Tag Archives: healthy-living

New “Fitting in Health” article!

click here for “Fitting in Health: Age is Just a Number”

or go above to the “Fitting in Health” pull-down menu!

About these ads

CLASSES IN THE PARK!

WEDNESDAYS:

TABATA @530p-620p

Payne Park, Sarasota 

( click for map)

* Please meet in parking lot off Laurel Street, next to the children’s playground.

SUNDAYS:

TABATA @10a-1050a
YOGA FOR ALL @11a-1150a

Summerfield Park, Lakewood Ranch 

(click for map)

* Please meet in parking lot.

*Please check-in at least a day prior via email!*

-

SUGGESTED DONATION:

$10 PER CLASS

($15 FOR BOTH ON SUNDAY)

What is TABATA?

TABATA is timed high-intensity interval training.

Tabata watch

Each exercise – whether it be body-weight, with weights, props, or a combination – is done in 20-second intervals, with 10-second breaks, and a 30-second break between each sequence.  Typically the exercises are done on average of 8 sets; and the 20/10/30 is the most common combination, however, variations do include altered lengths of sets and breaks.  That’s about 4 minutes of each.

  • As a Tabata teacher, I only teach body-weight exercises.  I find that many do not know proper technique and get injured or discouraged, so even though the class is a “boot camp” style, I take my time to monitor form, breathing, and modifications, and adjust accordingly.
  • It is very important to understand and be mindful of the body, all the major muscle groups, posture and alignment, proper breathing, stability, core strength, and be able to pick up oneself off the ground (and that is not just for the older generation).  
  • Essentially, I format my class so that it can be taken by everyone and anyone.  I usually have in class a wide-range of ages, people with different precautions, people with different strengths, and they all get a great workout. (see below: “Should You Try Tabata Training?”)
  • I enjoy mixing up the sequences into split-sets (alternating between 2 exercises), developing on one particular exercise (like different types of squats), and making the class interesting and challenging.
  • The Tabata-style can actually be combined with a wide-range of exercises involving aerobic and anaerobic, or body-weight, free-weights, and machines, ie: 8 sets of sprints followed by 8 sets of pushups, to leg presses….
  • I always end my class with about 5 minutes of stretching.  This important aspect of fitness tends to get left behind with the usual aside, “yeah, I need to do more of that.”

    Prof. Izumi Tabata

Professor Izumi Tabata, well known for his research into high-intensity intermittent training, is a former researcher at the National Institute for Health and Nutrition and currently a professor and researcher at Ritsumeikan University’s newly established Faculty of Sport and Health Science. He created Tabata training originally for speed skaters.  Please visit the Faculty of Sport and Health Science’s English Website for more details.

“The current regime consists of repetitions of 20 seconds of intense work, followed by 10 seconds of rest. This means that, excluding warming up and cooling down, the exercise can be completed in only 4 minutes if repeated 8 times, more than enough to make even a fit person exhausted. The idea has become bigger than I imagined and now if you search this on Google, you will get about 200,000 hits.”

(ref: Izumi Tabata | Featured Researchers | Ritsumeikan University)

While a number of research studies have explored Dr. Tabata’s 20-seconds-on, 10-seconds-off interval training format for cycling and running activities, fitness professionals, athletes and casual exercisers are now applying the Tabata training concept to all kinds of different exercises, including weight lifting, swimming, athletic drills and more.  Unlike other intervals where you just want to “work harder,” by definition, Tabata training is working at an intensity level that is as hard and as fast as you can physically go—generally an anaerobic effort.

Does It Really Work?
A number of studies have suggested that Tabata training does, in fact, work. Further studies have also made a case for Tabata training and other variations of high intensity interval training. A 2007 study in the Journal of Applied Physiology found that seven sessions of high intensity interval training over two weeks resulted in marked increases in whole body and skeletal muscle capacity for fatty acid oxidation during exercise in moderately active women. A 2009 study from the same journal found that young men cycling to maximum effort for four bouts of 30 seconds with four minutes of rest doubled their metabolic rate for three full hours after training. Also, a 2008 study in the Journal of Physiology found that these short, yet intense types of interval workouts can be a time-efficient way to get in shape and may help participants achieve fitness improvements comparable to longer, less-intense workouts. 

Should You Try Tabata Training?
Tabata training promises big results in little time, but true Tabata training requires participants to push themselves to the max—and that level of intensity is definitely not for everyone. Working out at such a high intensity is only appropriate for healthy, intermediate to advanced exercisers who have experience and knowledge in the type of exercise(s) they’re doing. Tabata training takes your body to the extreme, so it’s best if you’ve been working out regularly and are very comfortable with the exercises you’ll be doing (more on that later). This ensures that you have better awareness of how hard to push your body (or when to back off) and that you have the know-how to maintain form (or modify your weight or exercise) when your body tires as you go through the intervals.

With that said, beginners can try Tabata-inspired intervals at a lower intensity that’s more appropriate for their fitness level. However, anything less than maximum effort won’t get the true Tabata training results. As always, if you’re trying Tabata—or any new exercise—for the first time, it’s a good idea to get it approved by your doctor and work with a fitness professional until you feel comfortable doing it on your own.

(ref: Tabata Training 101: Does This 4-Minute Fitness Technique Deliver? – By Jennipher Walters, Certified Personal Trainer and Fitness Instructor)

Try it!

Yoga Poses to Build Strength for Running | Runner’s World Running Times

Here are segments from the great new article on Runner’s World:

Why strike a pose? Studies have shown that yoga squashes stress, aids weight loss, eases pain, helps people stick to an exercise routine, and even improves running times. The strength and flexibility you develop on the mat–namely in the core, quads, hamstrings, and hip flexors–can help you run more efficiently and stay injury-free, says Adam St. Pierre, a coach, biomechanist, and exercise physiologist for the Boulder Center for Sports Medicine.

Additionally, holding challenging poses builds tenacity that’ll pay off on the road. Lauren Fleshman, a two-time national outdoor 5000-meter champion, started practicing yoga after breaking her foot in 2008. But the poses gave her more than just foot strength: “Yoga helps me control my emotions while I’m in discomfort on the road,” she says. “Enduring an intense pose is a lot like enduring a long run or tempo run.”

For all the perks yoga offers, it still requires a cautious approach. Get too ambitious, and you could end up hurt and frustrated. This guide will make easing in easy.

SHOP AROUND

TIME IT RIGHT

BE HUMBLE

AVOID INJURY

via Yoga Poses to Build Strength for Running | Runner’s World & Running Times.

Eli Sapharti: FAT Boy FIT Man

(click the banner to enter the site!)

ELI SAPHARTI’S STORY: (from www.2minutestogreatness.com)

“At  42 years old and I am in the best shape of my life. Just a little over 4 years ago I was in the WORST shape of my life. Not only physically, but also emotionally and mentally. I believe these all go hand in hand.

In 2008 I had ballooned to almost 300 lbs standing at 6′ and my body fat percentage was well over 40%. My blood pressure was elevated, I felt tired all the time, if I walked a flight of steps I would lose my breath, my joints were hurting, and I was always getting some type of flu or cold.

Around March of 2008, shortly before the end of an almost 18 year marriage, I had what many would call an epiphany. One day I looked at myself in the mirror and couldn’t believe how unhealthy and just plain fat I had allowed myself to get. At that moment I knew I had to do something to change this downward spiral and begin setting the right example for my 3 children.  As I thought about past attempts to lose weight I realized that the “quick fixes” and fad diets I had tried, although successful short term, were not going to work if I wanted to make LIFE-LONG changes.

That is when I decided to try a different approach and came up with my ONE STEP AT A TIME = SUCCESS! approach and principles.   Small, consistent changes allowed me to acheive the body I have today 180 POUNDS with 10% body fat. I am also an avid runner having finished my last 10K in 47:43 and my last 5K in 22:01 and two half marathons in 1:49.  All being my personal best times. My drive and passion today is in helping inspire, motivate and teaching YOU that YOU too can achieve a healthy and strong body YOU can be proud of, no matter how much weight YOU have to lose.

JOIN TODAY and allow me to be your own personal weight loss coach.  When I was losing my weight I thought of how nice it would be to be able to get motivated, inspired, educated, pushed, pulled, recipes, eating plans, exercise plans, grocery lists, and someone who just cared enough to contact me on a regular basis to help me reach my goals.

WELL…that is what this site is all about.

I will be your personal weight loss coach. I will call you regularly, I will text you daily, I will send you video clips weekly. I will add articles, videos, recipes, grocery lists, meal plans, exercises and exercise plans each week for you to follow as well as anything and everything you need to help you reach your goal!!!

Join Today. Eli’s One Step To Weight Loss Success!

To watch more videos about Eli Sapharti:  <CLICK HERE>

Be sure to <Facebook Eli> for daily inspiration and motivation

Related articles