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Coach’s Daily Dose: Armed and Dangerous

Posted by Debby Ridgell on May 7, 2012
Posted in: Coach's Daily Dose, Physical Activity. Tagged: arm exercises, bicep, dumbbells, medicine ball, toning, tricep. Leave a comment

“I want to be armed and dangerous,” I told Coach Stacy when I arrived for my workout last Monday.  

“Excuse me?” she replied.

“I need killer arms for my vacation next month,” I explained.

“One month?” she intoned.  “You’re giving me one month to get your arms in shape?”  I could see Coach’s sadistic juices already beginning to flow.  She loves a fitness challenge.

But a tall order it was indeed.  “Killer arms” don’t develop overnight.  The plan Coach Stacy devised for me called for increased daily cardio, more protein in my food diet and some strength training exercises specifically geared for toning my arms. 

She also loaned me one of her exercise DVDs to take home.  “Work out to this three days per week.  It’s only twenty minutes but it’ll really help define the muscles in your arms.  People will start mistaking you for Jennifer Aniston.” 

Coach cracks me up sometimes.  Jennifer Aniston.  What a hoot…….

The next time I saw Coach she inquired how my arm makeover was progressing.  I flexed my newly rediscovered right bicep by way of encouragement.

“How did you like the DVD?”

“It was great, Coach.  I did it for thirty minutes three times last week.”

Thinking she’d caught me in a little fib, she replied, “Well, that’s interesting, seeing as how it’s a twenty minute DVD.”

“Well, yea,” I quipped, “The DVD lasted twenty minutes, but my arms kept jiggling for ten more minutes.  That had to count for some calorie burn!”

Coach Stacy says that many of her clients cringe at the thought of wearing tank tops.  But with the help of a 20 pound medicine ball and a couple of sets of dumbbells, Coach’s “Armed and Dangerous” workout will have you going sleeveless all summer long:

Medicine Ball:  Use a 10 to 20 pound Medicine Ball.  Coach likes the very popular balls with handles.  You’ll perform a routine of three separate exercises, with 10-15 reps of each, and try not to rest in between.  Repeat the routine one to three times, resting at least one minute between each set.

    • Bicep Curl:  While standing, hold the Medicine Ball with both hands, arms extended.  Bend your arms at the elbows up toward your shoulders, keeping elbows at your side, and slowly return to the starting position.
    • Shoulder Press:  While standing, hold the Medicine Ball with both hands, elbows bent, and the Ball close to your chest and chin.  Lift the Ball up, and extend your arms as though placing an item on a high shelf, and slowly return to the starting position.
    • Overhead Tricep Extension:  While standing, hold the Medicine Ball with both hands above your head, arms extended.  Bend your elbows back and then bring the Ball back behind your head, and slowly return to the starting position.

Dumbbells:  Select a weight of Dumbbells that you can lift 10-15 times.  You’ll perform a routine of three separate exercises, with 10-15 reps of each, and try not to rest in between.  Repeat the routine one to three times, resting at least one minute between each set.

    • Bicep Curls:  You can do these sitting or standing, single or double.  With dumbbells in each hand, bend at your elbows and raise the weights toward your shoulders, keeping your elbows at your side, and slowly return to the starting position.
    • Tricep Extension (choose one):  You can either use a dumbbell or – if you’re working out at the gym – you can use a Cable Tricep Pushdown. 
      • Kickback Extensions:  Bend forward at the waist while holding a dumbbell. Keeping your elbow at your side, extend forearm up and slowly return it back.
      • Overhead Tricep Extension:  Hold a single dumbbell with both hands above your head, arms extended.  Bend your elbows back and bring the dumbbell behind your head, and slowly return to the starting position.
      • Push Ups:  For a change of pace, or if you’re lacking equipment, all you need for this one is you and the floor.  For beginners, Coach recommends bent knee Push Ups – just remember to keep your rear down.
    • Shoulder Punches:  Select a weight of dumbbell you can use to “punch” 10-15 times.  With a dumbbell in each hand, assume a boxing stance and extend one arm at a time in a punch toward the sky.

Coach Stacy also recommends “Super Sets,” in which you work opposing muscle groups with no rest in between.

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Coach’s Kitchen: Healthy Recipes from South of the Border

Posted by Coach Stacy on May 4, 2012
Posted in: Coach's Kitchen, Diet & Nutrition. Tagged: low-fat recipes, Mexican food. Leave a comment

Celebrate big this Cinco de Mayo – without biggy-sizing your waistline – with these low-fat and tasty recipes:

Chorizo Migas from www.eatingwell.com

8 oz Mexican-style chorizo, casings removed

1 onion, chopped

2 poblano peppers, chopped

1 tablespoon canola oil (optional)

6 corn tortillas (5-6 inches) torn into bite-size pieces

1 32-oz carton liquid egg substitute

½ tsp dried oregano

½ tsp salt

½ tsp freshly ground pepper

½ cup chopped cilantro

Fresh salsa for serving (optional)

Cook chorizo, onion and peppers in a large nonstick skillet over medium heat, stirring occasionally, until the chorizo is cooked and the vegetables are softened, 6-9 minutes.  Remove to a bowl using a slotted spoon.  Discard all but 1 tsp of fat from the pan; if there is no fat in the pan, add 1tsp canola oil.  Add the tortillas and cook over medium heat, stirring often, until beginning to brown and lightly crisp, 4-6 minutes.  Meanwhile, whisk egg substitute, oregano, salt and pepper in a medium bowl.  Once the tortillas are browned, add the egg mixture and the reserved chorizo mixture to the pan; cook, stirring occasionally, until the eggs are set, 4-6 minutes.  Remove from the heat and stir in cilantro.  Serve with salsa.

 Per serving:

275 calories; 15 g Fat, 26 mg Cholesterol; 12 g Carbohydrates; 22 g Protein, 2 g Fiber; 706 mg Sodium; 581 mg Potassium

Low Fat Tamale Pie from http://lowfatcooking.about.com

 1 medium onion

1 large green pepper

1 pound extra-lean ground beef

1 Tbsp chili powder

1 16-oz can corn

1 28-oz can crushed tomatoes

1 4-oz can jalapenos

1 4-oz can sliced olives

1 ½ cups cornmeal

1 tsp salt

1 quart fat-free milk

½ c reduced fat shredded cheese

Preheat oven to 400 degrees.  Sauté onion and pepper in a large skillet over medium heat, crumble beef and cook until no longer pink.  Add chili powder, corn, tomatoes, jalapenos and olives.  Simmer for 20 minutes.  Transfer to an 11X7 baking dish.  Meanwhile, combine cornmeal, salt and milk in a 2 quart saucepan.  Heat on medium and until thickened, stirring almost continuously.  Spread cornmeal over top of the meat and vegetables.  Sprinkle with cheese.  Place in oven and bake for 20-25 minutes, until top is golden.

Per serving:

369 Calories; 8.3 g Fat; 42 mg Cholesterol; 664 mg Sodium; 49.5 g Carbohydrate; 6.8 g Fiber; 23.9 g Protein

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Ask Coach Stacy: How to Squeeze Your Rear Back into that Swimsuit

Posted by Debby Ridgell on April 30, 2012
Posted in: Ask Coach Stacy, Diet & Nutrition, Physical Activity. Tagged: Bikini ready, butt exercises, donkey kicks, squats, step ups. 1 Comment

Q:  For our 20th anniversary, my husband surprised me with a vacation to Hawaii, which is wonderful, but the very thought of trying to fit my backside into a swimsuit that I’d look halfway decent in makes me want to cry.  The problem is that between my job and chasing after my kids, I just don’t have time to try to get in shape.  Our trip is less than a month away – HELP!  – Janice, Colorado Springs

A:  Janice, quit wasting your time with excuses and start spending it on productive exercise and a healthy food diet.  Even thirty minutes a day will set you on the right path toward a firmer, leaner physique.  Make a conscious choice to take time each and every day for exercise as well as preparing and packing low-fat, nutritious meals and snacks.  Think you can’t work out because of soccer practice or carpool?  Set your alarm 30 minutes earlier and do some lifting or cardio first thing in the morning.  Your lunches are from the office vending machine because deadlines are looming?  Take 5 minutes at night to pack and refrigerate a healthy lunch that you can eat at your desk while you work.

And don’t worry – you still have plenty of time to slim down your backside and make it “swim-suit ready.”  Try this plan of attack 5-7 days of the week for the next four weeks:

  • Start with 20 minutes of cardio – walking, running, or elliptical machine
  • Finish with 10 minutes of exercise geared specifically for firming your rear.  Try some of these moves:

Walking Lunges:  Start by standing up straight, feet shoulder width apart.  Step forward with your left leg and allow your right knee to almost touch the floor.  Now push off and bring your right leg forward to meet your left.  Repeat with right leg, traveling forward at least 30 feet.  Do 2-3 sets.

Step Ups:  Position yourself behind a platform or step, feet shoulder width apart.  Plant your right foot on the step and lift up.  Slowly step back down and repeat 15 times with right foot then switch to the left foot.  Do 2-3 sets.

Walking Kicks:  Stand up straight with arms to your sides.  With knees completely straight, kick your right leg up and touch your toes with your outstretched left arm while taking a step forward (think “goose step”).  Repeat with your left leg and right arm.

Donkey Kicks:  On an exercise mat, get down on all fours.  With your right knee bent, left your leg behind you so that the bottom of your foot is reaching toward the ceiling.  Squeeze your glute muscles while lifting your leg.  Return to the start position and repeat 20 times then switch to your left leg.  Do 2-3 sets.

Squats:  Stand up straight with feet shoulder width apart.  Slowly lower your bottom as though you’re sitting in an imaginary chair (if balance is a problem for you, you might do this exercise in front of a real chair or bench).  Try to go low enough so that your thighs are parallel to the floor.  Push through your heels to rise back up to the starting position.  Repeat 10 times; do 2-3 sets.

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HealthyLib: Resources for Kick Starting Swimsuit Season

Posted by Debby Ridgell on April 28, 2012
Posted in: Diet & Nutrition, Health & Fitness Library, Physical Activity. Tagged: bikini workouts, body sculpting, exercise, fitness books, fitness library, strength training. Leave a comment

Ready to carve out your beach body?  Look for these books and DVDs at your local library or bookstore:

 Six Weeks to Skinny Jeans:  Blast Fat, and Lose Two Jean Sizes by Amy Cotta

 Bikini Bootcamp: Two Weeks to Your Ultimate Beach Body by Melissa Perlman

 Tank Top Arms, Bikini Belly, Boy Shorts Bottom: Tighten and Tone Your Body in as Little as 10 Minutes a Day by Minna Lessig

  Self: Bikini Ready Fast

 Crunch: Bikini Body

You’ll also want to check out these web articles:

Bikini Workout: Get Beach Ready with 10 Exercises from Sparkpeople.com

Exercises for Bikini Season from Livestrong.com

Now start working out already!

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Coach’s Daily Dose: Your Game Plan for Becoming “Swimsuit Fit”

Posted by Coach Stacy on April 26, 2012
Posted in: Coach's Daily Dose, Diet & Nutrition, Physical Activity. Tagged: Bikini ready, fitness, physical activity, swimsuit. Leave a comment

I’m not sure which scares me more:  Me trying to squeeze my winter belly into my swimsuit, or me, appearing in public in that swimsuit.  Either way, this is an anxious time, indeed, as we ease out of winter hibernation, bulky sweaters and fleece and into the warm days of summer, shorts and bikinis.  Now, it’s not like I’m preparing for a cover shoot for the SI Swimsuit Edition, but I would like to be able to step out of the shower without scaring the daylights out of myself when I look in the mirror.

Truth is I gave up on bikinis years ago after giving birth to my daughter Presley.  But when I dragged my one-piece out the other day and hung it up, I’d swear the thing took one look at me and started laughing.   “Yep,” I replied, “We have a lot of work to do before we’re seen in public.”

The formula for preparing for swimsuit season is the same for losing fat:

Healthy Food Diet + Weight Training + Cardiovascular Exercise = Swimsuit Fit

Now, if you start this week, you still have plenty of time to give those extra pounds the boot.  I have designed a 5-Step Game Plan for burning off your winter calories, building muscle and losing the belly fat.  In this plan, your food diet and exercise must team up together to support one another with the right amount of fuel and exercise.  Remember that the body can only lose up to two pounds of fat per week without losing muscle along with it.  

Step 1- Establish your motivation

  • Hang your swimsuit where you can look at it everyday, expecting to wear it soon
  • Display a picture of yourself – one that reminds you of how you want to look
  •  Find a motivational quote and make it your mantra

 Step 2- Commit to a realistic plan and set your goals to make you accountable

  • Tracking in a journal everything you eat and drink, as well as your exercise will  help you lose weight twice as fast
  • Organize how you plan to achieve your swimsuit goal so you are prepared
  • Set your schedule and your attitude for exercise fun

 Step 3- Dump the junk!

  • Watch the soda, coffee, juice and sports drinks as they can be loaded with calories
  • Limit your alcohol consumption
  • Limit processed  and artificial foods and eat more natural foods like fresh fruits and veggies
  • Load your refrigerator and pantry with healthy choices readily available for that snack attack

 Step 4- Get moving and get losing

  • Unplug – Your TV, your computer, your cell phone, tablet and iPod.  Get up and get active.
  • Build up to achieving  10,000 steps or 5 miles a day in your lifestyle and activities
  •  Get outside – Try activities in the sunshine and fresh air

Step 5- Add some muscle power 2-3 days a week that includes  push (pushups, squats, lunges), pull (pull ups, sit ups) and twist moves

  • Sign up for a mini boot camp in your area
  • Circuit train using a combination of weight machines and cardio equipment
  • Add functional training exercises such as kettlebells, medicine balls, cables, Bosu and dumbbells as they mimic natural body movements

Follow these five steps and you’ll not only get a jump on swimsuit season, you’ll also be well on your way to improved overall health.  Always remember:

When you’re moving, you’re improving!

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Coach’s Kitchen: Earth Day Salmon

Posted by Debby Ridgell on April 20, 2012
Posted in: Diet & Nutrition, Healthy Recipes. Tagged: Coach's Kitchen, diet and nutrition, recipe, salmon. Leave a comment

 

Try this “Earth Friendly” meal in celebration of Earth Day on Saturday, April 22.  Adapted from www.allrecipes.com:

2 Tbs lite olive oil

4 (8 oz) salmon fillets

4 medium potatoes, peeled and sliced

2 large red onions, sliced into rings

1 jarred roasted red pepper, drained and cut into strips

8 oz Portobello mushrooms

1 Tbs fresh lemon juice

Morton Lite Salt and pepper to taste

1 Tsp sesame oil

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Coat the bottom of a 9X13 inch baking dish generously with olive oil.  Arrange potato slices in a layer on the bottom of the baking dish.  Season with a little salt and pepper.  Place a layer of onions over the potatoes, then a layer of roasted peppers, seasoning each layer with salt and pepper as desired.  Place salmon fillets over the vegetables in the dish, and season with lemon juice, salt and pepper.  Place whole mushrooms over the fillets and drizzle them with sesame oil.  Bake for 45 minutes.  Fish should flake easily with a fork and potatoes should be tender.

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Diet 411: Diet Dateline

Posted by Coach Stacy on April 18, 2012
Posted in: Diet & Nutrition, Diet 411. Tagged: diet, history, weight loss. Leave a comment

For the overwhelming majority of human history, man has been driven by the singular need of acquiring more food.  More protein, more sugar, more carbs – more of anything that’s edible in order to stay alive.  And then – boom – along came King William I, or William the Conqueror, England’s first monarch.  William was a rather……large……man and when his corpulence rendered him unable to mount his horse, he went on the first recorded weight loss diet in history.  Unfortunately, little was known about diet and nutrition in those days and the good king decided to commence a liquid diet – as in the liquor variety.  As would be expected, the diet did him little good and when William passed away — ironically enough, from falling off his horse — his corpse had to be squeezed forcibly into a casket.

Fast forward about a thousand years to Horace Fletcher, a Victorian era weight-loss  aficionado.  Fletcher advocated the chewing of food 32 times before swallowing – a practice which became widely known as “fletcherizing.”  Nick-named “The Great Masticator,” Fletcher’s ideas were supported by many prominent personalities of the early 1900s, including John D. Rockefeller and Upton Sinclair.  Fletcherizing, it was argued, would lead to the consumption of less food, thus promoting better health.  Some of Fletcher’s ideas were before their time.  For example, he also argued that one should never eat unless truly hungry and that “emotional” eating – or eating when angry or sad – should be avoided.  These suggestions are standard fare in today’s diet books.

By the time Fletcher died, the idea of weight loss via dieting had taken root in the American psyche and led to a host of dieting milestones over the course of the next fifty years:

  • 1918 – Publication of America’s first best-selling diet book, Diet and Health, With Key to the Calories by Lulu Hunt Peters
  • 1919 – Health-O-Meter pioneers the first mass market bathroom scales
  • 1928 – Lucky Strike cigarettes launches the “Reach for a Lucky instead of a sweet” weight loss campaign
  • 1930 – The Grapefruit Diet, also known as the Hollywood Diet, is all the rage, calling for consumption of a mere 585 calories per day consisting of grapefruit, black coffee, melba toast, green vegetables and eggs
  • 1942 – The first standards of ideal body weight are published by Metropolitan Life Insurance
  • 1951 – The Jack LaLanne Show debuts as the first ever television exercise program
  • 1958 – Saccharin is approved for use as an artificial, non-caloric sweetener for foods
  • 1963 – Sugar-free Tab is introduced by Coca-Cola
  • 1967 – Twiggy becomes the world’s first supermodel and her waif-like 5’7” 92 lb. frame  is popularized

Stay tuned for future Diet 411 posts as we explore the pros and cons of dozens of popular weight-loss fads and diets.

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Recess: Walking the Plank

Posted by Debby Ridgell on April 16, 2012
Posted in: Physical Activity, Recess. Tagged: Coach Stacy, core, fitness, Pilates. 6 Comments

I’ve missed a lot of workout classes in the last couple of weeks.  Sometimes life “happens” and fitness takes a necessary back seat, and before you know it, well, spandex is no longer an option.  But I heard through the grapevine that these have been good workouts to miss.  Coach Stacy, all fired up over core fitness, has rather sadistically been testing some of her ideas on human subjects.  I thought I’d dodged a bullet but it turns out I was somewhat premature in my celebratory relief.

Last night, Coach phoned.  “Come over to my house – I have a surprise for you.”

 “Can’t tonight,” I said.  “I’ve got a gazillion emails to attend to.”

No response.  “Coach?  Coach, are you there?”

The line was dead.  I could have called her back and argued my premise.  But I knew that in the long run I’d still wind up over at the Fowlers’ house.  Coach typically doesn’t take “no” for an answer, so why waste my breath?

Upon arriving, I was immediately led up to the Fowler loft, where prominently situated in the middle of the room were a brand new elliptical machine and…….something else, which was hiding menacingly beneath a sheet.  Suddenly sensing grave danger, I muttered, “Nice elliptical,” and turned to leave.

 “Freeze!” Coach barked.  “I want to show you my new toy.”  With a quick flip of the wrist, Coach snapped up the sheet.  “Ta-da!” she announced with outstretched arms à la Vanna White revealing the completed phrase.

 “What…….what is it?” I stuttered.

The contraption was hideous, like something from a medieval torture chamber.  It seemed to be part table, part trampoline, with a ghastly array of stirrups and pulleys, springs and runners.

Evidently my instincts for self-preservation are not particularly advanced because I stood there paralyzed, staring mutely at the contraption, rather like a deer in headlights.

 “Take your shoes off, Ridge.  Time to work your core,” Coach ordered.

One minute later I was lying face up on Coach’s Aero Pilates Performer machine, arms locked in the stirrups, performing a variety of pulley exercises such as Arm Circles and Bicep Curls.  Coach had coined clever names for some of the drills, like “Hug a Tree,” and “Salute.”  Of course, I had a salute in mind, but not necessarily appropriate for general audiences.

After the arm circuit, Coach started me off on the leg routine – Leg Circles, Leg Extensions, and the like.  Coach had just demonstrated the “Nordic Walk,” when her phone rang and she disappeared rather abruptly to answer it.  Unfortunately, I’m prone to mishaps when working out unsupervised, and sure enough, while “walking Nordicly,” my foot slipped through the stirrup and I wound up a bit cockeyed on the table.  Trying to right myself, my other foot slipped and before I knew it, I was hanging upside down off the table, legs knotted in the stirrups and arms flailing wildly like the unwitting safarier dangling from a snare in a Tarzan movie.

 “Ridge, stop messing around,” Coach chastised upon her return.  “Now let’s start on your stomach.”

For the next twenty minutes I grunted through a series of exercises that increased in difficulty with each maneuver.  I remember thinking at one point, Good Lord, this thing is from the Middle Ages.  I am being tortured on a rack.  Finally, I completed the entire Pilates circuit and Coach helped me up off the table.  I was lacing my tennies back up and preparing to leave when Coach said, “Now it’s time for planks.”

 “Huh?”

Before I could escape, Coach had me on a floor mat, performing every type of plank known to human kind:

  • Front planks – “Ridge, get that butt down.  Don’t you want your abs to look like Jillian Michaels’?”
  • Side planks – “I found this in my Shape magazine.  Pretty cool, huh?”  Note to self — cancel Coach’s Shape subscription…..
  • Seated planks – “Lift higher, Ridge.”  I might as well have had the anchor to the Titanic tied to my rear…..
  • Walking planks – “Get those arms up, Ridge.”  Really?  Surely, walking the plank into shark infested waters would   have been more merciful.

On and on it went.  Bird-dog planks, fire hydrant planks, marching planks, mountain climber planks.  I learned recently that 29 different muscles are activated when one is working out one’s core.  By the time we were finished, I felt as though 129 muscles were screaming in concerted agony – muscles I never knew I had.

At various times during her workouts Coach has this annoying habit of asking her clients, “Where are you on a scale of 1 to 10?”  It’s just her subtle way of knowing how close she is to finishing you off.  It’s a trick question, really.  If you answer “6” or “7,” she concludes you’re being cocky and proceeds to try to beat you up a little more.  If you answer “11,” Coach tells you to “Cowboy Up” and it’s off to the rodeo.

 “Where are you Ridge, scale of 1 to 10?” Coach asked.

Gasping for breath, my core feeling like jello, I panted, “Like….around….a million.”

Five minutes later I was heading out the Fowlers’ front door.  “Good job,” Coach said encouragingly.  “Jillian would be proud.  Tomorrow I’ll show you some cool moves for your hips and rear.”

 “Jillian can bite me,” I muttered.

But not until I was buckled safely in my car, and well out of Coach’s earshot.  Perhaps my survival instincts are more developed than I previously thought…….

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Coach’s Kitchen: Debby’s Healthy Deviled Eggs

Posted by Debby Ridgell on April 4, 2012
Posted in: Diet & Nutrition. Tagged: Coach's Kitchen, deviled eggs, healthy. Leave a comment

Serve these healthy treats at your Easter celebration this weekend:

1 dozen eggs

5 Tbsp light mayonnaise

1 tsp mustard powder

1 tsp Morton Lite Salt

½ tsp pepper

Paprika

Hard boil the eggs then peel and cut them in half lengthwise.  Carefully scoop out the yolks into a bowl, setting the egg white halves aside.  Crush the yolks then add mayonnaise, mustard powder, salt and pepper.  Mix until smooth and creamy.  Carefully spoon or pipe the yolk mixture back into the empty egg white halves.  Sprinkle each egg half lightly with Paprika.  Chill for 1 hour then serve.

Per Serving (1/2 egg)

Calories: 51; Proteins: 3.6 g; Cholesterol: 108 mg; Sodium: 97 mg; Total Fat: 3.4 g (0 trans fat)

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Coach’s Daily Dose: The CORE of the Matter

Posted by Coach Stacy on April 3, 2012
Posted in: Coach's Daily Dose, Physical Activity. Tagged: core, physical activity, planks. 1 Comment

Your core is the first thing people notice about you – think of it as your body’s business card.  It’s your center of gravity; the epicenter of where all of your movements originate.  Your core, also known as the lumbo-pelvic-hip complex, is composed of 29 muscles — not just the abs — that attach to the spine and the pelvis. Your posture partners up with your core to work in harmony in your daily activities from work to play.  So it makes sense to work the body parts that give you better balance, stability and agility no matter what your age.  A strong core can be just the performance edge you need. 

Conversely, a weak and neglected core can quickly sideline you – that’s why over 80% of adults have experienced back pain.  In fact, low back pain is 2nd to the common cold as a cause of lost days at work.  Every movement you make starts in the core from the simple act of reaching for a glass of water, to getting out of a chair, to running in a game.  Strengthening the core involves more than just floor moves; it’s about moving our bodies through different planes that mimic how we work and play.  How is your core working for you?  

As a personal trainer and coach it is my desire to help you strengthen your core and get in shape for a long and healthy life.  The exercises below can be performed 2-3 times a week. You can do core exercise no matter where your travels take you, as long as you have access to a carpeted floor or mat.  As your core improves, you will find it easier to do your daily tasks and physical activities. You will also notice improved posture, a stronger back and overall sense of muscle support. Work your core and eat a healthy food diet and that belly fat that’s been plaguing you all these years will begin to shrink as your performance improves.

Start adding some of these exercises into your daily routine.  But before beginning any new exercise program always consult your physician. If you experience any discomfort stop the exercise or try doing a modified version. Most of all always know that “when you’re moving you’re improving.”

 Core Exercise Standing Warm-ups:  10 minutes, 1 set – 10-15 reps each side

  1. Leg swing standing – 1 leg at a time.
  2. Standing bicycle peddling – 1 leg at a time.
  3. Soccer kicks low and sweeping.
  4. Arm Circles – front and back.
  5. Side bends.
  6. Knee/toe touches.
  7. Shoulder rolls followed by shrugs.
  8. Torso Twist helicopter – slowly twist and swing arms and torso to each side.
  9. Neck Leans – with head centered slowly lean to each side, front and back holding the lean for 10-12- seconds each side. Return to center each time.
  10. Hula pelvic circles each side.
  11. Swim strokes – Vary some dry land swim strokes such as the crawl, breast and backstroke.
  12. Boxing – Vary punches straight, up and undercuts.
  13. March – lift knees hip high and march around straight or in circle.
  14. Butt kicks – In place or walking try to imagine your heel kicking your butt.

Do each of the following core exercises 1-3 sets/times. Gradually build up to 10 to 15 repetitions as your strength improves. Avoid any exercise that is contraindicated.

Strength Training/Core Standing

  1.  Golf Swing Motion or wood chops reaching up and down to each side.
  2. Fan kicks – Sweep each leg from center out then switch.
  3. Platypus walk – Bend knees in wide stance and squat to hips parallel to floor with arms bent in front of you as if in a holdup. Move forward by rotating hips and legs side to side as a unit and pivot from side to side.
  4. Leg kicks front and roundhouse or side kicks.  For an added challenge, do while moving in a straight line.
  5. Good mornings – Stand straight and bend from the hips over until you feel you have to bend your legs and then lift back up and repeat. Try not to round your back.
  6. Single hip circles with one bent knee, sweep from center to out to open your hip.
  7. Standing leg curls – bend knee up and down curling your heel towards your butt.
  8. Standing tall crunch – hands at ears then lift single elbow to opposite knee.
  9. Calves/toe raises – add challenge one leg at a time.

 Strength Training Core Floor Moves

  1. Knee Swish or Segmental rotation – Lie on your back with your knees bent and your back in a neutral position. Tighten your abdominal muscles. Keeping your shoulders on the floor let your knees fall slowly to the left and hold. Go only as far as is comfortable. You should feel a stretch, but no pain.  Return to the start position. Repeat the exercise to the opposite side.
  2. Cat Camel – On all fours, arch your back like a cat and then let it sag like a camel.
  3. The Cobra – To begin this stretching exercise lie flat on stomach, forehead to ground, with arms straight out in front of you. Slide your arms as you slowly raise your upper torso and slowly arch your back then slowly bringing the upper torso back down to the floor. Do not over arch and stop if there’s pain. May be modified to elbows.
  4. Reverse crunches: Lie flat on your back, your hands behind your head. Bend knees 90 degrees. Place hands by side or under buttocks for support and make sure your lower back remains flat on the floor. Tightening your lower abdomen, lift your buttocks a few inches off your hands/floor. Now, contracting your abdominal muscles, lift your pelvis off the floor, bringing your knees towards your chest. Then, without relaxing the contraction in your abs, lower feet to the floor. Then relax by straightening your body out. You can repeat another set or two. Remember to keep breathing during the exercise, and not allow your back to arch.
  5. Super Hero – Lie on your stomach with arms outstretched as if flying like super hero.  Tighten your abdominal muscles. Raise your right arms off the floor and hold for 5 seconds. As an added challenge, raise one arm and opposite leg as if flutter kicking through the air.
  6. X- Factor core firmer – On stomach extend arms and legs to in and out as if making an X.
  7. Pushups – Bent knee or full body with spine straight; modified version – push up on a wall.
  8. Pointer Dog – On floor on all fours, lift opposite arm and leg to horizontal position.  Point, hold, and repeat each side.
  9. Bent Leg Donkey Kicks – On all fours, lift and bend one knee.  Kick leg up to sky and back to chest.
  10. Front planks – Begin with the easiest before advancing to the next. Try to maintain 10 – 30 seconds on each hold rather than how many repetitions.
    • Modified plank elbows – Lie on your stomach. Raise yourself up so that you’re resting on your forearms and your knees. Align your head and neck with your back, and place your shoulders directly above your elbows. Tighten your abdominal muscles and hold. Return to the start position and repeat.  
    • Lift leg to challenge with 5 second hold.
    • Raise your right arm off the floor with 5 second hold. Repeat with your left arm.  
    • Raise your opposite arm and leg at the same time with 5 second hold.
    • Front plank (advanced) in a pushup position with arms straight and hold.
    • Front plank clock – balance on one hand and with opposite hand touch the floor in a circular motion coinciding with the numbers on a clock.
  11. Side plank – The side plank challenges your stability and works the muscles along the side of your body:
    • Side Plank: Lie on your side, raising yourself onto your forearm.  Place your shoulder directly above your elbow, keeping your shoulders, hips and knees in alignment. Rest your opposite arm along the side of your body. Tighten your abdominal muscle and hold. Repeat on your other side. For added challenge, balance on your hand. Raise your hips off the floor and extend your opposite hand toward the ceiling and hold. Repeat on your other side.
    • Modified Side Plank: Do the same actions as above, but with the bottom knee bent 90 degrees.
    • Side plank hip drop – while in a side plank lower hip and then lift up.  Repeat on each side.
  12. Lying Side double leg lifts (QL) – Lie on your side with head resting on our arm or towel. Lift both legs up together off the floor while keeping upper body still.
  13. The Vacuum – This works your deeper abdominal muscles by sucking in the bellybutton like a vacuum. First, get down on all fours. Let your tummy hang down as you take a deep breath. Let your breath out, and at the end of your exhalation, gently draw your bellybutton inward and upward toward your spine. You should feel a slight tightening around your waist — think of it as trying to squeeze through a partially closed door. Hold for 10 seconds, and then rest for 10 seconds. Work up to 10 repetitions. During each effort, your spine position shouldn’t change and you should breathe freely. Eventually, you’ll be able to do this exercise standing up. It’s so subtle; no one should be able to tell you’re doing it.
  14. TIC TOC Abs – Lie on your back and lift both legs straight up with your arms out to each side for balance.  With feet together, move legs from side to side in tic-toc fashion.
  15. Figure 8 – Lie on your back and lift both legs straight up.  With feet together, make a figure eight in the air with your feet.
  16. Russian Twist – Assume a boat pose position and with arms holding a ball or hands together twist to each side while maintaining the boat pose.
  17. Sit and tucks – Assume boat position and slowly straighten legs and arms then tuck back in.
  18. Drawbridge – Lie on back and lift your legs up.  Slowly lower legs a few inches as if lowering a bridge towards the floor and pull legs back up.
  19. Abs crisscross – Lie on back lift shoulders off the floor and touch hand to opposite knee.
  20. Ab Scissors – Lie on your back legs bent 90 degrees and slowly open them like scissors in and out.
  21. Bridge Pelvic Tilt – Lie on your back with your knees bent. Tighten your abdominal muscles. Raise your hips off the floor until your hips are aligned with your knees and shoulders and hold for 3 seconds. Return to the start position and repeat.  Try the exercise with a single leg for added challenge.

Cool Down Floor Moves – Post Work-Out Stretching

  1.  Knee swish or Segmental Rotation – Lie on your back with your knees bent and your back in a neutral position. Tighten your abdominal muscles. Keeping your shoulders on the floor let your knees fall slowly to the each side and hold. Go only as far as is comfortable. You should feel a stretch, but no pain. Return to the start position.
  2. Knee to chest – Lie on your back with one leg straight then bend one knee up towards chest and grab the underside of that knee and repeat both sides.
  3. Rolling egg – Lie on your back with knees bent to chest – arms hug knees and rock back and forth.
  4. Number Four – Lie on your back and bend your knees.  Cross your leg one on top of the other knee so that is looks like the number 4 when you have them crossed. Reach in the circle of the 4 and grab behind your knee pulling it in towards your chest as you stretch.
  5. Hurdlers Modified Stretch – Sit with one leg out and the other flexed in with the sole of your foot touching the inside knee. Lean towards the stretched leg and hold.
  6. Sit and Twist – Put one leg over the other and slowly twist to the opposite side with your arms.
  7. Ankle Circles – Slowly roll each ankle around and then point and flex.
  8. Butterfly Groin Stretch – Put soles of feet together, gently lean forward as you hold onto your ankles.
  9. Shake it out and hydrate – good job!

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