Add this challenge to the beginning or end of your workout for an extra cardio boost! Just 10 minutes! We’re capable of doing so many things if we just let ourselves do it! Don’t stand in your own way! Make it happen!
Happy stepping!
I came across this article and I like the points it makes. I want to highlight the word HABITS. Once you commit to a healthy, active lifestyle you form healthy habits to keep up with that lifestyle.
Here are the 13 Habits:
1. Eat a smart breakfast. Individuals who start their day off with breakfast have a reduced risk of weight gain.
Think about it – when you don’t eat breakfast and that hunger bug finally hits – you want to eat ANYTHING and EVERYTHING. Starting your day with a smart breakfast prevents from making a decision based on hunger and not a smart decision.
Examples: eggs with spinach or bowl of whole wheat oatmeal and fruit
2. Listen to internal hunger cues. Learning to listen to your inner cues and not social cues – It’s lunch time I need to eat or the boss brought in doughnuts. Social environments like work and parties can be incredable influences on when, how and what people eat. ues such as social pressures or environments strongly influence when and how people eat. It can become a mindless act – getting candy here or grabbing one more brownie at the office.
Try learning the difference between eating because you are hungry or eating because you are near it.
Tip: To keep yourself honest try keeping a healthy snack, like fruit or nuts, nearby.
3. Avoid skipping meals. According to a study conducted by researchers at Cornell University, short-term food deprivation can lead people to make unhealthy food choices and increase the attraction of high calorie foods. The researchers found that “hungry” participants who did not eat five hours prior to grocery shopping were more likely to buy higher-calorie foods, compared to those who snacked on crackers before shopping. The results confirm the importance of eating before shopping, but also demonstrate that consuming regular meals can promote healthy food choices later in the day.
Lesson: Prevent yourself from the pitfalls of “hungry choices” and stay ahead of your hunger!
4. Eat most meals from home. Eating meals away from home decreases awareness of the calories and ingredients in the meal, as indicated by a 2013 study conducted in popular fast-food restaurants in America. Two-thirds of the 3,385 study participants who ate at a fast-food chain underestimated the calorie content of their meal, with one quarter underestimating by more than 500 calories.
Additional findings in children and adolescents were also published in 2013, demonstrating that eating out at fast food and full-service restaurants increases children and adolescents’ daily energy consumption by 126 to 310 calories. That’s in addition to increasing total fat, saturated fat, sugar and protein intake.
Tip: Pack a lunch! It not only helps you make healthy choices, it saves money in the long run!
5. Load up on plant-based protein. Many individuals who maintain a healthy body weight long-term do so by removing meat from the center of their plate. Studies show that vegetarians tend to have a lower body fat percentage long-term, in addition to lower levels of oxidative stress and cholesterol, compared to their meat-eating counterparts.
Tip: Start shopping in the produce and try to think ahead of meals you can prepare for the week. Planning ahead is super helpful in keeping you on track and prevents you from making unhealthy decisions based on convenience.
6. Avoid foods with added sugars. A diet low in added sugars translates to fewer empty calories and a lower risk of weight gain. A 2013 report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention defines added sugars as sweeteners added to processed and prepared foods such as breads, cakes, jam and ice cream. Some examples of added sugars include white sugar, brown sugar, raw sugar, corn syrup, high fructose corn syrup, molasses and honey. The CDC report stated that an increased intake of added sugars is associated with a decreased intake of essential micronutrients and an increase in body weight. Stick to naturally occurring sugars found in fruit and dairy products and minimize intake of added sugars.
Tip: Natural sugars in fruit and yogurt can give you your “sweet fix” and keep you on track with your healthy lifestyle.
7. Creatively add vegetables. Veggies provide a variety of nutrients for very few calories, which makes them a key component to achieving a healthy weight. Incorporating vegetables into snacks and meals leads to a boost in fiber intake, which is associated with increased satiety and weight loss. Creatively add vegetables wherever you can get them into your diet.
Example: For breakfast, add diced veggies to eggs and a few scoops of salsa.
For lunch and dinner, try making a wrap with collard greens instead of tortillas, or add tomato sauce to a baked potato.
Other ideas including seasoning and grilling an entire cauliflower “steak” or incorporating broccoli or kale into a rice dish.
8. Choose 100 percent over 50 percent whole grain. Science demonstrates that the proportion of grains consumed in the diet is not as important as type when predicting future weight gain. The study suggests that a high intake of refined grains and sweets may predict weight gain, while consumption of refined white bread is associated with larger increases in waist circumference. Obvious sources of refined grains are white bread and bagels, while less obvious sources are hidden in “whole grain” products that are not 100 percent whole grain. Get in the habit of avoiding all refined grains by choosing 100 percent whole wheat or 100 percent whole grain products. The benefits of increased fiber intake will aid with weight-loss or help maintain a healthy weight.
9. Use smaller containers. Those who carefully control the quantity of food they consume generally eat from smaller serving dishes and containers. A 2012 study demonstrated that students consumed twice as much candy when they ate from two larger candy bowls, compared to the small bowl. The findings imply that eating with larger serving containers – plates, bowls, spoons and packages – stimulates food intake. To help curb overeating, switch to smaller containers.
TIP: Measure your food just once and you’ll see how big your portions really are. Once you see that make appropriate adjustments to help you keep your portion sizes in check!
10. Read ingredients before anything else. Check to see that the claims made on the front of the package are justified by the ingredients that are in the actual food product. Focusing on the quality of food first and the numbers second will ensure consumption of nutrient-dense calories. While calorie content does determine weight loss fueling your body with quality calories helps promote healthy choices long-term.
11. Don’t drink calories. Sodas, fruit drinks, specialty coffee drinks, energy drinks – the list of empty calories goes on and on. These popular beverages are exploding with sugar, meaning empty calories that provide no nutritional value. Regular consumption of sugary drinks adds inches to the waistline faster than you can finish a 20-ounce bottle of soda. According to results from 2005 to 2006 NHANES data, 35.7 percent of added sugar in the average U.S. diet comes from soda, energy drinks and sports drinks. An additional 10.5 percent of calories from added sugar are derived from fruit drinks. In total, almost 50 percent of sugar calories in the U.S. come from beverages that lack any nutritional benefits.
TIP: Avoid soda all together, you won’t miss it! There are numerous benefits of drinking water – try for a week swamping soda for water and you’ll see and FEEL the change!
12. Get adequate sleep. Research has shown that sleep habits influence people’s dietary habits. A study published in 2011 followed men and women for six years and found that every additional hour of sleep decreased the incidence of obesity by 30 percent. The underlying mechanism that explains the relationship is not known, but experts suspect it involves hunger hormones such as leptin and ghrelin, along with other physiological factors. Aim for seven to eight hours of sleep per night for optimal health.
Tip: Make sleep just as much a priority as everything else – your body will thank you!
13. Wear a pedometer. Individuals who have a lean shape are often active throughout the entire day, not just during their 30-minute date with the elliptical. In order to achieve optimal health and a slim physique, experts recommend taking at least 10,000 steps per day. Start tracking your steps each day with a pedometer or other devices that increase your awareness of your activity.
Lesson: Be aware of how much activity you are getting throughout a day. Pedometers keep you in check and are helpful tools in accessing your activity level!
Focus Friday: BOOTY
Two moves:
Curtsy lunge
Bridge with kick
Your butt is your largest and strongest muscle in your body so it’s important to work all of the tiny muscles in there!
These moves fire up your abductors, your outer thighs.
On the curtsy lunge keep your, planted leg with the the weight in the heel and spread your toes for support – ALWAYS keeping your knee over your ankle. Angle your lunge behind the planted leg and curtsy – adding the kick is COMPLETELY optional! That adds another degree of difficultly! Once you master the curtsy lunge try adding the kick!
On the bridge with kick – bridge up and keep your core tight and glutes engaged. Bring one leg under and out and it will really fire up your abductors!
Try doing 4 sets of 12 of these using just your body weight!
Your “inner thigh” and “outer thigh” muscles are the adductor and abductor. The inner thighs are called adductors, – to remember this, think you move you leg back toward your body – you’re ADDing it back. The abductors are the outer thigh muscles that bring the leg away from the body.
It important to strengthen these muscles because they keep your hips even. Having weak adductors and abductors can result in compromised stride length and in turn the walking/running gait is hindered and increases the risk of injury.
As we age, it is important to keep the adbuctors and adductors strong to prevent falling and lessen the risk of hip and other lower body injuries.
Since it’s spring break across the country for many kids – thought this was a perfect time to encourage everyone to take advantage of this free time and get active with your kids!
It is obvious that obesity is an epidemic in the United States. Nothing breaks my heart more than seeing an obese child, especially because It is 100% preventable.
Please teach your kids, nieces, nephews, grand kids the importance of a healthy lifestyle. There are so many risks that come with obesity and a sedentary life. Below is an clip of an article I found and based on a study, kids in the ’70s were fitter and healthier than kids today.
Study: The Cardiovascular Fitness of Kids Worldwide Has Declined Since the 1970s
Many kids today can’t run as far as their parents could when they were children, according to a study presented Tuesday at the American Heart Association’s Scientific Sessions 2013 in Dallas. Researchers looked at 50 studies between 1964 and 2010, which covered more than 25 million children ages 9 to 17 in 28 countries. Each of the studies was about running fitness, because, although there are many different kinds of ways to be fit, “the most important type of fitness for good health is cardiovascular fitness, which is the ability to exercise vigorously for a long time, like running multiple laps around an oval track,” states Grant Tomkinson, lead study author and senior lecturer in the University of South Australia’s School of Health Science, in a press release. In analyzing these studies, researchers found that the cardiovascular fitness of kids around the world has lessened since about 1975. Specifically, the cardiovascular endurance of children in the United States dropped about 6 percent per decade, between 1970 and 2000. And today’s kids are about a minute and a half slower in a mile run than kids were 30 years ago, according to the press release.
Kids need to get moving, Tomkinson says in the release, for their current and future health. “If a young person is generally unfit now, then they are more likely to develop conditions like heart disease later in life.”
Help your family and yourself from becoming apart of this statistic!
-Go on a walk
-Go to the park
-Go to the zoo
-Play any sport
-Ride bikes
-Play catch
Get up, get out and get active…
Here is a link to the article: http://health.usnews.com/health-news/articles/2013/11/20/kids-today-are-less-fit-than-their-parents-were
In an article with PopSugar Fitness, Maria Menounos, who has lost 40 pounds and kept it off, offers her 5 weight loss tips.
I thought I’d offer additional support to her tips.
Hope these tips help! Do you have any other tips you like to follow? Leave it in a comment!
Here’s the link to the full article: http://www.fitsugar.com/Maria-Menounos-Weight-Loss-Tips-32987218