop in to my gym during their lunch break for a quick workout. Likewise I have clients I visit at home, breaking up their work day. They all report the same thing: To get away from their desk and get their body moving (and brain working) does them wonders! W hat’s more is clients constantly feed back to me that they are much more productive and indeed, creative at work after sessions! Unfortunately none have agreed to give me a percentage of their earnings... Yet!                   
                                                 

The natural high!

Exercise releases endorphins, which create feelings of happiness and euphoria. I’ve had countless personal training clients who suffer from clinical depression. (BEFORE meeting me before you ask!) After just a couple of weeks training they all, without fail, back up what all the research indicates. They report alleviated symptoms of depression and anxiety. My advice, pencil in some “me time” where you can go for a bike ride, hit the gym, go for a swim or whatever you fancy. Anything that gets you out of your home or work environment, where you can just shut off to the world and release your inner beast!  If that sounds awful to you remember, just 30 minutes 3-5 times a week can instantly boost your mood.


Self-Confidence

Even at a basic level, knowing you have exercised makes you feel good about yourself. You have done something that benefits you and you’re in control. That’s empowering! Immediately after exercise you can feel your muscles tighten and let’s face it, in a sick and twisted sort of way it feels great to sweat and ache because you’ve pushed yourself! Of course as the weeks go by you will see a physical difference in the mirror. You will stand straighter, walk a little taller and even gain a little bounce in your step. People notice these things will start commenting on how well you look (trust me, they will). This will enhance your self-image and further boost your confidence no end. As the function of your body improves you will find you can achieve more with your body and your quality of life will improve, therefore opening up more possibilities to do things you never would have had the confidence to do before.


The Great Outdoors

Not only one of my favourite films starring the greats Dan Aykroyd and John Candy but a super way getting closer to nature. A place, I believe as a species we are really meant to be. Fresh air, sunshine (vitamin D), wildlife, natural beauty all do amazing things for our state of mind. Becoming dwarfed by nature can help one put their worries and being into perspective. There are so many physical activities you can do outside. Figure out what floats your boat and give it a go. A few suggestions: Team sports, canoeing, hiking, mountain biking.  



Keep the brain active with exercise

Something many people don’t realise is that exercise can be (and it’s my philosophy that it should be) taxing on the brain. Challenging the neuromuscular system (brain connecting with the body through millions of nerve endings and muscle fibres) will not only improve the bodies balance and coordination but also the brains ability to send such messages to the body. The great thing is, like a muscle, the brain responds well to being workout out. You feel tired but satisfied! It’s a sad fact but in later years, our brains deteriorate. Aging and degenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s kill off brain cells, causing the loss of many important brain functions in the process. While exercise and a healthy diet won’t cure Alzheimer’s, they can help shore up the brain against cognitive decline that begins at middle age. Exercise boosts the chemicals in the brain that support and prevent degeneration of the hippocampus, an important part of the brain for memory and learning. So in summary, exercise improves brain functions, better connects brain and body, speeds connection time between brain and body, improves memory and helps maintain healthy brain cells in later life! Exercise not sounding too bad now right?!


Relaxation

Using up all that excess energy and tension in the gym can be extremely tiring.  Many of my clients have reported improved sleeping patters due to regular exercise. As a result they are happier the following day and cope better with whatever life throws their way.



Addiction control

The brain releases dopamine, the “reward chemical” in response to any form of pleasure. So when a person becomes dependant on drugs or alcohol (or anything else that gives you a perceived feeling of pleasure) you become addicted to the dopamine. Exercise can be a great distraction. Keeping occupied with exercise, doing something you know will benefit you, can help you forget your cravings for a short while. Working out creates a new focus which hopefully becomes a prioritised alternative to substance or alcohol abuse.



Inspire others to feel good about themselves

Over the years I have trained many different people of different shapes, sizes, ages, back grounds and abilities. You name them, I’ve trained them! What I have found is it’s not just the slim, well-toned “gym rats” that inspire others. It’s the older generation striving to improve their strength and mobility. It’s the overweight individuals slogging through sessions to make themselves healthier. It’s the athletes who offer help and support to beginners which inspire and give them something to aspire to. It’s those who (irrespective of physical appearance) are scared to enter the gym, feel intimidated or have anxiety yet still force themselves to do so. You are all amazing! I also have to mention the support groups that organically form without intention in the gym / class / sports / activity environment.  I believe these groups are fundamentally important in maintaining good mental health. Exercise breaks down social barriers and friends are made over the common bond of exercise and wellbeing. These are friends that can empathise with you and encourage you on your journey.  They are there to pick you up when your mood or motivation dips and make you feel good again. The truth is that anyone who is putting themselves out there and working towards a healthier lifestyle will be inspiring someone else, whether they know it or not. So my advice is not to worry about what you may look like when exercising. You are an inspiration for deciding your own course taking action. That is something to feel positive about.

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Monday, 18 June 2018

Food: Use your brain


When it comes to the very basics of nutrition and the foods you put into your body, there is no excuse for ignorance in modern society. Whatever you are doing, be it scrolling through social media, watching TV, listening to the radio, reading an article or even chatting, you are never too far from the topic of “dieting” or weight control. I would even go as far as saying (and excuse the pun) it’s rammed down our throats.



The ideas and dietary research found on the previously mentioned media platforms can provide some sound information and with a small amount of common sense applied, it is possible to make simple, easy improvements to your diet. However, many of these eating plans and methods can be confusing, misleading or in most cases, inappropriate.
I often find the advice given in the media to be very weighted towards its own purpose. By that I mean the primary parameters of the subject (the person and / or the particular “diet” being promoted or examined) are extremely narrow and rarely apply to the wider public. Yet they are advertised as the answer to all our weight loss problems. The parameters are seemingly manufactured to relinquish the desired results under a strictly controlled set of environments which wouldn't be practical for the every day person going about their routine. I do not believe in fad diets, crazy eating regimes, starvation or water only detoxes. Nor for that matter do I believe in the vast majority of gimmicks advertised on infomercials and celeb fashion magazines.
I put my trust in proven good honest hard exercise and sensible food choices containing the correct balance of:

Macro nutrients: Carbohydrates, proteins, fats
Micro nutrients: Vitamins and minerals

It goes without saying that anyone dedicated to making a significant change to their nutritional intake and individuals with unusual requirements (medical conditions, athletes) should seek professional guidance from a qualified nutritionist but for those going it alone I strongly recommend not getting hung up on special diets that you may hear about, but instead focus your energy on getting the basic principles of healthy eating right first.


10 basic tips:


Consume natural and varied whole foods

Try to eat 5 or even 6 small meals per day 

Dink plenty of water throughout the day

Take on nutrients from a wide source of foods. A good guideline is to include fruits, vegetable and salad items of different colours

Don’t eat large meals late at night

Avoid processed, fried and fast foods

Chew your food properly. It is the first stage of digestion!

Stop eating when you are full

Where possible prepare and cook your own foods from scratch

Reduce salt intake


I would never suggest totally cutting out treats as I think that can make for a boring existence but perhaps limit yourself to once or twice a week. The key word is moderation.

This is just the tip of the iceberg lettuce. If you would like further information on healthy eating or you would like to know how much of which foods and when you should be eating them to meet your personal nutritional requirements, please me at email info@jwcorenutrifit.co.uk

Thank you for taking the time to read.



Monday, 11 April 2016

Asthma

Asthma is a respiratory condition that is characterised by an increased sensitivity of the airways resulting in the air passages, principally the bronchioles, narrowing for a period of time.

There are a variety of potential ‘triggers’ that can induce an "asthma attack”


·         Infection
·         Dust
·         Air pollution
·         Pollens and air-borne allergens
·         Specific foods
·         Drugs
·         Exercise


Most people who suffer from asthma know what their triggers are and very few suffer from all the above.  Usually suffers have the potential for Broncho-constriction with exercise, however the response and severity can vary greatly from person to person.  

If you do suffer from asthma and are looking to get involved in exercise, I highly recommend that before you join a gym, you recall and record any times you have had an exercised induced episode.  
Include where you were, time of year, weather conditions, what you were doing on these occasions and detail as much information as possible. Include any past experiences with daily activities.

When you decide to begin exercise, consult a trainer and share with them all related information and experiences.  This will allow your trainer to reduce the risk of inducing similar events by eliminating likely contributing factors.


To reduce the risk of developing exercise induced asthma

·        -  Intermittent physical activity 
·         - Work out in warm moist air
·         - Swimming (trigger dependent)
·         - Low to moderate intensity exercise
·         - Exercise in clean fresh air with low pollution and pollen in the environment
·         - Always have your fast acting bronchodilator in your possession when you exercise
·         - Make gains in physical conditioning
·         - Always listen to your body and be patient with progress – It WILL work!


Exercise guidelines for asthma

Goal: Improve cardio respiratory conditioning (breathe easier and more efficiently)

What to do: Weight training - work large muscle groups, low resistance and conditioning based. 15-20 reps, 2-4 sets.
Cardio vascular (walking cycling, swimming, rowing, jogging, running) Start with 5 minutes and build up to 20-30 minutes working intermittently depending on your fitness levels.

How often?: 3-5 times per week – time of day may be trigger dependant.

Intensity: Low- moderate and then after time progress to high (trigger dependant)



You may also find Tai Chi useful in regulating controlled breathing through exercise.


I hope this has been useful.


Please visit my other channels where you can find out more.

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Jamie-lee

JW CORE















Thursday, 29 October 2015

Weight Loss: Lean or Fat? ... Be Patient


One of the most common reasons people join a gym is to lose weight. I have spoken about fad dieting and the media / fashion industry (pressure to be sickly and stick thin) before so wont dwell on my feeling toward that too much here. What I do want to focus on is the process and resulting psychology of weight loss.

When clients, friends and family ask me how to lose weight they look disbelieving and dejected at me when I say you should aim to loose between 1-2lbs per week. They expect (because media and fads dictates) to lose 7 or 8 lbs per week. It rarely works like that in truth. Rapid weight loss is routinely followed by rapid weight gain. I strongly suggest to them that they exercise patience and trust in the process of losing weight for the long term. Unfortunately many still find it difficult to foresee the end game and therefore become demotivated and depressed. People need to understand that weight is made up of more than just fat therefore rendering overall weight on a set of scales as only partially relevant.

For new exercise beginners, I recommend that for the first four weeks you try to look for some alternative benefits so you can to prove to yourself that you are on the right path.

1.      Clothes feel looser

2.      Feel healthier

3.      Carry yourself better – improved posture and confidence

4.      Look slimmer in mirror, new curves / others people noticing

5.      Heightened alertness and more energetic.

 

Of course everyone is built slightly differently. We all have different genetics, natural abilities, varying fitness levels, different sizes and body compositions so first off DO NOT COMPARE YOURSELF TO OTHERS! What works for one person may not work for you. For example a person with more body fat to loose, who has never exercised before will likely lose more fat, initially, than an experienced exerciser who is only 7lbs over weight.

If you train 3-4 times per week and eat healthy, natural and organic foods in frequent small doses you will lose weight. Your calorie expenditure will outweigh your calorie intake. You will also increase your muscle mass and therefore metabolism thus burning calories and emptying fat cells more efficiently.

All the while weight comes off people are happy. That’s great but I would like to make it clear that it can take a couple of weeks to kick start so try not to despair!  

When you join a gm or start a vigorous exercise routine your body may initially do two things

1.      Go into a survival mode – Your body panics at the sudden increase in calories being used up and expended. It can actually hold on to fat cells ensuring you don’t run out of your vital fat stores. (it goes back to early hunter gatherer days where we didn’t know where the next food source was coming from) This doesn’t necessarily happen after one workout but more after a dramatic change in lifestyle from sedentary to active. It is important to keep eating and not starve yourself, otherwise apart from making yourself very ill you will encourage your body to heighten its survival mode further, therefore making it even harder to lose weight.

 

2.      Slowly begin toning up. At JW CORE a large proportion of what I teach is full body functional training movements utilising as many muscles, all working together, as possible. This type of training increases healthy lean muscle and promotes strong movement patterns and posture. I am not saying my clients rapidly pack on size but the extra muscle tissue is very dense compared to that of fat…. 3 times as dense.

Many clients, for the first couple of weeks claim they have not lost weight. They feel fitter and look healthier but on the scales they are the same….. Muscle gain will slow down overall weight loss but it will increase BODY FAT loss. All the time we are sitting behind a desk at school or work, we are defying what we are evolved to do and that is living off the land and, moving around. Hence we are atrophying as a species. (loosing bone density, muscle mass, healthy tissue)

 

Continuing from my second point, once you have improved your muscle mass you will naturally burn more calories up, just maintaining the extra muscle volume you have acquired… even when your asleep! Weight loss while you’re sleeping, can’t be bad! You just need to be patient for it to kick in!

Give yourself four weeks for your body to acclimatise to exercise and your healthy eating plan. This time will allow for you to improve your muscle function and mass. Then if you haven’t already, you will begin losing weight.

Remember weight is only one piece of the puzzle. I personally recommend you pay more attention to your shape, how you feel and your clothes sizes and fitting. Get out of the old mentality of weighing yourself every day. Weigh yourself once a week maximum. Give yourself a pat on the back if you have lost 1-2lb. When you repeat that for 6 months and you will have lost 2-3 ½ stones and that is significant. You will have better lean tissue and essentially you will have actually built up a permanent habit / lifestyle, meaning the chance of putting the weight back on is dramatically decreased.

In conclusion

·        Build muscle mass to loose fat.

·        Don’t panic if you haven’t lost weight in the first 4 weeks. See it as your body stabilising so be patient.  

·        Understand the difference between lean weight and body fat weight.

·        Avoid becoming depressed if you haven’t lost weight on the scales – think long term.

·        Look for other improvements and differences rather than depending on scales.

 

I hope you find this article useful.

 

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www.jwcorept.co.uk

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https://twitter.com/Jamieleeweller?lang=en-gb

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFEruBvdAdIHzZObByQipTQ

 

Jamie-lee

JW CORE