Thank you for your business and sharing your athletic energy with me this year. I appreciate every single one you! What a blessing to continue to work with healthy happy people and see all your body changes. Keep moving, setting new goals & working towards your perfectly balanced selves in side & out.
Love Shari & the girls
Category Archives: Exercise
Pre-Resolution Tips
I would like to share with you these few tips to begin thinking about before the New Year and all the great reflections of your year. Let’s make this New Year the best yet. Thank you for sharing your energy, strength, committing to show up and work hard. I have enjoyed each and every session this year. I am so blessed you are in my life. Thank you for your business and love.
Happy Holidays and a safe fun New Year!
Shari
Despite good intentions (a cleaner diet, a commitment to strength-train), New Year’s resolutions are inherently flawed. Research shows as much: A study from the University of Scranton found that six months into the New Year, fewer than half of us are still on the track we set out on.
Yet the solution isn’t to stop goal-setting: That same study found that having a resolution made a person more likely to achieve success than those who didn’t bother with one.
It might just be that our timing is off. “January 1 is an arbitrary date,” says Damon Bayles, Psy.D., a New York-based clinical psychologist. “If you’re actually committed to your health, and you know that healthy behaviors get tossed to the wayside over the holiday season, why not start now?”
Introducing pre-resolutions: specific goals and plans you can put into action right now. They’ll propel you through the holiday season stronger, healthier, and happier— and that’s important. After all, between November and January, the average person gains about 1 pound. While that doesn’t sound like much, researchers say we usually don’t lose that pound. Holiday weight gain, then, is a major contributor to overall weight gain (and thus diseases risk, like diabetes, down the line).
So set your pre-resolution today and use this guide to stick to it all year long.
1) Build Your Support System: Once you have a specific goal in mind, ID who you need around you in order to succeed. This might include fit friends, a registered dietitian, or a personal trainer, says Bayles. Start your research now and consider reaching out—you’ll beat the crowds and the stress that comes with them. Research from the International Health, Racquet, and Sportsclub Association finds the busiest time of the year at gyms is between January and March.
2) Consider Relapse The Rule: Falling off the bandwagon every so often isn’t the exception, it’s to be expected, says Bayles. Thinking you’re going to make it through the holiday season on a diet of smoothies is not setting you up for success. A better suggestion: Plan indulgences. Building them into your day helps you sidestep debilitating feelings of guilt, says Bayles.
If you’re faced with an out-of-nowhere challenge, use your past experiences to guide your decisions, he suggests. Maybe an a.m. run helped you beat stressful family gatherings last year; so wake up early for some cardio. “Really think, ‘What strategies could I employ to help me through this?’” he says. This kind of thinking, as well as the experiences and solutions you’ll gather throughout the season, will help you tackle issues throughout the year.
3) Find Time For Daily Zen: “After three months of daily mindfulness practice, some of the impacts can be increased concentration, increased attention, decreased anxiety, decreased stress, and increased immune system functioning,” says Bayles. Start now. No matter your goal, guided breathing exercises, classes (like Unplug Meditation), meditations apps like Headspace or Calm, and books can help you build a stronger mental framework to stay fit in the New Year. Don’t throw in the towel if things aren’t coming naturally. “This is muscle that needs to be grown,” says Bayles.
4) Reassess January 1: “Efficacy can get generated for individuals who are successful in this holiday time period,” says Bayles. After all, if you can be healthy throughout December, you can be healthy in January. So use the New Year not as a time to start a new goal but as a time to enter ‘phase 2’ of your original plan, he suggests. Ask yourself: How are you going to continue to manage your goal for the next few weeks and months? What will you do differently? What worked? What didn’t?
Thank you Marie Forleo another great article
http://www.marieforleo.com/2016/12/year-in-review/?utm_campaign=3PowerfulQuestionsToAskBeforeYearEnd&utm_medium=Broadcast&utm_source=Email&utm_term=NewsletterList&utm_content=YearInReview
If you liked this article please be so kind to share, share, share.
Shari
Female Guide to getting lean
I like the following article by breaking muscle. I preach all the time to follow these nutritional guide lines. I would also add to this article work out intensity. You have to push your self in the gym and come out side your comfort zone to really see results quick. I do this myself with as many work outs as I can. It has truly helped me stay fit and feeling great for many years. It is only takes one hour a day!
If you like this article leave a comment below. If you would be so kind to share my website kink I would really appreciate it.
https://breakingmuscle.com/womens-fitness/the-female-guide-to-getting-lean
Have fun and stay motivated!
5 Foot Strengthening Exercises
MOTIVATION
Watch this short clip by Marie Forlio on the Steve Harvey show explaining the Three E’s of motivation.
Stay Motivated you got this!
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Excited for Yaiba Body Bar Training and up coming video
Body fat Calculator
5 simple stretches to a healthier more open you!
Starting Position:
Ending Position:
Place your elbows and hands in front of you, such that your elbows and hands are touching in a ‘prayer-like’ position, but with your elbows at chest-height and hands at forehead height. From this position, move your arms out to the side by slowly squeezing your shoulder blades together until your chest is wide open and you feel a stretch along the entire front of of your chest and abdomen. Return slowly to the starting position and repeat.
Starting Position:
Ending Position:
Begin with your elbows straight and arms crossed in front of you, such that you’re squeezing your pecs together and rounding your shoulders forward. From this position, extend your arms upward and outward, while depressing your shoulders and retracting your chin into a double-chin position. You will be in a ‘Y-like’ position at the top. Return slowly to the starting position and repeat.
Position of tennis ball:
Reduced Tension (Beginner) Position:
Increased Tension (Advanced) Position:
Lie on your back and place the tennis ball just behind your shoulder, about 2 inches from the outer most point of your arm. From here, place your arm into the beginner (external rotation) or advanced (internal rotation) position, and gently rock side to side; gradually increase the amount of weight you’re placing through the tennis ball. By progressing how much pressure you use, you’ll release ‘fascia,’ which is what generally prevents you from progressing when doing a standard ‘stretching’ exercise.
Starting Position:
Ending Position:
Start with your elbows at your sides, hands up, chest big, and shoulders back. From here, slowly raise your arms into the air, while keeping your shoulders down and preventing them from hiking. Also, be sure not to lose your core, in that you’ll want to maintain a light abdominal contraction that prevents your low back from bending. The end position of this exercise is determined by the maximum height you can raise your arms without either of your shoulders shrugging upward. After reaching the top, return to the starting position and repeat.
Position of tennis ball:
Close-Up:
In the z-sit position, roll the ball about 2 inches or 2 revolutions up from your knee, until you find the soft spot in your leg. From there, press down and perform gentle revolutions of the tennis ball until you find the sensitive area; focus on increasing pressure slowly but surely, as you progress through this exercise. By gradually increasing pressure with this exercise, you’ll release ‘fascia,’ which is like the encasement for muscles, organs, and other areas of your body.
By Dr. Kareem F. Samhouri
Doctor of Physical Therapy & Kinesiologist
Advanced hamstring release & full knee extension video
An exercise to perform for great knee health
I came across this exercise while helping some clients rehab there ankles and knees. This exercise helps fire and recruit correct muscles around the knee and leg if done correctly. Try It! Progression is a barbell on bask or 1 or 2 dumbbells in hand.
Did you like this video? If so please leave a comment below and share with your wonderful friends!
My very best to you in health and fitness!
Shari