Rainy Day Workout

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As it is a rainy, gloomy, and let’s face it, a lazy day here in Iowa, it got me thinking of the direct effect of the weather on our moods. Most rainy days bring out the lazy, relaxed moods in even the most energetic of us, which is okay. Go ahead and curl up on that couch and pop and old movie in (my intentions for the rest of the day) but know that you will feel so much better if you get your body moving first, during, or after that spurt of laziness.

Don’t feel like going out in the wet and driving in the rain just to get a little sweat on? NO PROBLEM! Here is an at home rainy day workout that will make you more than a little sweaty!

AMRAP (As Many Rounds As Possible): 15,20,25, or 30 minutes- you choose! Just make it fast and intense

  • 10 burpees
  • 20 jump lunges
  • 30 push ups
  • 40 sit ups
  • 50 squats
  • 60 second plank

*Try adding weights- anything that has weight– to your sit ups or holding during the lunges or squats!*

Being Youthful this Summer

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Summer is amongst us, and for most that means more opportunities to be active. Weather its playing outdoor sports, going hiking or kayaking, or just walking your dog, the summer activities are almost endless.

Have you ever thought about how kids can play outside for hours on end and not seem tired come dinner time? How they can ride their bikes around for miles without complaints of tired legs? Kids are generally beasts in this sense- they can be active for what seems like forever, just because they are having fun. 

Let’s take some advice from kids- being active just by having FUN. Do something that gets you moving, any type of movement, your heart is pumping, and you are smiling ear to ear. Be a KID this summer.

Choose activities that you did as a child or that you would do with a child now, and you’ll be surprised just how good you feel at the end of the day. You’ll be spent, but you’ll be happy. You might be tired, but you also might look forward to doing it again tomorrow.

Now I’m not saying you should try to be a kid all day, because lets be honest- work won’t allow that. But instead of sending your children or your dog outside to play by themselves, join them. It will not only get you active but it will also boost your relationship with them. No kids? Drag your best friend your significant other outdoors with you- house chores can wait, summer is short, so have fun and be creative.

Here are some fun summer activities to try!

  • Rollerblading- a lost art!
  • Family bike rides
  • Backyard obstacle courses
  • Slip-n-slide challenge course
  • A day at the park- play frisbee, tag, heck do yoga
  • Family hikes to a picnic
  • Playing catch- or any sport
  • Building a hop scotch city
  • Relay races- grab a baton and take turns running laps!
  • Walking more places- walk to get some refreshing frozen yogurt, and walk back
  • Pool workouts- make them fun!
  • Establish a buddy system- rely on each other to be active every day by having fun

Eating to Fuel Your Workout and Your Goals: Part 2

By now you’ve have a week to digest what was said in “Eating for Your Fitness and Goals” and have even had a chance to evaluate your current diet (if you haven’t yet I suggest starting a 7 day food and exercise log today to see where you compare in your macronutrient composition). So let’s say you have done a food log and you have evaluated and you realized that your carbs were too low and your fat was too high for example, but now what? You know the percentages of each macronutrient that you should be consuming, but that is a percentage of what?

Eating to Fuel Your Workout and Your Goals: Part 2 is about to go into how you figure your caloric needs daily, and more specifically what kind of deficit or gain you need based on your current diet and your goals.

When it comes to meeting or going above the national exercise recommendations of 3-5X a week of cardio, 2-3X a week of strength and flexibility, exercising a minimum of 150 minutes a week, your diet needs become more advanced and, hefty, than you would think. There is a way to figure out just how many calories you specifically need to have in a day, and I’m just gonna take a stab in the dark here and say that you will realize it is actually more than you thought, or might even be comfortable with.

For example, when I first started using MyFitnessPal it calculated my daily caloric needs at 1,700 kcal a day based on my age, height, gender, and weight. I quickly learned that that was far too low for my heavy lifting, half marathon training, and sometimes 2-a-days that I pull, it just didn’t realize how active I am. SO it is okay to adjust your caloric goals on those apps to tailor to you more specifically.

OKAY, lets get down to it. My nutrition professor gave us a few different equations to use to find daily caloric needs that include activity level, I will show you one below:

Calorie Needs

Harris-Benedict Equation:

  • Adult male REE (resting energy expenditure):
    • 66.5 + 13.7 X (weight in kg) +5.0 X (height in centimeters) – 6.8 X (age)
  • Adult female REE:
    • 655 + 9.6 X (weight in kg) + 1.8 X (height in centimeters) – 4.7 X (age)
  • Multiply your REE by your activity factor:
    • 1.2= bed rest
    • 1.3= low activity
    • 1.5-1.75= average activity
    • 2.0-2.4= highly active
  • Conversions to note:
    • Weight in lbs to weight in kilograms= weight in lbs/ 2.2
    • Height in inches to height in centimeters= height in inches X 2.54

As I said earlier, my fitness pal had me needing 1,700 kcal a day, which I followed for a short while. After doing my equation: [ 655 + 9.6(70kg)+1.8(177.8cm)-4.7(22)= 1,548.34 kcal REE ] X 2 (activity factor)= 3,096 kcal/day.

WOW that’s a big difference! See why its important to know your body? Now since I am not in the interest of gaining or maintaining year round, I do not consume 3,000 calories a day. On my lower activity days when my activity factor is more towards 1.5 I consume 2,000 calories and on my heavier days I get up to 2,500 but usually not more. My reasoning for this is not that I’m always trying to lose weight, but rather I’m just trying to stay healthy, 3,000 calories is just physically too much for my body to handle.

Food Timing:

When you start eating more calories than you used to you also need to change your eating pattern. If I were to consume 2,000- 2,500 calories a day at only 3 meals a day I would have between 600 and 850 calories at every meal. Sure, the average meal consists of 500-1,000 calories, but I would rather not push the higher end. My personal preference is the rule of thumb of eating every 3-4 hours OR as I am hungry. I find that I am hungry after 3 and ½ hours anyway, so this works for me, eating this often prevents my body from going into “starvation mode”. What I mean by this is that having a consistent and constant flow of macronutrients into my body, it is not trying to trick itself into storing extra carbs for example for energy later because it thinks that it is about to go multiple hours without energy. Again, remember this is personal preference

Keep in Mind:

  • As you start to figure out your personal caloric needs keep in mind that exercise is not the only way for your body to spend calories. This is what your energy balance looks like where macronutrients are on the left and energy expenditure is on the right. TEF stands for thermal effect of food, which is the energy your body uses to break down food, and RMR stands for resting metabolic rate and is the amount of energy your body uses just to keep you alive and breathing. View this image as a teeter-totter. For weight maintenance; you should view it as even, for weight loss; the right side should be lower for more calories use, for weight gain; the left side should be lower for more calories consumed.

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  • If weight loss is your goal you should strive for a 300-500 calorie deficit each day NOT a 1,000+ deficit. Also, only expect to lose .5 to 2 lbs at most a week and know that once your body adapts to changes, your rate of progress will decrease
  • It takes time keep it up, keep it positive, and most importantly keep it smart!

Eating to Fuel Your Workout and Your Goals

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Sometimes the hardest thing about making weight loss goals that include both exercise and healthy eating is the balance between the two. To lose weight you need a negative calorie deficit, but when you exercise your body needs more calories in order to properly refuel. SO, before going into any of this lets keep one thing in mind- going back to the ABC’s of your goals- you have to remember balance.

Everybody’s body reacts differently to an exercise and nutrition plan, so often times it takes multiple trial and errors. Me? It took at least 3 different go arounds at reworking my diet to balance out my exercise to find something that began to work, but even still, I am tweaking it.

So lets start with the basics, going back to my sports nutrition class and our segment on macronutrients. Knowing the 3 macros, and how each of them work in your body is the first important step.

Carbohydrates: the body’s main source for energy weighing in at 4 kcals per grams. In other words if you eat a slice of whole wheat bread that usually has around 20 grams of carbs in it, you just ate 80 calories of carbs.

20 grams X 4 kcal/gram= 80 calories

You might be sitting there thinking “oh my gosh that is so many carbs!” because you may have been one of those people that have been bombarding with “carbs are evil” diet plans. Let me be clear to you right no carbs are NOT the devil. Without carbs your body will not, without a doubt, get the energy it needs to power you through even the lightest of workouts. Without carbs your body starts metabolizing fats for fuel and due to the lack of carbs it tricks itself into storing any carbs you might consume, often times causing you to bloat with water weight. It’s quite simple, don’t trick your body, and it won’t trick you.

Carbohydrate requirements:

  • 45-65% of calories
  • 3-5 grams per body weight pound

Carbohydrates and exercise:

  • 4-24 hours before= normal carb intake
  • 0-4 hours before= complex carbs that are low on the Glycemic Index (GI scale), carb rich protein, and 1-4g/kg of carbs
  • During= gels, bars, and drinks are needed only for endurance events, consume water every 15-30 minutes
  • After= consume within 2 hours, sooner if you are working out again in that day. High GI carbs and 1-1.5g/kg

For an example of low vs high GI carbs see link: http://www.the-gi-diet.org/lowgifoods/

Fats: although they aren’t the preferred source of energy for the body, they still provide fuel. Weighing in heavier than carbs at 9kcal per gram, this macronutrient packs more in a punch. In other words, less grams of fat can still provide you the same “amount” of energy as carbs. Let’s take almonds for example, a common healthy snack for “dieters”, a serving of these that usually consist of only 24-30 almonds has 15 grams of fat in it. Meaning that by consuming a serving of almonds you will have eaten 135 calories of fat.

15 grams X 9 kcal/gram= 135 calories.

So there you can see how it is easy to start climbing toward your upper limit of fat calories due to their high nutrient density.

But what about the different types of fat? Trans, saturated, unsaturated, omega’s- what do they all mean for your body?

It isn’t often that I try to limit a food group entirely, but when it comes to trans fat you can do just fine without any of it in your diet. Trans fat comes from the fast food and overly greasy, fried foods that you already know are not healthy for you. These fats are made from partially hydrogenated oil and are essentially a normal (still unhealthy) saturated fat mutated into a different form, a form that your body doesn’t recognize or appreciate. Unless you want clogged arteries or heart disease, you should stay away from trans fats entirely

Saturated fats are another unhealthy fat that shouldn’t make up a majority of your diet, in fact keep in minimal (10% or less of your fat). Foods that contain these fatty acids include fatty beefs, butter, cheeses, and other high fat dairy products. Although it is okay to eat these in moderation, if weight loss is your goal you are going to want to track your intake

The good fats? Let’s talk about unsaturated fats including Omega 6’s. Monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats are 2 forms of unsaturated fats that differ based on their number of double bonds (that is less important to remember, just remember that these are good). These unsaturated fats can actually have health benefits such as improving cholesterol, and reduce your risk for heart disease or diabetes, just to name a few. Mono and polyunsaturated fats typically make up olive oils, avocados, nuts, and even peanut butter. So although these foods might be high in calories including fat calories, they are actually good for you, enjoy and don’t overdo it!

Omega-6 fats, as you may have heard before, are highly found in fishy foods. Also found in flax seed and canola oil, these are another branch of unsaturated fats meaning they also have positive health effects. Omega-6’s should be consumed weekly, if not daily, just make sure to not over consume certain types of fish that can lead to mercury poisoning. For more information see link: http://www.nyc.gov/html/doh/downloads/pdf/edp/mercury_brochure.pdf

Fat requirements:

  • 20-35% of calories
  • Eat fats throughout the day
  • Not important for exercise

 

Protein: Ah, the macronutrient you’ve been waiting for. Weighing in at 4 kcal per gram, all fitness fanatics hail the protein! Yes, protein is essential to keeping your muscles healthy and ready to be pushed to their limits, but be careful not to consume too much in an attempt to gain muscle mass instantaneously. Protein is not a source of energy for the body, only in desperate cases when your body has depleted all of its other nutrients. The main role of protein is acting as a structural component for cells and tissues. It helps to build and maintain muscle and synthesizes hormones involved in energy production. There are different types or protein just as there are different fats, and the timing of these proteins in relation to your workout is important.

Proteins are made of amino acids (AA’s), some “essential” and some “non-essential” or “not produced by the body” and “produced by the body”. Protein foods are also complete or incomplete. Complete proteins have all of the essential amino acids that your body needs, incomplete proteins are missing a few essential AA’s but can be paired with other incomplete proteins to get all of the essential AA’s. Example of complete proteins include most animal meats, and incomplete proteins include oats, beans, peanuts, walnuts, and other seeds.

Protein requirements:

  • Males: 71-100g
  • Females: 55-62g per day
  • Athletes: between .8-1 g/kg or no more than a gram per pound of body weight
  • 15-20% of total calories

Protein and exercise:

  • 4-24 hours before= normal intake that reflects your macro goals
  • 1-4 hours before= 2-4 ounces of lean proteins plus carbs
  • 1-3 hours after= 6-20 grams depending on goals, intake a 3:1 carb to protein ratio (example= 15 grams carbs, 5 grams protein)

 

The take away:

  • Calories in<calories out
  • 45-65% of calories from carbs
  • 20-35% of calories from fat
  • 15-20% of calories from protein
  • Ingest carbs before exercise to fuel your body
  • Ingest a 3 to 1 carb to protein ratio after exercise to replenish your body’s main energy source and protect and rebuild the muscles
  • Drink plenty of water!
  • Oh and remember the ChooseMyPlate food guidance system

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The Power of a Morning Workout

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Do you feel so exhausted right now that the thought of a workout at any time of the day, let alone the morning, makes you just want to fall asleep right where you’re sitting? What if I told you that a morning workout could improve your sleep? Yep, research shows that a morning workout, especially when made a habit, can improve your sleep quality. The research found on WebMD indicates that exercise and sleep correlate, and exercise in the morning sets your body’s internal clock up for a better pattern throughout the day and night.

What’s even better? Other research has shown that better sleep aids with weight loss goals.

So what if you’re one of those “oh, I already have to be at work at the ass crack of dawn so there’s no way I could fit a morning workout in” people? I never said a full hours workout including strength training and cardio is what you need. A little at home workout could be your key! Wake up in the morning; stick a note on that bathroom door to remind yourself to get to work! Make it a 10-15 minute workout, something that will get your blood flowing and wake your body up. Need ideas? Stay tuned for more posts about at home workouts. And if that morning workout doesn’t tickle your fancy enough, there is no one stopping you from getting your usual afternoon workout in after work! And maybe, just maybe, that morning workout will not only make you more alert for the day ahead, but will spill into extra energy for that 5pm workout class.

Oh and did I mention the crowd that you will find if you do head to the gym in the morning? Yeah, you won’t. Because unlike other people, you are beating the clock, getting a step ahead of the game, getting so much more done in those first few hours of your day than others won’t because they are still sleeping in. Yeah, feel empowered and proud

Now I don’t know about you, but it’s about time for me to set my alarm for my morning workout, will you?