Addicted To Stress
Posted by Guru | Tagged as: blackberry, endurance training, exercise, fitness, MIT, New York Times, stress, weight loss, Wellness blog

Thank God! The Times Wellness Blog has been kind enough to post the results of yet another study suggesting that we can get fit in six minutes a week. Think of everything else we will have time for now. More work, more Blackberry, more emails, more Facebook, more Twitter, more blogs on wellness, more reality television. It’s like a dream come true.
Needless to say, I’m bothered yet again. You’d think by now I would stop reading these articles. The truth is–I have. This one was sent to me by my buddy, Seth, so I read it. Some day I will learn. My time could be spent doing other things.
The study is an interesting account of endurance training. The results suggest that endurance gains made through long term training can be matched through six minutes of very intense interval training per week. Great! For all the endurance athletes out there, that is good to know. As I am training for a marathon, it warms my heart to know that, if I am in a pinch, I can train for six hardcore minutes each week and that will benefit my endurance.

Here’s the problem: there is a suggestion, though no proof in the study, that the intense intervals will improve weight loss. Also, there is only brief mention of how INCREDIBLY taxing these all out intense intervals need to be. So Joe Average American is kicking back with the morning coffee and reading that maybe he can get rid of his gut (and 2 out of every 3 Joes in this country has a gut to get rid of) by running all out intervals for six minutes. He wanders off to his neighborhood gym where there is little in the way of supervision and he busts a move on the treadmill. His body, in no way, shape or form ready for such intensity, starts to break down, and in little to no time at all, Joe is injured, out of the game, and spends the next six months bemoaning his ill-fated attempt to lose his gut, which, due to his inactivity, continues to grow.
And even that doesn’t bother me. What bothers me is this: this is all being written up in the Times WELLNESS blog. Wellness. Well-ness. That word, for me, suggests a balance of mind, body and spirit. Where is the balance in reporting on a study like this?
In this day and age, we have too much interference on a minute-to-minute basis with our well-being. We are so busy focusing on everything around us that we rarely take the time to take care of ourselves. Disagree? Fine. Turn off your email for a day. Avoid Facebook or Twitter or your cell phone or your television or Youtube. Let’s go Hardcore Thoreau and just focus on you and the world around you, in that moment. Won’t happen. Can’t happen. We’re not wired like that anymore. And, consequently, we are left doing damage to our bodies and souls because of this unconscious addiction to stress. If you like studies, check out the one from MIT regarding Blackberry addiction (Crackberry) and stress. (Author’s note: the iPhone, with its 15.2 billion apps, ain’t a whole lot better.)

Exercise is your opportunity to free your body and your mind. Take an hour to do something that you enjoy doing and the benefits are tremendous, from healthier organs to happy moods and greater productivity in the workplace. A gentleman mentioned in the NYT Wellness article that six minutes is perfect for him because, as a 41-year old father of two, he doesn’t have the time to exercise “for hours.” I’m the 42-year old father of two and I say “Horse Feathers!” It’s not a question of hours. It is a question of making time on a regular basis to tend to yourself. Weight loss becomes the added benefit of that care. You want to lose weight? Feed yourself the right fuels, stay active and do things to reduce your stress level. It’s always the people who say that they don’t have an hour to spare that are most in need of sparing the hour. It’s your personal meditation. Not hippy-dippy-trippy Eastern meditation (though, folks, if you haven’t tried it, you really really should), but meditation in the spirit of relaxing and refocusing your energy to better serve your well-being, your family’s well-being, your goals and your quality of life.
Wellness Blog: get it together. There is no room in my schedule for six minutes a week. I’d rather run for an hour.
Winter 2010 Pilates Mat Instructor Certification
Posted by Guru
| February 5, 2010 | to | February 7, 2010 |
This 19 hour Pilates Mat Certification course is recognized by the Pilates Method Alliance. It is a comprehensive course encompassing anatomy as it pertains to the Pilates exercises, the 16 fundamentals and 27 mat exercises. The Fitness Guru believes in teaching contemporary Pilates utilizing a neutral spine. The course is given over 3 days the hours are as follows: Friday 7:30pm-9:30pm Sat. & Sun.10am-6pm all testing is done on Sunday afternoon. Study materials include: study binder with written descriitions of all information and photos, 1 DVD of the fundamentals and 1 DVD of the Mat Exercises.
For more information or to enroll in the course, please click HERE
Fall Apparatus Certification (Saturdays)
Posted by Guru
| November 7, 2009 | to | February 13, 2010 |
The Fitness Guru Teaching Lab Pilates Apparatus Certification is a 600 hour course covering the Reformer, Wunda Chair and Cadillac Pilates apparatus. Our extremely contemporary approach focuses of the on the development of the eye and intellect of the instructor to properly access postural imbalances and apply the most effective exercise selection possible to rebalance the body of each individual client. Students are encouraged to utilize the primary principles of Pilates to innovate new exercises using the incredibly versatile equipment.
Classes will begin on Saturday, November 7, 2009.
Classes will be held on Saturday afternoons from 12:30 pm to 3:30 pm for twelve weeks.
For more information, click HERE
To sign up, click HERE
Rolling into the weekend…..
Posted by Guru | Tagged as: blind, CBS, dolphin, echo location, Morning Show
Just amazing!! Enjoy the video and have a terrific weekend!!
Hot Health Links of the Week
Posted by Guru | Tagged as: cigarettes, exercise, fitness, health, Men's Health, Miami Herald, New York Times, nutrition, Obama, Women's Health
Here are some great stories out there for this week:

- From the good folks at Men’s Health, some quick ideas in the kitchen to help get you ripped up and in shape.
- The Ten Ingredient Shopping Trip
- And from Women’s Health: 11 Most Common Running Mistakes
- Exercise your way to a Better Sex Life
- Stretching in Bed
- President Obama’s Personal Battle Against Cigarettes
- Debunking Myths About Warm Ups and Eggs
Father’s Day
Posted by Guru | Tagged as: exercise, Father's day, fitness, health, weight loss
I am asked all year long: “What can I do for my husband/dad? He doesn’t like to exercise. He just won’t do it!” I stopped selling gift certificates to well intentioned spouses because their men-folk would never redeem them. The certificate would sit and rot in a drawer somewhere.
So now, on the day we celebrate DAD, here are a few ideas of where you can spend your money:
A great cap for Dads who run at night: it has a trail light built into the brim!
This great little golf aid has a range finder (to gauge distance, as well as a mesh holder for tees and balls.
…..and for the fitness….ummmm…….non-enthusiast….
…yup. Beer holster.
But getting back to the Dad who won’t exercise: here’s my idea!
1. Take a big box and wrap it beautifully (doesn’t matter what’s inside….keep reading…).
2. Let Dad sleep late.
3. Make Dad a big waffle breakfast and everyone present the meal to him while standing around the bed with the big, wrapped box.
4. While making a big To-Do about Father’s Day, the baby of the family (the youngest child, no matter how old he or she is) starts to cry uncontrollably.
5. When Dad says “what’s wrong?” the baby, still sobbing, cries out “My daddy is fat……”
Dad will join a gym on Monday morning.
Have a great day!!
Core Values
Posted by Guru | Tagged as: back, core, exercise, fitness, health, New York Times, pain, training, wellness
The New York Times Wellness blog published a piece the other day about “core” training. “Core” is one of those words that has seemed to overwhelm the fitness industry, as certain terms will every so often. Everyone is focused on training their cores. “My trainer focuses on my core and training my core and so my core is powerful and I love my core.” I hate “core”–not the muscles but the term. I run a certification program for instructors and one of the first things I say to them is “Never, ever use the word ‘core’. At least not in my presence.” The word core is a crutch, a catch-all term that has made its way into the trendy magazines to the point where everyone uses it, regardless of whether or not they know to what they are referring.
The NYT blog is quick to point out that all this core-centric talk may not be doing much to insure the health of the modern American back. I agree 100%. There is absolutely no benefit from focusing on the abdominal muscles to help to strengthen the lower back. In fact, if you focus on just the abdominal muscles, you may be doing yourself far more harm than good. But I don’t like the idea that the focus is without merit; rather, I think it is necessary to expand the focus.
First point: pain is usually the result of an imbalance in the body. The imbalance may be create by a traumatic force, like a fall, or it may be created by repetitive stress, like sitting poorly in a desk chair or sleeping on a non-supportive mattress. If you focus simply on the abdominal muscles, you are working hard to create that imbalance.
Second point: the problem with SO MANY trainers and training techniques is that the focus is on muscular activation without regard to structure. The spine has an ideal state, an ideal form which allows it to serve as support to the body and as a shock absorber for any trauma that body may experience. When an individual moves away from that ideal position, the individual is doing away with all the support that the spine natural offers. When we exercise in that compromised position, we are ASKING for trouble.
Solution: trainers have to have a better understanding of posture in its ideal state and how to evaluate the postures of the clients they train. Right now, many trainers lack that ability. Consequently, all this “core” focus serves to reinforce bad, and sometimes painful, habits. Secondly, trainers have to understand that in order to attain balance in the body, all the muscles of the “core” must be trained: the many muscle groups of the abdomen, pevis and lower back. In addition, balance must be reach in the limbs in order to preserve balance in the torso.
It’s not as simple as making people do crunches or stand on a wobble board. That’s simple linear thinking that is a disservice to all who would look to the training profession for answers.
It would help to get people on the same page. Why is it that the government insists on licenses for massage therapists and physical therapists, but there is absolutely no criteria for personal trainers, Pilates and yoga instructors, et al. All the people in these professions are charged with the care and well being of human bodies. Shouldn’t the bar be set as high as possible?
This Stinks…..I Think……
Posted by Guru | Tagged as: cold, FDA, flu, Hydroxycut, Zicam

When last we left the FDA, they were issuing a warning against a popular weight loss supplement, Hydroxycut. The warning was issued after 23 people had reported severe adverse reaction to the supplement, including one person who needed a liver transplant. Other issues included heart problems and muscle damage that could lead to kidney failure. All very serious stuff….but in 23 people– out of how many consumers that had purchased the product? And no mention of whether these people had taken the suggested dosage of the supplement (believe it or not, when people hear that something can help you lose weight, they tend to take more than they should. True.)
I have never been a big fan of weight loss supplements. I believe people take them in an effort to get the results without changing their behavior. In that sense, they are a crutch. As a nation, we are a mess in terms of weight management. And the supplements offer a false hope of change. It’s no wonder that people develop problems: some folks are probably popping the pills like Tic-Tacs (Editor’s Note: as of this writing, there is no existing FDA warning against Tic-Tacs.)
But now the FDA has issued a warning against Zicam. For those of you who don’t know, Zicam is a Zinc based nasal spray that works as a cold remedy. The warning suggests that Zicam can destroy one’s sense of smell. In 2006, Matrixx, Zicam’s parent company, paid out $12 million to 340 people who claimed their senses of smell had been damaged or destroyed.
I live by Zicam in the winter. The first sign of sniffles, I run to the drug store and stock up. I have never had any problems and I have found it effective. But what do I do now that I know my sense of smell is in danger? Do I continue taking the product? For heavy people, does the possibility of liver or kidney problems stop them from taking Hydroxycut? What do we do? Who do we listen to?
Wicked Addictive Gadget of the Moment
Posted by Guru | Tagged as: apps, computer, exercise, fitness, fitnessbuilder, health, iPhone
This week, it’s a new iPhone App. This one is Fitness Builder. It has all sorts of bells and whistles: fitness calculators (BMI, Body Fat %); weight tracking; progress reports; calorie calculators; and about 4000 exercises. That’s a lot of stuff. And the price of this App, which was just released yesterday: $19.99.

So today’s question:
Sorry, there are no polls available at the moment.
Ah, the quiet Sunday morning with a cup of coffee…….let’s take a few minutes to think about how we can make the upcoming work week more productive….






