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July 22, 2021

CrossFit Founder, Greg Glassman, Will Roar Back

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , , , — admin @ 5:09 pm

A new article in the New Yorker, Does CrossFit Have a Future, sounds like a comeback tour of sorts for Greg Glassman, CrossFit’s controversial founder. Glassman tells the article’s author, Matt Horn, unapologetically as is his wont, that he has no regrets.

In his first comments since the sale of his company, Glassman says, “I ran a gym I would join. Formed an affiliate program that I would particpate in..” And he goes on to say, “CrossFit succeeded because I was willing to tell the truth that no one else would tell. The world’s changed and I haven’t.”

 

 

Read CrossFit Founder, Greg Glassman, Will Roar Back at its original source Breaking Muscle:

http://breakingmuscle.com/news/crossfit-founder-greg-glassman-will-roar-back

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July 21, 2021

A Successful Career in Fitness With Tony Gentilcore

In this episode, I’m delighted to join Tony Gentilcore to discuss how he charted his path within the fitness industry and has built a thriving business using coaching, writing, and educating.

 

Read A Successful Career in Fitness With Tony Gentilcore at its original source Breaking Muscle:

http://breakingmuscle.com/fitness/a-successful-career-in-fitness-with-tony-gentilcore

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July 19, 2021

Tapping Into the Power of Identity Is the Secret to Sustainable Fitness

My dad began waking up my older brother and me a few days a week to practice karate and lift weights in the basement in elementary school. While I wouldn’t recommend starting eight-year-olds on weights, these experiences had a lasting impact on me.

I’ll never forget my father bragging to other adults about how much I could lift. This bragging became a point of pride that stoked my confidence and gave me an identity that I wanted to keep.

 

 

Read Tapping Into the Power of Identity Is the Secret to Sustainable Fitness at its original source Breaking Muscle:

https://breakingmuscle.com/fitness/tapping-into-the-power-of-identity-is-the-secret-to-sustainable-fitness

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July 16, 2021

Train Toughness Before It’s Too Late

“Unless we keep the barbarian virtues, gaining the civilized ones will be of little avail.”

– Theodore Roosevelt

Read Train Toughness Before It’s Too Late at its original source Breaking Muscle:

https://breakingmuscle.com/fitness/train-toughness-before-its-too-late

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July 15, 2021

Five easy ways to turbo charge your daily walk

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: — admin @ 3:07 am

With Sydneysiders battling through another lockdown, it can be easy to fall into a trap of not exercising during this period of isolation

However, being stagnant can be a dangerous rut to fall into and can lead to unwanted weight gain or loss, stress, food cravings and altered sleep patterns — but we’re sure you knew that already.

Of course to maintain mental stability, reduce anxiety, boost your immune system and sleep better at night, daily exercise is a must — and for most, right now, a daily stroll is all we’re allowed.

A brisk outdoor walk is a great low-impact way to move your body and the perfect way to break up a long day working from home or home-schooling the kids.

(Getty)

While it might not sound like much of a workout, there are plenty of ways to maximise the efficiency and fat-burning potential of a walking session.

Personal trainer and elite remedial sports therapist Rima Elmowy of Sydney holistic health studio Selph gave 9Honey Coach five tips to turn your daily walk into a mini workout.

1. Practice good posture

When doing any kind of exercise, it’s important to have good form. This prevents injury and helps your muscles get the most out of a workout.

“Pull back and drop your shoulders so they’re not bunched up around your ears,” instructs Elmowy.

“Keep your core tight and your glutes switched on.”

2. Speed it up

“A brisk walk is great,” says Elmowy. “But if you were to power walk more and raise your heart rate, that’s more calories you’ll end up burning.”

Elmowy suggests walking “anywhere from 30-90 mins, most days”, and keeping a pace that elevates your heart rate.

“The more you work in the zone of your heart rate being about 60-70 percent of your maximum heart rate, the better,” she says.

If you don’t have a Fitbit or smart watch, there are other ways to monitor your cardio output.

“Noticing your breath is the easiest way to monitor that,” says the expert.

“It becomes harder to speak in full sentences, and you won’t be able to sing,” she advises.

“If you’re walking with a friend or speaking on the phone and can still maintain a full conversation, that’s when you know you’re not putting in that extra bit of effort to turn it into a workout.”

Alternate jogging and walking to maximise results (Getty Images/Tetra images RF)

3. Switch it up

Implementing some jogging/running intervals into your walk can make a huge difference.

“If you’re in a healthy state where you can jog or run, go for it,” says Elmowy, who recommends the Swedish technique Fartlek training as a good resource.

“It’s continuous interval training,” she explains. “So you may sprint up a hill, power walk across, then run back down.

4. Add in a circuit

To maintain hygiene and safety, you can create a circuit without the need for props. Incorporate some body weight exercises into you walks.

If you pass by a bench or brick fence, try some dips or a wall sit. Alternatively you could try lunging or squatting at different intervals.

“Do a basic circuit of 10 push-ups, 10 sit-ups, 10 squats or lunges, then continue on, with walking being an active recovery between efforts,” says Elmowy.

“You can run or walk for a kilometre, then do a set of burpees,” she adds.

“Be versatile in what you do and you’ll get a good workout either way.”

Add in bodyweight exercises to cross train. (Getty)

5. Use inclines

If you can, find a walking route that incorporates hills and/or stairs to really work those leg and glute muscles and increase your cardio endurance.

“Inclines are great for hitting your heart rate quite high and you’re also getting strength training in there too as you have to apply more of your body into the exercise,” says Elmowy.

6. Take a friend and/or dog along for the fun

Let’s face it, it can be easier to slack off when no one’s watching. So, Elmowy suggests teaming up (at a safe distance) with a friend who has like-minded fitness goals, or bringing along a furry friend.

“If you’re out there and someone else motivates you, you’re more likely to put in more effort, without even realising it,” she says.

“Dog walking is great, it’s a lot more exciting. Her energy is positive so it makes the walk a lot more playful, and gets me moving faster.”

Dogs can be great motivators (Getty)
Jennifer Lopez / Kim Kardashian / Ellie Goulding

Celebrity workouts ranked by calories burned

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July 12, 2021

The Cream Rises to the Top for CrossFit Boxes Post-COVID

Filed under: Fitness — Tags: , , , — admin @ 9:53 pm

Mike Tromello from Precision Crossfit has over 20 years of experience and accolades in sports and fitness. His ability to navigate through tough times and grow his business plays a huge role in his success.

While there are many box gyms closing, he adapts to the circumstances, plans ahead and takes care of his own community. He is one of the go to guys in the fitness industry and has found ways to evolve fitness for all ages and circumstances.

 

 

Read The Cream Rises to the Top for CrossFit Boxes Post-COVID at its original source Breaking Muscle:

https://breakingmuscle.com/fitness/the-cream-rises-to-the-top-for-crossfit-boxes-post-covid

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July 11, 2021

The 4 Stages of Acquiring Skill Sets

When we learn a skill, whether it is sports, music, painting, chess, or something completely different, some experts contend that we go through various stages over time. These stages reflect two things:

  1. Our increasing sophistication relative to the skill
  2. Our metacognitive awareness of that sophistication, or our understanding of our understanding

The Conscious Competence model helps to explain the process by which we move through these stages to acquire a skill and an awareness of our level of acquisition.

Unconscious Incompetence

Unconscious incompetence is the first stage in the model. In this stage, we don’t know much about the skill, and we don’t know how much we don’t know.

In other words, we have only a very rudimentary understanding of what mastery of the skill might entail—and we will eventually find out that understanding is inadequate. We are likely unconsciously incompetent in any arena where we have no experience whatsoever.

Conscious Incompetence

In this stage, we have learned enough about the skill to realize how little we know. Our sophistication has increased somewhat, but so has our awareness of what it would take to get to a level of real sophistication.

This stage can be uncomfortable to enter, because we realize both how little we knew in the previous stage and how much work it will take to progress to further stages.

The Muscle Up is an Acquired Skill

Conscious Competence

Conscious competence is the stage where we find ourselves able to perform the skill increasingly well, but it takes lots of concentration and hard work to do so.

We have a better appreciation for what it would take to become an expert, and while our performance relative to the skill continues to improve, we are also aware of the need to work at the skill as well as the fact that we are doing things differently from the way we used to do them.

Unconscious Competence

Unconscious competence is the stage where our ability to perform the skill has become almost second nature. We improve still further at our execution of the skill and have to use less conscious effort to do so.

Each of us can probably identify multiple domains in which we are in each of these stages. Being in the conscious stages can be a bit uncomfortable. But that also provides an opportunity for us to improve our metacognition about learning different skills, and to broaden our horizons in general.

Understanding where we are in the stages of skill acquisition can help us become comfortable with the discomfort everyone must feel in order to improve.

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3 Ways to Address the Myth of Good Posture

Not many words make people shift in their seats as the word posture does. Probably just reading it made you straighten up. What did you do? How are you sitting now?

When most people think of good posture, they think of sitting and standing up straight with the shoulders pulled back. Trying to maintain this position can be tiring.

Many people give up, falling into the hunched position encouraged by gravity and our screens. Even those who manage to hold themselves in a good posture may experience tension and discomfort. So what’s the point?

The Downside of the Urge to Hunch or Slouch

While attempting to maintain good posture can cause discomfort, it’s better than the alternative. Sitting or standing for prolonged periods without actively engaging our muscles for support leads to an extra load on the joints and ligaments of the spine.

These structures aren’t designed to be loaded in a bent position for long periods, and the additional stress can result in stiffness and pain.

Our spine isn’t the only thing that suffers when we hunch and slouch. When the upper back stiffens, our rib cage and lung expansion are restricted. This restriction limits oxygenation and increases the work of breathing, which can trigger our stress response and impair cognition.

When your upper back rounds and your head sticks forward over your body, tension can develop in the muscles attaching to your jaw and face. This tension can result in the movement of your jaw becoming painful or restricted and contribute to headaches.

Many other hormonal and behavioral effects are associated with bad posture, some of which are discussed in this popular TED talk by social psychologist Amy Cuddy. But maintaining good posture is easier said than done.

To Maintain Good Posture, Avoid the Pitfalls

Many people develop imbalances when they try to achieve and maintain good posture. Imbalances occur when parts of your body that generally work together can no longer cooperate because of a mismatch in strength or mobility.

Imbalances can result in tension and discomfort and cause dysfunction in other parts of the body.

This pitfall comes from how most people think about attaining good posture. A common misconception is that to have good posture; you need to get into a straight position and hold it there while you sit or stand.

When you ask your body to complete a task such as stand up straight, or pull the shoulders back, without telling it how to accomplish this, the body will use the muscles you use the most.

This reliance on strong muscles results in the prolonged use of muscles that are already strong, while weaker groups are neglected. Over time, stronger muscles get stronger and tighter, while weaker muscles atrophy.

For example, if you’ve experienced lower back pain when sitting up straight, this may be because your stronger lower back muscles are working too hard, attempting to compensate for your weaker lower abdominal and pelvic muscles.

The Most Common Imbalance

Your lower back and pelvic muscles are the most common site of imbalance. The muscles that arch your lower back are often overused in many activities, including prolonged sitting and standing, exercising, and carrying.

Conversely, the muscles of your lower abdomen and pelvis are usually under-utilized. This neglect is partly because many of us experience stiffness and rounding in the upper back, and our body compensates for this by overarching the lower back when we ask it to sit or stand up straight. The result is an exaggeration of our natural spinal curves.

When the lower back is over-arched, the pelvis will tip forward, reducing activation in the lower abdominal and gluteal muscles. If left unchecked, this imbalance can contribute to dysfunction throughout the body.

Rethink Good Posture

Instead of thinking of posture as a position, think of it as the balance of strength and mobility across the muscles and joints of your body.

Rather than trying to achieve good posture by sitting or standing up straight, use your body in a way that promotes musculoskeletal balance.

An excellent way to improve posture is to move more. Setting reminders to move regularly by incorporating methods to move more into your day, such as:

  • Vary your work position with an adjustable desk.
  • Use the restroom on another floor, so that you can climb the stairs.
  • Vary the type of manual work you are doing.

A variety of movements will mix up the loading pattern on your body and reduce imbalances.

However, movement without conscious effort is usually not enough to resolve significant imbalances.

Unless we are performing a new type of movement, or consciously activating weak muscles and relaxing strong ones, the body will still use the muscles with which it is most familiar. You may still experience discomfort or tension, even after taking a break to move around.

Actively Improve Posture

Consciously challenging your weaker muscles and relaxing your overactive muscles is the best way to restore balance. But, this is easier said than done.

Overactive muscles are difficult to relax, and underactive muscles are hard to feel and use.

The rest of this post will discuss techniques designed to help you restore balance while:

  • Sitting
  • Standing
  • Performing functional tasks like manual work and exercise

Improve Lower Back Posture

The first step to achieving balance across the muscles of your lower spine and abdomen is to move the area through its full range of motion, rather than to confine it to an arched or slouched position. You can do this with an exercise called the pelvic tilt.

If you have limited control of your lumbar spine and pelvis, you may find the pelvic tilt to be difficult at first.

These exercises are fundamental, and we recommend them for people of all ability levels.

To perform the pelvic tilt:

  • Sit in a comfortable position with your feet on the floor. Place the hands around the hips so that you can feel the bony bit on the front of your hip with your index finger. Wrap your thumb around and feel the bone at the back of the pelvis. Imagine you are holding a big bowl of water in your hands.
  • Tip the pelvis forward as far as you can, as if pouring water out of the front of the bowl. Your lower back will arch, and you will roll forward onto your crotch. Tilting forward will activate the muscles of the lower back while reducing the load on its joints and ligaments. If held for a prolonged period, the tipped forward position will lead to overactivity in muscles of the lower back and front of the hips. The muscles of the lower abdomen and pelvis will be put at a mechanical disadvantage, leading to an imbalance.
  • After you have pushed the bowl forward as far as it will go, roll backward (tipping water out of the back of the bowl) while preventing your chest and upper back from slouching. As your pelvis tips backward, activate the lower abdominal muscles.
  • A useful cue is to imagine that you are using the area underneath your belly button to zip up your pants. Tipping backward and drawing up like this will stretch the lower back and activate the muscles of the lower abdomen and pelvic floor.
  • Sitting in this tilted back position will offload the muscles of the lower back, but may stress the joints of the spine if held for a prolonged period.
  • Rather than arch or slouch, try keeping the back and pelvis in the middle of the two positions. With a neutral pelvis, the load is balanced across the front and back of the trunk. The spine, abdominal, and back muscles all take a share of the load.

Repeat the pelvic tilt five times to activate and stretch both sides of the trunk, and then finish in a neutral position. You can find the neutral by moving your bowl of water to a level position so that the bony bits on the front and back of the pelvis are even in height.

Another way to tell is by looking at the waistband of your clothing. In a neutral position, the waistband usually is parallel to the ground rather than at an angle.

You can perform the pelvic tilt while sitting, standing, or exercising. It can function as a preventative measure or as a technique to relieve pain in the back or hips. It’s one of the best ways to assess and improve the most common site of postural imbalance.

If you have an existing back injury, you may experience some pain when pelvic tilting. This pain is normal. Reduce the range of motion until the movement is no longer painful, and then gradually build it up again.

Or, try imagining that a string is pulling the top of your head to the ceiling, making you as tall as possible as you perform the tilt. This lifting will help to unload the spine and reduce pain.

Another effect you may experience is the feeling of being hunched when you tip the pelvis backward. This feeling is also familiar, and it probably means that your upper back has stiffened into a rounded position. This stiffness may be why your lower back was arching excessively in the first place: to keep your upper back more upright.

Improve Upper Back Posture

Now that you’ve begun to improve your control of the lumbopelvic region, you can move on to the second most common region of imbalance: the upper back and neck.

These areas may feel rounded now that the lumbopelvic region is in a neutral position. You will need to improve their ability to arch if we want to promote musculoskeletal balance.

You can extend the upper back, also known as the thoracic spine, over the back of a low-backed chair.

  • Lace your fingers together behind your head, squeeze your shoulder blades together, and lean back so that the top of the backrest pushes into your back.
  • To emphasize the extension of the upper back, limit arching of the lower back by keeping your lower abdominal muscles engaged.
  • Hold this extended position for about fifteen seconds, feeling a stretch in your chest and upper back.

Stretching the muscles and joints of the upper trunk with the thoracic extension is an excellent way to reduce overactivity. But we still need to strengthen our underactive muscles.

The muscles between and below the shoulder blades are often underused, and activating them can help to relieve upper back, neck, and shoulder pain.

  • With your pelvis in a neutral position, pull the chin back as if trying to be as tall as possible.
  • Then, squeeze the shoulder blades down and back together.
  • The body often compensates for limited movement of the shoulder blades by arching the lower back, so be sure to keep the pelvis neutral.
  • The upper shoulders will also try to compensate during this movement, so remember to squeeze the shoulders down and back, rather than up and back. Perform the squeeze ten times to activate the muscles of the upper back.

There may not be much movement at first, and it will be hard to feel the muscles working..

It’s All About Balance

Good posture is traditionally thought of as standing and sitting up straight with the shoulders pulled back. This is difficult for many people to maintain, and those who do maintain it do so by often overusing their strong muscles.

To improve your strength, mobility, and risk of injury, think about posture as the balance between different muscles and joints of the body.

Improve your posture by introducing more movement to your daily routine and by consciously developing a balance between overused and underused muscles.

When performed regularly and deliberately, the pelvic tilt, thoracic extension, and shoulder retraction exercises will help you achieve and maintain balance without strain and discomfort, making good posture second nature.

Initially, these movements can be made difficult by stiffness in adjoining parts of the body.

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July 7, 2021

Stress Management and Hypertrophy

In this episode, I sat down with my friend and colleague, Tarek Shuhaibar, to discuss the importance of stress management on our overall health, gym performance, and physical appearance.

Read Stress Management and Hypertrophy at its original source Breaking Muscle:

https://breakingmuscle.com/fitness/stress-management-and-hypertrophy

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A Guide to Proper Footwear Selection for Athletes

Social proof is a powerful influencer. We’re wired to think whatever is common is normal and, therefore, can’t be all that bad. Pop-Tarts for breakfast? Why not?

Quit being such a buzzkill, Shane.

 

 

Read A Guide to Proper Footwear Selection for Athletes at its original source Breaking Muscle:

https://breakingmuscle.com/fitness/a-guide-to-proper-footwear-selection-for-athletes

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