Tuesday, March 12, 2013

10 minutes...

10 Minutes is enough exercise to have a positive effect on the body.  10 minutes.  Sure, a bit more is a bit better, but 10 minutes can make a difference.  Most notably, dozens of studies have shown that those 10 minutes quickly turn into 15, then 30, then 60.  One step at a time.
 
A critical consideration is how to spend those 10 minutes.  The following are a few examples for both in the Gym and out of the Gym.  Remember, the 10 minutes does not include warming up before and stretching after. 
 
Take a Walk
 
This one is stupid simple.  The benefits of walking are ignored.  Our bodies are mechanical in design.  Our joints, bones, and muscles are designed to move.  Walking strengthens the muscles of the deep trunk, stretches the lower back and hips, and is a pretty decent fat burner. 
 
Walk around the office complex on a nice day.  Enjoy the weather.  Maybe listen to music or a podcast on you iPod. 
 
Burst Circuit:
 
Take a look at the FitDeck portion of Daily Fit workouts.  Perform these movements as a circuit, by doing 10 repetitions of each movement then immediately moving on to the next . 
 
With 1 minute of rest between circuits you should easily get through 3 or 4 rounds.
 
Stair Climb:

Whether at home, the office, or the mall, walking up and down stairs is a great exercise.  You strengthen all the muscles of the lower body, while simultaneously spiking your cardiovascular response. 
 
If you only have one flight of stairs, climb them one or two at a time, job down, and repeat.  If you have a taller building, take the steps one or two at a time until you make it to the top, then jog back down.
 
Box Carry:
 
Pick up a box filled with reams of paper of files, toss it on one shoulder and do a lap around the office.  These are "loaded carries", and are perhaps one of the most effective total body conditioning tools available.  You'll even look like the "helpful one moving heavy boxes".   Do as many laps in 10 minutes as you can. 
 
An alternative if you're in the gym is a Farmer's Walk, Waiter's Walk or  Rack Walk. 
 
Dumbbell Circuit/Dumbbell Complex:
 
Grab a pair of dumbbells, find a corner of the gym (or house, or office) and blast out a few circuits or dumbbell complexes.  While these options each target a different goal, they're both great at conditioning the body and hitting all the muscle groups quickly. 
 
A circuit involves multiple (5+) movements performed in succession with limited rest.  The goal being to exhaust the muscle groups.  Shoot for rep counts between 6 and 15. 
 
A complex is similar to a circuit, except you use far lighter weights, and rep counts between 6 and 10.  The goal here is amp up your cardiovascular response. 
 
Try these 6 movements:  Dumbbell Dead lift, Push ups, Lunges, Bent-Over Row, Shoulder Press, Jumping Jacks. 
 
2 or 3 circuits, with 1 minute rest in between should be no problem in 10 minutes.   
 
6-5-4 (actually 15 minutes):
 
Choose 3 pieces of cardio training equipment (e.g. rower, versa climber, and stationary bike).  Hop on one for 6 minutes, the next for 5 minutes, and the last for 4 minutes.  You'll hit 15 minutes before you know it. 
 
These are examples of things you can easily do in 10 minutes (maybe 15).  Also, as you start spending more time exercising you can combine the various strategies above to create longer workouts.
 
Contact Fit2You for more information on the exercise tips discussed here today, and remember:  "If you've got it, flaunt it.  If you don't, get it with us."
 
 
 
 
 

Daily Fit March 12

Since 2009 we have provided routine workouts for anyone's use.
Please be advised, exercise is tough. Many of the movements included in DailyFit aren't easy. Even the best trained athletes injure themselves. If you don't know what you're doing, ask someone who looks like they do --and it just so happens that the trainers at Fit2You know what they're doing.
Email us: Info@fit2youfitness.com, we're here to help.
Below you'll find three workouts - Beginner/Intermediate, Advanced, and FitDeck. Don't be cocky...choose properly!
If these workouts are taking you longer than 60 minutes you’re either talking too much, staring at yourself in the mirror too long, or moving too slowly.
Beginner/Intermediate
Dynamic Warmup: 10 Jumping Jacks, 10 Body Weight Squats, 10 Squat Jumps, 10 Hip Bends, 10 Incline Pushups
Activity A: 3 Sets || 15 - 18 Repetitions || 60 seconds rest
1. Squat Thrust + Pushup
Activity B: 3 Sets || 15 - 18 Repetitions || 60 seconds rest
1. Barbell Straight Leg Deadlift
2. Incline Dumbbell Chest Press
Activity C: 3 Sets || 15 - 18 Repetitions || 60 seconds rest
1. Russian Step Up
2. Assisted Chinups
Activity D (Optional):
1. 50 Kettlebell Swings - take as many breaks as needed, but only for 10 - 20 seconds.
Static Stretch
Advanced
Activity A: 10 Sets || 5 Repetitions || Rest as long as needed
1. Double Kettlbell Snatch to Pushpress
Activity B: 10 to 1|| Rest as needed
1. Weighted Chin-Ups
2. Pushups
Activity C: 10 - 1 || Rest as needed
1. Tactical Lunge
2. Ballistic Row
Static Stretch
FitDeck
FitDeck is a unique exercise modality best for those of you with limited space, limited equipment, and/or limited time. FitDeck is designed to combine intense total body resistance training and cardiovascular training; maximizing the time you do have to exercise.
Equipment: 1 full deck of playing cards, 2 dumbbells or kettlebells, or 1 barbell or sand bag.
Instructions: Each Suit is assigned an activity. As you flip through the deck the card number is the number of repetitions you perform of that Suit's activity (J is 11, Q is 12, K is 13, Ace is 1 or 14). For example, If the "diamond" activity is pushups, when you flip 10 of Diamonds, perform 10 pushups.
Take rests as needed, but no longer than 1 minute. Work up to completing an entire FitDeck without rest.
Diamond: Ballistic Row
Hearts : Dive Bomb Pushup
Spades : Prisoner Squats
Clover : Flutter Kicks (per leg)